Bills May Have Found The Edge That Comes With Real Risk

Despite an impressive career filled with accolades, C.J. Gardner-Johnson's journey through the NFL has been a rollercoaster ride due to persistent, controversial perceptions of his off-field demeanor.

C.J. Gardner-Johnson has spent most of his NFL career answering the same question in different ways: how can a player with this kind of production keep ending up somewhere new?

The numbers are hard to ignore. He has 20 interceptions, a Super Bowl ring, another Super Bowl appearance and playoff trips in six of seven seasons. He also keeps getting moved along - by trade, free agency or release - from the Saints to the Eagles, then the Lions, Texans, Ravens, Bears and now the Bills.

That reality is part of why the Buffalo safety sat down with The Athletic and went straight at the label that has followed him around.

"One of the narratives is I'm a cancer in the locker room," Gardner-Johnson told The Athletic. "Where have I been a cancer?"

He didn’t back off from the bigger point, either: he thinks his reputation has swallowed his resume.

"This is a scary statement for me: I make plays and still don't know my future," Gardner-Johnson told The Athletic. "Guys who make plays have guaranteed futures."

Gardner-Johnson finished last season with two interceptions, three sacks and a forced fumble in 11 games after joining the Bears in October. He has also long been one of the league’s loudest trash talkers, a reputation that stuck even before Buffalo brought him in.

In anonymous player polls conducted by The Athletic, he was voted the NFL’s biggest trash talker and most annoying player. He has been fined 13 times in his career, has baited opponents into throwing punches and built an alter ego called "Ceedy Duce."

Still, he pushed back hard on the idea that he’s a problem in the room.

"I’ve been slapped in the face by the business so many times to the point," Gardner-Johnson said.

He went further when asked about the locker-room cancer label.

"Where was that after the Super Bowl loss? Where was that after the Super Bowl win?"

Gardner-Johnson said. "When we do our homework and really think about it, where have I been a cancer?"

Buffalo, at least for now, seems convinced it has the right mix of edge and playmaking. General manager Brandon Beane said after signing Gardner-Johnson in March that the Bills had thoroughly vetted him before giving him a one-year deal worth $3.5 million and up to $6 million with incentives.

Beane said people around the league and in Gardner-Johnson’s recent stops helped shape that evaluation, including new Bills wide receiver D.J. Moore, who played with him in Chicago, and defensive quality control coach Craig Robertson, a former Saints teammate.

"We talked about just making sure, 'You've got to be a good teammate,'" Beane said. "We don't want any cheap shots in practice or anything like that. You want to keep it in between those lines, but you do want his edge."

The Bills reshaped their safety group this offseason after moving on from Taylor Rapp and bringing in Gardner-Johnson, Geno Stone and fifth-round pick Jalon Kilgore around third-year safety Cole Bishop. Defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard said the veteran has already stood out.

"He loves football," Leonhard told The Athletic. "The day-to-day, the workouts, the meetings, he's a guy who loves being in the building.

He's trying to be a leader, man. He really wants to be that."

Gardner-Johnson said Buffalo is the first place where he has felt truly appreciated, at least so far. He pointed to Moore, Robertson, secondary coach Joe Danna and free-agent addition Bradley Chubb as people who made him feel wanted before he even arrived.

“I’m a firecracker, but let’s take the body of work: never legally been in trouble; never physically harmed a person,” Gardner-Johnson said. “But I haven’t been a captain ever in my life.

They say, ‘You gotta lead the right way.’ My definition of leading is winning.”

The one-year contract gives him a shot to lock down a long-term role at safety and set himself up for a bigger payday next offseason. Gardner-Johnson, though, is already talking in bigger terms.

"I'm going to win the next two out of three Super Bowls," Gardner-Johnson said. "How?

Look where they placed me at. Look who's my quarterback."

For the last four years, he has been on the move. In Buffalo, he believes the story can finally change.

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