ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills are done waiting. After watching Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs celebrate yet another deep playoff run while Buffalo sat at home, the front office knows the status quo isn’t enough. With Sean McDermott out and Joe Brady taking the reins as head coach, the Bills need a splash play—not on the field, but in the war room.
Enter the “Crosby Sweepstakes.”
Las Vegas Raiders superstar Maxx Crosby has likely played his final snap in silver and black. The five-time Pro Bowler is arguably the best defensive player on the block, and a new proposal from CBS Sports’ Tyler Sullivan has Buffalo pulling off the heist of the decade to land him.
The Deal on the Table
In a scenario that would send shockwaves through the AFC East, Sullivan proposes the Bills acquire Crosby for a package that looks surprisingly light for a player of his caliber.
- Buffalo Bills Receive: DE Maxx Crosby
- Las Vegas Raiders Receive: 2026 1st Round Pick (No. 26), 2027 1st Round Pick, WR Keon Coleman
Two first-rounders are the standard entry fee for an elite edge rusher—just look at the Micah Parsons-to-Green Bay blockbuster last August. But the “sweetener” in this deal is where eyebrows rise. Keon Coleman, coming off a disappointing sophomore season where he tallied just 404 yards and four touchdowns, is hardly the blue-chip prospect Las Vegas might demand.
Why Buffalo Pulls the Trigger
The Bills’ defense was their Achilles’ heel in 2025. Despite heavy investment, the unit finished with the ninth-fewest pressures in the league. In a conference loaded with Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, and Joe Burrow, a pedestrian pass rush is a death sentence.
Crosby is the antidote. Even in a down year for Vegas, he racked up 10 sacks and remained a relentless force off the edge. Pairing him with Greg Rousseau (assuming an extension) or Ed Oliver would give Buffalo the “Josh Allen of the defense”—a player who can wreck a game single-handedly.
Giving up two late first-round picks is steep, but for a known commodity like Crosby? It’s a no-brainer. The draft is a lottery; Crosby is a guaranteed payout.
The Keon Coleman Dilemma
“It wasn’t Brandon Beane pushing for that pick. That was the coaching staff.”
— Terry Pegula, Bills Owner (post-2025 season press conference)
Coleman’s inclusion in this trade package signals just how far his stock has fallen. Once a promising second-round pick, Coleman struggled to find rhythm in Buffalo’s offense. Owner Terry Pegula’s rare public comments threw gasoline on the fire, suggesting a disconnect between the front office and the previous coaching staff regarding Coleman’s selection.
For the Raiders and new head coach Klint Kubiak, Coleman is a lottery ticket. At best, a change of scenery unlocks his physical potential. At worst, he helps them reach the salary floor while they execute a full-scale rebuild around their projected No. 1 overall pick (potentially QB Fernando Mendoza).
Playoff Implications
If this trade materializes, the AFC hierarchy shifts overnight. Buffalo moves from “playoff contender” to “Super Bowl favorite.” The Raiders, meanwhile, signal a full demolition, stockpiling assets for 2027 and beyond.
With free agency looming in March, GM Brandon Beane has a history of aggression. If he thinks Crosby is the missing piece to finally bring a Lombardi Trophy to Western New York, those first-round picks will be on a plane to Vegas before the ink dries.

