Updated: May 8, 2014, 10:29 PM ET
By Mike Rodak | ESPN.comNFL Draft Highlight Reel: Sammy Watkins
Sammy Watkins is headed to the Buffalo Bills, who moved up five spots in a trade with the Cleveland Browns to take the wide receiver with the No. 4 overall pick in the NFL draft.
The Bills sent the ninth overall pick along with their first- and fourth-round selections in 2015 to Cleveland in the trade.
"We went into this draft saying we were going to be bold and we made a bold move," Bills CEO Russ Brandon said.
General manager Doug Whaley said the trade came at a "very high cost" for the Bills, who haven't made the playoffs since 1999 -- the NFL's longest postseason drought.
"We thought it was a calculated risk and a risk we were willing to take," Whaley said. "The high cost of not making the playoffs is something we weighed in and we thought this guy was going to get us to the playoffs."
The Bills are being sold and the process could be completed as soon as this summer, but Brandon said the uncertain ownership future didn't weigh into the decision to give up the team's first-round pick next season.
"It's business as usual, Brandon said. "I'm not worried about anything relative to the sale of the franchise when it comes to the football operation."
With Watkins now in the fold, the Bills have a crowded depth chart at wide receiver. Stevie Johnson, the team's leading receiver from 2010-2012, could have a murky future with the team. He battled several injuries last season and has an $8.5 million cap number this season.
"Stevie Johnson is on our team. He is under contract and that is another weapon in our arsenal," Whaley said.
The Bills drafted receiver Robert Woods in the second round last season and also sent a sixth-round pick last month to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for receiver Mike Williams, further clouding the picture at the position.
Watkins set a Clemson record with 240 receptions in his three seasons. He possesses great acceleration, competitiveness and big-play ability, as he led all receivers from AQ conferences with 1,044 yards after the catch last season, according to ESPN Stats & Information.
The 6-foot-1, 211-pound Watkins was one of college football's most exciting playmakers during his Clemson career, which he capped with 101 receptions for 1,464 yards (14.5 yards per catch) and 12 touchdowns in 2013. He also averaged 9.2 yards per catch on screens last season, which is three yards better than the national average, according to ESPN Stats & Information.
He also has the ability to contribute on special teams, as he returned kickoffs and punts at Clemson.
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