logo
Bills GM Brandon Beane expresses frustration on radio after being criticized for not drafting a receiver

Bills GM Brandon Beane expresses frustration on radio after being criticized for not drafting a receiver

Yahoo28-04-2025

The Buffalo Bills didn't win the Super Bowl last season, but the team had a lot going for it. After trading away Stefon Diggs last offseason, Buffalo's offense somehow improved and Josh Allen took home his first MVP award.
While Allen and the rest of the offense look strong again in 2025, the Bills neglected to address that side of the ball during most of the 2025 NFL Draft, instead focusing on strengthening the team's defense. Buffalo's strategy — particularly the team's decision to not take a wide receiver early — came under fire on "The Jeremy and Joe" radio show in Buffalo.
Advertisement
Beane made a scheduled appearance on the show shortly after that conversation, and wasn't happy about being criticized for not grabbing a receiver, according to ESPN.
"Well, you guys were b****ing in 2018 about Josh Allen, you guys wanted Josh Rosen, and now you guys are b****ing that we don't have a receiver," Beane said when asked what he meant. "... We just scored 30 points in a row for eight straight games. A year ago, I get you guys asking why we didn't have receivers, but I don't understand it now. You just saw us lead the league in points, when you add all the postseason, no one scored more points than the Buffalo Bills, including the Super Bowl champions. So, you just saw us do it without Stefon Diggs, same group. How is this group not better than last year's group? Our job is to score points and win games. Where do we need to get better? Defense. We did that. So, I get it, you got to have a show, and you got to have something to b**** about, but b***ing about wide receiver is one of the dumbest arguments I've heard."
Beane has a point. The team didn't have a true No. 1 receiver last year, but it still finished second in points scored in the regular season. Allen did win his first MVP, though threw for fewer yards and touchdowns than the previous four seasons.
In addition to that, the Bills went heavy on offense in the first round in both 2023 and 2024, bringing in tight end Dalton Kincaid and wideout Keon Coleman. Beane has made an effort in recent seasons.
You can argue, however, that despite the Bills' numbers and Allen's ability, missing that star pass catcher hurt the team when it mattered most. On the team's biggest play of the year, Kincaid dropped a pass that would have kept the Bills' season alive. Given everything that happened on that particular play, you can't guarantee having a standout top wide receiver would have drastically altered the outcome of the game, but it certainly would have helped.
Advertisement
During his radio appearance, Beane explained that the team wasn't avoiding pass catchers in the draft, but said no one they liked fell to them where they picked. He also said he didn't think it was a deep draft at receiver, and felt the defense was the bigger need.
That's probably true. The Bills' defense performed well last season, finishing 11th in points against, but it wasn't elite. The Bills allowed 28 touchdowns on defense, which tied for 24th in the NFL. If the team had a weak spot last season, it was its inability to prevent other teams from finding the end zone.
In response, the Bills spent their first five picks on defensive players in the 2025 NFL Draft. Cornerback Maxwell Hairston was the team's top selection. The Bills continued to fill in defensive gaps from there before finally taking tight end Jackson Hawes with their second fifth-round draft pick.
For all the Bills' recent success, a Super Bowl has proved elusive. Until the team brings home a title, Beane is going to face scrutiny about every one of his team-building decisions, especially considering how last season ended.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jets Ranked Surprisingly High as Team to Snap Playoff Woes in 2025
Jets Ranked Surprisingly High as Team to Snap Playoff Woes in 2025

