

Many former Bills front office members and coaches now work in New York. The Bills also have strong and more obvious ties to New York’s front office, with general manager Joe Schoen assuming that role this past winter after serving as Beane’s understudy in Buffalo. In his first five games under new head coach Brian Daboll, Barkley has already run for 533 yards (at 5.5 yards per rush), added another 143 receiving yards, and scored three touchdowns.
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Set to become a free agent after this season, Barkley is experiencing something of a career renaissance after a 2020 injury cost him 14 games and slowed him for much of 2021. However, the structure of his contract-he’s only making $1.035 million in base salary this season, and none of the three remaining years on his deal are guaranteed-makes it feasible for an enterprising contender to acquire him, if they deem it worthwhile.īarkley, 25, is on the trade radar for a different reason-his expiring rookie contract. He likely won’t see the end of his contract. He no longer seems like a long-term fit for the Panthers as they begin another rebuild.
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For a player that has struggled with injury and only appeared in 10 games over the past two full seasons (he is five-for-five so far this year), the contract has become prohibitive.

McCaffrey, 26, was one of the league’s most dynamic players in 20, which landed him a four-year contract extension that gives him cap hits ranging between $15-20 million for each of the next three seasons. Bills general manager Brandon Beane and head coach Sean McDermott have strong ties to the Panthers’ organization, up to and including Carolina’s current assistant general manager-former Bills director of player personnel Dan Morgan. We’ll start with McCaffrey in Carolina, a franchise that is about to embark on a major transition after today’s firing of head coach Matt Rhule. Two names are routinely linked to discussions about the trade deadline and Buffalo’s rushing attack: New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley, and Carolina Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey. In Sunday’s win over the Pittsburgh Steelers, a 24-yard touchdown run from Cook-the first of his career-became Buffalo’s first offensive touchdown of the season that didn’t involve Allen. Running backs James Cook (17 attempts, 89 yards), and Zack Moss (17 attempts, 91 yards) have yet to establish themselves as necessary members of the rushing attack, leaving Allen and running back Devin Singletary (40 attempts, 171 yards) to carry what little rushing burden there has been on the offense thus far. He has paced the team in rushing yardage in four out of their five games. It’s Allen, however, who leads Buffalo in rushing, gaining 225 of those yards himself through five weeks. The Bills currently rank 13th in the NFL in team rushing yardage, with 582 yards gained at 5.1 yards per clip. Given that Buffalo boast an elite passing attack with a legitimate MVP candidate at quarterback in Josh Allen, along with a deep and well-established defense that has allowed seven points to opponents in the second half this season, it’s of little surprise that most Bills-centric trade discussion focuses on the team’s less-than-stellar rushing attack. No roster is perfect and every team can improve, however-so with three weeks to speculate, Bills fans are letting their imaginations run wild. The Bills are currently well-positioned to contend for the Lombardi Trophy, and are clearly one of the league’s best teams through five games this season. The 2022 NFL trade deadline is on Tuesday, November 1, 2022. The answer to those questions may lie in how aggressively-or not-the Bills pursue upgrades on the trade market this month. How desperate are the Buffalo Bills to win the Super Bowl this season? How long do the team’s decision-makers believe they have before their current championship opportunity closes, and a roster re-tool for another run begins? How thin has their patience grown with select members of their running back room?
