Keon Coleman has breakout game with his new receiving mate against the Titans

Keon Coleman has breakout game with his new receiving mate against the Titans

It had felt like for the last few weeks, the Buffalo Bills and their offense has stalled out in moving the ball and putting points on the board even with the talent of Pro Bowl quarterback Josh Allen. All things finally seemed to be cooking against the Tennessee Titans now that rookie Keon Coleman got a top-tier wide receiver to run opposite of, Amari Cooper.

 

Not only did the freshly arrived Cooper manage to find a ton of success, Coleman himself found more openings now that teams couldn’t pay as much attention to the talented rookie. On the afternoon, Coleman hauled in 4 catches, resulting in 125 yards through the air, including a couple of big play catches that helped flip the field for the Bills.

 

With Cooper in Buffalo, this receiving core is starting to settle in nicely and looks to be one of the more loaded groups of weapons in the NFL. Allowing Coleman to operate in one-on-one spaces is going to be crucial for him as the big play threat continues to develop within this offense. With Khalil Shakir and Dalton Kincaid eating up the inside, Coleman has a chance to really take over and potentially land himself toward the 1,000-yard mark on the season.

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Amari Cooper hilariously asked for help after a Bills pre-snap audible and still scored a touchdown

Amari Cooper didn’t know the Bills’ playbook at all and it didn’t matter.

In due time, the Buffalo Bills’ recent trade acquisition, Amari Cooper, and franchise quarterback Josh Allen will likely have impeccable chemistry. Both the receiver and quarterback are simply too talented not to be on the same page for long.

But for now, Cooper is still acclimating to Buffalo, learning the playbook, and trying to ingratiate himself into an AFC heavyweight’s roster mix.

We saw a perfect example of this early in the third quarter during the Bills’ battle with the Tennessee Titans on Sunday.

With the Bills facing a second-and-long in the red zone, it appeared that Cooper didn’t know what route to run from the slot after Allen audibled to a different play. You could even see a confused Cooper asking rookie playmaker Keon Coleman for help.

Cooper amazingly wound up scoring his first Bills touchdown on the sequence anyway, but it’s unclear whether Coleman successfully pointed him in the right direction:

Note to self: Ad-libbing often works! Note to star receivers like Cooper: Improv with confidence usually works out, too!

Bills’ Keon Coleman sets up TD with 44-yard catch vs. Titans (video)

Bills’ Keon Coleman sets up TD with 44-yard catch vs. Titans (video)

The Bills offense started their Week 7 matchup with the Titans with a huge lull. Three-straight three-and-out-drives by the team.

They got a jolt from second-round rookie Keon Coleman to wake them up.

Coleman hauled in a 44-yard catch from quarterback Josh Allen early in the second half. The Bills went on to score on a carry from running back James Cook on the very next play to bring the score to 10-7 in favor of the Titans.

Coleman’s score can be found below:

Bills’ Keon Coleman on Amari Cooper: ‘Bring more thrill to the offense’

Bills’ Keon Coleman on Amari Cooper: ‘Bring more thrill to the offense’

[anyclip-media thumbnail=”undefined” playlistId=”undefined” content=”dW5kZWZpbmVk”][/anyclip-media]Bills rookie receiver Keon Coleman has gotten off to a decent start in his rookie season in Buffalo.

The second-round pick by the club in the 2024 NFL Draft has 12 receptions on 20 targets for 201 yards with two touchdowns through six games. He’s also been third on the team in targets and yards receiving after Khalil Shakir and tight end Dalton Kincaid.

He also gained a new teammate who could further open up opportunities for him and potentially help his development as well.

In a trade with the Cleveland Browns, the Bills acquired seven-time 1,000-yard wide receiver and five-time Pro Bowler Amari Cooper this past Tuesday.

When asked about the newest Bills receiver, Coleman was happy to have a player of Cooper’s experience and ability around.

“I mean, it’s Amari Cooper,” Coleman said to the media on Thursday. “Great receiver, produced in the league for a long time. Get to learn from him and watch him work every day.”

He also gave a funny analogy to describe the big trade addition.

“Same thing like adding another person with more money in your household,” the rookie added. “Help you pay everything, help everything out. Help everybody else get open and just bring more thrill to the offense.”

Coleman has gotten some more looks in the passing game as of late, in part, due to scarcity.

The Bills have not yet replaced the receiving threat or target productivity of former WR1 Stefon Diggs. Though they have spread the ball out across more receivers, Coleman and other targeted players have had difficulty getting separation and open looks the way they did when opposing defenses double-teamed Diggs.

The addition of Cooper can open things up more for Coleman and company, and the young receiver might even see some time on the other side of the ball as well should a play call for it.

