Blockbuster Trade Idea Would Move All-Pro Safety To Bills
The last few years have seen some key investments by the Buffalo Bills into their secondary. Last offseason, Taylor Rapp and Taron Johnson were both locked into three-year deals.
Advertisement
This time around, the Bills kept Damar Hamlin on a cheap one-year deal and inked Christian Benford to a handsome four-year $76 million deal. They also used their first-round draft pick on cornerback Maxwell Hairston.
All these players vary in skill and ability, but represent the Bills' ongoing efforts to maintain a solid secondary in a conference littered with potent passing game threats. This collection of players have mostly been around for the team's recent runs where they have fallen short.
Buffalo wants to end that streak and finally break through this coming season. To do so, that may require a little extra aggression on their roster construction. Since free agency has passed, Bleacher Report's Brent Sobleski has offered a blockbuster three-team deal that would help the Bills accomplish that.
In this trade, he has the Bills getting New Orleans Saints safety Tyrann Mathieu and sending tight end Dawson Knox to the Saints while the Atlanta Falcons get Kirk Cousins.
Advertisement
"Tyrann Mathieu is a New Orleans native and wants to play in his hometown. However, a trade to a perennial Super Bowl contender should be enough to get him on board, even if it's in Buffalo.
"The Bills can use the three-time first-team All-Pro all over the field as a defensive chess piece. At 33, he's still a better safety than Taylor Rapp and Damar Hamlin. Buffalo needs the type of players who can push the team over the top. Mathieu can be one of those individuals."
Mathieu clears those players in front of him and also brings a championship pedigree. Mathieu won Super Bowl LIV with the Kansas City Chiefs but has spent the last three years playing for his hometown team.
His talent and championship experience are attributes a team like the Bills are starved for. There's a clear line of reasoning where Mathieu plugs in and immediately upgrades this unit still plenty capable under Sean McDermott.
Advertisement
Of course this trade would require the sacrifice of Knox though the Bills are equipped to deal with such a loss if it means gaining a player of Mathieu's ilk on the opposite side.
General manager Brandon Beane has pulled several daring move in recent seasons and this one would fall into that category. Mathieu may not be the exact target, but do not be surprised if Buffalo goes on the hunt for a veteran player who can enhance their title chances.
Related: Josh Allen is Huge Fan of Patriots' Young QB
Related: 'Vital' Bills Cash In On Josh Allen's Prime With Super Bowl Triumph
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 25, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
11 minutes ago
- New York Times
Phillies takeaways: Mick Abel's place in rotation, outfield slugging, Seth Johnson impresses
PHILADELPHIA — There were no runs on the scoreboard, two outs, and Mick Abel had San Diego's No. 9 hitter in an 0-2 count. It was the second inning in the first game of Wednesday's doubleheader. He threw Padres catcher Elias Díaz an elevated fastball for ball one. He bounced a curveball. He fired a slider that was a ball out of hand. He countered with a fastball that was even higher than the one before it. Advertisement That was the beginning of the end. 'I got in some leverage counts and was trying too hard to make the pitches, if that makes sense,' Abel said. 'Just not naturally letting it happen.' Two more walks and a double later, the 23-year-old rookie righty had experienced his harshest big-league lesson yet. Abel is the fifth starter in a rotation that has carried the Phillies to the Fourth of July. The Phillies have seen some good — against Pittsburgh, Toronto and Miami — and some bad against tougher lineups. But, before Wednesday's 6-4 loss, Abel was at least attacking hitters. He did not walk a batter in his first two big-league starts. He wasn't missing as many bats in recent outings, but at least he was competitive. Five walks in 1 2/3 innings — the first Phillies starter to do that since Garrett Stephenson in 1998 — will only prompt larger questions about where Abel fits. The Phillies expect Aaron Nola to return in August, with the possibility of him throwing from a mound as early as this weekend. They have always targeted 'July-ish' for top prospect Andrew Painter, but have indicated they would rather wait until after the All-Star break. The Phillies need one more start from the No. 5 slot before the break (Tuesday at San Francisco). They could give it to Abel. They could replace him on the roster with a reliever, go with a bigger bullpen until the break, and do a bullpen game in San Francisco. Or they could summon another starter. Maybe the Painter plans change. Probably not. 'We'll talk about it,' Phillies manager Rob Thomson said when asked about Abel's next start. At times in the minors, Abel had trouble preventing the big inning. Things spiraled too fast. He could not avoid it against San Diego. 