NFL Offseason Trade Grades: Dissecting the David Montgomery Deal and Houston’s Monday Moves
The NFL offseason is a chess match played with draft capital and salary cap figures. While blockbuster quarterback trades dominate headlines, it’s the nuanced, calculated moves for established veterans that often define a team’s trajectory. As we hand out report cards on the league’s pivotal offseason shuffles, one deal from last year demands a revisit, and a flurry of recent activity requires immediate grading. Today, we focus on the Detroit Lions’ acquisition of running back David Montgomery and the Houston Texans’ two headline-grabbing trades this past Monday. Who won? Who lost? The answers may shape the 2024 season.
The Montgomery Move: A Re-Grade with the Benefit of Hindsight
When the Detroit Lions let Jamaal Williams walk in free agency and swiftly signed former Chicago Bear David Montgomery to a three-year, $18 million deal, the immediate reaction was mixed. Some saw it as a lateral move; others questioned the investment in a running back. One season later, the lens is crystal clear. This trade wasn’t just a transaction; it was a declaration of identity.
Detroit Lions Grade: A+
General Manager Brad Holmes didn’t just acquire a running back; he secured the perfect cultural and schematic fit for Dan Campbell’s “bite-kneecaps” offense. Montgomery’s bruising, relentless style embodied the Lions’ new ethos. While the dazzling Jahmyr Gibbs provided the electric splash plays, Montgomery was the engine of consistency. He racked up over 1,000 scrimmage yards, scored 13 total touchdowns, and, most importantly, mastered the art of the tough, game-sealing yard. His value transcended stats, providing leadership and a proven workhorse mentality that stabilized the offense. In the context of their run to the NFC Championship Game, this deal was an unqualified home run.
Chicago Bears Grade: C-
From the Bears’ perspective, the move was a financial decision, allowing them to pivot to a cheaper committee approach. However, losing a homegrown talent of Montgomery’s caliber and toughness created a tangible void in leadership and short-yardage reliability. While the Bears’ offense evolved around Justin Fields (and now Caleb Williams), they lacked the consistent, chain-moving presence Montgomery provided. The grade isn’t an “F” because the cap savings had strategic value, but the intangible loss was significant. They moved on from a known, high-character commodity without a clear, like-for-like replacement.
Houston’s Monday Masterstroke: Stealing the Spotlight
This past Monday, the Houston Texans, fresh off a stunning playoff run, proved they are not content with mere progress. General Manager Nick Caserio executed two trades that sent shockwaves through the league, aggressively addressing their few remaining weaknesses.
Trade 1: Acquiring RB Joe Mixon from Cincinnati
In a move that directly echoes the Lions’ Montgomery logic, Houston sent a late-round pick swap to the Bengals for Pro Bowl running back Joe Mixon, immediately signing him to an extension. This is a masterclass in targeted team building.
Houston Texans Grade: A
The Texans’ offense, with C.J. Stroud and a stellar receiver corps, was missing one element: a proven, three-down bell-cow back. Mixon is exactly that. He is a durable, versatile workhorse with elite pass-catching chops, perfectly suited for Bobby Slowik’s offensive system. For a minimal draft capital cost, Houston transformed their backfield from a question mark into a powerhouse. This move protects Stroud, balances the offense, and signals a “win-now” mentality that the entire locker room will feel.
Cincinnati Bengals Grade: B-
The Bengals’ grade is about cold, hard financial calculus. Facing cap pressures and with Mixon’s production at a potential inflection point, they chose fiscal flexibility and a fresh start. It’s a pragmatic, if unsexy, move. The deduction comes from the relatively low return and the emotional hit of losing a long-time offensive centerpiece. The success of this trade for Cincinnati hinges entirely on how they reinvest the saved capital.
The Stefon Diggs Blockbuster: High Risk, High Reward
Trade 2: Acquiring WR Stefon Diggs from Buffalo
This is the move that broke the internet. Houston sent a 2025 second-round pick to Buffalo for the elite but mercurial wide receiver, with the Bills absorbing a massive dead cap hit. The implications are seismic for both franchises.
Houston Texans Grade: B+ (with potential for an A)
On paper, pairing a 29-year-old, four-time Pro Bowl receiver with the reigning Offensive Rookie of the Year is a stroke of genius. Diggs, Nico Collins, and Tank Dell form arguably the most terrifying wideout trio in the NFL. This gives C.J. Stroud an embarrassment of riches and forces defenses into impossible choices. The grade isn’t a straight “A” due to the legitimate questions: Diggs’ late-season production dips in Buffalo, his contract demands, and the need for strong locker room management. However, the Texans’ culture, led by Stroud and Coach DeMeco Ryans, is uniquely positioned to integrate him. If it clicks, this is a league-altering acquisition.
Buffalo Bills Grade: C+
The Bills’ grade is the toughest to assign. This trade is a clear salary cap purge and a cultural reset. Moving on from Diggs’ massive contract and occasional turbulence allows them to reshape their offense more around Josh Allen’s improvisation and diversify their targets. However, you simply do not easily replace a player of Diggs’ caliber—a true alpha who commands double coverage. The return (a 2025 second-rounder) feels light for a player of his talent, and the immediate offensive burden on Allen increases. This grade could improve if the cap space is used brilliantly, but for now, it represents a painful but necessary step back to potentially leap forward.
Final Verdict and 2024 Predictions
Our offseason trade report card reveals one undeniable theme: the teams with clear, aggressive visions are pulling ahead.
- The Detroit Lions won the David Montgomery deal by prioritizing cultural fit and on-field identity, a lesson that continues to pay dividends.
- The Houston Texans have executed a near-perfect offseason. The Mixon trade fills a need with precision, while the Diggs trade is an audacious swing for the fences. They are all-in on the Stroud era.
- The Buffalo Bengals and Chicago Bears made financially-driven decisions that prioritize future flexibility over present certainty. Their grades hinge on their next moves.
Prediction for 2024: The Texans’ aggressive Monday moves catapult them into the AFC’s absolute elite. They are legitimate Super Bowl contenders. The Diggs-Stroud connection will be prolific, though not without midseason headlines. Meanwhile, Detroit will continue to lean on Montgomery’s toughness as they seek to finish their journey to a championship. The true cost of Buffalo’s and Chicago’s decisions will be measured in critical third-down conversions and red zone efficiency—the very moments where players like Diggs and Montgomery have built their reputations.
In the high-stakes game of NFL roster construction, the teams that best understand their own identity—and then have the courage to acquire the pieces that amplify it—are the ones holding the report cards with the highest marks. This offseason, the Detroit Lions and Houston Texans are heading to the front of the class.
Source: Based on news from ESPN.
Image: CC licensed via www.pickpik.com
