logo
James Cook sits out Bills practice for first time amid contract stalemate, cites 'business'

James Cook sits out Bills practice for first time amid contract stalemate, cites 'business'

Yahooa day ago
The James Cook hold-in has commenced.
After participating at practice since the start of Bills training camp, Buffalo's Pro Bowl running back showed up to Sunday's session in street clothes. When asked by reporters why he didn't participate, Cook offered a one-word answer:
"Business," Cook said.
When asked about practicing on Monday, Cook offered the same answer: "Business."
Per ESPN's Alaina Getzenberg, Cook kept repeating the word "business" to reporters from there. The Bills declined to comment on the situation, according to Getzenberg.
So it's safe to say that Cook's lack of participation was business-related.
Cook shows up to practice in sweats
Cook's been seeking a new deal the entire offseason. Despite the lack of progress on an extension, he participated at mandatory minicamp and during the opening days of training camp practice. But it was clear from the start of Sunday's session that he wasn't participating when he showed up wearing white sweats, no pads and a beanie.
Instead of running drills, Cook got his work done Sunday on a sideline exercise bike.
Cook, 25, is approaching the final season of his four-year, $5.8 million rookie contract that he signed after the Bills selected him in the second round of the 2022 draft. He's made the Pro Bowl twice while posting 1,200-plus yards from scrimmage in each of the last two seasons.
He led the NFL with 16 rushing touchdowns in 2024. He's done so for a Bills team that enters 2025 seeking its sixth straight AFC East championship and hoping to contend for the Super Bowl.
Where things stand between Cook, Bills
Cook's previously indicated on social media that he's seeking a contract valued at $15 million per season. That would make him the league's third-highest paid running back in terms of annual value behind Saquon Barkley and Christian McCaffrey. Per Over The Cap, his current average annual contract value of $1.46 million makes him the league's 51st-highest paid running back.
Cook addressed his contract status on July 24, shortly after the start of training camp.
'I mean, we have talks. I'm never going to give up,' Cook said of negotiations with the Bills, per The Athletic. 'I mean, I deserve it — what I want, what I need. It's going to eventually happen.'
When asked how confident he was in a deal getting done, Cook said this:
'I mean, however it happens, it's going to get done," Cook said. "Wherever it happens."
That same day, Bills general manager Brandon Beane addressed Cook's contract situation.
'As I've said all along, I love James Cook," Beane told reporters. "I want nothing more — you know how I am, I want to draft, develop, re-sign our own.
"It is a business. We have to fit it in, not only cash, but cap. And sometimes it's not — you can look at it and say, well, you go this website or whatever, they could fit him in if they did this and this. But we also have to look at '26, '27, and beyond because you can walk yourself into one of those years where you're like, oh man, there's not a lot of guys we can take down on those years.
"We would have to trade or cut someone that we wouldn't want to lose. So, it's not only 2025 when we're doing a deal with him or any other player. So, all those things have to make sense for us to fit it in."
Without a contract extension, Cook would enter next offseason as a free agent, though the Bills in that instance could opt to apply the franchise tag.
But that's not the immediate concern in Buffalo. For now, the Bills are trying to win a Super Bowl. And the status of their Pro Bowl running back is up in the air as Buffalo approaches its third week of training camp.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Connections: Sports Edition hints for Aug. 5, 2025, puzzle No. 316
Connections: Sports Edition hints for Aug. 5, 2025, puzzle No. 316

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

Connections: Sports Edition hints for Aug. 5, 2025, puzzle No. 316

Need help with today's Connections: Sports Edition puzzle? You've come to the right place. Welcome to Connections: Sports Edition Coach — a spot to gather clues and discuss (and share) scores. A quick public service announcement before we continue: The bottom of this article includes one answer in each of the four categories. So if you want to solve the board hint-free, we recommend you play before continuing. Advertisement You can access Tuesday's game here. Game No. 316's difficulty: 2.5 out of 5 Scroll below for one answer in each of the four categories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Yellow: STRAIGHT Green: Blue: Purple: BLOCKS The next puzzle will be available at midnight in your time zone. Thanks for playing — and share your scores in the comments! (Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic)

Trade Deal 'Losers' Have Economics on Their Side
Trade Deal 'Losers' Have Economics on Their Side

Bloomberg

timea minute ago

  • Bloomberg

Trade Deal 'Losers' Have Economics on Their Side

Mercantilism — essentially the idea that exports are good and imports bad — is the most miraculously tenacious fallacy in economics. Many politicians accept it as true, but even those who understand that it's a fallacy find themselves playing by its rules. The mercantilist manual says that the Trump administration has scored huge wins in its tariff confrontation with US trading partners, and the partners appear to agree. Their 'defeat' has left them humiliated and unable to explain what they did. They might not know it, but what they did was smart. In trade policy, 'defeat' is often underrated.

