How to target Buffalo Bills WRs in fantasy drafts

Breaking down the unheralded cast of wideouts in Western New York.

Over the last four seasons, the Buffalo Bills have featured one of the NFL’s most prolific passing attacks, primarily on the strength of quarterback Josh Allen and wide receiver Stefon Diggs. That era came to an end this offseason when the Bills traded Diggs to the Houston Texans. In addition to parting ways with Diggs, their No. 1 receiver, they also lost WR Gabe Davis, who signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars after finishing second on the team in receiving in both 2022 and 2023.

With the Bills possessing limited cap space, the retooling of the receiver room took the form of value free-agent signings like Curtis Samuel and Marquez Valdes-Scantling, along with the selection of WR Keon Coleman in the second round of this year’s draft. Internally, they’ll be looking at Khalil Shakir and hoping he can take another step in his development.

One thing that can’t be overlooked when talking about Buffalo’s receivers is the presence of Allen, who has the disposition and talent to shepherd these fresh faces through the inevitable bumps in the road. With that in mind, let’s look at who can contribute in 2024.

Bills rookie Frank Gore Jr. on preseason: ‘I put my best foot forward’

#Bills rookie Frank Gore Jr. on preseason: ‘I put my best foot forward’

The Buffalo Bills played their final preseason snaps against the Carolina Panthers on Saturday in a 31-26 effort that came up short.

Despite the loss, it was a big day for the team’s undrafted free agent signee and legacy player Frank Gore Jr.

Like his Father, the junior Gore signed with Buffalo, and while Gore Sr. did so near the end of his career the second member of the family to wear a Bills jersey is doing so as his is just beginning.

To that end, he helped his case in the contest, putting up a touchdown and 101 Yards rushing via 18 carries on the day. He finished the preseason with Gore finished the preseason with a total of 163 yards on 33 carries and a 4.9 yards average per attempt.

“I can’t control it, so there’s nothing that I can really do about it. But I put my best foot forward every day during camp, during preseason,” Gore said after the exhibition about his roster chances. “So, whatever they decide, they decide. They’re going to do what’s best for the team, and I’ll be fine no matter what.”

The Bills rested their offensive starters as to not risk injury, opening a door of opportunity that Gore Jr. made the most of.

While it was a preseason contest and a number of the defensive players for Carolina were backups or depth players, the rookie rose to the occasion to make a strong case for a practice squad spot with Buffalo.

“I actually felt that I was doing good throughout the preseason. It was just everyone had to rotate, so like I really couldn’t get into a groove, because I’m used to playing in college all four quarters,” he added. “So, I was excited to come out here and be able to play like a full game again. So that’s what I was looking forward to when I was ready for.”

As the Bills prepare to kick off the regular season next Sunday they will name their 53-man roster along with a number of cuts and practice squad signings. 

His head coach had some good things to say about his play in the game, despite a slight knee roll injury in the final minutes.

“I thought he did some good things as well,” Sean McDermott said to the press. “It’s unfortunate that he went down towards the end of the game there, but ran hard, and gave us some juice in there.”

He also noted his development since arriving with the Bills.
“Yeah, probably just like most rookies – probably more and more comfortable as the training camp wore on, and then preseason one to two, and then two to three as well, and just getting more and more comfortable in our run game and our system.”

Gore will likely be among those who don’t make the 53-man roster, though being signed to the practice squad and even playing in the regular season aren’t improbable despite being behind RB1 James Cook, Cook’s backup Ty Johnson, and fellow rookie Ray Davis on the backfield depth chart.

Last season saw some injuries to the Bills running backs, and this year the team hopes the current group remains healthy. 

Gore could be cut due to the crowdedness at the position, or he could be added to develop on the practice squad and even get called up at some point should a roster spot open up and the need arise.

Time will tell as Tuesday’s roster cut deadline looms whether he’ll remain in Buffalo, but no matter the outcome another Gore running back wearing number 20 Bills jersey put on a display in a ground game performance.

“Of course, I feel like I belong in the league,” the rookie noted. “I don’t know where – I hope I’m here – but it really doesn’t matter. Like I said before, (general manager Brandon) Beane’s gonna do his best for his team, and hopefully someone’s seen something in me. So, really I’ll be fine, for sure. No matter if it’s this year, next year, the year after, I’ll be fine.”

