2020 NFL Draft: Full 7-round order, trade values for Bills, NFL picks

Plus, Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane hasn’t been afraid to make moves on draft day. Whether it’s an early or late round, could the Bills be on the move? Maybe. 

The 2020 NFL Draft is slowly approaching. The Buffalo Bills don’t hold a first-round pick, but there’s still going to be plenty of picks coming to the team.

Plus, Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane hasn’t been afraid to make moves on draft day. Whether it’s an early or late round, could the Bills be on the move? Maybe.

To help consider which moves could be in the works, here’s an updated look at the complete seven-round order for this year’s draft, complete with trade values for every selection:

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Bills spoke to Emmanuel Sanders right before Stefon Diggs trade

Josh Allen to Stefon Diggs sounds nice, but what about Allen to Emmanuel Sanders? Apparently that was legitimately a possibility. 

Josh Allen to Stefon Diggs sounds nice, but what about Allen to Emmanuel Sanders? Apparently that was legitimately a possibility.

According to Sanders, on the same day that Buffalo traded for Diggs, he had spoke to the Bills. Sanders was an unrestricted free agents this offseason who eventually signed with the Saints after his Super Bowl run with the 49ers in 2019.

“I spoke with the Bills for a little bit,” Sanders told The Rich Eisen Show. “And I told them, ‘Let me think about the idea, give me a night.’ And 30 minutes later the Stefon Diggs deal went through and I was like, ‘OK.’”

Apparently Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane was in a pretty impatient mood on March 16, the day the deal went down. Had Sanders simply accept their offer on the spot, it’s very unlike the Bills have Diggs.

On Sanders’ experience with the Bills, it does matchup with reports on the deal. Talks between Beane and Vikings general manager Rick Spielman reportedly moved fast that day and a deal came together. Buffalo was said to have “blown them away” with their offer, which included a first-round pick.

In addition, if the Bills did add Sanders instead of Diggs, it really shows how much the Bills don’t value size much. Beane and Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott have said various times that size doesn’t make a good wideout, talent does. The 33-year-old Sanders is only 5-foot-11, not a big-bodied guy… and niether is Diggs, 26, who’s only six-feet tall himself.

Buffalo could still add that type of target later this offseason with the 2020 NFL Draft still to come, but much offseason analysis of the Bills roster saw an opening for a large playmaker immediately. Evidently not. We’ll see if the Bills keep adding.

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Bills’ Josh Allen still on ‘cloud nine’ with Stefon Diggs trade

Bills quarterback Josh Allen is still jazzed up about his team’s trade for wide receiver Stefon Diggs.

On Thursday, new Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs still expressed some excitement about his new team. During a live stream, Diggs was very complimentary of his new quarterback, Josh Allen.

“I think he a baller, I think he’s a dog, too,” Diggs said.

Bills quarterback Josh Allen is still jazzed up about his team’s trade for wide receiver Stefon Diggs too, and returned the compliments this week despite the initial shock of the trade wearing off.

“I’m still pumped about it. I am still floating on cloud nine. I just can’t wait to work with him,” Allen told SiriusXM’s MadDog Radio. “We’ve been staying in contact and trying to devise a plan to get together. The things he can do on a football field are unbelievable – the route-running, the way he can make contested catches. I’ve talked to him on the phone a couple of times and [it’s great to see] just how cool of a dude he seems. He’s going to mesh in very well with our wide receiver group. He’s going to mesh well within our locker room.”

Some may worry with Diggs’ past, he might not sit well in Buffalo for long. With the Vikings, he became expendable because of off-field issues with the team. The Bills still paid a premium price for the two-time 1,000-yard receiver though, and we won’t know for years how things will pan out, but it appears Diggs is already trying to build a solid foundation with his new quarterback.

Unfortunately for Allen and Diggs, it’ll be unclear as to when the two will be able to start working with the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. But it sounds like as soon as the new teammates get the green light, they’ll be meeting up.

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Players, media react to Bills’ trade deal for Stefon Diggs

The Bills sent shockwaves across western New York and the NFL on Monday evening. The Bills made three moves, in total. 

The Bills sent shockwaves across western New York and the NFL on Monday evening. The Bills made three moves, in total.

Buffalo agreed to terms with linebacker AJ Klein and defensive end Mario Addison, but the night was highlighted by their trade for Stefon Diggs.

