ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills fired Sean McDermott after the Denver Broncos beat them 33-30 in overtime in the Divisional Round. They promoted offensive coordinator Joe Brady to head coach. Now Buffalo must fix a glaring hole: the pass-catching corps that left Josh Allen without enough help in the biggest game of the season.
Allen put up big numbers again, but the group around him ranked near the bottom of the league in key receiving metrics. The Bills won’t pick early enough for the top-tier prospects, yet a late first-round riser fits perfectly. Indiana’s Omar Cooper Jr. checks every box for what this offense needs under Brady.
Cooper Brings Versatility That Complements Khalil Shakir
Scouts first pegged Cooper as a pure slot guy because that’s where he lined up most at Indiana alongside Elijah Sarratt and Charlie Becker on the outside. But tape shows more. At 6-foot-0 and 199 pounds, Cooper battles press coverage with surprising strength. He wins at the catch point and tracks the ball well enough to handle boundary work.
Buffalo already features Khalil Shakir as its reliable inside option. Adding Cooper gives Brady the freedom to mix alignments without forcing anyone out of position. Allen has hunted for a true go-to target since Stefon Diggs left. Cooper’s physical style and ability to separate could fill that role immediately.
Explosive After the Catch Makes Him a Home-Run Threat
Cooper clocked a 4.42 in the 40-yard dash at the Combine. Speed shows up constantly on Indiana film—he catches the ball in stride and turns short throws into long gains. Defenders rarely catch him from behind.
Size doesn’t limit him there, either. Cooper runs tough, sheds arm tackles, and makes defenders miss in the open field. Screens and quick-game concepts become dangerous with him on the field. The Bills missed that consistent big-play ability from their receivers last season. Cooper directly addresses it.
Brady Can Scheme Him Like a Modern Deebo Samuel
Joe Brady knows how to manufacture touches. Cooper’s skill set invites creativity—jet sweeps, reverses, designed runs after the catch. Some scouts compare him to a Deebo Samuel-type weapon, not because of identical measurables, but because both punish defenses when the ball reaches their hands.
Josh Allen will always create explosive moments. The offense still grew predictable at times in critical spots. James Cook helped balance the attack on the ground, yet the passing game needed another dimension. Cooper gives Brady tools to spread the load and keep defenses guessing.
You could see the frustration on the sideline in Denver when drives stalled. Fresh weapons change that. A player who contributes in so many ways raises the ceiling from very good to potential Super Bowl caliber.
“He’s a guy who can do it all—line up anywhere, make plays with his speed, and fight for every yard. We need that kind of competitor.” — Anonymous NFL scout, on Omar Cooper Jr.
Draft Fit and Playoff Path Forward
The 2026 NFL Draft sits just weeks away. If Cooper slides into the late first round, the Bills hold the perfect spot to pounce. Pairing him with Allen and Brady creates the kind of offensive firepower that carries teams deep in January.
Buffalo enters the new era under Brady with urgency. Allen turns 30 this year. The window stays open, but it demands smart, high-impact additions. Cooper isn’t just another receiver. His blend of speed, toughness, and scheme versatility gives the Bills exactly what they lacked against Denver.
Fans who watched the overtime loss know the feeling—the crowd at Empower Field went quiet after that final Broncos field goal. Adding a dynamic piece like Cooper turns those close calls into wins that matter most. Buffalo’s front office should stay aggressive if his name hits the board.

