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Bills Pulse
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Bills Draft & Post-Draft update |
It was a pretty uneventful draft for the Bills. They traded their picks last year in an attempt to make a run at the Super Bowl. They did add some picks this off-season, but the class was thinner than previous years and finding starters in the later 3rd proved to be pretty difficult. Aside from depth, the Bills were realistically hoping to fill a starting OLB spot and potentially LT or C.
Draft Recap
3.14 - Tony Moll | Left Tackle, Nevada
Age 23, 6’5”, 315lbs, 57 SPD, 90 STR, 53 AWR, 64 AGI, 74 ACC, 81 PBK, 78 RBK
The first selection was a needs-based approach for Buffalo as they took an OL who is expected to start for the team. After moving LT Todd Herremans, LG Dylan Gandy was expected to slot in at LT. The spot vacated by LG Ben Hamilton would be filled by C Ben Claxton, who is being replaced by RG Kenyatta Walker, who is being replaced by C Chris Spencer. Moll is nothing special. He’s 23-years-old, 6’5”, 315lbs with decent athleticism and blocking skills. The AWR is a bit raw at 53. Compared to Gandy, Moll is +1 SPD, +4 STR, -13 AWR, +10 AGI, +4 ACC, -1 PBK, -4 RBK. It’s definitely a tradeoff in terms of AWR in favor of more athleticism and saving APs. Compared to Herremans, Moll is -2 SPD, +1 STR, -17 AWR, +10 AGI, +5 ACC, -4 PBK, -8 RBK. They essentially traded a more pro-ready LT for a more athletic one. It remains to be seen if this was a bad move, but they surrendered 29 progressable points in this swap. Herremans had a good 2005 campaign and started at 61 AWR, which is +8 compared to Moll now. The left side won’t get exposed as much, but there is risk in this move. This is the exact pick the Bills acquired for Herremans, so comparing the two is fair and raises some questions on the thought process.
3.24 – A.J. Nicholson | Left Outside Linebacker, Florida State
Age 23, 6’1”, 240lbs, 79 SPD, 73 STR, 54 AWR, 81 AGI, 87 ACC, 75 TAK
In a cost-saving measure the Bills moved on from fan favorite London Fletcher. They struck out in finding a starting OLB via trade or pre-draft free agency this off-season, so they turned to the draft to fill that need. They missed out on LOLB Manny Lawson who was taken 19 spots earlier at 3.5. Buffalo had thought he may fall but were not fortunate enough for that to happen. Lawson would’ve been a much better choice with the 6’5”, 240lb frame with 81 SPD, 79 STR, 84 ACC, and a year younger at 22-years-old. Unfortunately, Nicholson was their next highest rated OLB, and will be expected to start as the post-draft Free Agency pool looks rather weak at the position. The Bills prefer taller OLBs, the 6’1” height is less than ideal, but they do like the weight at 240lbs. The ACC at 87 is excellent, but the 79 SPD leaves a lot to be desired. If they had to have one or the other they would prefer ACC over SPD, but obviously you want both. As it stands, Nicholson is likely to be the week 1 starting LOLB barring any potential trades.
5.29 – Brandon Schnittker | Halfback, Ohio State
Age 22, 6’0”, 215lbs, 85 SPD, 74 STR, 53 AWR, 88 AGI, 89 ACC, 67 CAR, 81 BTK
Schnittker, aside form having a cool name, was drafted solely based on value. The team prefers the bigger, strong backs who are more power rushers than speedsters, and Schnittker fits that mold. He isn’t a very special player. He’s probably most comparable to HB Correll Buckhalter. If he was bigger or had better CAR/BTK, he could maybe be a serviceable piece for the Bills, but he’s likely to be the 3rd or 4th HB and shouldn’t see the field much, if at all.