Newsweek

time18 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Jets Ranked Surprisingly High as Team to Snap Playoff Woes in 2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Every season, there is always hype behind the New York Jets. The hype they experienced last time was due to Aaron Rodgers taking over as quarterback. However, a torn Achilles ended the team's hopeful 2023 season. More news: 5 Best Landing Spots for Jaire Alexander After Shocking Release by Packers The 2024 season rolled around, and Rodgers' full and healthy return did not spark any additional comeback. The Jets finished the season 5-12 and continued their streak of not making the playoffs to a staggering 14 straight seasons. Though the belief is that the Jets' luck would finally kick in at some point, the organization has simply not been able to turn things around. Despite the team continually underperforming, they have been given a huge ranking in terms of teams that can snap their playoff drought woes. FLORHAM PARK, NEW JERSEY - JANUARY 27: New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn is introduced to the media at Atlantic Health Jets Training Center on January 27, 2025 in Florham Park, New Jersey. FLORHAM PARK, NEW JERSEY - JANUARY 27: New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn is introduced to the media at Atlantic Health Jets Training Center on January 27, 2025 in Florham Park, New Jersey. More news: Bengals Shockingly Release Top 10 Defender Jeremy Bergman has ranked the Jets as being the third-best in terms of odds for teams that can make the playoffs in the 2025 season. "Will wholesale changes in the front office, on the coaching staff, and under center spell a turnaround for Gang Green in 2025? Darren Mougey, Aaron Glenn, and Justin Fields benefit from a roster with cheap, young talent (Sauce Gardner, Garrett Wilson, Breece Hall) that was built to succeed with Rodgers. Plus, the AFC East ain't what it was, with Miami in purgatory and a new regime in New England. The Jets' .460 strength of schedule is 26th in the league," Bergman writes. There is some value to what Bergman is proposing, with one big aspect of this projection coming from the AFC East. The Jets might have a far better shot at competing now that the Buffalo Bills are the only team standing in their way in terms of overall skill level. The Miami Dolphins have many unanswered questions in terms of their overall roster. Star cornerback Jalen Ramsey is about to be traded leaving the secondary severely lacking, and tight end Jonnu Smith might also join Ramsey on a new team, as the disgruntled playmaker is seeking a contract that will pay him higher than $4 million in 2025. With so many roster issues, the Dolphins might struggle mightily in 2025. The New England Patriots are also a question mark. Granted, they have a wonderful new head coach in Mike Vrabel, but this is his first time helming the team that once won a Super Bowl. There is no telling how the Patriots' new coaching staff will answer the challenge of rebounding a team that also had a paltry 4-12 record. The Jets should be spoken about in the same light as the Patriots, as Aaron Glenn has come over from the Detroit Lions and is set to try and turn the organization around. However, New York might have found itself a huge steal in landing Justin Fields. Fields went 4-2 while running the offense for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2024. He was replaced by Russell Wilson, who took over and led the team to a playoff berth and a first-round exit. Still, while Mike Tomlin chose to use Wilson, Fields proved that he can lead a team. The Jets also have some young and dynamic playmakers in Garrett Wilson, Breece Hall, Allen Lazard, and Mason Taylor. On paper, the Jets are a more improved team, but time will tell if they can truly climb out of the basement of the AFC. More NFL: Falcons QB Kirk Cousins to Attend Mini-Camp for Unexpected Reason For more on the Jets, head to Newsweek Sports.

World Cup host city organizers acknowledge immigration crackdown may impact next year's tournament
World Cup host city organizers acknowledge immigration crackdown may impact next year's tournament

Hamilton Spectator

time21 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

World Cup host city organizers acknowledge immigration crackdown may impact next year's tournament

