Bills' solution to James Cook dilemma could be 2x All-SEC draft 'sleeper'

   

It's no secret that Buffalo Bills fourth-year running back put some strain on his potential contract extension by making hefty public demands shortly after the season ended. While Bills GM Brandon Beane has generally maintained a cool public demeanor about the Pro Bowler's stance, he's also hinted that things can change quickly during and after the upcoming draft.Bills' solution to James Cook dilemma could be 2x All-SEC draft 'sleeper'

Beane has a long history of draft-day trades and ten picks this year gives him plenty of opportunity to make a move, including trading Cook for a 2nd to 4th round pick and then stealing a hidden gem in South Carolina running back Raheim Sanders.

Sanders, 6'0" and 217 pounds, is currently projected to go somewhere in late Round 5 to Round 6. He started at Arkansas, earning All-Freshman honors as a true freshman, playing in every game and running for 578 yards and 5 TDs. Sanders then took over the starting job in 2022, ripping off 1,443 yards and 10 TD's to go with 28 catches for 278 yards and 2TD's, earning him First-Team All-SEC as a sophomore. After a transfer to South Carolina and injury-plagued junior season, Sanders bounced back in 2024 to go for 881 yards and 11 TDs, while still nursing two off-season surgeries.

"When healthy, Sanders has been a productive three-down back at two SEC spots, " wrote Lance Zierlein of NFL.com, "He’s a big rusher with pop behind his pads. He runs with timing and tempo as a one-cut runner. He creates yards with vision and cut quickness... he has the size and talent to become a committee runner."

 

Sanders was listed in ESPN's Adam Rittenberg's recent piece where a SEC defensive coordinator said, "I still felt like [Sanders] was still nursing the injury a touch from Arkansas, but down the stretch he was killing it when they started rolling a little bit more on offense and he was playing well."

The Bills and offensive coordinator Joe Brady run a complimentary, "everyone eats" offense that relies on a balanced attack. Cook is talented but he's never played more than 54% of the offensive snaps in a season simply because that's not how Buffalo rolls. Ray Davis and Ty Johnson are very capable players. Beane's not going pay Cook his demanded "$15 mil" per year and it doesn't seem like Cook will back down.

All signs point to a draft-day move by the gunslinging Beane, one that could bring a Gamecock to Buffalo.