5.30 – Jeff King | Tight End, Virginia Tech
Age 23, 6’3”, 260lbs, 85 SPD, 76 STR, 54 AWR, 80 AGI, 79 ACC, 72 CTH
The Bills were looking to add to their TE depth after trading Andy Stokes this off-season. They considered trading for TE Brandon Manumaleuna due to his run blocking abilities but didn’t like that he was on the last year of his contract. They add been eyeing Quinn Sypniewski instead, as he is also a run blocker, but he was taken at 5.16 by the Bucs. By the time the Bills were on the clock they had a choice between Jason Pociask, Domonique Byrd and King. They used their last PW on Pociask and despite having 81 STR they didn’t love the 48 AWR, 66 AGI, 69 ACC. As it turns out Sypniewski wasn’t that much different at 49 AWR, 64 AGI, 73 ACC, but at least Sypniewski was 6’6”, 270lbs. Byrd wasn’t an option with his 61 SPD, 65 STR, 73 ACC pre-skew, it’s no surprise he went undrafted. Buffalo selected King without having run a PW and got lucky to find he had a great skew with +8 SPD, +6 ACC. They did a double take after seeing the post-skew attributes when the rookie signings were submitted. He was the 10th TE off the board at 5.30 but the team would’ve been more than happy with him in the 3rd round over Moll and Nicholson. Looking back at the TEs selected, he was probably more in line with Tony Scheffler taken at 3.9 and Owen Daniels at 4.3. In the end he will still be a seldom-used TE2, but great value in the 5th after an underwhelming 3rd round.
6.11 – Eric Winston | Right Tackle, Miami
Age 23, 6’7”, 310lbs, 43 SPD, 91 STR, 53 AWR, 51 AGI, 64 ACC, 88 PBK, 80 RBK
The team returned to drafting turds in the 6th round. At this stage they were just hoping to fill roster minimums at a cheap salary and Winston accomplishes that. He has good PBK/RBK for a rookie, but with his athleticism he should never see the field.
6.25 – Marvin Philip | Center, California
Age 24, 6’1”, 300lbs, 55 SPD, 89 STR, 52 AWR, 65 AGI, 62 ACC, 85 PBK, 82 RBK
The same applies to Philip as it did to Winston, he will be cheap depth to fill roster minimums. The 85 PBK, 82 RBK are decent but the rest is marginal.
6.29 – Tony Palmer | Left Guard, Missouri
Age 23, 6’2”, 311lbs, 56 SPD, 93 STR, 46 AWR, 57 AGI, 71 ACC, 77 PBK, 71 RBK
The athletic profile is probably okay to fill in if needed but the 46 AWR, 77 PBK, 71 RBK is real rough. Palmer is another roster minimum.
7.26 – Mathias Kiwanuka | Right End, Boston College
Age 23, 6’6”, 267lbs, 72 SPD, 80 STR, 58 AWR, 62 AGI, 70 ACC, 64 TAK
Another roster minimum, SPD and STR are okay, the rest stink.
Trades
Bills trade: SS Sean Jones, 2007 Broncos 4th
Chargers trade: 2007 Chargers 2nd
The Chargers were looking for a Safety, so the Bills sent an offer for Sean Jones. Jones was a former 3rd round pick and someone they liked, but after acquiring Derrick Gibson and Deon Grant last year, Jones found himself as the 3rd Safety in the position group. Part of the thought process here was that Corey Chavous was in post-draft Free Agency. The team felt they could replace Jones, for a year or 2 at most due to Chavous’ age, and profit in the process.
Bills trade: HB Tony Hollings, 2007 Chargers 2nd, 2007 Bills 5th
Chargers trade: HB Maurice Clarett, 2007 Patriots 5th
After hunting for a WR the team could develop, they thought they found that guy in Clarett, but turns out the 234lb weight is just a tad over the maximum allowable weight of 230 to move to WR. Clarett finds himself on the trade block, but it isn’t expected other teams will value his skillset as he will be stuck at HB. It’s more likely the Bills lick their wounds on this mishap and play him out of position at WR at WR3 or lower. He could be a KR, but competing with Az-Zahir Hakim and Dante Hall. Unfortunately there is no progression for KR/PR stats so there’s no sense in throwing him back there if the others can do it better.
