ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills’ wide receiver room didn’t just underperform in 2025; it flatlined. Josh Allen spent the entire season trying to squeeze water from a stone. The unit ranked 18th in the NFL with 180 catches and plummeted to 24th in yards with a measly 2,107. For context, Dallas’ pass-catchers hauled in 253 balls for over 3,600 yards. Now, fresh off the firing of Sean McDermott and the promotion of 36-year-old Joe Brady to head coach, executing the perfect Buffalo Bills Wide Receiver Free Agency 2026 plan is the most critical mission of the offseason.
General Manager Brandon Beane tried plugging holes with mid-tier veterans. Curtis Samuel, Mack Hollins, and Elijah Moore barely moved the needle. In-season rentals like Amari Cooper and Brandin Cooks offered nothing but empty calories. Khalil Shakir dragged this unit across the finish line with 72 receptions for 719 yards, but that only ranked 34th in the league. Keon Coleman’s sophomore slump resulted in a dismal 38 catches for 404 yards.
Standing on the turf at Highmark Stadium during the bitter divisional round loss to Denver in January, you could feel the desperation in the crisp air. The crowd groaned every time Allen was forced to check down. Despite these glaring perimeter flaws, the Bills still finished fourth in scoring at 28.3 points per game. Imagine what this offense could do with a true WR1.
“I had a lot of faith in the receiver group last year and I didn’t think they played to a point that I’m getting a lot of questions about.”
— Joe Brady, Head Coach, Buffalo Bills
Brady naturally defended his guys at the combine. He called the offensive plays, after all. But blind faith doesn’t win Lombardi trophies. Buffalo’s passing offense ranked 15th at 216.6 yards per game, their worst mark since Allen’s erratic 2019 campaign. It is time to face reality.
Free agency opens on March 11. Beane cannot afford to shop in the bargain bin again. The AFC East is unforgiving. If Buffalo heads into training camp relying on Shakir and Coleman to carry the passing game, defensive coordinators will just stack the box against James Cook and force Allen to play hero ball every Sunday. Upgrading the perimeter is non-negotiable. Brady’s new tenure depends entirely on fixing this exact problem before April’s draft.