Draft Notes: Newton, Lions, Latu, Bills, Titans, Texans, Jets, Eagles, Broncos, Cardinals, Commanders, Giants, Panthers
Wednesday marks the final day for “30” visits during this year’s cycle. Illinois defensive tackle Jer’Zhan Newton is on the way back from a January surgery to repair a Jones fracture in his foot. Newton went through a belated pro day in Champaign on Tuesday, per Bleacher Report’s Jordan Schultz, who noted more than eight teams were in attendance. The Lions are not one of the teams Schultz named, but the Detroit Free Press’ Dave Birkett notes Newton did go through a visit with the defending NFC North champs. A first-team All-American and reigning Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, Newton played through his foot injury last season — a 7.5-sack slate. The acclaimed DT, who ranks as the No. 32 overall prospect on Daniel Jeremiah’s NFL.com big board, also recorded 14.5 tackles for loss in 2022.
Here is the latest from the draft scene:
- Speaking of the Lions, they are also believed to be high on NC State linebacker Payton Wilson, The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman notes (subscription required). Last season’s Bednarik award winner (given to Division I-FBS’ top defender), Wilson ranks 41st on Jeremiah’s big board. In need at linebacker, the Cowboys are also believed to be intrigued by Wilson, though Feldman adds some teams are too concerned about his medical history to consider drafting him. Season-ending knee and shoulder injuries halted Wilson in 2018 and 2021, respectively, but the six-year Wolfpack cog has been healthy over the past two years.
- The Bills have brought in two likely first-round defenders, hosting edge rusher Laiatu Latu and cornerback Cooper DeJean (via Schultz and NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport). Holding the No. 28 overall pick, Buffalo saw a concerning season from Von Miller (zero sacks after a second ACL rehab journey) and did not re-sign Leonard Floyd. The Bills also released Tre’Davious White and have not replaced him. While wide receiver is the buzz position in Buffalo given the exits of longtime performers, the Bills also have some needs to address on defense.
- A fourth team booked a visit with Alabama tackle JC Latham. The first-round-level tackle will meet with the Jets tonight and Wednesday, according to ESPN.com’s Adam Schefter. One of seven tackles Jeremiah places among his top 25 overall prospects, Latham has already met with the Cardinals, Titans and Bears. The Jets have been linked to an O-line investment, and the prospect of moving down from No. 10 has also come up for Gang Green.
- Both the Alabama cornerbacks expected to go off the board early in this draft booked more visits before the Wednesday deadline. Terrion Arnold met with the Titans on Monday, Rapoport adds, while Kool-Aid McKinstry visited the Eagles (via the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Jeff McLane). With Darius Slay and James Bradberry set to begin the season north of 31st birthdays, the Eagles have been tied to corners. The Titans acquired L’Jarius Sneed via trade and signed Chidobe Awuzie; this would seemingly take Tennessee out of the early-round CB mix. Though, the team did lose Sean Murphy-Bunting and has seen ex-first-rounder Caleb Farley prove undependable.
- Although the Texans have taken multiple fliers on former top-10 corners (Jeff Okudah, C.J. Henderson), they may be interested in bolstering their cornerback corps with a higher-upside player. Houston hosted Missouri’s Ennis Rakestraw on Monday, KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson tweets. A Texas native, Rakestraw (Jeremiah’s No. 28 overall prospect) allowed just one touchdown on 28 targets last season, per Wilson. The 5-foot-11 defender broke up 11 passes with the Tigers in 2023.
- This draft features a number of tackles set to go off the board in Round 1, but the second round could produce some investments at the position. The Giants, Jets and Commanders scheduled late visits with Arizona’s Jordan Morgan, ESPN.com’s Jordan Raanan tweets. Jeremiah’s No. 49 overall player, Morgan also visited the Bills, Broncos, Cardinals and Panthers, Wilson adds, noting also the three-year Wildcats starter worked out for the Texans during the pre-draft process. Morgan earned first-team All-Pac-12 recognition last season.
WR Rashard Higgins, LB Christian Kirksey To Retire As Browns
Both wideout Rashard Higgins and linebacker Christian Kirksey have officially decided to hang up their cleats, but they will do so as members of the team which drafted them. Both players will sign one-day contracts with the Browns, the team announced on Tuesday. 
Higgins spent his first six years in Cleveland, serving as a complementary receiver along the way. His best campaign came in 2020, when he posted 37 catches for 599 yards and four touchdowns. His 16.2 yards per catch average demonstrated his ability as a vertical threat, but by 2022 signs pointed to a free agent departure.
