Skip to main contentSkip to main content
Register for more free articles.
Log in Sign up
Back to homepage
Subscriber Login
Keep reading with a digital access subscription.
Subscribe now
You have permission to edit this collection.
Edit
Arizona Daily Star
92°
  • Sign in
  • Subscribe Now
  • Manage account
  • Logout
    • Manage account
    • e-Newspaper
    • Logout
  • News
    • Sign up for newsletters
    • Local
    • Arizona
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Nation & World
    • Markets & Stocks
    • SaddleBrooke
    • Politics
    • Archives
    • News Tip
  • Arizona Daily Star
    • E-edition
    • E-edition-Tutorial
    • Archives
    • Special Sections
    • Merchandise
    • Circulars
    • Readers' Choice Awards
    • Buyer's Edge
  • Obituaries
    • Share Your Story
    • Recent Obituaries
    • Find an Obituary
  • Opinion
    • Submit a Letter
    • Submit guest opinion
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Opinion & Editorials
    • National Columnists
  • Sports
    • Arizona Wildcats
    • Greg Hansen
    • High Schools
    • Roadrunners
  • Lifestyles
    • Events Calendar
    • Arts & Theatre
    • Food & Cooking
    • Movies & TV
    • Movie Listings
    • Music
    • Comics
    • Games
    • Columns
    • Play
    • Home & Gardening
    • Health
    • Get Healthy
    • Parenting
    • Fashion
    • People
    • Pets
    • Travel
    • Faith
    • Retro Tucson
    • History
    • Travel
    • Outdoors & Rec
    • Community Pages
  • Brand Ave. Studios
  • Join the community
    • News tip
    • Share video
  • Buy & Sell
    • Place an Ad
    • Shop Local
    • Jobs
    • Homes
    • Marketplace
    • I Love A Deal
  • Shopping
  • Customer Service
    • Manage My Account
    • Newsletter Sign-Up
    • Subscribe
    • Contact us
  • Mobile Apps
  • Weather: Live Radar
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
© 2026 Lee Enterprises
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy
Arizona Daily Star
News+
Read Today's E-edition
Arizona Daily Star
News+
  • Log In
  • $1 for 3 months
    Subscribe Now
    • Manage account
    • e-Newspaper
    • Logout
  • E-edition
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Opinion
  • Wildcats
  • Lifestyles
  • Newsletters
  • Comics & Puzzles
  • Buyer's Edge
  • Jobs
  • 92° Sunny
Share This
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • WhatsApp
  • SMS
  • Email

NFL free agency: Beane speaks to the media about Von Miller, J.D. McKissic and more

  • Mar 19, 2022
  • Mar 19, 2022 Updated Apr 19, 2026

The moves weren't as fast and furious on Friday, but there was still plenty of Buffalo Bills free agency news. Check out the roundup of our Bills free agency coverage here.

Bills GM Brandon Beane says Von Miller is 'that finisher'

Buffalo Bills general manager Brandon Beane is comfortable acknowledging when two things are true at once. Take the Bills defense, for example.

Last season, Beane was impressed with some statistics, while realizing those rankings didn’t equate to the ultimate goal, a Super Bowl.

“This was a No. 1 defense, and did a lot of really good things,” Beane said Friday. “Was every game perfect? No. Was the pass rush where we wanted it all the time? No.”

In the nuance, he saw an opportunity for improvement. And as free agency played out, Beane saw the person for the job.

By Wednesday, famed pass rusher Von Miller had signed with the Bills. The former Bronco and Ram signed a six-year, $120 million contract that guarantees $51 million. Beane is expecting a strong return on investment.

“I think we're just going to get so much from him,” Beane said Friday. “He's a true pro. Obviously, he is a heck of a player. Maybe on the field, (he’s) that closer. That finisher. OK, this guy knows how to get to the quarterback. It's proven. He's done it 115 or whatever times. We don't have that on our roster, and this was the only way to get it.”