Fantasy football: Where to draft Buffalo Bills WR Keon Coleman

Analyzing Buffalo Bills’ WR Keon Coleman 2024 fantasy football ADP and where to target him in fantasy drafts.

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Buffalo Bills WR Keon Coleman was taken with the 1st pick of the 2nd round in the 2024 NFL Draft. Drafted out of Florida State, Coleman will have big shoes to help fill with WRs Stefon Diggs (traded to Houston) and Gabe Davis (signed as free agent by Jacksonville) gone. Below, we look at Keon Coleman’s 2024 fantasy football average draft position (ADP) and where you should draft him.

Coleman is expected to be the No. 2 option of a highly-dynamic Bills attack. Ideally, he becomes a star in his own right, and given the offense he was drafted into, being a top-15 receiver certainly isn’t out of the question. The rookie is intriguing in terms of fantasy value.

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Keon Coleman’s ADP: 66.82

(ADP data courtesy of MyFantasyLeague.com; last updated at time of this publishing – ADPs continually change as more drafts occur)

Coleman’s 66.82 ADP in redraft leagues puts him in the range of the 6th to 9th round, depending on the size of the league. While numerous Bills rank higher than him, he is slightly below that of teammate TE Dalton Kincaid (58.14).

Among wide receivers, Coleman’s ADP ranks him 30th at the position. Houston’s Tank Dell (66.63) is 29th just behind Pittsburgh’s George Pickens (58.89), Cincinnati’s Tee Higgins (58.23) and Baltimore’s Zay Flowers  (56.02). Coleman is slightly ahead of Chicago’s Keenan Allen (66.95), Kansas City’s Rashee Rice (67.70) and Washington’s Terry McLaurin (69.13).

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Keon Coleman’s 2023-24 stats (at Florida State)

Games: 12

Receptions: 50

Receiving yards: 658

Receiving touchdowns: 11

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Where should you draft Coleman?

Coleman’s fantasy value should get a boost as he will be pulling in receptions from QB Josh Allen. The Bills QB has thrown 29 or more touchdowns in each of the last 4 seasons. He’s an aggressive passer, and Coleman should bode well from that.

The Bills offense was changed under offensive coordinator Joe Brady last season which hurt Diggs’ value given they went to more of a rush-first approach. While Coleman is eyeing the No. 2 receiver spot and should be on the field often, he’s a wild card given his usage rate is relatively unknown.

He’ll be battling fellow wide receiver Khalil Shakir for targets. Running back James Cook will also play a role, as will Kincaid. There are numerous mouths to feed, but expect Coleman to be one that gets looked at consistently.

Draft Coleman after Kincaid and Cook, but don’t let him fall out of the 7th round in 12-team leagues. The upside in this offense is just too great to watch him slip that much.

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Bills rookie Keon Coleman takes responsibility for dropped touchdown

Like a vet:

Buffalo Bills wide receiver Keon Coleman took responsibility for a debated play against the Pittsburgh Steelers in his second preseason game.

In doing so, Coleman came off as anything but a rookie.

Buffalo topped Pittsburgh, 9-3, in their second preseason outing. While a win, there were no touchdowns for the Bills. The team has not scored one during the exhibition season.

Coleman had a great look at getting one. On a quick route to the end zone, Bills quarterback Mitchell Trubisky threw a strike Coleman’s way but the rookie could not haul it in.

There was a debate about whether the pass was too far in front of him or if Coleman dropped it. In his own mind, it was the latter.

“Just a drop,” Coleman said via video conference. “Focus drop. You got to look the ball in and make the play.”

It was not a perfect pass by any means but Coleman taking responsibility is something the Bills coaching staff will love. It shows a desire to be better.

And despite the drop, coaches are still backing him–Specifically, offensive coordinator Joe Brady.

The OC referenced Brady’s daily drive in practice to be a much more important factor than one play in an exhibition contest.

“I love where Keon is at as a football player,” Brady said. “I’m not always as focused on where the production is at.”

It remains to be seen if Coleman suits up and plays against the Carolina Panthers in Buffalo’s preseason finale on Saturday. Head coach Sean McDermott announced that the Bills will not be playing starters because of a string of injuries the team has sustained, but as a rookie, Coleman could see time.

Or he might have to wait until the regular season for his first-career touchdown.

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Bills’ Joe Brady backs Keon Coleman after Steelers ‘drop’

Brady has no worries on Keon:

Did Keon Coleman drop a potential touchdown against the Pittsburgh Steelers? That’s the debate going on in Buffalo Bills circles this week.

