BREAKING: BILLS STUN NFL BY CLAIMING 6× PRO BOWLER DARIUS SLAY OFF WAIVERS IN BLOCKBUSTER LATE-SEASON MOVE
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — In a move nobody saw coming — not executives, not analysts, not even the Steelers fan base — the Buffalo Bills have ignited shockwaves across the NFL by claiming six-time Pro Bowl cornerback Darius Slay off waivers on Wednesday afternoon. The acquisition arrives at a pivotal moment, as Buffalo positions itself for a high-stakes playoff push with the season entering its final stretch.

The Bills, currently 8–4 and fresh off a Week 13 bye, have spent the past two months trying to patch together an injury-ravaged secondary. With multiple defensive backs sidelined or underperforming, Buffalo’s playoff hopes were quietly being threatened by a thinning depth chart. Today, that equation changed instantly — and dramatically.
Slay, 34, became unexpectedly available after the Pittsburgh Steelers waived him following a rocky, short-lived tenure marked by uneven production and a concussion suffered in Week 10. Signed to a one-year, $10 million deal in the offseason, the veteran recorded 36 tackles and just three pass breakups across nine starts, while allowing a 75% completion rate and a 108.0 passer rating when targeted.
But last week may have been the clearest sign something was wrong in Pittsburgh: Slay was a healthy scratch in the Steelers’ 26–7 loss to Buffalo — watching from the sidelines as Josh Allen carved through the very defense he was supposed to help anchor.
And now, in one of the most ironic twists of the season, Slay is switching sidelines.
The Bills wasted no time in pouncing on the opportunity, claiming the veteran at a cap-friendly $1.26 million, instantly making him a low-risk, high-upside reinforcement for a defensive unit desperate for stability.
Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott was effusive in his praise for the move, calling Slay’s experience, leadership, and football IQ “an immediate cultural fit” for a team gearing up for a December stretch packed with playoff implications.
“Anytime you can add a player with his pedigree, his résumé, his championship mentality — you do it,” McDermott said. “We believe he can help us right away.”
Buffalo’s depth woes at cornerback have been no secret. With Rasul Douglas on injured reserve, Kaiir Elam traded midseason, and multiple backups delivering inconsistent performances, the team had reached a breaking point. Slay’s arrival instantly changes that calculus.
A former second-round pick of the Detroit Lions in 2013, Slay has built one of the most decorated careers among active cornerbacks, boasting 43 interceptions, 180 passes defended, and six Pro Bowls. Most recently, he helped the Philadelphia Eagles secure the Super Bowl LIX championship in 2025, solidifying his status as one of the league’s most respected defensive backs.
His sudden arrival in Buffalo has electrified Bills Mafia, which flooded social media with celebration under the trending tag #SlayDay.
For Slay, the move represents both a fresh start and a rare late-season opportunity to compete with a contender. For Buffalo, it marks a statement to the rest of the AFC: the Bills are not quietly fading this winter — they’re loading up.
If all goes smoothly in practice this week, Slay could suit up as soon as Sunday, when Buffalo hosts the New York Jets in a critical AFC East showdown.
And if his presence helps stabilize the secondary and propel Buffalo toward another postseason run, today’s waiver claim may be remembered as one of the most impactful late-season moves of the entire 2025 campaign.
The Bills made their message loud and clear: the playoff push starts now — and they’re bringing reinforcements.