Beane was close on the stats: Miller has 115.5 career regular-season sacks. He’s added another 10.5 sacks in the playoffs. But it’s not just the immediate impact of Miller’s individual play that can boost the defense.

Beane believes Miller will help the Bills’ younger players on the defensive line, who will be able to watch his example and ask questions on his techniques. He noted Miller brings the experience of winning two Super Bowls – his win with the Broncos six years ago perhaps just as fresh as last month’s win with the Rams in Beane’s eyes.

“Unfortunately I was a part of one of his wins,” said Beane, who was then with the Panthers. “If you can't beat 'em, join 'em, as my son told me last night.”

Beane planted seeds of Miller joining long ago, having reached out about Miller when he was still in Denver. Beane stayed in touch with Miller’s agent, Joby Branion, checking in over the years. This time, Branion reached out to Beane.

Beane had appreciated Branion’s transparency in the past, so he kept asking direct questions, even if the answers may have kept Buffalo out of the running.

“One of the things I said to Joby is, ‘Is he all in? Would he really want to be here?’ ” Beane said.

At Miller’s introductory news conference Thursday, the pass rusher was clear that he was excited to be in Buffalo, while being candid about how hard it was to leave Los Angeles. Both can hold true at once; Beane knows that.

The general manager can empathize with any player wanting to take that jump, while still feeling rooted elsewhere.

“He talked about the struggle of making this decision, leaving L.A.,” Beane said. “I talked to him, I said, ‘Listen, I was in Carolina 18 years. My kids were crying when I told them that we were leaving, but it was the best thing for me. Just trust it.’ I appreciate that. Some people don't want to tell you what they're feeling internally. I respected his whole process.”

Even with all the reasons to reel Miller in, Beane knew it would take some work on the Bills’ end. First, there’s the way the team’s cap situation will play out. Beane knows things are tighter than before, a byproduct of a talented roster. He pushed back on the idea that the team would sacrifice long-term team health simply to win now. Beane doesn’t think the Bills are set up in a way where it has to be one or the other.

“I’m not trying to set this up that if we don’t win this year or the next year, then we gotta blow it up and start over,” Beane said. “We’re going to try to be a consistent contender. … I’m not sitting here going, ‘Alright, we got a two-year window, we gotta win it, and then we blow it up.’ That’s not the plan at all.”

Beane credited Jim Overdorf and Kevin Meganck of the Bills' front office for working with him to structure different contracts to avoid everything swelling at once. That work will continue.

Any financial concerns could be tied to Miller’s longevity. There again, Beane recognized concerns before dismissing them.

“We all watched this guy down the playoff stretch and what he showed he's still got,” Beane said. “I've seen pass rushers in the history of the NFL do well late into their career and into the end of their 30s. And so, I get the question of this guy's in his early 30s, but you didn't see anything down the stretch with the Rams that said he doesn't have it or he's declining by any means.”

In the end, the main hesitancy in the whole process was from Miller’s end – not for lack of enthusiasm, but for feeling out a new situation and making sure it felt right. Beane gave him time. The rushing will come later.

By the time Miller put pen to paper, contemplation gave way to elation.

“When he signed it, he was all smiles and excited to be here, and I appreciated how he went through it,” Beane said. “He was very open and honest that he wanted to get here and know this was the right thing for him.”

Quarterback Matt Barkley hints at return to Bills

The Buffalo Bills appear to be on the verge of adding to their quarterback room.

Matt Barkley, who served as Josh Allen's backup for two-plus seasons from 2018-20, tweeted a GIF of himself in a Bills uniform during a 2019 victory over Pittsburgh with just one, drawn-out word: "Buffalooooooo!!!!"

Buffalooooooo!!!! pic.twitter.com/hRz9rm98DT

— Matt Barkley (@MattBarkley) March 18, 2022

The Bills, of course, have a need at quarterback after last year's backup to Allen, Mitchell Trubisky, signed a two-year contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers at the start of free agency. Allen is currently the only quarterback on the Bills' roster.