'He was kind of missing all over the place,' catcher J.T. Realmuto said. Thomson needed to cover 18 innings Wednesday, so he let Abel go a batter or two longer than he normally might have. Advertisement 'It's not easy,' Realmuto said. 'I mean, there's a lot of pressure in that situation. So you just try to calm them down and slow things down for them a little bit. Mick's obviously got great stuff. But sometimes it's not easy to come into this scenario and be successful right away. He's done a great job for us. That's just part of the growing pains of being a young pitcher.' All of that will factor into the club's decision about next week. Moments after the first game ended, Thomson pulled Brandon Marsh aside for a dugout chat. Marsh explained why he risked making the game's 27th out at third base with the potential winning run coming to the plate in Kyle Schwarber. He knew his run didn't matter, so he figured he could go first to third because center fielder Jackson Merrill would lob the ball to second base to prevent Trea Turner, the tying run, from zooming into scoring position. It was sound thinking — except Marsh had to know there wouldn't be a play at third. He miscalculated. Merrill made a strong throw. Marsh was called out, but a replay review showed he beat the tag. Barely. 'Probably wasn't the best decision to go there, to be honest,' Marsh said. 'But I got away with it.' In the end, the play didn't matter. Schwarber struck out. A lesson, maybe, for Marsh. He started in the second game, a 5-1 Phillies win, and launched a solo homer to center. He's raised his season slash line to .262/.333/.384. 'I like the way that I'm attacking,' Marsh said. 'Definitely can improve a lot more on a lot of things. But, for what it's worth, I like where I'm at personally.' The Phillies are off Thursday, then will face a lefty starter Friday and Saturday. Marsh probably won't play. Neither will Max Kepler, who also homered in Wednesday's nightcap. Got the Maximum height on this one — Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) July 2, 2025 It marked the first time the Phillies had two homers from their outfield in a game since March 31 — the fourth game of the season. This homer was Kepler's first extra-base hit in 50 plate appearances (since June 16). He should have had one earlier in the week, but Merrill made a spectacular catch to rob him of a three-run homer. Advertisement That was the second time this season a center fielder has taken back a potential Kepler three-run homer. Without those plays, he'd have a .718 OPS for the season instead of his .685. Either way, the Phillies need more from Kepler, who hasn't had a consistent power stroke. He's hit the ball harder than last season and doubled his walk rate. However, many of the underlying metrics are unfavorable to Kepler. The Phillies will see it through, for now. This was Seth Johnson's third big-league appearance, and he's had a large gap between each one. So, when he caught Trenton Brooks looking, on a curveball, for his first strikeout in the majors, he did not think to throw the baseball out of play to preserve the keepsake. 'I forgot,' Johnson said. The rookie was just happy for another chance to make an impression. It was a good one. He was summoned for a day as the 27th man permitted in doubleheader rules. He tossed two scoreless innings in Wednesday's first game with two strikeouts. His fastball almost touched 100 mph. He threw some decent curveballs and changeups along with his slider. 'He was really good,' Thomson said. 'I mean, really good. Throwing strikes. He broke out that curveball, and it's sharp. It's a swing-and-miss pitch. So there's a lot of things we have to talk about.' It didn't take the Phillies long; they sent Johnson back to Triple A after the doubleheader ended. The Phillies' search for competent relief continues; more swing-and-miss stuff would help. They entered Wednesday's doubleheader with one reliever among the top 50 (of 174 qualified relievers) in strikeout rate. That was Jordan Romano at 27.3 percent. Matt Strahm ranked 58th, Tanner Banks 73rd and Orion Kerkering 107th. Last season, the Phillies had two relievers — Strahm and Jeff Hoffman — who ranked in the top 15 in strikeout rate. Kerkering was 32nd. Advertisement They are desperate for some whiffs. Johnson didn't exactly feature that; he had only three swings-and-misses in his 33 pitches. San Diego did not swing-and-miss at any of the 18 fastballs he fired, although the pitch sat 98.6 mph and topped at 99.8 mph. Maybe that's why the Phillies opted not to keep him around. 'That's actually the first time I've gotten to catch him,' Realmuto said. 'I was impressed with his stuff. It was really good.' As far as stuff goes, Kerkering showed some of his best in Wednesday's second game. He struck out two Padres in a scoreless inning. His four-seam fastball averaged 98.8 mph — the hardest it's been in an outing all season. Kerkering has allowed one earned run over his last 22 appearances, dating back to May 9.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest: How to watch, plus what to know about Joey Chestnut's return