QB Aaron Rodgers’ successful hail mary at the end of the first half during last week’s Monday Night Football showdown with the Jets was one the Bills were unsuccessful in defending, allowing a scoring play.

And, more famously, the team also failed to bat down a 2020 Kyler Murray to DeAndre Hopkins play dubbed the “Hail Murray” which won that game for the Arizona Cardinals.

Due to the difficulties that Buffalo has had defending these deep scoring plays, Coleman’s athleticism, jump ball abilities, and basketball background could come in handy.

And according to Sean McDermott via WROC, there is a possibility the Bills could use Coleman as part of the secondary in coverage for future Hail Mary attempts to bat down passes.

Only time will tell.

Bills’ Josh Allen: Team ‘found a way’ to win vs. Jets

Bills’ Josh Allen: Team ‘found a way’ to win vs. Jets

The Bills defeated the Jets 23-20 on Monday Night Football this week to take a first-place lead in the AFC East as the only team in the division with a winning record.

QB Josh Allen and company bounced back from their first two losses of the season in back-to-back weeks by returning to their scoring ways early.

After scoring a touchdown and a field goal, Buffalo appeared headed into halftime with a 10-point lead.

That is until four-time NFL MVP and South American tea enthusiast Aaron Rodgers threw a signature 52-yard Hail Mary touchdown as the clock ran out to end the first half.

“Yeah, obviously kind of a gut punch,” Allen said postgame about Rodgers’ latest feat. “Going in thinking you’re gonna have a two-score lead there and they catch a Hail Mary.”

But the Bills fought back into the game in the second half.

The offense added two more touchdown tosses later in the contest, tying the game at 20 points each before a Tyler Bass field goal gave Buffalo a lead they would not lose the rest of the way.

“Fighting through adversity, getting in at halftime, regrouping, saying let’s just control one play at a time,” Allen added. “We didn’t score as many points as I’d like in the second half, but found a way.”

Allen went 19-of-25 passing for 215 yards with a 127.9 rating and two touchdowns in the air plus one on the ground.

“I wanted to come out and play a clean game and get through my reads quickly” Allen continued.

His teammates had faith in his ability to bounce back from the consecutive losses.

“We totally expected him to be able to flush that (loss),” left guard David Edwards said via The Buffalo News. “Some of the plays he made – awesome.”

The Bills improved to 4-2 atop their division, and have still never lost three straight games with Allen at quarterback. His playmaking has had a substantial impact on the win column this season.

“He’s just Josh Allen,” tight end Dalton Kincaid noted as well. “He can do miraculous things with the ball in his hands.”

The leadership of the club’s quarterback in gutting out the win was noticed and credited by his head coach as well.

“A good division win on the road,” head coach Sean McDermott said to the media. “Last three games in a row on the road, thought it was a gritty win led by Josh. Offense got off to a good start, established the line of scrimmage, really in the game.”

Allen realizes the importance of the division matchups “counting double” in their postseason implications, a concept that may begin to apply to key matchups against the AFC’s top playoff contenders on the Bills’ schedule as well.

“Our No. 1 goal is making the playoffs and you do that by winning your division,” Allen said. “We understand the gravity of this type of game, us being 4-2 with a 2 1/2-game lead with a head-to-head win, as opposed to being 3-3 and in second place.”

Bills at Jets: 3 key matchups to watch in Week 6

Bills at Jets: 3 key matchups to watch in Week 6

The Buffalo Bills (3-2) will visit the New York Jets (2-3) in their upcoming Week 6 matchup.

Even with it being an AFC East clash, it will still be the games, within the game, that will make all the difference.

Here are three key matchups to watch during Monday’s Bills-Jets contest:

OL Dion Dawkins vs. DE Micheal Clemons

(Getty)

Let’s be honest, this is all about off the field.

In the past, Dawkins and Clemons have had flare ups during games. It has turned into a war of words at times.

Most recently, Dawkins had a laugh on social media about the Jets firing head coach Robert Saleh this week. These two will be going at each other hard.

WR Keon Coleman vs. CB Sauce Gardner

(Photo by Bryan M. Bennett/Getty Images)

Buffalo’s second-round rookie receiver has had a few moments in his career but not many. No big breakout games. The Bills need one and this is a tough task.

Going against the entire Jets secondary is difficult. Gardner is at the top of the list.

Quarterback Josh Allen will need a lot more help than he got from his receivers last week.

LB Terrel Bernard vs. RB Breece Hall

(Getty)

Like the Bills offense, the Jets struggled on that side of the ball last week as well. However, their issues have been going on for most of the NFL season. The reason why is easy to see.

It will be a full-defensive effort to stop a rushing attack. But Bernard leads that unit. When New York can’t run the ball, quarterback Aaron Rodgers has been forced into mistakes because their game plan becomes predictable. That will play into Buffalo’s hand as their secondary is very good, too.

