Robert Griffin III claimed that Stefon Diggs and Josh Allen are having ‘personal’ issues with each other

This is the LAST thing the Bills need right now.

For a bona fide Super Bowl contender like the Buffalo Bills, everyone has to be on the same page — especially their best players.

When it comes to Human Terminator quarterback Josh Allen and superstar receiver Stefon Diggs, that doesn’t seem to be the case right now. According to one NFL personality, Diggs’ strange absence from the start of the Bills’ minicamp earlier this month had to do with a rift between himself and Allen.

On Wednesday’s episode of the Rich Eisen Show, ESPN’s Robert Griffin III had an interesting take on the Bills’ situation with their top playmaker. Apparently, per “some people close” to Buffalo, Griffin maintains that it’s a “personal thing” between Diggs and Allen.

Why?

Diggs believes Allen unnecessarily (and occasionally) ignores him in crunch time, especially in last January’s deflating Divisional Round loss to the Cincinnati Bengals. Honestly, if true, this is quite the shift from what I thought was a dynamic and tight-knit relationship:

I can’t say I agree if Diggs is distraught with how Allen uses him whenever the Bills have their back against the wall. I know he was frustrated after Buffalo’s defeat at the hands of the Bengals, but this wouldn’t be the path to project them.

In the three years since the Bills traded for Diggs, he’s accumulated a whopping 486 targets. He’s never been lower than fifth overall in total targets in a single campaign and is one of the most-used receivers in pro football. Full stop. In fact, part of the reason the Bills were (are?) a rumored suitor for DeAndre Hopkins was explicitly because they leaned on Diggs’ excellence far too much in playoff contexts when defenses are usually more disciplined and constricting.

Otherwise, the Bills generally throw the ball to Diggs 10 times a game in his Buffalo career — a number that would be unsustainable in almost any other contending offense. To me, for Diggs to have any kind of issue with Allen’s trust in him as a quarterback is a player scapegoating their own disappointing individual playoff performances. In the Bills’ last three postseason exits, Diggs has recorded 13 receptions, 119 receiving yards, and zero touchdowns on 27 targets. That is, in two words: not good!

The problem for Diggs in Buffalo, if there is one, is not Allen — the quarterback who arguably elevated him to a household name and vice versa. It’s Diggs getting erased by defenses as a No. 1 option when the Bills need him most. I don’t think all of that falls at the feet of Diggs — there are extenuating offensive line and playcalling issues — but the meager production in do-or-die situations doesn’t lie.

It’s June, meaning reported team heat such as this is bound to evaporate by the time meaningful football is played in September, and will likely be viewed in a trivial sense soon enough. At the very least, you’d hope the Bills and their two faces of the franchise can get back in sync before another golden opportunity for a championship floats away.