Post-Draft Free Agency
Buffalo was more active in post-draft free agency than they were in pre-draft. They had some cap to spend and since the off-season was nearly over, there’s no incentive in on not spending the money. The team went after veteran NFL Icons like WR Joe Horn, WR Keyshawn Johnson and HB Corey Dillon. They signed RT Jerry Wisne, LOLB Tommy Hendricks and DT John Nix for roster minimums.
FB Robert Royal was a splurge signing, it was unexpected to see him hit free agency. He is likely headed back to TE at 6’4”, 257lbs, 71 SPD, 81 STR, 64 AWR, 75 ACC, 67 RBK. The team acquired their run-blocking TE after all, and while they got lucky landing Jeff King in pursuit of one, now the question is how Royal will see the field. It’s a good problem to have!
SS Corey Chavous was the prize of post-draft FA. At 6’1”, 205lbs, 85 SPD, 58 STR, 90 AWR, 84 AGI, 85 ACC, 67 CTH, 69 TAK. Chavous will immediately push Deon Grant out of the starting role, which is no easy decision to make as Grant had 6 INTs, 22 DFL and just 2 CTHA last year. Some of the sub packages will use 3 safeties so Grant should still have a role, but he unfortunately was a casualty in this. Chavous was signed at a modest $13.11m over 3 years, with a first year cap hit of $3.5m. It was surprising that teams didn’t go higher as there were plenty more with cap space and at least 8 teams in on him. The Bills expected someone to go as big as the Jerry Azumah contract on Chavous but were pleasantly surprised when they didn’t.
To make cap space for these moves the team is expected to release QB Joey Harrington and move on from FB Josh Norman and TE Darnell Sanders. |
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Forum Discussion
(by T_Collins on 05/12/2026)
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Replies - 0 :: Views - 10 |
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Bills Round 1 recap |
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Forum Discussion
(by T_Collins on 05/08/2026)
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Replies - 3 :: Views - 34 |
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More Bills moves |
Bills Update:
The Bills OL is coming into clearer view after they traded LG Ben Hamilton and the Giants 5th to San Diego for the Chargers 3rd. Hamilton, acquired mid-season in 2004 from the New England Patriots, started at LG last year and earned a Pro Bowl. This transaction was not an indictment on his abilities, obviously have played at a high enough level to be a Pro Bowler, but a philosophical one in terms of the archetypes they want at certain spots on the OL. Hamilton is still a starting quality guard, and considering some of the moves teams made for OL this off-season, this is a good value for the Chargers. With Hamilton out of the picture, it appears as though last year’s 5th round pick LG Dylan Gandy may slide over to LT. He’s 6’3”, 295lbs, 56 SPD, 86 STR, 66 AWR, 54 AGI, 70 ACC, 82 PBK, 82 RBK. For comparison sake, Todd Herremans, last year’s starter at LT, was 6’6”, 323lbs, 58 SPD, 87 STR, 61 AWR, 53 AGI, 68 ACC, 84 PBK, 85 RBK to start the year. He ended up having 74 pancakes to 6 sacks allowed. Aside from the size difference, they’re pretty comparable in terms of talent. The whole shakeup on the OL was done for the new guards, Ben Claxton and Chris Spencer. Roos will stay put at RT, Kenyatta Walker is expected to move to C, although he would be an excellent LT. Gandy would slot in as the LT if there are no acquisitions throughout the draft weekend, but he’s not someone they’re forcing into the role. If they can find someone better they will keep Gandy as a backup, or shop him if they get a good return. The most ideal situation would be for the Bills to move Walker to LT and acquire a different Center, but it doesn’t necessarily have to happen in the draft, the team is reportedly interested in signing LG Brian Waters in free agency.