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Steve Smith Sr. believes the Bills are using Keon Coleman wrong

After Sunday’s 23-20 loss to the Houston Texans, the Buffalo Bills are looking for answer and Hall-of-Famer Steve Smith Sr. has one.

The Buffalo Bills (3-2) are coming off a disappointing 23-20 loss at the Houston Texans in which the passing offense looked anemic when the team needed a spark. The offense put up just 126 passing yards against one of the stingiest pass defenses in the NFL, but Buffalo’s offense also looked like it needed someone to step up.

On Sunday against the Texans, Bills rookie wide receiver Keon Coleman led the team in receiving yards with 49, but all of that came on his touchdown catch that helped Buffalo come back from a 17-point deficit. Through five games, Coleman has nine catches for 175 yards and two touchdowns, something that many could say are underwhelming numbers for the 33rd overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft.

Essentially, Coleman filled in for Khalil Shakir, who missed the contest due to an ankle injury, as the number one receiver, but he was third on the team in targets with five. Despite the fact that Coleman is still learning the ropes as a rookie, there is one NFL Hall-of-Famer who believes that he is being used out of position.

“Their young rookie receiver, Keon Coleman, he’s a heck of a football player. I believe that they (the Bills) have put him out of position,” Steve Smith Sr. said during a podcast for Underdog. “Give him a mismatch against a smaller DB (defensive back). When he was playing against Jalen Ramsey against Miami, they won that game, but he was getting clamped down.”

It’s no secret that the Bills are trying to make the best of the situation with their pass-catchers following the departures of wide receivers Stefon Diggs and Gabe Davis in free-agency. That has forced players like Coleman and Shakir into featured roles within the offense to various degrees, but there are some who believe that Coleman can be used in a better way to fit his skill set.

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One more time: Bills’ Keon Coleman takes it 49 yards to the house

One more time: Bills’ Keon Coleman takes it 49 yards to the house

The Buffalo Bills are busy preparing to take on the New York Jets on Monday Night Football in Week 6.

Before we go there, let’s look back at Week 5.

The Bills (3-2) fell to the Houston Texans, 23-20. Although there wasn’t much to celebrate in the loss, rookie Keon Coleman’s long touchdown is worth a second look.On a crucial fourth-and-five in the third quarter, Coleman caught a pass on a curl and ran up the sideline for a TD. The play was huge for the Bills, bringing them within three points.

For Coleman, the 49-yard catch-and-run was the longest play of his young career. Although it was his only catch of the game, plays like this will grow the trust Josh Allen has in him.

He now has two touchdowns through five weeks of his young career.

Before looking forward to the Jets (2-3), let’s take one last look at the play:

Bills’ Josh Allen post-Texans loss: ‘This isn’t a defining moment in our season’

Bills’ Josh Allen post-Texans loss: ‘This isn’t a defining moment in our season’

The Buffalo Bills could not complete a come-from-behind win in Houston against the Texans on Sunday, falling to an AFC playoff contender for the second consecutive week.

Buffalo’s second loss of the year ended with a final score of 23-20 in NFL Week 5 thanks to a 59-yard game-winning field goal by Houston kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn.

59 yards had significance more than once during the game.

On a 1st-and-20 in the first quarter, Bills quarterback Josh Allen threw a deep shot downfield to receiver Mack Hollins, who lost some acceleration watching the ball overhead and missed what could have been a 59-yard catch with a clear path to the endzone off the fingers of his extended hands.

Allen had the least productive outing of his career and his worst since he made his debut in 2018, completing a career-low 30% of his passes while going 9-of-30 for 131 yards and a touchdown with 54 yards rushing. 49 of those yards came courtesy of a single scoring play by WR Keon Coleman, and 82 yards of that production went scoreless.

“Starts with making better decisions on my part,” Allen said after the game. “I know I didn’t complete the ball at a high rate. I put the ball in harm’s way, especially in that first half.”

The Bills QB found himself on the wrong side of history, recording the lowest completion percentage in a game with at least 30 pass attempts in the last 30 seasons, per ESPN Stats & Info.

The offense struggled on first down and was also without their leading receiver this season, Khalil Shakir, who was out with an ankle injury. Without him, they looked one-dimensional, as the rest of the receivers struggled to get open or catch passes, only hauling in four catches.

“I would have hoped for more, honestly,” head coach Sean McDermott said to the press. “I’m sure those guys feel the same way.”

Coleman had two catches for touchdowns in the last few games, though the Bills’ other significant 3-year $24 million offseason addition to the receivers group, Curtis Samuel, has yet to make a meaningful impact. There remains a clear need for a reliable deep threat and target in the passing game that can take the top off defenses, perhaps setting the stage for a signature Brandon Beane trade acquisition.

