Ohio State lands 4-star Davis Seaman, adding to elite OL haul this cycle
Ohio State adds 4-star offensive lineman Davis Seaman to its 2027 class!
Buffalo Bills GM Brandon Beane selected 10 players in the 2026 NFL Draft, focusing on filling key roster needs. The draft addressed both offensive and defensive positions, including potential replacements and depth additions.
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I think the answer to this question has to begin with how the Billsā season ended ā they were a blown call in overtime ā yes, it was a catch ā away from advancing to their second-consecutive AFC championship game, and they didnāt have a mass exodus during free agency, so āstartingā gigs or, more aptly described as āfull-timeā positions were never going to be easy to come by, particularly on the offensive side of the ball. Buffalo is returning 12 of its top 13 snap percentage leaders on offense from the 2025 campaign ā the only non-returnee is, of course, left guard David Edwards. Unironically, the Bills drafted two potential eventual replacements for Edwards in the 2026 draft with fourth-round pick Jude Bowry and seventh-rounder ArāMaj Reed-Adams. We all know, with an entirely new system with a fresh defensive coordinator in Jim Leonhard, his side of the ball is where most of the job openings resided. Even with the acquisition of , given ās early-November Achillesā tear, the Bills low-key needed another stand-up rush outside linebacker ā insert T.J. Parker. *(Last season, the third and fourth stand-up rush outside linebackers in Denver, Dondrea Tillman and Jonah Elliss, played 31.7% and 28.2% of the defensive snaps respectively during the regular season for the Broncos, for reference.)* The inside linebacker group didnāt have a crying need for a full-time player, but depth was clearly a priority ā insert Kaleb Elarms-Orr. The nickel position and whatās asked of that role is undergoing a significant makeover, as evidenced by the trade of longtime nickel stalwart . Even with the signing of in March, a more sizable presence was needed. Heck the Bills literally downsized going from Johnson to Alford and we all know how Johnson was put through the wringer as a box linebacker against the run. Insert Jalon Kilgore. In his post-draft presser, Beane made multiple references to the chaotic divisional-round loss to the , mostly citing the lack of cornerback depth, which has come back to bite the Bills in back-to-back playoff exits ā insert and While Iām back on the most recent postseason defeats, letās not forget about who received the final two targets of the Billsā 2025 season ā and , both of whom were added in November, and had a grand total five catches between them for Buffalo during the regular season. Insert Skyler Bell. When youāre a Super Bowl contender like the Bills, particularly one that retained essentially of its marquee free-agents, full-time starting gigs are hard to come by. Which brings me to the next questionā¦
The Buffalo Bills drafted 10 players in the 2026 NFL Draft.
The Bills focused on offensive and defensive positions, including potential replacements for left guard and depth for linebacker and cornerback.
Notable players include Jude Bowry, T.J. Parker, and Davison Igbinosun, among others.
The biggest perceived need was a nose tackle, although the Bills have adapted their defensive scheme away from traditional requirements.
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The perceived largest need ā both literal and figurative ā to many Bills fans was nose tackle despite the intimidating presence of 6-foot-7, 330-plus pounder Deone Walker, because we all saw in 2025 heās best when attacking not devour blocks. Because it has been nearly a decade since the Bills deployed a base three-man front, itās completely understandable to have lost sight of what that defensive scheme needs. Heck, itās taken time for me to recalibrate too. And much has changed with the odd-man fronts in the NFL since the days of Rex Ryan patrolling the sidelines in Orchard Park. During the 2025 season, ābaseā defenses (see: non-nickel, dime etc.) āclimbedā to 29.6%, up from just under 24.0% in 2024. What Iām getting at is, and what Iāve come to accept myself ā itās a bit mathematically silly to obsess over 3-4 vs. 4-3 from a traditional sense, especially re: nose tackle. In short, the Bills will likely trot out a 3-4 look, in a traditional sense, 25% ā 30% of the time, and weāve all probably focused on the addition of a hulking, immovable, double-team eating nose tackle much more frequently than that. Also, the 2024 and 2025 Broncos defensive line group featured exactly one 315-plus pounder, EyiomaĀ Uwazurike, and the highest snap percentage he had in those two years was 36.9%, in 2025. Heck, last seasonās Broncos featured \more\ defensive linemen who weighed under 300 pounds (3) than the Bills (2). To me, the Billsā disregard for the traditional nose tackle was not a misstep by Beane during this draft ā it was planned, and itās completely justifiable.