Buffalo topped Pittsburgh, 9-3, in their second preseason outing. While a win, there were no touchdowns for the Bills. The team has not scored one during the exhibition season.

Coleman had the best look at one of any Buffalo player. On a quick route to the end zone, Bills quarterback Mitchell Trubisky threw a strike Coleman’s way but the rookie could not haul it in.

So the debate? Bad catch or bad throw? You decide:

Regardless of any controversy among fans, there is not any in the world of Joe Brady.

Buffalo’s offensive coordinator reflected on the Steelers matchup for the first time. On Coleman, Brady mentioned how there is no worry in his mind.

“I love where Keon is at as a football player,” Brady said. “I’m not always as focused on where the production is at.”

Brady noted how Coleman’s efforts day in, day out, stand out much more to him than any one preseason pass.

Brady’s full thoughts on Coleman can be found in the WROC-TV clip below:

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Bills’ Sean McDermott on CB JaMarcus Ingram: ‘Real proud of him’

#Bills’ Sean McDermott on CB JaMarcus Ingram: ‘Real proud of him’

It’s not uncommon for Bills head coach Sean McDermott to throw his support behind a depth player on Buffalo’s roster.

It’s also not uncommon for it to be a member of the team’s defensive backs group.

On Saturday against the Pittsburgh Steelers, he liked what he saw in how hard CB Ja’Marcus Ingram played, and spoke about it to the press afterward.

“He practices the same way,” McDermott said. “His teammates love him, they respect him for the way he works and all of the work he puts in physically, all of the work he puts in on the mental part of the game. I’m just real proud of him.”

The 6-foot-2, 190-pound Ingram signed with Buffalo as an undrafted rookie in 2022 after playing in college as a walk-on at Utah State, as a transfer at Texas Tech, and then finishing with the University at Buffalo as a Bison.

He’s played in five games over the last two seasons and has been on and off the Bills practice squad, released and re-signed at times, and endured finding himself in a position to now be the team’s fourth cornerback behind starters Rasul Douglas and Christian Benford, and Kaiir Elam.

Bills defensive coordinator Bobby Babich views him as an example of the Bills approach to player development.

“Ja’Marcus, his development is really, to me, one of the cool things that when you coach, you’ve got different tiers of players. But here’s a guy that I believe came to try out at camp,” Babich said. “Came in at like 170 pounds, as tall as he is, and put in so much work and grinded and worked while he waited, and those types of things.

“And it’s just really cool to see a guy like Ja’Marcus really growing and developing in a way that you see clear dividends from the hard work he’s put in.”
As for the corner, he too pointed to some of the work he’s put in and the results it has produced after focusing this offseason on his press footwork, agility ladders, and pedaling.

“Just really all the base fundamentals,” Ingram said per The Buffalo News, “and that puts you in position to make plays.”

He also set out to work on writing a children’s book called “The Little Player That Could” that will be out around Thanksgiving of this year.

“It’s based on my story,” Ingram shared. “I want to teach kids or inspire kids to have perseverance and resiliency in life and whatever dream that they’re chasing.

“But the story happens to just be about me and what I kind of went through my career to get to the point where I’m at. But I want people – well, kids – to be able to be inspired by my story, to just persevere through anything and whatever it is that they want to do in life.”

“I felt like that was something that that I could leave for my son,” Ingram said. “He just turned 1, so I’m reading him books and stuff like that. I feel like that was something that I could leave behind for him, but also be able to inspire others with the platform that I have and something that could, like, leave my work, long after I’m gone.”

Local Buffalo LB Joe Andreessen on opportunity with Bills: ‘Nothing to lose’

Local Buffalo LB Joe Andreessen on opportunity with #Bills: ‘Nothing to lose’

Western New York native Joe Andreessen is playing his way into competition for making the Bills’ 53-man roster thanks to a strong performance in preseason action against the Steelers in Pittsburgh.

On Saturday the rookie was calling and leading the Bills defense on the field against a pro offense led by a Super Bowl-winning quarterback in Russell Wilson.

He would finish the game leading the team with 12 tackles.

“It was kind of nice,” Andreessen said to the media after the game. “They didn’t surprise me with it or anything like that. … I’m an undrafted guy, and I kind of looked at it as an opportunity, like nothing to lose.”

