Times Record

Diggs trade was the right move

- Sal Maiorana

For most of his four seasons with the Buffalo Bills, I really didn’t have a problem with Stefon Diggs’ mercurial nature, chalking it up to the well-worn axiom that these days, you just come to expect that star NFL wide receivers are going to be divas.

Diggs is a diva, plain and simple. He could be a little exhausting in that regard, and we knew this about him from his days in Minnesota before the Bills acquired him in a trade. It wasn’t much of an issue in Buffalo, though, until it bubbled to the surface during and then after the playoff flameout against Cincinnati in January 2023.

We, meaning the media, the fans, and most importantl­y his teammates and coaches, put up with it because in his first three seasons with the Bills, he was a tremendous player, the kind of player of whom you wondered, “What would the Bills do without this guy?”

And that was a valid argument because with Diggs soaring the way he was, the Bills ranked second, third and second in points scored, and third, fifth and second in yards gained those three years. Josh Allen, regardless of what Diggs’ brother Trevon thinks, was the primary reason for that unbridled success, but Diggs was his unassailab­le wing man.

The numbers speak for themselves. In those first three years, Diggs was brilliant. He led the NFL in both catches (127) and yards (1,535) in 2020, the first Bills player to ever do that on his way to setting team records in both categories. In 2021 and 2022, his numbers dipped ever so slightly, but he still topped 100 catches and 1,000 yards while his touchdowns increased from eight in 2020 to 10 in 2021 to a team-record-tying 11 in 2022.

But the proverbial worm turned that dark, snowy day when the Bengals drummed the Bills 27-10 at Highmark Stadium.

Diggs’ sideline meltdown when he was caught on the network broadcast screaming and waving his arms at Allen about something, followed by his immature bolting from the locker room after the game before coach Sean McDermott had even addressed the team, was abhorrent behavior for a team captain.

It was his competitiv­e nature, many said. Nah, it was childish and selfish, and it was a precursor to the 2022 winter/spring of discontent when Diggs spent his time sending out cryptic messages on his social media channels, stirring a fan base already rubbed raw by the loss to Cincinnati, all the while skipping the entire Bills’ offseason program.

At the time, my opinion was that it wasn’t all that big a deal for him to blow off what I consider the silly season, those OTA sessions that mean virtually nothing to a veteran player. That stuff might be necessary for young players and bottom of the roster players trying to make a team, but for veterans like Diggs, they should not have to be at a team facility in April and May sitting through meetings, walking through drills, and then playing touch football. I’ll stand and die on that hill if necessary.

However, when Diggs created the needless drama on the eve of the first day of the team’s mandatory minicamp in mid-June – which I do believe all players should attend – that’s when I started to wonder about what Diggs’ deal was. Until that point, I didn’t question his desire to be in Buffalo and play for the Bills, but this changed it for me.

Yes, Diggs did show up, but why didn’t he practice that first day? Instead, he met with McDermott, Brandon Beane and Allen, apparently to clear the air about what he was feeling in the months after the Bengals game. OK, fine, have the kumbaya talk, but why not go out and practice with the rest of his teammates?

McDermott clearly botched the handling of that and made things worse. A ravenous media and fan base wanted to know where things stood with Diggs, and when he was asked whether Diggs was there that day, McDermott said he was not. When asked if that concerned him, he said it was “very concerning.”

All the while, as McDermott admitted the next day, Diggs was there but the coach gave him permission to opt out of practice and leave. So, semantical­ly Diggs was not at One Bills Drive when McDermott was asked, and all that did was set off a firestorm because everyone thought Diggs hadn’t even bothered to show up.

It was such a stupid day for the organizati­on, and McDermott’s role was central to that, but here’s the thing: Diggs should not have been excused. He was there, and he should have been on the field with everyone else. Further, he should have spoken to reporters afterward to put all of the nonsense of that offseason in the rearview mirror, but he declined. Instead, all of it festered until the first day of training camp.

And now here we are, less than a year later, and Diggs has been traded to the Texans.

 ?? TINA MACINTYRE-YEE/ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE ?? Stefon Diggs was going to count $27.8 million on the Bills cap this year and $27.3 million in 2025. By trading him, the $27.8 million cap hit plus all of his future salary goes with him to Houston. In Buffalo, it is replaced by a one-time $31.1 million cap hit which is all the prorated bonus money he has already pocketed, which the Bills now have to immediatel­y absorb on their 2024 cap.
TINA MACINTYRE-YEE/ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE Stefon Diggs was going to count $27.8 million on the Bills cap this year and $27.3 million in 2025. By trading him, the $27.8 million cap hit plus all of his future salary goes with him to Houston. In Buffalo, it is replaced by a one-time $31.1 million cap hit which is all the prorated bonus money he has already pocketed, which the Bills now have to immediatel­y absorb on their 2024 cap.

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