Diggs is one of the NFL’s best receivers and has wanted the Vikings to move him for some time. Anytime a headline-grabbing wideout gets his wish, it’s always big news, and many had their takes on it.

Here’s how some Bills players and national media (for better or worse) reacted to the trade deal that was on Monday:

QB Josh Allen

Adam Schefter, ESPN

LS Reid Ferguson

Sports Illustrated

OL Cody Ford

QB Matt Barkley

Chris Simms, NBC Sports

OL Dion Dawkins

Skip Bayless, FOX Sports

Dan Orlovsky, ESPN

Adam Schein, CBS Sports

Ian Rapoport, NFL Network

Warren Sharp, Sharp Football

Jason McIntyre, FOX Sports

Ian Kenyon, Bleacher Report

Dan “Big Cat” Katz, Barstool Sports

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Instant analysis: Bills strike trade deal for WR Stefon Diggs

Sandwiched into those two updates was a blockbuster trade as the Bills landed wide receiver Stefon Diggs from the Minnesota Vikings. 

The Bills made their fans wait, but they got on the board in a big, big way on Monday evening.

Buffalo agreed to terms with linebacker AJ Klein and defensive end Mario Addison. Sandwiched into those two updates was a blockbuster trade as the Bills landed wide receiver Stefon Diggs from the Minnesota Vikings.

The trade cost the Bills a hefty sum, including a first-round pick. While the 2020 NFL Draft will be a bit less exciting now, one thing is certainly clear.

The Bills are “all in” now.

Diggs isn’t a rookie, but Buffalo still landed a younger prospect. He’s also not the big-bodied wonder some hoped for. However, the 26-year-old has five years under his belt, but now the Bills don’t have to hope they select a rookie that pans out, now they have a proven and legit No. 1 receiver. Diggs shown that since entering the league.

Even as a rookie, Diggs put up numbers with the Vikings that are better than the ones the team has gotten out of their wideout room in recent memory, especially in a No. 2 role. In his first season, Diggs had 52 catches for 720 yards and four touchdowns. He’s only grown from there.

Diggs has put together back-to-back 1,000-plus yard seasons the last two years. His best year was 2018, when he caught 102 total passes. Overall in his career, Diggs has caught 365 catches for 4,623 yards and 30 touchdowns in 70 games played.

The closest thing the Bills have had to that in recent memory was Sammy Watkins. But the big key here isn’t just one player. The Bills are finally building a full offense.

Diggs joins the likes of Cole Beasley and John Brown. That duo put up some career-best numbers with quarterback Josh Allen in 2019 themselves. Beasley had a career-high six touchdowns, while Brown himself also passed the 1,000-yard receiving mark (1,060).

This trio, along with tight end reinforcement led by Dawson Knox, injects a belief into the team and their fan base which they’ve lacked for years. Sure, Buffalo’s put up a good defense under head coach Sean McDermott, but the gap between the offense and defense is getting closer.

But of course, general manager Brandon Beane only wants the offense to catch up and not have the defense regress. Not only are Addison and Klein slated to fill holes, could they improve Buffalo’s already stout defense? And don’t forget Josh Norman either, a former All-Pro that’s hopeful he can return to the form in McDermott.

So that’s right, the Bills are absolutely all in… and all eyes on Allen now.

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Stefon Diggs makes first comments since trade to Bills

Buffalo Bills WR Stefon Diggs responds to QB Josh Allen on Twitter.

Things seem all but confirmed now. Vikings….scratch that, Buffalo Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs has made his first, albeit brief, comments since joining the team via trade.

The Bills sent a slew of picks to the Vikings for the wideout, including a first-round pick. Despite a decent haul, there’s now no need to worry if Diggs is happy about teaming up his new quarterback. He sounds it.

Bills quarterback Josh Allen sent out a tweet after he heard the news. It was brief and to the point, but very creative: “Ya Digg?” the tweet read.

Well Diggs caught wind of the message and has responded. He seems ready to be with the Bills:

The Bills will need the 26-year-old playmaker ready. He’s going to be relied on from Allen and all of Bills Mafia. Diggs now joins what might be the best trio of playmakers the Bills have had in their roster in any recent memory with John Brown and Cole Beasley.

For an extensive period, Diggs has expressed an interest to leave the Vikings due to differences with the team and quarterback Kirk Cousins. Some of that raised some red flags from folks when the trade was first announced, but those concerns can probably be put to rest for now.

