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Bears send fifth-round pick to Bills for Walker

NFL, Buffalo Bills, Chicago Bears

PITTSFORD, N.Y. -- The Chicago Bears acquired defensive
tackle Darwin Walker in a trade with Buffalo on Sunday, landing a
veteran to replace Tank Johnson.

The Bills, meanwhile, acquired a conditional fifth-round draft pick in return, and
dropped a player who refused to report to Buffalo in a contract
dispute. The Bills obtained Walker in March in a trade that sent
linebacker Takeo Spikes and backup quarterback Kelly Holcomb to
Philadelphia.

Walker, however, refused to report to Buffalo until the team
renegotiated the remaining two years on his contract. He was
scheduled to make $1.3 million this year and $1.4 million next
season.

"When he didn't show up to begin camp, it looked like it would
drag on," Bills general manager Marv Levy said. "The opportunity
presented itself for us to make this deal with the Bears, so it
seemed like the best thing to do. We did it and we're moving on."

Levy added the draft pick the Bills receive will depend on
Walker's playing time in Chicago this season. The Bills would've
been forced to return Walker to Philadelphia in exchange for a
sixth-round pick if the player had not reported by Aug. 5. Bears
general manger Jerry Angelo said Sunday the deadline no longer
applies.

Walker had no trouble getting to Bears training camp in
Bourbonnais, Ill. Shortly after the trade was announced, the
seven-year veteran was taking a physical during the team's
afternoon practice.

"Philly, I have no regrets. I enjoyed myself in Philadelphia,"
Walker said. "I'll always have those years, championship years, to
remember. But I'm extremely excited to be here."

He said it's a whole new situation with a team he thinks is a
Super Bowl contender.

Walker's agent, Albert Irby, said his client was eager to join
the Bears and planned to negotiate a new contract with Chicago.

"Darwin's old deal is gone. The new deal will be talked about
tomorrow," Irby said. "We'll take a one-year deal. We'll do
whatever it takes. We're not going to hold out."

The Bills offered Walker a one-year contract, but for the same
money he was scheduled to make this season. The offer, however, was
immediately rejected.

Asked if he thought the Bills misled him, Walker said, "I'm not
going to go there. I think that situation is now behind me, and I'm
looking forward to being a Chicago Bear."

Walker fills an immediate need in Chicago, after the defending
NFC champions released Johnson in June because of the player's
constant run-ins with the law.

"Losing Tank, we were one defensive lineman down," Bears coach
Lovie Smith said. "We feel we filled that need."

Walker has 26½ sacks over the past five years, making him the
fourth-most productive defensive tackle during that span.

The Bears were one of the teams Walker was interested in joining
when the Eagles allowed him to seek a trade last spring. But
Chicago, at that time, had no room for him because Johnson was
still on the team, Irby said.

"We felt that bringing in another defensive lineman, in
particular a defensive tackle, would be a good thing for us,"
Angelo said. "To get a quality player that we think is still in
his prime is a good get for us."

The Bills hoped Walker would bolster their defensive line, but
are pleased with the progress John McCargo has shown in camp. The
second of Buffalo's two first-round draft picks last year, McCargo
appeared in only five games in 2006 before breaking his foot.

McCargo then had a setback in his recovery and needed a second
operation on his foot earlier this year.

"We're very encouraged by the progress John has made. That
helps alleviate a little bit of the fact that we weren't able to
come to terms [with Walker]," Levy said. "If we could have worked
something out with Darwin, we would have liked to have had him."

Walker faced being fined by the Bills for missing the first
three days of training camp, which opened Thursday in suburban
Rochester. He also faced potential fines for missing Buffalo's
three-day mandatory minicamp in June.

Information from ESPN.com's John Clayton and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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