The Bills also traded LOLB London Fletcher and TE Andy Stokes to the Jets for 3.02. Stokes was a great find in the 6th round and is 6’4”, 83 SPD, 72 STR, 81 ACC. He would be a fine backup, but just felt like a waste to sit on the bench for the Bills. Hopefully TE Jerome Collins is able to stay healthy, that’s really the only scenario that Stokes would be put to use in. As far as being a TE2 in select formations, Buffalo prefers a more run blocking, stronger TE to handle that duty. Darnell Sanders fits that mold better, at 6’6”, 270lbs, 77 SPD, 75 STR, 53 RBK. He’s still not ideal there, though. We could see the team address the TE2 spot at some point this off-season, but they won’t invest significant resources into the position, hence the Stokes trade. Drafted in the 6th, the team felt he was worth well beyond that, otherwise they would’ve been happy to keep him. Trading him was just good business. London Fletcher being included in the deal was more of a cap saving move. It’s a strong LB class, so there is some hope that a team that drafts a LB may put someone on the block for a later round pick. Fletcher moved to LOLB last year to make room for rookie MLB Lofa Tatupu, and the team expected a bigger impact from Fletcher. He had 58 tackles, 5 TFL, 2 Sacks at 84 SPD, 75 STR, 91 AWR, 81 AGI, 83 ACC. It felt like the AWR alone should’ve resulted in more production, but perhaps he did some things that just didn’t register in the box score. There is no player currently on the Bills roster that is slotting in to fill this vacated role by Fletcher, it is the only wide open starting spot on the team.
Not long after acquiring the 3.02 pick, the team traded it right back to the Jets for HB Eric Shelton. Last year the Bills relied on veterans Michael Pittman and Priest Holmes as the backup HBs. They had dealt away Marcel Shipp to Green Bay in the trade for Jamal Williams, but really liked him and hated to see him go. They had tried to find a more long-term replacement for Shipp last off-season but were not successful. This off-season they reached out to Detroit about HB Brandon Jacobs but he is unavailable. Musa Smith from the Eagles was of interest, but they couldn’t have retained him after this season unless they let ROLB Rashean Mathis or RE Dewayne White walk. White has been productive for the team totaling 7 sacks at RE in each of the last 3 seasons, while Mathis was moved from CB to OLB to be more of a coverage LB and they like him. Buffalo did not expect Erik Bickerstaff to be moved so cheap, being shipped with a 4th for a 3rd! They would have been in on him at that price and willingly topped that offer. Najeh Davenport and Jonathan Wells were both of interest, as well, but both 27-years-old; the team was hoping for someone a bit younger. Wells was going to cost at least a 2nd round pick, and Davenport had been traded for a 3rd & 4th to Carolina so he was unlikely to move.
With the options dwindling, Buffalo made the move to get Shelton and now no longer feel compelled to invest Training Camp points into Ricky Williams, which has made him a Balanced tendency compared to the more preferable Power running back the Bills like. Ricky is 29-years-old, but because of all those Training Camp boosts he will survive regression for quite a while. At age 30 he will be 93 SPD, 94 ACC | Age 31: 91 SPD, 92 ACC | Age 32: 88 SPD, 89 ACC. He has 4 years left as a starter, and 4 years left on his contract. He would be a serviceable #2 back during that age 33 season where he would be 85 SPD, 86 ACC, but the team would need to resign him or acquire him back in Free Agency. For now, Shelton will be the backup to be groomed for that takeover in 4 years (but maybe 3). After training camp this year, he will be 6’1”, 246lbs, 88 SPD, 79 STR, 53 AWR, 86 AGI, 90 ACC, 76 CAR, 76 BTK and only 23-years-old. The BTK obviously needs work, but any progression he gets would be invested solely into that area. He’s also 98 STA, 96 INJ and 84 TGH. Last year Ricky got subbed out quite a bit and it was suspected to be due to his lower STA, which was 74 to start the year. The team did begin to progress him there to try to keep him on the field more, but now that they have Shelton to get reps to, maybe they do not! After seeing 315 carries in 2003 (70.3%) and 312 in 2004 (73.6%), Ricky only carried the ball 260 times last year (65%). It was odd to see his usage go down despite no change in STA or injury status.