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B/R sends Alshon Jeffery to Bills in ‘ideal offseason trade scenario’

Bleacher Report thinks Philadelphia Eagles’ wideout Alshon Jeffery would be an “ideal” addition for the Buffalo Bills this offseason.

Though the Buffalo Bills’ offense did enough to win 10 games throughout the 2019 NFL season, to say that the unit was good would be a bit too generous.

Buffalo finished the campaign with the league’s eighth-worst offensive unit, averaging a total of just 330.2 yards per game. The grouping struggled to consistently move the ball through the air, with its 201.8 passing yards per game besting the weekly average of just six other teams.

While the Bills’ lack of success in the passing game can be partially attributed to quarterback Josh Allen’s lack of polish, it can also be attributed to his lack of weapons. Though John Brown and Cole Beasley shined in their debut seasons in Buffalo, combining for 1,838 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns, that’s where the receiving corps’ production started and stopped.

Isaiah McKenzie finished the season as the team’s third-most productive wide receiver, totaling 254 – yes, 254 – receiving yards.

As Buffalo enters the 2020 offseason, it’s clear that it needs a true No. 1 weapon, a player who can become the centerpiece of its offense.

According to Bleacher Report, Alshon Jeffery may be a perfect fit.

In a recent article in which he described “ideal offseason trade scenario[s]” for each NFL team,  B/R identified the Bills as a realistic suitor for the 29-year-old wideout, who he feels the Philadelphia Eagles may look to move this offseason:

The process [to revamp the offense]  began a year ago when general manager Brandon Beane revamped the offensive line and signed free-agent wide receivers John Brown and Cole Beasley. These moves helped lead the team to a playoff appearance, but they didn’t quite go far enough, particularly at wide receiver . . .

. . . The Philadelphia Eagles somehow thrived during their latest playoff run despite being down to three healthy wide receivers, a couple of which came from the practice squad. That’s not the way to build a roster, of course. But circumstances showed the offense doesn’t require big-dollar receivers on the outside to win, which makes Alshon Jeffery and DeSean Jackson expendable.

Buffalo has more than enough to absorb Jeffery’s $9.9 million base salary and complete its skill positions.

Though Jeffery certainly wouldn’t be a poor addition to a receiving corps that is in desperate need of a proven primary producer, whether or not Jeffery is still a ‘proven primary producer’ is debatable.

He hasn’t bested the 1,000-receiving yard plateau since 2014. Though he’s been impactful throughout his three years in Philadelphia, tallying an average of 707 receiving yards per season with the Eagles, he’s only appeared in all 16 games for the team once.

He missed the first three weeks of the 2018 season following offseason surgery. He missed six regular-season games throughout the 2019 campaign, including the final three and the postseason with a hip injury.

While Jeffery has still been relatively productive, his recent injury history is certainly a cause for concern.

Combine that with his upcoming $9.9 million cap hit, and you have a recipe that may give some teams pause while looking at a potential trade.

Buffalo could afford to take on Jeffery’s contract, as its set to enter the offseason with north of $80 million in cap space, according to OverTheCap.

But devoting an eighth of that cap space to a borderline injury-prone wide receiver who will be 30 years of age when the 2020 season commences does not seem incredibly intelligent.

Should Buffalo ultimately acquire the wideout, its Week 1 receiving corps in 2020 would be likely headlined by Jeffery, Brown, and Beasley – all of whom would be at least 30 years old.

Acquiring Jeffery would certainly push wide receiver down on the team’s list of needs entering the 2020 NFL Draft, but it wouldn’t eliminate it entirely. The Bills’ receiving corps would go from untalented to aging, in need of a young, developmental option that the team could look to pick up as early as day two.

Though there are certainly a bevy of reasons as to why Buffalo should be cautious should it choose to pursue Jeffery, a quick eye-test suggests that he could be a valuable addition.

He’s perhaps exactly what the Bills’ offense is in need of – a big-bodied wide receiver who is not afraid to go up and get the football. Though he’s soon to be on the wrong side of 30, and his injury history is certainly concerning, it’s hard to make an argument against adding talent.

Jeffery would immediately become the most talented wide receiver on Buffalo’s roster.

Bleacher Report suggests fourth-and-sixth round draft picks as compensation for Jeffery. Should the Bills acquire the former Pro Bowler for a handful of day three picks, even with his laundry list of potential hiccups – it’d be hard to be upset.

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