Kyle Schwarber hears MVP chants, hits slam to reach 40 homers: ‘The guy is unbelievable'
Kyle Schwarber hears MVP chants, hits slam to reach 40 homers: ‘The guy is unbelievable'

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

Kyle Schwarber hears MVP chants, hits slam to reach 40 homers: ‘The guy is unbelievable'

PHILADEPHIA — The 'MVP' chants started when Kyle Schwarber stepped to the plate. The roar continued as he sat on the first pitch of his second at-bat, in the sixth, a fastball outside, and escalated when his bat connected with the next pitch, a 95.9 mph fastball. It was a crack so sharp, so clear, all of Citizens Bank Park knew. Advertisement Fans leaped from their seats. Edmundo Sosa, Weston Wilson and Trea Turner watched the ball sail 390 feet, then ran the bases. Pitcher Jesús Luzardo saw the ball fly and knew, with how long the sixth had gone and was going, he would not return to the game. The ball was gone. Schwarber's second grand slam of the season rocked into the right-center stands. 'Those are the moments you take in as a player,' Schwarber said. 'Those are special things that happen. Those are things that just go in the back of the memory and you hold onto for a while.' The grand slam, Schwarber's 40th homer of the season, sealed a 13-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles on Monday. It was his second home run of the game, and 10th since his dominance in the All-Star Game swing-off on July 15. Now, Schwarber leads the National League in home runs, sitting second in the majors (Cal Raleigh has 42). With more home runs comes more difficulty for everyone trying to describe what Schwarber is doing. Manager Rob Thomson listed what Schwarber has accomplished this season: the big hits, the home runs, the RBIs. Harrison Bader, a Phillies player for all of five days, said he's watched Schwarber's routine, poise and work ethic and said it 'really does make sense why he's so successful.' 'It was incredible,' Thomson said. 'He had MVP chants, and I think they're warranted,' Luzardo said. 'The guy is unbelievable,' Bader said. The designated hitter had somewhat of a down June. And down, for Schwarber, meant a slash line of .214/.347/.408 with six home runs and a .756 OPS as he dealt with tougher pitching. From the All-Star break through Sunday, he posted a 1.164 OPS with a .776 slugging percentage. Throwing him a fastball in the zone, as the Orioles did on both home runs, was a grave error. The 'MVP' chants, which continued when Schwarber singled in the eighth, are fun. Schwarber said they feed into his efforts at the plate. They make his at-bats even more of an event. But could there be something real to his MVP chances? Advertisement It would require a lot. Hitting 60 home runs would break the franchise record set by Ryan Howard (58 in 2006) and make him just the second Phillies player in history to reach 50 homers in a season. Shohei Ohtani, the three-time MVP, sits third in MLB with 38 home runs. A first-place MVP finish for Schwarber seems unlikely. A top-three or top-five finish, however, seems within the realm of possibility. Schwarber, for all his strong seasons, has placed no better than 15th in MVP voting. Cracking the top-five, especially in a contract year, matters — even if Schwarber, for now, is caught up in the day-to-day. 'I'm not trying to go out there and think about records or anything like that,' Schwarber said. 'I'm just trying to go out on a daily basis and try to help these guys. If (breaking Howard's record) happens, it's great. If it doesn't, it's great.' Helping the other guys has been key since the All-Star break ended July 18. Schwarber has 10 homers since then. Bryce Harper has seven. Their power hitting, slowly, has caught on. The Phillies, from Opening Day through the end of June, ranked 16th with 89 home runs. Since the All-Star Break, the club leads the league in homers (33). And Monday marked the Phillies' first game with six home runs since Sept. 6, 2021. Harper homered in the first inning, and Schwarber in the third. Then, with two outs in the sixth, the rest of the lineup came together. Bader had his first hit in a Phillies uniform, a three-run homer, to provide a 6-3 lead. Five batters — and three hits — later, Schwarber hit the grand slam. The power, long a question mark for this team, seems to have arrived. There is also something to be said about the Phillies — and not just Schwarber and Harper — delivering timely hits late in close games as they did Friday and Monday. The combination, should the Phillies continue to embrace it, could be crucial. Advertisement '(Home runs) excite the crowd,' Schwarber said. 'It excites the dugout. You can kind of feel that energy, and it can kind of carry over to the next at-bat for someone. You get the fans (energetic), they're still going, and the next thing you know, it's more runs, more runs, more runs. ' (Top photo of Kyle Schwarber: Heather Barry / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store