Taron Johnson, one of the Bills’ longest-tenured players, has worked as a nickel cornerback throughout his eight-year career. With Johnson set to play his age-30 season in 2026, a position switch could be in store. The Bills will consider moving Johnson to safety next season, general manager Brandon Beane told reporters (via Jay Skurski of the Buffalo News).
Transitioning Johnson to safety could be among many changes defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard implements in his first year on the job. Both in terms of style and personnel, Leonhard’s unit will look far different than the defense the Bills ran under former head coach Sean McDermott from 2017-25.
The Bills deployed a four-man base, leaned on zone coverage and rarely blitzed during the McDermott era. With McDermott and previous Bills D-coordinator Bobby Babich out, the team will primarily go to a 3-4 in 2026. At the same time, expectations are that Leonhard will rely more on man coverage and blitzes.
Johnson didn’t come off the board until Round 4 of the 2018 draft, but the Weber State product held his own under McDermott for most of the coach’s tenure. After Johnson thrived in his first six seasons, Beane authorized a three-year, $31MM extension in March 2024. The deal temporarily made Johnson the highest-paid slot corner in the league, though injuries have contributed to a decline in performance over the past couple of years.
Johnson has sat out nine games since 2024, including four last season. Over 13 games and eight starts in 2025, Johnson totaled 57 tackles and four passes defensed. He went without an interception, but picks were never a big part of the package even when Johnson was at his best (he has just six in his career). Pro Football Focus ranked Johnson’s play 74th among 112 qualifying corners last year.
Despite Johnson’s struggles, Leonhard is eager to work with him. As a former NFL safety, including in Buffalo, Leonhard has a deep knowledge of the position. He may have full confidence in Johnson emerging as the solution alongside the entrenched Cole Bishop next season.
Earlier this month, during Leonhard’s first press conference with the Bills, the former Broncos defensive pass-game coordinator spoke glowingly of Johnson (via Joe Buscaglia of The Athletic).
“Finding out the perfect role for a player like that is very high on our priority list,” he said. “What it exactly is gonna look like is yet to be determined a little bit, but I love the player, I love the personality, I had a great conversation with him. He’s excited for the change. Not knowing what it is, right? And he knows that we’re gonna communicate with him and find out what’s right because he’s been an extremely productive player in the NFL.”
Pairing Johnson with Bishop would take care of an important offseason issue for the Bills, who are facing serious questions at safety. Former star Jordan Poyer played far better than expected over 10 games and nine starts in 2025, but he’s going to turn 35 in April. Poyer is also a pending free agent who may retire. Taylor Rapp entered the year as a starter, but he endured a rough six-game stretch before undergoing season-ending knee surgery in October. Rapp is now a surefire release candidate. Cutting him by March 15 would clear $3.08MM in cap space at the cost of just $667K in dead money.
Conversely, there is little financial incentive in moving on from Johnson in the next few months. That will change beginning June 1, at which point releasing Johnson would open up $8.67MM in breathing room. The Bills would then spread $9.5MM in dead money over two seasons. That may be an option down the road, but the Bills have plenty of time before then to evaluate where Johnson fits while exploring safety options in free agency and the draft.