Buffalo Bills general manager Brandon Beane was asked Friday where things stood in the search for more depth behind Allen.

"I've got some things in the works for there," Beane said. "Hopefully, early next week we'll have that resolved, but I do have some things. It's an important position. I feel pretty good that we're going to find the right fit."

Later in his news conference, Beane gave an update on the Bills' cap space, and said he's taking into account backup quarterback when he says the team is "right on it," in terms of spending up to the cap. 

That would seem to indicate a deal for a backup.

Barkley, 31, appeared in eight games during his time with the Bills, starting just once. It was a memorable start, though, as he went 15 of 25 for 232 yards and a pair of touchdowns in a 41-10 victory over the New York Jets in Week 10 of the 2018 season. 

Barkley spent time with three franchises – Tennessee, Carolina and Atlanta – during the 2021 season, either on the active roster or practice squad.  

Observations: Bills GM voices frustration at Washington front office over J.D. McKissic saga

It would figure to be tough to put Brandon Beane in a bad mood right about now.

The Buffalo Bills’ general manager would be justified in celebrating his team’s addition of Von Miller in free agency – an acquisition that fills a crying need for a game-changing pass rusher.

Bills GM Brandon Beane says Von Miller is 'that finisher'

It’s not all been sunshine and roses, though, for Beane the past couple of days. He thought he had a deal with J.D. McKissic on a two-year contract that was agreed to Tuesday, but by Wednesday, the running back backed out – choosing instead to return to the Washington Commanders on the same deal.

While most Bills fans quickly forgot about that after Miller’s addition, it was quite clear Friday that Beane had not – and will not.

“That was tough. Obviously, he was a guy we targeted, and in this business, in general, when you have an agreement, it’s good,” Beane said. “But until there's ink on the paper …”

Beane was clear that any blame in this situation should not be assigned to McKissic’s agents, Doug Hendrickson and C.J. LaBoy.

“There were some things that went down with the other organization, which is painful, but they chose to do what they did, and I couldn't stop it,” Beane said. “Once you have an agreement, the agent’s supposed to say it’s over. And this agent did that. And this agent told the other club it's over. But the other club didn't back off.”

Complicating maters is that Beane has tight relationships with Washington executive vice president of football/player personnel Marty Hurney and head coach Ron Rivera, having worked with both of them for many years in Carolina. Asked if those relationships complicated the situation even more, Beane stared daggers straight ahead as he coolly, said, “yeah, it does.”

McKissic is one of the NFL’s top pass-catching threats at running back and figured to be an option on third down for the Bills. They’ll need to continue shopping for that type of player.

Here are four more observations from what was another busy day of transactions for the Bills:

1. It's reunion week at One Bills Drive, part I. The team announced it has signed linebacker Marquel Lee to a one-year contract. Lee signed with the Bills in March 2021, and spent the offseason and training camp with the team before being released at final cuts on Aug. 31. He signed with the Raiders in late September, but was released four days later. He then rejoined the Raiders in November, and played in 11 games, mostly on special teams. He finished with 11 tackles on defense and four on special teams, which was second on the Raiders.

Lee, 26, was selected by the Raiders in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL draft and spent his first three seasons with the team. After being released by Las Vegas in August 2020 because of a failed physical, he missed all of the 2020 season because of injury. He was placed on the physically unable to perform list after failing his physical at the start of training camp and waived with an injury settlement days later.

In an injury-riddled career, Lee has played 45 games with 19 starts, posting 115 tackles, six tackles for a loss and three quarterback hits. He also has been a regular contributor on special teams throughout his career and figures to compete for a depth linebacker spot with the Bills behind starters Tremaine Edmunds and Matt Milano.