Their final trade was shipping WR Peter Warrick to Tennessee for the Jaguars 6th round pick. This was just a cost saving move as the Bills were not happy with Warrick last year. When they signed him uncontested, the team was happy to add another 95 SPD WR to the mix, but he quickly fell out of favor and was pushed to the bottom of the WR depth chart, even behind TE Jerome Collins and HB Ricky Williams. Through 5 games last year, Warrick had 6 catches for 47 yards, 0 TDs and 3 drops. Those drops felt like they were at pivotal moments, too. They quickly lost faith in him and bumped Collins and Williams up to the WR4 and WR5 slots, pushing him to WR6. Getting anything out of him was a plus!
Today, the team traded QB David Greene to the Cleveland Browns for the Browns 4th (4.10). After acquiring Boller from the Steelers, there was no sense in keeping Greene on the roster when they have Kerry Collins until he retires. Greene would not see Training Camps and the longer they kept him on the team without progressing the lower his value would get. They lost out on the trade deadline deal with Dallas that saw the Bills ship what amounted to 2.30 to the Cowboys for Greene and 3.32, that amounted to 168 points, or approximately 3.20 value. By shipping him off for 4.10, they accepted a loss of 86 points, or 4.8 value. At the time the Bills were unsure if they were going to develop a young QB, they had just lost back-to-back games against the Cowboys and Texans and their playoff hopes were in jeopardy. The AFC was very tough through the deadline, but after acquiring Greene the team rallied off 6 consecutive wins and made it to their 3rd consecutive AFC Title Game. When Kerry Collins was injured early in that game, after throwing only 9 attempts, it was Joey Harrington backing Collins up. Greene had looked very bad when given opportunities during the regular season and the team did not trust him to fill-in during the post-season. At the end of the day you can’t win all the trades, getting something out of a player who clearly fell out of favor within the organization was cutting their losses.
The Bills had another deal in the works that would’ve seen the team ship 3.14 away for a player, but since the offer was made 3 days ago they have not been able to get in touch with the GM to follow-up and have since canceled the offer. It appears as though the team will be staying put with where they are for now.
As we approach the 1st round of the PTF draft this evening, the Bills are below roster requirements at Tackle (by 3), Guard (by 2), DE (by 1), DT (by 1), and OLB (by 2). They need 9 spots filled to meet minimums with $14.55m in cap space and picks 3.14, 3.24, 3.32, 4.10, 5.29, 5.30, 6.11, 6.25, 6.29. Expect the team to fill those spots with the 5th and 6th rounders, leaving them with just 4 spots to fill, if they don’t accomplish that with their first 4 picks. |
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Forum Discussion
(by T_Collins on 05/07/2026)
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Replies - 0 :: Views - 9 |
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Bills make a few moves |
Going into this off-season it was to be expected that the Bills would be quiet. They filled a lot of holes last year, and there's really very few areas where they could truly upgrade. They nearly maxed out their cap penalties last year, again, and they really didn't want to go down that road for a 3rd consecutive year. That's $25m that could be spent on FAs/trade targets that isn't helping the current team. They also moved most of their draft picks last year. They lost their 1st round pick in the LE John Abraham signing and traded their picks during the season last year in hopes that it would give them a push toward a Super Bowl. They traded their 2nd round pick to Jacksonville for CB Fernando Bryant and their 3rd to the New York Giants for CB Ahmed Plummer. Resources, and needs, were minimal this off-season.
They could, of course, trade some players to obtain resources, but those would likely be lateral moves that wouldn't really help the franchise. The one time they would be willing to make a big move would be to acquire a franchise QB, which they've already done in trading for QB Kyle Boller. Outside of that, it's mostly going to be minor moves this off-season, filling in the gaps and potentially freeing up some cap space without incurring big cap penalties. They released ROLB J.J. Jones, LT Alex Sulfsted, LG Tyrone Hopson and LT Michael Thompson, none of which were of anything of value, just cost saving moves as the team expects to obtain cheaper backup options.