If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission. Pricing and availability are subject to change. Joey Chestnut and Miki Sudo hold the respective records for most hot dogs eaten in the men's and women's Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest. (YUKI IWAMURA/AFP via Getty Images) The Fourth of July is fast approaching, and you know what that means: It's time for fireworks, barbecue and tuning in to watch Joey "Jaws" Chestnut scarf down upwards of 70 hot dogs (and buns!) in 10 minutes. Chestnut is returning to compete at the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest. The long-reigning champ was banned in 2024 after signing an endorsement deal with Nathan's competitor Impossible Foods. But this Friday, Chestnut returns to compete at Coney Island. Chestnut will aim to beat his world record of 76 dogs and buns. He'll face 2024 men's champion and No. 2-ranked eater Patrick Bertoletti, No. 3 Geoffrey Esper, No. 4 James Webb and No. 6 Nick Wehry. On the women's side, Miko Sudo remains the reigning champ, with a personal best of 51 hot dogs and buns set last year. Will she set a new record this year? Here's what to know about how to watch Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest live on July 4. How to watch the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest: Date: July 4 Advertisement Time: Coverage starts at 10:45 a.m. ET; men's contest begins at noon ET Location: Coney Island, New York Channel: ESPN2, ESPN3 (web only), ESPN Streaming: DirecTV, Fubo and more When is Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest? Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest is held annually on the Fourth of July. 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest time: Coverage of this year's competition will begin at 10:45 a.m. on ESPN3 with the women's contest. Then, at noon, coverage of the men's competition will begin on ESPN2. 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest channel: ESPN will once again broadcast the hot dog-eating contest. The main event will air live on ESPN2 before being re-broadcast on ESPN, while the women's contest will air on ESPN3. The event will not be available to stream on ESPN+. Advertisement Need to find a way to watch the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest? Here's what we recommend if you don't already have cable: Watch ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPN3 DirecTV DirecTV offers multiple live TV packages geared toward sports fans, with access to ESPN's suite of channels, ABC and more starting at $69.99/month. For ESPN3 content, you can log in to with DirecTV. You can try any tier free for five days before committing. Try free at DirecTV 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest TV schedule: All times Eastern 10:45 a.m. - Women's contest (ESPN3) 11 a.m. - Miki Sudo cam (ESPN3) 12 p.m. - Men's contest (ESPN2) 12:30 p.m. - Joey Chestnut cam (ESPN3) 5 p.m. - Main event re-airing (ESPN) 6 p.m. - Main event re-airing (ESPN2) 9 p.m. - Main event re-airing (ESPN) Who is competing in the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest? The 2025 contest will see the return of top-ranked eater Joey Chestnut. He'll compete alongside 2024 men's Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Champion and No. 2-ranked eater Patrick Bertoletti, No. 3 Geoffrey Esper, No. 4 James Webb and No. 6 Nick Wehry. Advertisement On the women's side, Miko Sudo will look to win her fourth-straight Mustard Belt and her 11th overall. Her competition includes No. 9-ranked eater Michelle Lesco, among others. 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest record: The men's world record is 76 hot dogs and buns, set by Joey Chestnut in 2021. The women's world record is 51 hot dogs and buns, set by Miko Sudo last year. 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest prize: In addition to the Mustard Belt, the champions of this year's competition will each get $10,000. Second-place finishers will get $5,000 each, and third-place finishers get $2,500 apiece. Why was Joey Chestnut banned from the 2024 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest? Joey Chestnut was banned in 2024 after he signed an endorsement deal with Impossible Foods. Nathan's viewed it as a conflict of interest with its all-beef product and banned him from competing. Advertisement Chestnut has since agreed to exclusively endorse Nathan's hot dogs as part of a three-year contract with Nathan's and the International Federation of Competitive Eating. More ways to watch Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest:
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Will Cleveland's new WNBA team be the Rockers? How did it earn an expansion franchise?