2. It's reunion week at One Bills Drive, part II. Shaq's back. The Bills finalized a one-year contract with defensive end Shaq Lawson. A first-round draft pick of the team in 2016, Lawson played four seasons in Buffalo, making 16.5 sacks. His best season came in 2019, when he finished with 6.5 sacks and 13 tackles for loss. That led to Lawson signing a three-year contract worth up to $30 million with the Dolphins. Lawson played the 2020 season in Miami before being traded to Houston. He was then traded to the New York Jets shortly before the start of the 2021 season. Lawson played in seven games and had one sack, five tackles for loss and one interception for the Jets before being released one day before the regular-season finale.

For his career, Lawson played played in 78 games, starting 31 of them, and made 95 tackles, 21.5 sacks, 13 passes defensed, six forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries. His return comes one day after the Bills also signed former defensive tackle Jordan Phillips to a one-year contract.

"It's great to get those guys back," Beane said. "We didn't want to see them leave. The finances get in the way sometimes. You want to pay them all. I remember when they both left two years ago, we hated it, but we knew it was inevitable to probably lose one and maybe both. It's exciting to see them.

"Jordan came available first, and we worked it out to get him on a plane as soon as Arizona released him. Then, I think he recruited Shaq the rest of the way and he wasn't going to let Shaq say no."

3. It (looks to be) reunion week at One Bills Drive, part III. The Bills appear to be on the verge of adding to their quarterback room. Matt Barkley, who served as Josh Allen's backup for two-plus seasons from 2018-20, tweeted a GIF of himself in a Bills uniform during a 2019 victory over Pittsburgh with just one, drawn-out word: "Buffalooooooo!!!!"

The Bills, of course, have a need at quarterback after last year's backup to Allen, Mitchell Trubisky, signed a two-year contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers at the start of free agency. Allen is currently the only quarterback on the Bills' roster.

Beane was asked Friday where things stood in the search for more depth behind Allen.

"I've got some things in the works for there," Beane said. "Hopefully, early next week we'll have that resolved, but I do have some things. It's an important position. I feel pretty good that we're going to find the right fit."

Later in his news conference, Beane gave an update on the Bills' cap space, and said he's taking into account backup quarterback when he says the team is "right on it," in terms of spending up to the cap.

That would seem to indicate a deal for a backup is very close to being in place.

Barkley, 31, appeared in eight games during his time with the Bills, starting just once. It was a memorable start, though, as he went 15 of 25 for 232 yards and a pair of touchdowns in a 41-10 victory over the New York Jets in Week 10 of the 2018 season.

Barkley spent time with three franchises – Tennessee, Carolina and Atlanta – during the 2021 season, either on the active roster or practice squad.

4. Contract details for O.J. Howard are in. Howard, a former first-round draft pick of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2017, signed a one-year contract and will count $2.875 million against the salary cap in 2022.

His deal includes a $1.25 million signing bonus and a fully guaranteed base salary of $1.945 million. Additionally, he can earn up to $255,000 in roster bonuses ($15,000 per game) and $50,000 for a workout bonus.

He can earn up to $1.1 million in incentives for catches and receiving yards, although it's not specified what would trigger those bonuses.

Howard's contract automatically voids if he's on the roster 23 days preceding the first day of the 2023 league year. He will cost the Bills $625,000 in dead money on the 2023 salary cap.

A closer look at the contract details for new Bills tight end O.J. Howard

The contract details for new Buffalo Bills tight end O.J. Howard are in. 

Howard, a former first-round draft pick of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2017, signed a one-year contract and will count $2.875 million against the salary cap in 2022.

His deal includes a $1.25 million signing bonus and a fully guaranteed base salary of $1.945 million. Additionally, he can earn up to $255,000 in roster bonuses ($15,000 per game) and $50,000 for a workout bonus.

He can earn up to $1.1 million in incentives for catches and receiving yards, although it's not specified what would trigger those bonuses.