Indeed, the former fifth-rounder signed with the Panthers on a one-year deal that offseason. Higgins, 29, appeared in only three games that year, however. He was out of the league for the past campaign, and instead of pursuing a comeback, he will end his NFL run with roughly $8.3MM in career earnings.
Kirksey signed with the Bills ahead of the 2023 season, aiming to join a contender. His time in Buffalo proved to be very short-lived, though, and in September he informed the team of his intention to retire. That move was not officially made during the campaign, as evidenced by today’s news, but the former third-rounder was not on the field with any team last season.
Over the course of six years with the Browns, Kirksey started 54 of 73 games. He eclipsed 100 tackles twice in that span (2016 and ’17), doing so again during his 2022 performance with the Texans. In both Cleveland and Houston, the Iowa product earned his team’s nomination for the Walter Payton Man of the Year award.
Kirksey remained a full-time starter during his single season with the Packers in 2020, as well as his two campaigns as a Texan. The 31-year-old spent much of his career on rebuilding teams, and he was released halfway through his most lucrative pact (a four-year, $38MM Browns extension signed in 2017). Still, he made an NFC championship game appearance with Green Bay and accumulated just over $39MM during his career.
“We are thrilled that Rashard and Christian wanted to come back and retire as Cleveland Browns,” a team statement reads. “Both players obviously made an impact on the field, but they each made a lasting impression in the Cleveland community as well. It’s a testament to who they are as individuals, and we are honored to have them retire as part of our Browns family.”
DL Marshawn Kneeland Adds Six Pre-Draft Visits, To Close With 16
As Marshawn Kneeland logs a spring flight schedule that would potentially impress George Clooney’s Up in the Air protagonist, the Western Michigan alum is viewed as a rising prospect ahead of the draft.
The MAC product has scheduled pre-draft visits with half the NFL. His Chiefs, Colts, Commanders, Jaguars, Jets, Saints and Vikings meetings became known weeks ago, but other teams have since entered the fray. The Buccaneers, Panthers and Texans met with the edge rusher prospect last week, according to NFL.com’s Mike Garafolo. Not stopping there, Kneeland also has meetings scheduled with the Bills, Lions and Packers, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport adds.
More teams may have stepped in here, with Garafolo indicating Kneeland booked 16 “30” visits during one of the busiest pre-draft itineraries in recent NFL history. Teams have until Wednesday to conduct “30” visits, and Kneeland will presumably be setting foot in a number of new cities before that deadline arrives.
Generally, prospects with notable questions generate the most visits. Kneeland has become a coveted D-end prospect despite playing at a mid-major program and never topping 4.5 sacks in a season. But coaches are certainly intrigued by the versatile performer. As ESPN.com’s Matt Miller points out, Kneeland generated 36 pressures last season. The 6-foot-3, 267-pound edge player posted 26 tackles for loss from 2021-23, and Miller adds his profile has reached the point where a fall out of the top 50 is unlikely.
Kneeland has generated this profile despite never being a first-team All-MAC performer; though, he did play in only nine games as a senior. His mileage count this spring has reflected the curiosity his profile brings. For the teams that do not land a player on the Dallas Turner–Jared Verse–Laiatu Latu level, someone like Kneeland — who profiles as more of a power player capable of sliding inside situationally — would stand to be appealing on Day 2.
