Day 2, Buffalo Bills
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2h
SB Nation on MSNBuffalo Bills S Cole Bishop claiming starting snaps early in training campHas Bishop learned enough valuable lessons from 2024’s rookie season to cement himself as Buffalo’s starting strong safety in 2025?
That end to the season put a damper on Bills quarterback Josh Allen being named the NFL’s Most Valuable Player for the first time. While speaking to Sports Illustrated, Allen made it clear that individual accolades aside, the Bills have just one goal in 2025—victory in Santa Clara in Super Bowl LX:
NFL Films vice president and executive producer Ken Rodgers, the longtime “Hard Knocks” steward, still anticipates dramatic stories to tell. He knows a great tale when he sees one. Rodgers has been in charge of “Hard Knocks” since 2007 and directed the 2015 documentary “Four Falls of Buffalo” for ESPN.
"He backs up his status on the field with a uniquely violent, unbridled playing style," said Thorn in his substack piece about the rankings. "Paired with sneaky good athletic ability and a truly dominant 'Ice Pick' technique that he spams against the best edge-rushers in the league on a weekly basis."
The annual offseason sports documentary is following the AFC runners-up in 2025. Here are five things we are looking forward to.
The Buffalo Bills put up 525 points last season, won the AFC East again, and have the reigning MVP under center. But ESPN lumped their offensive weapons with the league's bottom feeders. Bill Barnwell placed the Bills at No. 28 in his annual NFL skill-position playmakers rankings, just ahead of four last-place teams.
"Josh is here," said head coach Sean McDermott during an OTAs media availability. "I think it says everything. He is the face of our organization. He's the leader of our team. When he's here, like anything else as a leader, it speaks and it holds a tremendous amount of weight."
Vince Carter: Basketball Hall of Fame player, legendary dunker, NBC Sports analyst for NBA games starting next fall ... And part-owner of the NFL’s Buffalo Bills.
Bills GM Brandon Beane defended 1st-round rookie amid a civil sexual assault lawsuit, citing polygraph and past investigations.