Bills Fans May Not Have Realized They Just Saw This Pass Rusher's End

Despite showing flashes of brilliance during his tenure with the Bills, Joey Bosa's NFL future hangs in the balance as speculation mounts over his potential retirement.

Joey Bosa may have taken the field for the last time in the NFL.

That’s the view ESPN’s Adam Schefter laid out when he said it was “more likely than not” the five-time Pro Bowler has already played his final game after spending last season with the Buffalo Bills. Bosa, one of the biggest names still sitting in free agency, has not found a new home, and Schefter said on his podcast that retirement now looks more likely than another contract.

“I think if Joey Bosa wanted to play football, it probably would have happened already,” Schefter said.

There is, at least in Schefter’s telling, one team that could still change the equation: the San Francisco 49ers. That would give Bosa a chance to line up with his younger brother, Nick Bosa. Earlier this offseason, Nick said his older brother wasn’t exactly locked in on football.

“I think he's working on his golf game right now,” Nick Bosa said.

Bosa signed with Buffalo on a one-year deal last year in an effort to get his career back on track after a stretch filled with injuries in Los Angeles with the Chargers. Instead, the Bills’ season may wind up as the final stop on a long run in the league.

The 31-year-old, who turns 31 on July 11, stayed healthier in Buffalo than he had in some time, but he still hasn’t signed anywhere during this free-agency cycle.

His lone season with the Bills was productive. He played in 15 regular-season games, finished second on the team with five sacks and 47 quarterback pressures, and led the NFL with five forced fumbles. Pro Football Focus also ranked him as the highest-graded fourth-quarter and overtime performer among players who elevated their play late in games during the 2025 season.

Bosa’s NFL résumé has been built over 10 seasons since the then-San Diego Chargers made him the No. 3 overall pick in the 2016 NFL Draft. He won NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year after piling up 10.5 sacks despite missing the first four games of his rookie year, and he reached double-digit sacks in four of his first six seasons.

Buffalo, meanwhile, moved on this offseason by signing veteran edge rusher Bradley Chubb in free agency and drafting Clemson’s T.J. Parker in the second round of the NFL Draft.

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