They traded DT Jerry DeLoach to New Orleans for a 6th round pick. It was a minimal return, but it was more of a cap saving move. He doesn't make much, but when you're tight financially every little bit will add up. Trading him this year, at age 29, would fetch something, but next year he would likely have no value once regression begins. The team expects to move forward with DT Justin Bannan as the DT2, assuming that DT Jamal Williams remains on the roster. He is a Match Eligible designation, so if someone makes an offer the Bills may be willing to let him walk due to their cap situation.
The only other trade was LT Todd Herremans and a future Buffalo 4 being shipped to Dallas for a 3rd this year and future Dallas 3. Herremans was a 3rd round pick last year and played very well with 74 pancakes and 6 sacks allowed as a rookie. He's not the most athletic player, but he has good AWR, PBK and RBK for a young OL. The reason for this move was a reshaping of the OL, which appears to be an annual tradition in Buffalo. Now that the team is going primarily with a younger QB, they will need to rely on their run game more. While obtaining a veteran OL would be the most ideal situation, they are, instead, looking to become more athletic, and as a result more raw. This will obviously be a risky strategy.
Their goal, as it stands in this moment, is to move C Ben Claxton to LG. Claxton, entering his 4th PFL season after being drafted by the San Diego Chargers in the 5th round and going unsigned, has developed from his 79 SPD, 81 STR, 48 AWR, 69 AGI, 75 ACC, 74 PBK, 76 RBK start to today's attributes of 80 SPD, 86 STR, 58 AWR, 71 AGI, 77 ACC, 85 PBK, 82 RBK. He still isn't very polished and his STR is much better than it was when he was drafted, but still on the weaker side. They're also moving C Chris Spencer, to RG. Spencer was a 7th round pick last year who regrettably didn't play and is 70 SPD, 94 STR, 47 AWR, 62 AGI, 75 ACC, 72 PBK, 77 RBK. Both of these OL are VERY athletic, and the goal is simply to be more athletic at the guard spots so the god damned toss plays work better and stop getting blown up for losses! To compensate for how raw both of these young guys are, the Bills are moving Kenyatta Walker to Center. Walker was the RT for Buffalo after being acquired in trade from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but the selection of Michael Roos last year saw Walker get bumped inside to RG. Now he is being tasked with moving to another new position for the second consecutive season. This leaves the LT position open, and if the season were to start today it may be given to LG Dylan Gandy, a 5th round pick last year who also didn't get to play, but is not much different from Herremans.
The only other roster moves the Bills have been has been restructuring Kyle Boller to a 7 year, $11.41m contract. The team is also expected to restructure WR Bernard Berrian to a 7 year deal very shortly. Both Boller and Berrian have improved INJ/TGH after spending time with the trainers this off-season to hopefully keep them on the field. |
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Forum Discussion
(by T_Collins on 04/29/2026)
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Replies - 0 :: Views - 9 |
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New Era in Buffalo |
After three consecutive AFC Title Game losses, Bills fans hopes of returning to a Super Bowl may have ended for a while. Buffalo announced that they acquired QB Kyle Boller from the Pittsburgh Steelers in exchange for Buffalo's future 1st round pick. To make such a move, the Bills have indicated that Boller is their future QB, and to develop and progress him he will need to play. The Bills have finished the regular season with double digit wins the past 3 years, but this type of move is going to make that much more difficult.
There is potential for the Bills to deploy both Kyle Boller and Kerry Collins this season but a lot of that is going to depend on the schedule. Kerry Collins is going to provide the team with the best chance of winning. Despite his play the last two seasons he gets less respect than Rodney Dangerfield. In a situation where Boller and Collins are playing during the same progression period, the Bills have to ensure that Boller gets his 500 passing yards, but the rest of his stats have to be good as well. Yards and touchdowns are everybody's focus, but if completion percentage, YPA and turnovers aren't good, the progression won't be there. Progressing Boller has to be the priority this season.