Traded NFL Draft Picks For 2024
As the 2024 draft nears, numerous picks have already changed hands. A handful of picks have already been moved twice, with a few being traded three times. Multiple deals from 2021 impact this draft. Here are the 2024 picks to have been traded thus far:
Round 1
- Bears hold Panthers‘ pick (No. 1 overall) sending over 2023 No. 1 overall selection (QB Bryce Young)
- Texans acquired Browns‘ first-rounder in March 2022’s QB Deshaun Watson trade
- Vikings obtained No. 23 from Texans via March 2024 exchange
- Cardinals acquired Texans‘ pick (No. 27) in Houston’s climb up for DE Will Anderson Jr. at No. 3
Round 2
- Giants received second-round pick from Seahawks for DL Leonard Williams
- Panthers obtained No. 39 from Giants for OLB Brian Burns
- Commanders collected second-rounder from Bears (No. 40) for DE Montez Sweat
- Packers landed Jets‘ second-rounder (No. 41) in April 2023 blockbuster centered around QB Aaron Rodgers
- Green Bay would have collected New York’s 2024 first had Rodgers played 65% of the Jets’ 2023 offensive snaps, but his Week 1 Achilles tear scuttled that prospect
- Texans acquired Vikings‘ second-rounder (No. 42) in March 2024
- Saints nabbed Broncos‘ second (No. 45) in January 2023 deal for Sean Payton‘s rights
- Eagles collected Saints‘ second-rounder (No. 50) in April 2022 trade
Round 3
- Cardinals picked up Titans‘ 2024 third (No. 71) in deal that allowed Tennessee to draft QB Will Levis at No. 33
- Lions obtained Vikings‘ pick (No. 73) in 2022 deadline deal that sent TE T.J. Hockenson to Minnesota
- Commanders acquired No. 78 from Seahawks in deal for QB Sam Howell
- Falcons hold Jaguars‘ third (No. 79) by virtue of Calvin Ridley meeting playing-time thresholds but not signing an extension with Jacksonville before March 13, 2024
- Had Ridley re-signed before the 2024 league year, the Falcons would have acquired Jags’ second-rounder
- As part of Sean Payton trade, Broncos collected Saints‘ third
- Seahawks acquired No. 81 from Broncos for 2023 No. 83 choice (CB Riley Moss)
- Texans landed third from Eagles (No. 86) in trade for 2023 No. 105 choice (CB Kelee Ringo)
- As part of Anderson trade, Cardinals acquired Texans’ 2024 third (No. 90)
- Packers obtained No. 91 from Bills for CB Rasul Douglas
- Buccaneers acquired No. 92 from Lions for CB Carlton Davis
- Steelers nabbed No. 98 from Eagles in deal for QB Kenny Pickett
- Commanders added No. 100 from 49ers in deadline deal for DE Chase Young
Round 4
- Seahawks received No. 102 from Commanders in Sam Howell swap
- Chargers collected No. 110 from Bears in exchange for WR Keenan Allen
- In pick-swap trade involving OLB Jacob Martin at 2022 deadline, Jets picked up Broncos‘ fourth
- Ravens acquired No. 113 from Jets in exchange for T Morgan Moses
- Jaguars obtained Saints‘ 2024 fourth (No. 116) in exchange for 2023 No. 127 selection (QB Jake Haener)
- Steelers obtained fourth from Rams in exchange for G Kevin Dotson
- Eagles acquired No. 120 from Steelers in Kenny Pickett deal
- Broncos acquired No. 121 from Dolphins in 2022 Bradley Chubb trade
- Bears acquired Eagles‘ fourth (No. 122) in deal for No. 9 overall (DT Jalen Carter)
- Deshaun Watson trade also involved Texans obtaining Browns‘ 2024 fourth (No. 123)
- 49ers acquired fourth-round pick from Cowboys (No. 124) for QB Trey Lance
- T.J. Hockenson trade gave Vikings fourth (No. 129) from Lions
- Jets acquired No. 135 from Ravens in Morgan Moses trade
Round 5
- Browns landed Panthers‘ 2024 fifth-rounder in trade for QB Baker Mayfield
- Mayfield failing to play 70% of Carolina’s 2022 offensive snaps converted pick from fourth to fifth
- Browns traded No. 136 to Broncos for WR Jerry Jeudy
- Mayfield failing to play 70% of Carolina’s 2022 offensive snaps converted pick from fourth to fifth
- Panthers obtained No. 141 from Giants in Brian Burns trade
- Panthers hold Titans‘ 2024 fifth (No. 142) through deal for OL Dennis Daley
- Bills acquired No. 144 from Bears in exchange for OL Ryan Bates
- Pick swap in 2022 Jacob Martin trade gave Broncos fifth (No. 145) from Jets
- Eagles collected Vikings‘ 2024 fifth in 2022 trade for WR Jalen Reagor
- WR failing to meet catch 40 passes or hit 500-yard receiving mark converted pick from fourth to fifth
- Titans obtained No. 146 from Eagles in exchange for S Kevin Byard
- WR failing to meet catch 40 passes or hit 500-yard receiving mark converted pick from fourth to fifth
- Commanders acquired No. 152 from Seahawks in Sam Howell swap
- Kevin Dotson pick-swap deal sent Rams fifth (No. 155) from Steelers
- Jonathan Gannon tampering resolution gave Cardinals fifth-rounder from Eagles
- Browns acquired No. 156 from Cardinals in exchange for QB Josh Dobbs
- Vikings acquired Browns fifth (No. 157) in pick-swap trade for DE Za’Darius Smith
- Chiefs hold Cowboys’ 2024 fifth (No. 159) after trade for 2023 No. 178 pick (CB Eric Scott Jr.)
