Orchard Park, N.Y. -- Apparently Richie Incognito isn't as excited about his restructured contract as he was a month ago.

The Buffalo Bills' guard told Sports Illustrated's Peter King that he is strongly considering retiring but would come back at the right price. The timing is odd, considering a month ago he and the Bills agreed on a restructured deal to bring him back at a reduced cap hit. At the time, Incognito seemed thrilled to be back.

On March 15, Incognito tweeted: "BUFFALO! I'm thrilled to be returning this season and fired up to get back to work with my #BuffaloBills brothers. I truly believe in the vision and the path we are on. We have all that we need to finish what we started #honored #letsdothis"

The Bills saved $1.675 million in cap space by restructuring Incognito's contract. The deal lowered Incognito's base salary from $6.325 million to $3.65 million and he received a $1 million bonus. In the process, Incognito's cap hit dropped from $7.575 million to $5.9 million. Last week, Incognito fired his agent in a tweet.

Incognito told Vic Carucci of the Buffalo News that his reason for retiring is medical.

"I'm done. That's it. It's been a long career. Went to the doctor. My liver and kidneys are shutting down. The stress is killing me. It's just about doing what's right. I just want to be in the Hall of Fame."

Incognito, who turns 35 in July, made the Pro Bowl four times, including three times with the Bills. He played 12 NFL seasons, four of those with the Bills.

With Incognito retiring, the Bills have now lost their three best offensive linemen this offseason. Center Eric Wood retired earlier this offseason after an end-of-season physical revealed a neck injury. The Bills also traded offensive tackle Cordy Glenn to the Bengals. They are left with Ryan Groy and Vlad Ducasse as returning guards with experience and newly signed Russell Bodine at center.