From an attribute standpoint, Boller is not far off from where Kerry Collins was at the beginning of the 2004 campaign. At the start of that year Kerry was 81 AWR, 89 THP, 84 THA. After Training Camp is applied this off-season, Boller will be 75 AWR, 94 THP, 81 THA and threw for 4429 yards, 36 TDs and 15 INTs. That's -6 AWR, -3 THA; he isn't far from being able to perform at a high level. It is believed that Boller can perform moderately well, and the Bills could potentially have a shot at a Wild Card berth. This type of move essentially ensures the Patriots will win the division, so Buffalo will be competing with the Chargers (I think the Broncos are the frontrunners now) and 2 of the Texans/Titans/Colts from the AFC South.
The Bills have tried to acquire QBs like Byron Leftwich from the Chiefs and Rex Grossman from the Dolphins multiple times. The Bills offered CB Nate Clements, QB Kerry Collins, QB David Greene and were willing to include players like MLB Lofa Tatupu and LE John Abraham. They were willing to throw a lot of talent to Miami for Grossman, which would've helped keep their GM from being fired while pushing Buffalo into a mini-rebuild. Miami severed trade talks though, which was a blessing to the Bills as Boller's cost was significantly cheaper than what was being offered for Grossman. When you compare the two, Grossman is 1 year older, +2 AWR, +6 THA. That's worth hanging onto guys like Clements, Tatupu and Abraham!
WRs Bernard Berrian and Craphonso Thorpe are untouchable in Buffalo while TE Jerome Collins and HB Ricky Williams are as close to untouchable as it can get. The offensive weapons to support Boller is there, but the offensive line is pretty raw, and rumor has it the Bills are going to shuffle it again this year. It is unlikely they acquire veteran lineman, although that would probably be what's best for Boller. They're trying to make the front as athletic as possible to improve their run game. Ricky Williams still averaged over 5 YPC but it was a down year for him. He had 50 fewer attempts than the previous two seasons despite no injuries, averaged less YPC and was held to single digit TDs. To support a young QB the team will need to find a way to become a more run oriented offense. |
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Forum Discussion
(by T_Collins on 04/28/2026)
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Replies - 2 :: Views - 30 |
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At A Glance
| TEAM CAPTAINS |
Off. Captain QB Kyle Boller |
Def. Captain MLB Lofa Tatupu |
ST Captain K Nate Kaeding |
| AFC East |
| RNK |
TEAM |
W-L-T |
PCT |
DIV |
| #19 |
Jets |
3-2-0 |
0.600 |
3-0 |
| #7 |
Patriots |
3-2-0 |
0.600 |
0-2 |
| #23 |
Dolphins |
2-3-0 |
0.400 |
0-1 |
| #29 |
Bills |
1-4-0 |
0.200 |
1-1 |
| BILLS SCHEDULE |
| Preseason |
| WK |
DATE |
OPPONENT |
SCOUT/RESULT |
| P1 |
Fri |
at Saints #25 |
|
| P2 |
Fri |
vs Falcons #1 |
|
| P3 |
Fri |
vs Titans #6 |
|
| P4 |
Thu |
at Lions #13 |
|
| Regular Season |
| 1 |
Sun |
vs Broncos #3 |
|
| 2 |
Sun |
at Steelers #11 |
|
| 3 |
Sun |
at Patriots #7 |
|
| 4 |
Sun |
vs Jets #19 |
|
| 5 |
Mon |
vs Cowboys #4 |
|
| 7 |
Sun |
vs Ravens #28 |
Match-up |
| 8 |
Sun |
at Jets #19 |
Match-up |
| 9 |
Sun |
vs Bengals #21 |
Match-up |
| 10 |
Sun |
at Dolphins #23 |
Match-up |
| 11 |
Sun |
vs Patriots #7 |
Match-up |
| 12 |
Sun |
at Jaguars #27 |
Match-up |
| 13 |
Sun |
at Redskins #5 |
Match-up |
| 14 |
Sun |
vs Dolphins #23 |
Match-up |
| 15 |
Sun |
at Browns #24 |
Match-up |
| 16 |
Sun |
vs Giants #18 |
Match-up |
| 17 |
Sun |
at Eagles #8 |
Match-up |
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