- Rasul Douglas trade sent Bills No. 160 from Packers
- In exchange for 2023 No. 191 pick (WR Trey Palmer), Eagles hold Buccaneers‘ fifth (No. 161)
- Cardinals received Texans‘ fifth-rounder (No. 162) exchange for OL Josh Jones
- Panthers‘ four-pick haul for RB Christian McCaffrey included 49ers‘ 2024 fifth
- Giants obtained No. 166 from Panthers in Brian Burns swap
- For 2023 No. 119 choice (CB Chamarri Conner), Vikings acquired Chiefs‘ 2024 fifth (No. 167)
Round 6
- Jaguars picked up Panthers‘ 2024 sixth in exchange for WR Laviska Shenault
- Vikings added No. 177 from Jaguars for G Ezra Cleveland
- Panthers received Cardinals‘ 2024 sixth for WR Robbie Chosen
- Steelers added No. 178 from Panthers in Diontae Johnson–Donte Jackson deal
- Seahawks added Commanders‘ sixth (No. 179) in Sam Howell trade
- Eagles obtained Titans‘ 2024 sixth in pick swap for DB Ugo Amadi
- Titans reacquired pick (No. 182) from Eagles in Kevin Byard deal
- Dolphins landed sixth-round choice (No. 184) from Bears for G Dan Feeney
- Cardinals acquired No. 186 from Vikings for QB Josh Dobbs
- Patriots acquired Raiders‘ 2024 sixth-rounder for OL Justin Herron
- Vikings received Patriots’ sixth for T Vederian Lowe
- Texans obtained No. 188 from Vikings in deal for 2024 first-round pick
- Vikings received Patriots’ sixth for T Vederian Lowe
- Rams acquired 2024 sixth from Broncos in October 2021 exchange for LB Kenny Young
- Bills collected sixth from Rams in exchange for 2023 No. 215 choice (RB Zach Evans)
- Texans picked up No. 189 from Bills in Stefon Diggs trade
- Bills collected sixth from Rams in exchange for 2023 No. 215 choice (RB Zach Evans)
- Patriots acquired No. 193 from Jaguars for QB Mac Jones
- Falcons obtained Browns’ 2024 sixth (No. 197) for LB Deion Jones
- Saints received Eagles’ sixth (No. 199) in exchange for S C.J. Gardner-Johnson
- Texans acquired sixth-rounder from Cowboys for WR Brandin Cooks
- Bills acquired No. 200 from Texans for 2023 No. 205 choice (WR Xavier Hutchinson)
- Buccaneers picked up No. 201 from Lions for CB Carlton Davis
- Deshaun Watson trade included Browns picking up Texans‘ 2024 sixth
- Broncos acquired seventh from Browns in Jerry Jeudy deal
- Jets land No. 203 from Broncos in pick-swap deal for QB Zach Wilson
- Broncos acquired seventh from Browns in Jerry Jeudy deal
- In trade for 2023 No. 229 pick (OL Andrew Vorhees), Browns picked up No. 206 from Ravens
- In pick-swap deal involving DE Randy Gregory, Broncos collected No. 207 from 49ers
- Intra-AFC West trade sent Raiders No. 208 from Chiefs for DL Neil Farrell
- Ravens picked up No. 218 from Jets in Morgan Moses trade
Round 7
- Dennis Daley pick swap sent Titans seventh from Panthers
- Chiefs acquired No. 221 from Titans for CB L’Jarius Sneed
- Raiders obtained No. 223 from Patriots in Justin Herron deal
- In Josh Jones pick-swap trade, Texans obtained Cardinals’ seventh-round choice
- Cardinals acquired Giants‘ seventh-rounder (No. 226) for LB Isaiah Simmons
- Browns obtain No. 227 from Titans in exchange for T Leroy Watson
- Ravens picked up No. 228 from Jets for S Chuck Clark
- Raiders added No. 229 from Vikings for QB Nick Mullens
- Patriots added seventh in July 2022 trade that sent WR N’Keal Harry to Bears
- Browns picked up seventh from Falcons in pick-swap deal involving LB Deion Jones
- Cardinals acquired pick from Browns in Joshua Dobbs deal
- Vikings landed No. 230 from Cardinals in second 2023 trade involving Dobbs
- Cardinals acquired pick from Browns in Joshua Dobbs deal
- Patriots picked up No. 231 from Bears in exchange for WR N’Keal Harry
- 49ers acquired seventh from Broncos in Randy Gregory deal
- Texans obtained pick from 49ers in exchange for DT Maliek Collins
- Vikings hold No. 232 after pick-swap deal with Texans
- Texans obtained pick from 49ers in exchange for DT Maliek Collins
- In pick-swap trade for DT Johnathan Hankins, Cowboys acquired Raiders‘ 2024 seventh (No. 233)
- Texans added No. 238 from Saints in 2021 trade for RB Mark Ingram
- Kenny Young trade sent Broncos seventh-rounder from Rams
- In Diontae Johnson-for-Donte Jackson deal, Panthers acquired No. 240 from Steelers
- As part of Ugo Amadi swap, Eagles obtained seventh (No. 242) from Titans
- L’Jarius Sneed trade sent Titans No. 252 from Chiefs
- Zach Wilson swap gives Broncos No. 256 from Jets
AFC Contract Details: Texans, Sneed, Barrett
Here are some details on recently agreed upon contracts from around the AFC:
- Myles Bryant, CB/PR (Texans): One year, $1.75MM. According to Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2, Bryant’s new deal in Houston includes a guaranteed amount of $800K comprised of $500K of his 2024 base salary (worth a total of $1.2MM) and a $300K signing bonus. Bryant can earn an additional $250K throughout the season with $14,705 per game active roster bonuses.