This has been a historic week in the WNBA. In one day, the league announced three new expansion teams, from the 13 playing now, to 18 by 2030. It continues up-and-to-the-right growth for the W since 2020. The first franchise which will begin play among those three franchises is in Cleveland in 2028. This marks the WNBA's return to the city, where the Cleveland Rockers were one of the eight original teams before they disbanded in 2003. Advertisement If the early interest in tickets is any indication, Cleveland seems ready for a WNBA team again. Nic Barlage, the CEO of Rock Entertainment Group, which owns the new franchise and the Cavaliers, said they already had more than 3,100 season ticket deposits as of Wednesday morning. It is the culmination of what he said was a process that began three years ago as the company grew more interested and invested in women's sports as part of its portfolio of sports properties. Barlage spoke to about how Cleveland got a WNBA team, why it bid for one, whether it'll bring the Rockers name back, and why he feels it was the right time to invest in a WNBA franchise. Congrats on the new WNBA team coming to Cleveland. Obviously, this has all been a long time in the making. Can you walk me through how you guys landed this team? As we were looking at our portfolio, we really started to see the momentum and the movement that was happening around women's sports, and so we partnered with the WTA 250 event here locally, called Tennis in the Land, which we've had a wonderful experience with. We're actually more of the sales and execution agency for them. We were part of the NWSL bid to bring women's professional soccer to Cleveland. Ultimately, that wasn't successful, but it was a great learning for us. But internally, through all these partnerships and endeavors, we've really been focused on the WNBA. Advertisement Our chairman, Dan Gilbert, has a deep, deep, deep, profound passion for basketball, and we have a deep, profound passion for leveling the playing field, if you will, and providing equal opportunity for both men and women. Our Cavs youth academy, which is 60,000 kids across the state of Ohio, upstate New York, Western (Pennsylvania). The largest growing segment of that has been young girls, who've been growing about 30 percent in participation rates year over year for the last two or three years. And so we noticed all this convergence of all of these things coming together. When we hosted the women's Final Four in 2024, it was historic viewership. We sold out the tournament in the fastest it's ever sold out. … Obviously we had a lot of unique opportunities in hosting Caitlin Clark and the undefeated University of South Carolina Dawn Staley-led Gamecocks. But all those things kind of said, alright, we're going to push our chips all in on something. When we push our chips all in on something, especially with having the backing of Dan and all that he thinks about, dreams about, and the vision that he has, this crystallized pretty quickly. And from there it just got down to how we wanted to execute the bid, and how big and bold we can make it. The bidding process for this latest round seemed to get pretty frothy. There was, I think, the most intense interest I've seen in getting a WNBA team to date. When did you guys find out that you had landed a team? And what do you think put you over the top? We found out right around (NBA) All-Star in February, maybe a little bit after that was the final confirmation. Obviously, there's a lot you have to work through once you're kind of selected. You've got legal documents, those kinds of things. But from our perspective, we think it's very symbolic of the Midwest. We think Cleveland is a city on the rise. We think we had such a great run in the early 1900s, we went through some tough times, and now we're kind of back in a bold way. Advertisement And if you study Cleveland at all, what people realize is sports and entertainment is really leading the resurgence and creating the momentum in this community. When we throw the ball in the air in April 2028 or May of 2028, Dan and the Gilbert family will have invested $1.1 billion in sports and entertainment infrastructure. Not like buying teams and moving them here, but like real infrastructure in Northeast Ohio. And so when you start to think about the infrastructure we have, the fan base that is unrelentingly passionate about sports. We were the most ready-made bid. So is it going to be the Cleveland Rockers 2.0? It's a great question. We're not going to commit to a brand identity at this point. We love the history of the Rockers, obviously, being one of the original eight. But at this stage in the process, we are absolutely going to have a dimension of our brand and our intellectual property that will pay homage to the Rockers, but we want to be very considerate of where Cleveland is going, where our fan base is going, as opposed to where it's been. And so for us, it's a little bit of that balance. Like paying honor and homage to the past while really focused on our bright future. And so from that perspective, we're going to go through a pretty intensive, thoughtful, inclusive process over the next six months. Advertisement Just trying to read a little bit into what you're saying, it sounds like it won't be the Rockers … No, I didn't say that. The Rockers will definitely be an option. The Rockers will definitely be a part of the mix of the options we look at. We just don't know if that's the right move for us yet. We haven't been able to publicly talk about this for a long time. We want to embrace the community. We want to be inclusive of their thoughts and their insights before we just pick a path, but Rockers will absolutely be under consideration. The reason I ask is — you guys might be the Rockers, you might not. The Portland expansion team looks like it's leaning towards bringing the Fire name back. I don't know if Detroit will be the Shock as well. But there is some nostalgia coating for some of these new WNBA teams. Do you think reboots can work for WNBA teams now, bringing back a less successful but sepia-toned era of the league? I absolutely think retro works. I think it can work depending on the situation. But I think for us, there's such a new fan base here in Cleveland. Cleveland has a different vibe to it now. They have a different vibrancy to the city. The communities that are going to be attracted to this demographic of this product, they might