Howard's contract automatically voids if he's on the roster 23 days preceding the first day of the 2023 league year. He will cost the Bills $625,000 in dead money on the 2023 salary cap.

Bills continue to clear salary cap space by releasing defensive tackle Star Lotulelei

The writing was on the wall for Buffalo Bills defensive tackle Star Lotulelei.

Asked Thursday what the future held for Lotulelei with the team after the addition of three defensive tackles in free agency, head coach Sean McDermott struck an ominous tone.

"Yeah, we’ll see," McDermott said. "We’ll just take it one step at a time."

The next step, it turns out, was Lotulelei's release, which came Friday afternoon. The move comes without a post-June 1 designation, according to a league source, which means the Bills will have to stomach a $7.7 million "dead money" charge on the cap this year for Lotulelei. The team does a little more than $1.5 million in cap space, although that number reduces to about $800,000 when you take into account the salary that slides into the top 51 -- which count against the cap during the offseason.  

Lotulelei, 32, spent the past four years with the Bills, playing three seasons. He opted out of the 2020 season over concerns related to the Covid-19 pandemic, which meant he had three years remaining on his contract when he returned in 2021. He became expendable when the Bills signed DaQuan Jones, Tim Settle and Jordan Phillips in the opening days of free agency. The Bills also lost Harrison Phillips in free agency to the Minnesota Vikings.

"We had open, honest conversation with his agent and ultimately just said 'let's see what it looks like in free agency. We got some guys that we're tracking.' If it makes sense for us we may pursue them, if we do where our money is, at that point we'd make a decision," General Manager Brandon Beane said Friday. "Starting last week, we had not made a firm decision on whether we were keeping Star or not. ... Ultimately, once we signed Jordan (after he) got released and became (available), if he's not released maybe we're not here. Appreciate Star. Bringing him here. I know people didn't always have a feel for what he brought to our team." 

Lotulelei had a trying 2021 season. He missed the season opener against Pittsburgh because of a calf injury, but returned to play in the next seven games. He was on the field for between 40 to 60% of the defensive snaps in each of those games. Prior to the Week 10 win over the Jets, however, Lotulelei tested positive for Covid-19, and would miss the next three games. Upon his return, he wasn't the same player, Bills General Manager Brandon Beane said at his end-of-season news conference.

"When he got Covid, when he came back, it really affected him," Beane said. "Without getting too deep into the woods, I don’t think he returned to form, and I think he’d be the first to tell you that at what he was playing at earlier in the year. He got better and I thought it improved the two playoff games, but I still don’t think it was as consistent as he was the first part of the season."

Phillips took over as the starter in the second half of the regular season and playoffs, and Lotulelei's playing time was limited to about 30% of the snaps during that time. 

Lotulelei also missed the Week 14 loss to Tampa Bay and the Week 16 win over New England for a personal reason, so availability proved to be an issue in what ultimately was his final season of the team.

"Last season, like I said, he really started and played really well for us for a guy coming off the opt-out year," Beane said. "After Covid, he never totally got back to the guy he could be. And we just thought it was time for a fresh start for all of us and ... we needed his money off the cap."

Lotulelei is a former first-round draft pick of the Panthers who has a long history with Beane and Bills coach Sean McDermott, both of whom were in Carolina when Lotulelei was selected. The Bills signed Lotulelei prior to the 2018 season, giving him a five-year deal worth up to $50 million to become the anchor of the defensive line. As McDermott frequently points out, the one-technique defensive tackle position in Buffalo's defense typically does not generate big stats. The job of the player in that position is primarily to occupy blockers so all those around him can get to the football.

In 43 career games in the regular season for the Bills, including 40 starts, Lotulelei made 53 tackles and had five sacks. The Bills could have chosen to release Lotulelei with a post-June 1 designation, which would have reduced the "dead money" for Lotulelei this year to $5.1 million, and created a $2.6 million charge in 2023. Doing so would have increased the cap savings this year to $4.126 million, but it would not have been accessible to the Bills until June 1. 