- C.J. Henderson, CB (Texans): One year, $2MM. Wilson reports that Henderson’s contract includes a guaranteed amount of $500K consisting of a $300K signing bonus, like Bryant, and $200K of his 2024 base salary (worth a total of $1.4MM). Henderson will also get a per game active roster bonus, but his will be $17,647 per game for a potential season total of $300K.
- L’Jarius Sneed, CB (Titans): Four years, $76.4MM. We already knew quite a bit about this deal when it was reported, though some of the figures weren’t completely accurate. While the reported number for guaranteed money was initially $55MM, it’s actually going to be $51.5MM. Per Mike Florio of NBC Sports, Sneed was guaranteed $44MM at signing consisting of Sneed’s $20MM signing bonus, his 2024 and 2025 base salaries of $4.32MM and 18.32MM, and per game active roster bonuses that equal up to $680K in each of the first two years. The per game active roster bonuses are listed as “fully guaranteed,” but they still must be earned with Sneed’s consistent presence on the active roster. Labeling a roster bonus as fully guaranteed usually means that it is prorated like a signing bonus. In theory, if Sneed misses any games in those two seasons, he’ll be forced to pay back a portion of those prorated bonuses. The remaining $7.5MM of guaranteed money comes from Sneed’s 2026 base salary of $15.15MM. His 2026 salary has $11MM guaranteed for injury at signing, which is likely where the $55MM figure came from, but effectively, the contract’s guarantees stand at $51.5MM. Additionally, Sneed’s per game active roster bonus potential season-totals increase in 2026 and 2027 to $850K apiece.
- Shaquil Barrett, OLB (Dolphins): One year, $7MM. We originally reported on Barrett’s one-year deal being worth a maximum of $9MM, which is still true with incentives, but thanks to Cameron Wolfe of NFL Network, now we have the details. Barrett’s new deal in Miami has an actual base value of $7MM. It includes a guaranteed amount of $6.75MM consisting of a $5.54MM signing bonus and the entirety of Barrett’s 2024 base salary (worth $1.21MM). Barrett can also earn an additional $250K through per game active roster bonuses of $14,705 apiece. Due to tight cap space, though, the Dolphins had to add four void years onto the backend of Barrett’s deal. Whether or not he’s on the roster, he’ll carry a cap hit of $4.43MM in 2025 and $1.11MM in each of the following three seasons.
Texans Waive DE Myjai Sanders
Active on the waiver wire last year, the Texans have seen two of their defensive lineman claimed in 2023 — Derek Barnett and Teair Tart — sign contracts. Barnett is back, while Tart joined the Dolphins. Another front-seven Texans claim will follow Tart off the roster.
The team is waiving Myjai Sanders, a 2022 Cardinals third-round pick. Sanders initially came to Houston via waivers, after the new Cardinals regime bailed on the Steve Keim-era draftee early. Two seasons remain on Sanders’ rookie contract.
Houston claimed Sanders before adding Barnett and Tart via waivers, picking up the former Cincinnati standout in mid-October. The young edge rusher played in seven games (138 defensive snaps) for the Texans, operating as a backup behind Will Anderson and Jonathan Greenard. Sanders, 25, did not record a sack with Houston. He did, however, play 43 defensive snaps in the Texans’ wild-card win over the Browns.
This marks the second Sanders waiver exit in six months. The Cardinals cut Sanders from their IR, doing so after designating him for return. Sanders played only four games with the Cards last season; he suited up for 13 as a rookie, registering three sacks. The Texans have Barnett and 2023 fourth-round pick Dylan Horton, who recently announced he was in remission after a Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosis, as D-end backup options behind Anderson and Greenard replacement Danielle Hunter.
