News

Bills running back James Cook ends contract standoff by agreeing to a four-year deal

Bills running back James Cook ends contract standoff by agreeing to a four-year deal

Buffalo Bills' James Cook stands on the sidelines during the second half of an NFL preseason football game against the New York Giants Saturday, Aug. 9, 2025, in Orchard Park, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jeffrey T. Barnes) Photo: Associated Press


By JOHN WAWROW AP Sports Writer
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Bills running back James Cook has ended his contract standoff by signing a four-year deal, Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane said Wednesday.
Cook’s deal will pay him $48 million over the four years, two people with knowledge of the agreement confirmed to The Associated Press.
The contract includes $30 million in guaranteed money, one of the people said. They spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because financial details of the contract have not been announced.
The Athletic first reported the agreement.
The new deal comes a day after the fourth-year player ended his weeklong standoff by returning to practice. Cook skipped four straight sessions and although he took part in warmups, he declined to play in Buffalo’s preseason-opener against the New York Giants on Saturday.
“I think there was good faith on both parts,” Beane said, noting an emphasis was placed on getting a deal done once Cook returned to practice Tuesday.
Cook was the NFL’s co-leader with 16 touchdowns rushing last season.
Cook was selected by Buffalo in the second round of the 2022 draft out of Georgia. His older brother is Dalvin Cook, best known for his six seasons in Minnesota and who spent last year appearing in two games with Dallas.
Cook’s 18 touchdowns, including two receiving, doubled his combined production in his first two seasons (four TDs rushing, five receiving). And he was part of an offense that finished second in the league in averaging more than 30 points per outing.
Until Wednesday, Cook proved to be the odd-man out in general manager Brandon Beane’s offseason binge of signing core players to multiyear contract extensions. The group was made up of quarterback Josh Allen, receiver Khalil Shakir, edge rusher Greg Rousseau, linebacker Terrel Bernard and cornerback Christian Benford.
In June, Cook said he didn’t begrudge his teammates for getting extensions.
“I love those guys. Whatever they got paid, they got paid. That’s not my problem,” Cook said. “In the meantime, I’m here to work and be where my feet are at.”
After practicing fully during the Bills’ first eight sessions of training camp this year, Cook began his “hold-in” on Aug. 3 by watching practice wearing a white sweatsuit along the sideline.
Cook also declined to participate in the Bills’ voluntary spring sessions before reporting and practicing in the team’s three-day mandatory minicamp in June.
He said the reason behind his decision to report was not wanting to risk getting fined.
“I like my money,” Cook said. “That’s why I’m here.”
___
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Recent Headlines

2 minutes ago in Business, Government, Lifestyle, Local, People

Mitchell Artist Wins Prestigious Midwest Disability Arts Award

Fresh
Brianna Wiersema Mitchell artist 2025 Midwest Award for Artists with Disabilities disabled artists Midwest recognition South Dakota award-winning artist regional arts awards Midwest creativity and inclusion in the arts supporting disabled artists 2025 Mitchell SD arts community disability arts recognition program Midwest arts and culture awards

Mitchell artist Brianna Wiersema won the 2025 Midwest Award for Artists with Disabilities, one of nine honorees selected from 400 submissions.

5 minutes ago in Business, Government, Lifestyle, Local, People

Rhoden Unveils $650 Million Prison Plan for Sioux Falls Site

Fresh
South Dakota new state prison plan Benson Road prison site Sioux Falls Governor Larry Rhoden $650 million proposal South Dakota prison task force support Lincoln County prison site alternative South Dakota rehabilitation and recidivism vocational training space prison design South Dakota special session Sept. 23 prison construction cost savings Nebraska vs. South Dakota prison proposal

Gov. Larry Rhoden unveiled a $650M plan for a new Sioux Falls state prison at Benson Road, cutting costs by $175M ahead of the Sept. 23 special session.

3 hours ago in National

Hegseth and Caine visit Puerto Rico as US steps up military operations in the Caribbean

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived in Puerto Rico on Monday for an unexpected visit as the U.S. steps up its military operations against drug cartels in the Caribbean.