
Much has been made of the Buffalo Bills’ glaring needs at wide receiver and on the edge entering free agency. General manager Brandon Beane clearly agreed, addressing those two biggest weaknesses head-on: he traded for proven wideout D.J. Moore and signed former Miami Dolphins EDGE Bradley Chubb.
While those moves plugged the most obvious holes, one area still demands urgent attention — defensive tackle. DaQuan Jones remains a free agent and has not been re-signed, leaving the interior rotation thinner than the Bills would like heading into the season.
Enter D.J. Jones, the Denver Broncos defensive tackle who has emerged as a smart, scheme-specific trade target for Buffalo. Bleacher Report’s Moe Moton flagged Jones as a player who could immediately strengthen the run defense, and the fit makes perfect sense. New head coach Joe Brady hired defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard, who spent the last two years as the Broncos’ defensive pass game coordinator under Sean Payton. Leonhard knows exactly what Jones brings to the table.
The numbers are eye-opening. Despite playing just 40 percent of the defensive snaps last season, Jones still posted 39 tackles, including four for loss, and added three sacks. Even more impressive? He missed only three tackles all year. That level of efficiency and reliability from a rotational piece is rare — and it’s absolute madness that a player producing at this rate wasn’t seeing more snaps in Denver.
In Buffalo, Jones wouldn’t be asked to rotate sparingly. He could step in as the veteran anchor of a young interior group, playing an expanded role and providing exactly the resistance against ground attacks the Bills have been missing. Moton nailed the upside: “Jones could play in an expanded role as the leader of a young interior group that shows a little more resistance against ground attacks.”
The Bills already showed forward-thinking vision in the 2025 NFL Draft by selecting two defensive tackles. T.J. Sanders, taken in the second round out of South Carolina, had a rocky rookie year that was partly attributable to injury. The team even experimented with him at defensive end in search of the right fit. Buffalo isn’t giving up on Sanders, and the change at defensive coordinator could be exactly what he needs to unlock his potential.
Fourth-round pick Deone Walker out of Kentucky, on the other hand, was a revelation as a rookie. He consistently slowed opposing ground games and showed legitimate interior pass-rush ability. Then there’s Ed Oliver — a true game-changer when healthy — who remains the cornerstone of the position.
Pairing that young talent with a proven run-stuffer like D.J. Jones could transform the entire defensive tackle room from a question mark into a strength. Best of all, acquiring Jones likely wouldn’t require a steep price if Denver is willing to move him. A low-cost trade for a player who already understands Leonhard’s defensive language and brings this kind of production would be a masterstroke for Beane and the new coaching staff.
The Bills have already checked the biggest boxes this offseason. Now they have a chance to turn one of their remaining vulnerabilities into an advantage — all by bringing in a run-stuffing monster who, despite seeing only 40 percent of the snaps last year, proved he can dominate in limited opportunities. Buffalo’s run defense doesn’t just need help. It needs a wall.
And D.J. Jones is ready to be that wall.