The Texans also signed wide receiver Alex Bachman and waived safety Josh Thompson. Bachman has not seen any game action since the 2021 season.
NFL Draft Rumors: Cowboys, McCarthy, Robinson
The Cowboys hosted a number of 2024 NFL Draft prospects for “top 30” visits this week. The visiting group included potential first-round targets like Taliese Fuaga, Graham Barton, and Darius Robinson as well as projected Day 2 selection Junior Colson.
Fuaga, an offensive tackle out of Oregon State, and Barton, a projected interior offensive lineman out of Duke, make sense considering the Cowboys’ losses on offensive line this offseason of Tyron Smith and Tyler Biadasz. If Fuaga is able to start, this would allow Dallas to keep Tyler Smith at guard, where he earned second-team All-Pro honors in 2023. In order to land Fuaga, though, the Cowboys would likely have to trade up earlier into the first round. Barton played left tackle for the Blue Devils for the last couple of years, but his early college film at center shows the versatility that he could bring at the NFL level.
Robinson, a defensive end out of Missouri, feels like the typical Cowboys pass rusher selection and adds depth to a position that saw Dorance Armstrong and Dante Fowler follow former defensive coordinator Dan Quinn to Washington. A bigger defensive end, Robinson could provide some versatility across the defensive line and may be available long enough for the Cowboys to trade back to collect some extra picks and still select him. Colson, a linebacker out of Michigan, would be a nice addition to a position that could use some attention with Micah Parsons spending more time at end. While he’s likely a second- or third-round pick, he’s worth note as he’s expected to be the first linebacker off the board.
Here are a couple of other rumors making the rounds in the weeks leading up to this month’s draft:
- We have seen the draft stock of Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy soaring over the last few weeks. Once considered a tier-two quarterback behind Caleb Williams, Drake Maye, and Jayden Daniels, the polarizing McCarthy has somehow found himself in consideration for the No. 2 overall draft selection. While his stock continues to inflate, Pro Football Network’s Adam Caplan pointed out some of the red flags that have some scouts feeling less than confident about the former Wolverine. McCarthy has been compared to former Steelers’ first-round pick Kenny Pickett “due to his inability to drive the ball down the field.” His strong sense of timing made up for a lack of arm strength in college, but some worry that it will prevent him from being able to make some throws at the NFL level. While he’s almost guaranteed to be a first-round pick due to the top-heavy nature of the position this year, many don’t have a first-round grade on McCarthy.
- Chop Robinson is set to be the next pass rusher out of Penn State to be selected in the first round. The projected Day 1 edge rusher had already taken visits with the Eagles, Ravens, and Saints, but Bleacher Report’s Jordan Schultz informs us that visits with the Giants and Jets were scheduled for this past week, as well. Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2 adds that the Texans have Robinson firmly on their radar after meeting with him at the NFL scouting combine.
Texans Remove Final Three Seasons From Stefon Diggs’ Contract
APRIL 5: One benefit from this unexpected move will come in the form of 2024 cap space. The Texans replaced the Diggs years with three void years, adding a fourth to spread out the wide receiver’s cap hit through 2027. Diggs’ 2024 cap number has dropped to $5.88MM, ESPN.com’s Field Yates tweets. A restructure could have created this cap space as well, and the Texans now have a $16.64MM dead money number — in the event Diggs does not sign an extension before the 2025 league year — staring at them.
APRIL 4: A day after trading for Stefon Diggs, the Texans are making an interesting adjustment to the Pro Bowl wide receiver’s contract. Diggs’ Bills-constructed deal ran through 2027; that is no longer the case.
The Texans are removing the 2025, 2026 and 2027 season from the contract, ESPN.com’s Adam Schefter reports. Diggs is now set to become a free agent in 2025. The Texans moved $3.5MM in 2025 guarantees up to 2024, running that amount to $22.52MM. This was a mutual decision, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini tweets.
[RELATED: Texans’ Offer Changed Bills’ Stefon Diggs Plan]
Teams do not exactly make a habit of ceding contractual control, so nixing three years of a high-profile player’s contract represents an unusual development. The Texans will certainly ensure Diggs is motivated to succeed in 2024, as a fourth contract would stand to await him next year. But they now run the risk of losing the six-time 1,000-yard receiver after one season.