Based on how close KC Concepcion got to the Bills in Round 1 ā just two spots away ā and what transpired afterward ā three trade backs from Buffaloā this āwhat ifā scenario is rightfully a question on the mind of Bills fans to start the week after the draft. Would a trade up for Concepcion ā that likely wouldāve cost pick No. 125 (Round 4) and probably a little extra even if the Browns were willing to slide back ā have been the better decision? As someone who adored Concepcion from the jump in this draft process, pegging him as the ideal separator the Bills needed at receiver, I wouldāve been giddy about that specific ascension from Beane. However, I can tell you I literally have had the words ātrade downā my Twitter/X bio for a few years now, so the alternative and what actually transpired in reality aligned with my main draft philosophy. I wonāt go deep into that philosophy because itās pretty simple ā in something as unpredictable as the draft, I want as many rolls at the table as possible, and when youāre scouting an entire class like I have for the last 10-plus years, there are a plethora of Day 2 and Day 3 picks with which you become enamored. And as we saw the Bills depth tested along the offensive line, at receiver, linebacker, cornerback, edge, safety, and defensive tackle a season ago, the quantity-based approach was probably the better option than only two picks in the first 126 selections or so. Believe me too ā I was #TeamWR during this draft process ā yet we canāt forget about Beaneās trade for D.J. Moore, which, ironically, after the multiple trade backs, essentially became āfree.ā
Like you, I found Beaneās aforementioned comment about the cornerback position fascinating, and, frankly, unexpected. I do think Beane and Co. tend to overweigh the final game of the season ā see: 2020 AFC Championship Game and subsequent selections in Round 1 and Round 2 of Greg Rousseau and Boogie Basham ā but technically, his assessment of the cornerback position was not totally out of left field. A season ago the Bills desperately signed then 30-year-old TreāDavious White, off a brutal stint with the Rams and only an average one in Baltimore, to serve as a mentor for first-rounder Maxwell Hairston. Then with Hairstonās training camp injury and normal rookie-year onboarding, White ultimately played the third-highest percentage of defensive snaps (71.3%) of anyone on that side of the ball. The cornerback spot was not discussed often entering the draft as a position in dire need of depth, and it shouldāve been. The presence of a well-paid CB1 in Christian Benford and a 2025 first-round pick at the other boundary corner spot likely halted any conversation about that position. Before this draft, who else was part of the cornerback room? Alford ā slot only ā and then⦠practice squadders TeāCorey Couch and MJ Devonshire if weāre not counting Dorian Strong due to the uncertainty of his neck injury. The need at cornerback was a microcosm of the Bills wholesale needs ā depth was required, and at that position, critically so.
Strictly following my pre-draft grades that would be Kaleb Elarms-Orr, who I had a Top 20 overall grade on in this class. Yet as someone who believes in this day and age, always lean offense, Iāll go Skyler Bell, a speedy, inside-out separator with deceptively trustworthy contested-catch ability, whom I had graded as the No. 63 overall player and the Bills got at No. 125.
Davison Igbinosun was the most sizable reach who also has the most arduous path to seeing the field, so Iāll go with him, although technically Jude Bowry was a more significant reach on my pre-draft board. Now, as discussed above, Beane decided to address depth with a premium-ish pick (No. 62), which does buck conventional wisdom on when depth should be added, yet he likely wanted to feel more confident about IGB if and when he needs to see the field early in his NFL career than he wouldāve with a later-round cornerback selection. As for Bowry, his blend of high-caliber athleticism and positional flex is undoubtedly appealing, yet there were more classically trained guards I wouldāve preferred with that No. 102 selection.