Bills Unlikely To Extend RB James Cook Before Draft

The Bills’ offseason has been defined in large part by their extension efforts with key in-house players. Quarterback Josh Allen‘s recent top-up has him near the top of the position’s pecking order, and a quartet of starters on their rookie contracts now have lucrative second deals in place.

Receiver Khalil Shakirlinebacker Terrel Bernard, edge rusher Gregory Rousseau and cornerback Christian Benford have all had their long-term futures assured early in the 2025 offseason. Other extension candidates loom on the roster, including running back James Cook. Nothing on that front should be expected over the coming weeks, however.

When speaking to the media at the league meetings, Bills general manager Brandon Beane said (via Ryan O’Halloran of the Buffalo News) nothing is imminent regarding a Cook extension. The team has turned its attention to the upcoming draft. As a result, a Cook deal may very well not be in place until after it is over.

Buffalo’s primary back for the past two seasons, Cook has earned a Pro Bowl nod each time in that span. The former second-rounder topped 1,500 scrimmage yards in 2023 and upped his end zone production considerably this past year. Cook tied for the league lead with 16 scores on the ground, something which helped inform his asking price. $15MM per season represents the target for a long-term deal, something Cook doubled down on shortly after letting it be known he aims to be one of the best-compensated backs in the NFL.

The top of the RB market sat at $19MM in AAV (Christian McCaffrey) at the start of the offseason, but it has since moved. In the wake of his historic debut Eagles campaign, Saquon Barkley inked an extension averaging $20.6MM per year; to no surprise, though, that investment was not followed by a series of lucrative free agent pacts at the position. If Cook, 25, were to hit his stated asking price on a long-term accord, he would rank third in the financial pecking order behind Barkley and McCaffrey and just ahead of Jonathan Taylor.

2024 fourth-rounder Ray Davis, veteran Ty Johnson and journeyman Darrynton Evans are also in place on the Bills’ backfield depth chart. Cook – who has handled 444 regular season carries across the past two years – is in line to remain the team’s lead option at the position, but as things stand he is entering the final year of his deal. Buffalo would avoid a potential departure on the open market next spring with an extension, but efforts to work out a deal on this front appear to be on pause until the draft is in the books.

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