Houston does, however, hold exclusive negotiating rights with Diggs until March 2025. The parties could work out another deal. Unless something is already in place, the team has introduced a unnecessary risk into this equation. As SI.com’s Albert Breer notes, Diggs checking in with a $22.5MM cap number would spike his 2025 franchise tag figure north of $27MM. That would make a tag prohibitive for Houston. Because the Texans adjusted Diggs’ deal, they would not be entitled to a compensatory pick if he departs in 2025.
The Bears did not adjust Keenan Allen‘s contract upon trading for the longtime Chargers WR, who drew interest from the Texans. While teams have made trade-and-extend moves for wideouts in the recent past — Tyreek Hill, A.J. Brown, Davante Adams each signed new deals upon being moved in 2022 — those players all had one season left on their previous contracts or, in Adams’ case, were franchise-tagged. Diggs was tied to a four-year, $96MM deal that featured four remaining years, separating this decision from those early-2020s calls.
When the Bills acquired Diggs from the Vikings in 2020, he remained on his Minnesota contract — a $14.4MM-per-year deal that ran through the 2024 season — over his first two Buffalo seasons. The Bills and Diggs huddled up on the above-referenced $24MM-per-year deal in 2022, and the extension years were just set to begin. Diggs, 30, now has an unexpected opportunity to become a first-time free agent next year.
At the time of the trade Wednesday morning, it appears the Texans would have Diggs’ $24MM-AAV contract aligned with C.J. Stroud‘s remaining rookie-deal seasons. Stroud must be kept on a rookie contract through at least 2025. The Texans had the ability to easily escape from Diggs’ deal after the 2024 season. While removing these years could reignite Diggs — who offered a low-wattage conclusion to his 2023 season — a rebound season would also stand to up his value ahead of free agency. That would work against Houston, even if Stroud presents a nice drawing card for the nine-year veteran.
As it stands, the Texans certainly appear confident they will be able to retain Diggs beyond 2024. If not, they sent a Vikings-obtained second-round pick to Buffalo for one year of Diggs, who will turn 31 in November.
Bills Trade WR Stefon Diggs To Texans
The Stefon Diggs era in Buffalo will end after four seasons. The AFC East champions are trading the star wide receiver to the Texans, Adam Schefter of ESPN.com reports. Both teams have since announced the trade.
The Bills will receive a 2025 second-round pick, according to Schefter, who adds the Texans will pick up Diggs, a 2025 fifth-round pick and a 2024 sixth. This will bring a decorated but mercurial period to a close for the Bills and Diggs. The 2025 second-rounder originally belonged to the Vikings, who packaged it in a deal to acquire the Texans’ No. 23 overall pick this year.
[RELATED: Texans’ Offer Changed Bills’ Stefon Diggs Plan]
It will also arm C.J. Stroud with a high-end weapon. With Stroud on a rookie contract, the Texans are bringing in one of the NFL’s most lucrative receiver deals. This move comes after the Texans had considered trading for Keenan Allen. Both high-end wideouts have six 1,000-yard seasons on their respective resumes, but Diggs — at 30 — is more than a year younger.
This, of course, marks the second time Diggs has been dealt in his career. The first such trade changed the Bills’ trajectory. Josh Allen‘s path to stardom reached a clear pivot point when the Bills acquired Diggs during the 2020 offseason. They landed the five-year Vikings wideout for a package headlined by a first-round selection. With Diggs set to turn 31 later this year and tied to a big-ticket contract, his price tag dropped.
Buffalo kept Diggs on his Minnesota-constructed contract for two seasons but handed out a four-year, $96MM deal during the 2022 offseason. Four years remain on that contract. While Diggs’ deal sits fifth in terms of wide receiver AAV, the Texans do not have too much money allocated to their skill positions. Diggs’ contract will overlap with Tank Dell and Nico Collins‘ rookie pacts. In clear rebuilding mode to start Nick Caserio‘s GM tenure, the Texans went into last year without any payment north of $7MM at the skill positions. They have now re-signed Dalton Schultz (three years, $36MM) and signed up to add Diggs, who will join Joe Mixon as a trade pickup in Houston.
For Buffalo, this will certainly mark a sea change. Diggs ripped off four straight 1,100-plus-yard seasons with the Bills. That included two 1,400-yard years. The elite route runner gave the Bills a bona fide No. 1 target after they had lacked one for the better part of the 21st century. The addition rocketed Allen onto the superstar tier. The Bills ventured to the AFC championship game in Diggs’ first year in New York, winning their first playoff games since 1995. Diggs, of course, was not the sole reason for Buffalo’s resurgence. But he played one of the central roles.