“We missed by a little bit,” Allen added of the offensive effort. “We were off slightly. That’s something I have to clean up. I’m proud of how we responded in the second half … we gave ourselves a chance to win the football game.”

Coleman took responsibility on the receiver’s side after only hauling in the scoring catch, missing another target, and getting flagged for offensive pass interference on a play as well.

“It was all self-inflicted,” Coleman said. “Mostly on me and the communication and doing what I need to do.”

He also spoke in support of his QB.

“I would never, ever criticize Josh ever,” he added. “He is the heartbeat of our offense and our football team. We go as he goes. He is the man. I could easily point to myself on one of those third downs, not being able to pick up one of the stunts. So, this game is not on Josh.”

Allen stood by his teammates as well.

“I’m proud of how we responded in the second half,” Bills QB Josh Allen said. “Got on our horses and gave ourselves a chance to win a football game.”

Even with the worst passing percentage performance of his career and an underwhelming lack of help, the Bills came back to tie the game twice and could have at least put the game into overtime by running out the clock.

“This isn’t a defining moment in our season,” Allen noted. “It’s a chance to learn and grow from this. That’s what we’re going to do.”

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Bills’ Sean McDermott takes responsibility for Texans loss: ‘That’s on me’

Bills’ Sean McDermott takes responsibility for Texans loss: ‘That’s on me’

The Buffalo Bills lost to the Houston Texans 23-20 during their NFL Week 5 road game on Sunday.

It was the Bills’ second loss of the season, coming in back-to-back weeks against AFC playoff contenders.

And like the week prior, coaching decisions once more came under question following the matchup.

The Bills came back from being down 20-3 and scored 17 straight points to tie the game with under four minutes to play.

Houston QB C.J. Stroud was flagged for intentional grounding making it fourth-and-15 to take the Texans out of field-goal range with under a minute left in the game. They punted, placing the Bills at their own three-yard line.

Three straight incomplete passes later, and the Bills had neither converted a first down nor run off the game clock, instead punting to give Houston the ball back with a chance to win.

One Houston made good on.

Buffalo could have run the clock down to have a chance to keep the game tied and go to overtime, a missed opportunity that proved costly.

“That’s on me, the end-of-game situation on offense,” head coach Sean McDermott said after the game “We’re in a tough situation … they were holding three timeouts, they got a good field goal kicker. We needed to run the clock and move the chains, and that’s on me. We didn’t do that there, and that’s my fault.”

Buffalo had a chance to keep a drive alive and potentially take a lead when they started a drive on their own three-yard line with under a minute left on the game clock.

But failed to do so.

“Coach is gonna trust us to go out there and do that,” Allen said. “Obviously would love to convert there and hindsight’s 20-20, but yeah.”

Allen threw three straight incomplete passes and the offense wasn’t able to get a first down or run out the clock.

“I love Josh with the ball in his hands — you know I do,” head coach Sean McDermott said postgame. “And again, efficient offense was the right approach there, and … I didn’t have us do that. And so again, we learned from that. Tough situation.”

McDermott and his staff have notably been scrutinized after their game and clock management near the end of the contest.

“… You go back and forth, and, hey, I probably should have run it on the first play and just said, ‘Hey, where are we now?'” He added. “Either way, we’re probably gonna have to move the chains one time, right? To not give them a chance. But again, those are situations and that’s on me.”

“It sucks to lose any game, but especially when you come back all the way through, felt like we had good momentum going into the second half, into the fourth quarter there, but it’s the NFL. It’s a tough League,” LB Terrel Bernard said.

After Houston returned Buffalo’s punt 13 yards to their own 41-yard line, they gained 5 yards on the next play, which set up a 59-yard game-winning field goal.

On that last play before the kick, Bills linebacker Dorian Williams was late to get on the field before the snap, and corner Rasul Douglas noted postgame Williams may not have known the play call.

“We were trying to go nickel defense, and Dorian was on the side,” McDermott explained. “We didn’t have the communication we needed right there, and so because of that, he was late onto the field and getting the call in that situation.”

It was the latest instance of some drop-off in play by the Bills players.

“Overall we’ve been a little bit off our game from what we executed in the first three games,” McDermott added.

Defensive end A.J. Epenesa shared it was important that the team not “ride the roller coaster” of emotions following the two losses.

“Right now, we’re at a low,” he said. “We’ve lost two games, but we’ve got to try to stay as consistent as possible. We’ve had a lot of success on this team. We do a lot of great things. It’s just us shooting ourselves in the foot. It’s us making mistakes, which is allowing these teams to beat us. We’ve got to clean those things up.”

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