even look a little bit different or be a bit more involved. And so we just want to make sure, like I said, we're being thoughtful and inclusive of that. I would never commit to that without getting real data and getting real insights. Honestly, I could speak to the other markets, it would be irresponsible. Advertisement Were you surprised the W went to three teams in the end? Did you think it would be just the 16 teams and were you surprised that they went all the way up to 18? No, I wasn't. As you look at it, whenever this much interest — and this much interest is being met by a real business performance … When I was doing an interview the other day, I mentioned there was a Sunday night Fever and Sky game, I think it may have been about a month ago, on a Sunday, it did 1.7 million viewers. I think Yankees-Red Sox hit 1.3 million viewers. When you're seeing this much insatiable demand for something, I wasn't surprised at all. When the league is led by commissioner (Cathy) Engelbert, and obviously is a part of the broader NBA family led by (NBA commissioner) Adam Silver and (NBA deputy commissioner) Mark Tatum, they're very thoughtful about these things. They put a lot of strategy and rigor into it. And so when they came back into three teams, and all three already had NBA infrastructure wrapped around them, it made a lot of sense. And by the way, they're great cities. They're great markets. I think it made a lot of sense. Advertisement You mentioned the NBA infrastructure. I think it's been unmissable that five of the six expansion teams in the last three years, or six of the six, depending how you want to do your accounting practices, have gone to owners with NBA ties. Do you think that's been intentional? Is there something that has given NBA ownership groups who want a WNBA team a leg up in that process? Are NBA owners the best served to own and run WNBA teams right now? Our thesis on this is . And I think Adam shares a similar thesis. We have commercial infrastructure. We have administrative infrastructure. We have marketing infrastructure. We have venues, right? And so when you start thinking about the infrastructure we can wrap around these assets — and by the way, we have decades of institutional knowledge of how to operate them, both on the business side, but also on the basketball side. There's no doubt there's nuances and there's differences across the board, but, yeah, I think it's very intentional in regards to how the league is expanding. An existing NBA owner is also a minority owner of the WNBA in the current financial structure. So there's a lot of incentive from our perspective to be a part of the growth of the WNBA, and I think Adam is really driving that in partnership with Cathy. The $250 million expansion fee is a really interesting number. It's obviously the largest in WNBA history, and five times more than what the Golden State group paid to get the Valkyries. I've been reporting on WNBA expansion for a while, and there was kind of this apprehension about even getting to $50 million back in 2022. Interested investors didn't know if it would be worth it, if the business of a team and the league could support that kind of valuation. And now you have three teams, three ownership groups, paying that $250 million. There were more than 10 bidders, if I remember correctly. Why did you think that that kind of expansion fee was worth it? And why do you think valuations have risen so much? I won't confirm the fee, but what I will say is, from our chairman, Dan, throughout the entire organization, we have a firm belief that money and numbers, they don't lead, they follow in situations like this. And we look at being the 16th team as being very much still an early mover. When you look at minority stakes that have been reported, that have been sold, whether it's for the Liberty, whether it's for the Seattle Storm in the last couple of months, we think this is an early-mover type of situation, and one that we're fully embracing. Advertisement Once again, it wasn't driven by the money and the numbers. It was driven by the impact we can make in our community, also the trajectory of the game. I mentioned the viewership earlier, but if you look at all the major key performance indicators across the league: attendance, viewership, merchandise, sales — everything is on this rocket ship type of trajectory. So for us, it was about how fast can we get involved and how quickly can we build a platform that inspires the next generation of young girls and young women across the entire state of Ohio and throughout our region? It also is another dimension. We own a local sports network in Rock Entertainment Sports Network. It's another dimension for us to be able to host on there as well. It's a key component and a key asset of this portfolio and this broader platform that we've been building for quite some time now, and it's the perfect complement. So when you have those types of dynamics, you do your diligence, you make sure you're being responsible with the financial resources that you're deploying. But we are firm believers that the best days of this league are in front of us. … If this thing gets to 25, 30 teams, which we think it will, that is all green field opportunity in regards to expansion of regular-season games, expansion of playoff games, expansion of media rights. What you're seeing right now is the fundamental and foundational return of the WNBA, and it's going to be a foundation that's going to launch it to new heights, sustainable heights. I know there's some owners out there that are aspiring for billion-dollar valuations over a period of time, we fully support that. But once again, for us, it's not about the money and the numbers, it's about the impact that we can create, and we think that impact will lead to much higher trajectories of valuation as we go forward. I was going to ask if you think a billion-dollar valuation for a WNBA team might be possible in the future, but maybe I'm setting my sights too low. Look, anytime you have viewership that is hitting these levels, anytime you have attendance that is hitting these levels, and you have a very finite amount of assets, this becomes a scarcity investment at the end of the day. When you have that type of scarcity and that type of stickiness and that type of growth, great things can happen. Advertisement This article originally appeared in The Athletic. WNBA, Sports Business 2025 The Athletic Media Company