While the Texans are set to roll out a Diggs-Dell-Collins receiver trio, the Bills have now lost Diggs and Gabe Davis this offseason. Buffalo did add Curtis Samuel and saw Khalil Shakir make key contributions down the stretch, but it appears likely the AFC power will need to come out of the draft with a major WR pickup. Fortunately, this year brings another deep crop at the position. Considering their Super Bowl window ahead of Allen’s age-28 season, this trade certainly ramps up the pressure on the Sean McDermott–Brandon Beane duo.
Diggs’ Bills relationship both traversed rocky terrain and ended on a low note. A confusing situation developed at minicamp last year, with Diggs leaving the team’s facility unexpectedly. McDermott referred to the exit as an excused absence, but he also called the Diggs situation “very concerning.” Allen attempted to downplay the matter, and Diggs soon said he wanted to finish his career in Buffalo. This all came after Diggs stormed out of the Bills’ locker room and needed to be brought back following the team’s divisional-round loss to the Bengals last year. A report indicated Diggs was frustrated by his role in Buffalo’s offense, one that had consistently featured him as the lead weapon. Diggs later denied that was the case.
As last season progressed, Diggs also became a lesser part of the Bills’ offense. As the team regrouped following a 5-5 start — one that led to Ken Dorsey‘s firing and Joe Brady‘s elevation to OC — Diggs did not offer WR1-level production. Allen needed to rely on Shakir and a James Cook-powered run game to drag the Bills to their fourth straight AFC East title. Diggs finished with 1,183 yards but only eclipsed 50 in two of Buffalo’s final seven games. Diggs added a crucial drop late in the Bills’ narrow divisional-round loss to the Chiefs; he caught just three passes for 21 yards in that 27-24 defeat.
This move will also be financially punitive for the Bills. Due to signing bonus proration, the team will be hit with more than $31MM in dead money. While the second-round pick being acquired will be important, Buffalo will see this money accelerate onto its 2024 salary cap due to the deal being finalized before June 1. In terms of single-season dead cap hits, Diggs’ ranks fifth in NFL history (h/t Spotrac). For non-QBs, the $31MM hit sets a record.
Rather than restructure Diggs’ deal to create cap space, the Bills are taking on considerable pain now. That will increase an uphill battle for a Bills team that has also moved on from Mitch Morse, Jordan Poyer and Tre’Davious White this offseason. Diggs’ $18.5MM 2024 base salary is guaranteed. Beyond that, Houston has some flexibility.
At the other end of the spectrum, the Texans are spending in a way they have not under Caserio. The Bill Belichick disciple has greenlit this Diggs deal following the Schultz re-up, Mixon trade and a few defensive augmentations — headlined by the near-fully guaranteed Danielle Hunter accord. With Stroud and Will Anderson tied to rookie deals through at least 2025, the Texans are operating with urgency.
As this represents a risk for a Bills team attempting to stay near the AFC’s top tier, the dead money here certainly suggests the organization believed this relationship had run its course. The Texans are not giving up too much for the 10th-year veteran, but they are acquiring a player with some baggage — Diggs clashed with Vikings brass during his final Minnesota year as well — and one coming off an unremarkable finish to last season. Still, Diggs brings an impressive pedigree to Houston. He will now join younger brother Trevon Diggs in Texas; the Texans play both the Bills and Cowboys in 2024.
AFC Restructures: Howard, Mason, Wilson
The Texans front office did some work recently to help with their cap situation. The bigger of their two recent moves saw them address the contract of veteran offensive tackle Tytus Howard, per Field Yates of ESPN.
Howard agreed to a restructured contract in which Houston converted $12.88MM of his 2024 base salary (originally worth $14MM) into a signing bonus. The Texans also added two void years onto the end of his existing deal. The adjustments to his contract resulted in the clearance of $10.3MM of cap space for Houston.
Here are a few other restructured deals seen recently around the AFC:
- Houston also adjusted the contract of fellow offensive lineman Shaq Mason, according to Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2. The new deal saw the Texans convert $8.04MM of Mason’s 2024 base salary (originally worth $9.25MM) into a signing bonus while, once again, adding two voidable years to the end of the contract. The resulting changes added an additional $6.4MM to Houston’s salary cap space.
- Doug Kyed of the Boston Herald informed us that a restructured deal was also underway for Patriots cornerback Marco Wilson. The new contract is a one-year, $1.2MM deal with $600K of guaranteed money, including a $300K signing bonus. The restructure results in approximately $750K of additional cap space for New England. Wilson’s new deal also contains a $200K workout bonus, $500K in potential per game active roster bonuses, $416K in incentives that are likely to be earned, and $750K in incentives classified as not likely to be earned.