While he is one of the newer faces on the roster, he is a familiar one to Buffalo. Andreessen is a Lancaster, NY native and played college football at the University at Buffalo before signing with his hometown team in May following a successful rookie tryout.

“A lot of people aren’t really expecting me to make the team,” he continued. “You know, I’m a rookie tryout guy, so it was just something to take full advantage of, and hopefully I showed it to people out there today.”

Starting weakside linebacker Matt Milano is out for much of the regular season with a bicep tear and Terrel Bernard, who played in his place during an injury last season, was held out of this weekend’s game as a precaution at the position.

That opened the door for Andreessen to see playing time with Buffalo’s starters in only his second career game.

One of Buffalo’s leaders on defense, pass rusher Greg Rousseau, spoke about how Andreessen was not fazed by any big moments or by playing in front of a big stadium crowd.

“He’s that guy,” Rousseau said. “You couldn’t sense any fear with Joe. He stepped up to the plate, called it with the ones, and it was great seeing him flying around here and making open-field tackles. He was doing his thing.”

Baylon Spector and vet Deion Jones are who Andreessen is competing with behind Terrel Bernard and Dorian Williams in the linebacker’s group. Still, the rookie is making a case on the field for consideration.

And his new head coach had good things to say about him as well.

“He did [have a game],” McDermott shared. “Yeah, he did. When a young guy gets an opportunity and he makes the most of it, it’s just fun to watch. Watch a young man like that, especially a local guy. I think I met his aunt in the elevator in the hotel. She was excited, was on the phone with Joe’s mom, who had just called in at the time. You love stories like that, right? Real happy for Joe.”

During the second half on a fourth-and-2 run by Steelers quarterback Justin Fields in Buffalo territory, Andreessen tackled him in the open field to end their drive with a seven-yard loss to give the Buffalo offense the ball back.

“I was telling the guys on the sideline I was super nervous,” Andreessen noteed. “That’s a very athletic guy out there and there was a lot of room. … I was just in my zone and he broke contain. I was trying to track the near hip and I didn’t want him to cut back on me and I didn’t press it super hard.”

Bills’ Keon Coleman reflects on first NFL action in loss to Bears

#Bills’ Keon Coleman reflects on first NFL action in loss to #Bears:

The first of many is done and dusted for Keon Coleman.

The Buffalo Bills wide receiver finally got his first, brief NFL action against the Chicago Bears on Saturday.

The scoreboard was none too kind to Buffalo, a 33-6 loss, but for the Bills’ top draft pick it was all about getting his feet wet.

Head coach Sean McDermott thought Coleman held his own.

“I thought he looked comfortable,” McDermott said via video conference. “I thought he looked like it wasn’t too big for him, and that’s part of being a young player and adjusting. That didn’t surprise me, though, because he’s been taking things in stride that way.”

Coleman’s mindset reflect McDermott’s analysis. After getting his first taste of taste of pro football, it was an “onto the next one” approach from the rookie.

“Really, I got a job to do,” Coleman said. “I’m just eager to do that every day.”

Coleman managed just one catch–but he mustered a first down out of it.

For more from Coleman, see the attached WKBW-TV clip below:

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Keon Coleman makes first catch with the Bills (video)

First of many:

Keon Coleman is on the board with his first catch for the Buffalo Bills… in the preseason, at least.

Coleman, Buffalo’s top rookie draft pick, made it a short and sweet grab. Running down the right sideline, Coleman turned on a dime and stopped, plucked the pass out of the air, and went out of bounds for a first down.

Worth noting: That was Coleman’s only catch in his team’s preseason opener against the Chicago Bears. In addition, that pass came from quarterback Mitchell Trubisky. Josh Allen had already left the game when Coleman finally hauled one in.

Coleman’s catch can be found below:

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Keon Coleman enters Highmark Stadium in Bills uniform for the first time (video)

Keon in his #Bills uniform:

The moment everyone in western New York has waited for since the end of April has arrived.

Well, everyone is waiting for incredle touchdowns off of passes from quarterback Josh Allen a lot more… but we’ve got to wait until September for that.

For now, Buffalo will have to settle with seeing Coleman in a Bills uniform in the tunnel at Highmark Stadium for the first time. That happened during the team’s annual “Return of Blue and Red” practice on Friday in Orchard Park.

The top rookie draft pick dawned the Bills’ classic white on white combo with the rest of the offense, giving fans a glimpse into an optimistic future.

Check out Coleman in the WKBW-TV clip below:

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