Bills bring back linebacker Marquel Lee on a one-year contract

Reunion Week at One Bills Drive continued Friday.

The team announced that it has signed linebacker Marquel Lee to a one-year contract, a deal announced earlier in the day by The Sports & Entertainment Group, Lee's agency.

Lee signed with the Bills last March and spent the offseason and training camp with the team before being released at final cuts on Aug. 31. He signed with the Raiders in late September, but was released four days later. He then rejoined the Raiders in November, and played in 11 games, mostly on special teams. He finished with 11 tackles on defense and four on special teams, which was second on the Raiders.

Congratulations to client Marquel Lee on signing with the @BuffaloBills! #TSEG #MarquelLee #NFL #Linebacker #BuffaloBills #Bills #FreeAgency pic.twitter.com/Gxje4hepXS

— TheSportsEntGroup (@TheSportsEntGrp) March 18, 2022

Lee, 26, was selected by the Raiders in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL draft and spent his first three seasons with the team. After being released by Las Vegas in August 2020 because of a failed physical, he missed all of the 2020 season because of injury. He was placed on the physically unable to perform list after failing his physical at the start of training camp and waived with an injury settlement days later. 

In an injury-riddled career, Lee has played 45 games with 19 starts, posting 115 tackles, six tackles for a loss and three quarterback hits. He was limited to five games in 2019 (making five tackles, including one for a loss) after appearing in all 16 games in 2018 with 58 tackles, three tackles for a loss, three quarterback hits and three passes defensed. As a rookie out of Wake Forest in 2017, he played in 13 games with 22 tackles and two tackles for loss. He also has been a regular contributor on special teams throughout his career and figures to compete for a depth linebacker spot with the Bills behind starters Tremaine Edmunds and Matt Milano.

Related to this collection

A closer look at the contract details for new Bills edge rusher Von Miller

Miller's salary cap charge in the first year of the contract is just $5.1 million, the total of his base salary, his roster and workout bonuses and $3.705 of his signing bonus, which is prorated over the maximum five years. 

Bills Mailbag: Is the massive investment in Von Miller the right call?

Jay Skurski looks at Miller's deal as the cost of doing business for an elite pass rusher in today’s NFL. Miller also brings with him the experience that comes with winning a pair of Super Bowl championships. That’s valuable for a roster in Buffalo looking to get over that hump.

A closer look at the contract details for new Bills defensive tackle DaQuan Jones

A closer look at the contract details for new Bills defensive tackle DaQuan Jones

Jones' contract, the details of which were provided to The Buffalo News via a league source, includes a signing bonus of $5.5 million.

GM Brandon Beane: Bills 'pretty much done with free agency,' though a few moves Monday

GM Brandon Beane: Bills 'pretty much done with free agency,' though a few moves Monday

With money tight, Beane said the Bills are just about done looking at free agents. He said the focus now is looking to Pro Days and visits. 

Arizona Daily Star
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Arizona Daily Star Store
  • This is Tucson
  • Saddlebag Notes
  • Tucson Festival of Books

Sites & Partners

  • E-edition
  • Classifieds
  • Events calendar
  • Careers @ Lee Enterprises
  • Careers @ Gannett
  • Online Features
  • Sponsored Blogs
  • Get Healthy

Services

  • Advertise with us
  • Register
  • Contact us
  • RSS feeds
  • Newsletters
  • Photo reprints
  • Subscriber services
  • Subscription FAQ
  • Licensing
  • Shopping
© Copyright 2026 Arizona Daily Star, PO Box 26887 Tucson, AZ 85726-6887
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising Terms of Use | Do Not Sell My Info | Cookie Preferences
Powered by BLOX Content Management System from bloxdigital.com.
  • Notifications
  • Settings
You don't have any notifications.

Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.

Topics

News Alerts

Breaking News