NEW YORK (AP) — Philadelphia's host city executive for the 2026 World Cup says organizers accept that an immigration crackdown by President Donald Trump's administration may be among the outside events that impact next year's tournament. 'There are certainly things that are happening at the national level, the international level, there are going to be geopolitical issues that we don't even know right now that are going affect the tournament next year, so we recognize that we're planning within uncertainty,' Meg Kane said Monday at a gathering of the 11 U.S. host city leaders, one year and two days ahead of the tournament opener. The World Cup will be played at 16 stadiums in the U.S., Mexico and Canada from June 11 to July 19 next year, a tournament expanded to 48 nations and 104 games. All matches from the quarterfinals on will be in the U.S., with the final at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. 'Whether it's the Olympics, whether it's a World Cup, whether it's a Super Bowl, you name it, anytime you've got a major international sporting event, geopolitics is going to have a role,' said Alex Vasry, CEO of the New York/New Jersey host committee. Kane said the host committees must adapt to decisions made by others. 'One of the things that I think we all recognize is that we have to be really good at operating within that uncertainty,' Kane said. 'I think for each of our cities, we want to be prepared to make any person that is coming and makes the decision to come to the United States or come to this World Cup feel that they are welcome. We do not play a role necessarily in what is happening in terms of the decisions that are made.' Trump's travel ban on citizens from 12 countries exempted athletes, coaches, staff and relatives while not mentioning fans. 'We allow for FIFA to continue having constructive conversations with the administrations around visas, around workforce, around tourism,' Kane said. FIFA is running the World Cup for the first time without a local organizing committee in the host nation. Asked in late April whether FIFA president Gianni Infantino was available to discuss the tournament, FIFA director of media relations Bryan Swanson forwarded the request to a member of the media relations staff, who did not make Infantino available. Legislation approved by the House of Representatives and awaiting action in the Senate would appropriate $625 million to the Federal Emergency Management Agency 'for security, planning, and other costs related to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.' The 11 U.S. host committees have been consulting with each other on issues such as transportation for teams and VIPs, and for arranging fan fests. At the last major soccer tournament in the U.S., the 2024 Copa America final at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, started 82 minutes late after fans breached security gates. 'Certainly we were not involved in the planning or the logistics for that particular match,' said Alina Hudak, CEO of the Miami World Cup host committee. She said local police 'have done an extensive review of the after-action reports related to that in collaboration with the stadium and so all of the things that happened are in fact being reviewed and addressed and I can assure you that everything is being done within our power to make sure that the appropriate measures are being placed, the appropriate perimeters.' ___ AP soccer:

Steve Wright, former Packers player from 1964-1967, dead at 82
Steve Wright, former Packers player from 1964-1967, dead at 82

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Steve Wright, former Packers player from 1964-1967, dead at 82

Steve Wright, an offensive lineman who played for the Green Bay Packers from 1964 to 1967, died June 1 in Augusta, Georgia. He was 82. Wright was drafted by the Packers out of Northern Iowa University in the sixth round, 69th overall, in the 1964 draft. He was drafted in the eighth round by the New York Jets of the then-separate American Football League. Advertisement Wright played 56 games for the Packers at tackle, starting 13 of them. He was on three NFL championship teams and two Super Bowl winners. Over the next five years, he played for the New York Giants, Washington, the Chicago Bears and the St. Louis Cardinals. He finished his career playing in the World Football League. Packers historian Cliff Christl wrote that "Lombardi was intrigued enough by Wright's size — he stood 6-foot-6 and weighed 250 pounds — and potential that he moved (Forrest) Gregg to left guard in place of Fuzzy Thurston and started Wright at right tackle for the first 11 games." Lombardi took Wright from the starting lineup beginning with game 12. Steve Wright, Green Bay Packers tackle,1964-67. He died June 1. He was 82. "'Coach Lombardi was tough and wanted perfection, but unfortunately I wasn't perfect,' Wright told Martin Hendricks for a Packers Plus story in 2015. 'He'd chew me up and down one minute and 15 minutes later tell me to do what I tell you to do and you'll be OK,'" Christl wrote. Advertisement His more lasting legacy was that while playing for the Giants he served as the model for Gladiator Award trophy, of which Packers quarterback Bart Starr was the first recipient. The next year it was renamed the NFL Man of the Year Award, and now is called the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award. The name was changed, but the trophy's statue remains the same. Contact Richard Ryman at rryman@ Follow him on Twitter at @RichRymanPG, on Instagram at @rrymanPG or on Facebook at This article originally appeared on Green Bay Press-Gazette: Steve Wright, former Packers player from 1964-1967, dead at 82

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store