The Patriots’ attempt to upgrade their pass rush is drawing fresh scrutiny, and that has to feel like a win for Buffalo.
ESPN’s Seth Walder handed out offseason grades for every NFL team and zeroed in on New England’s decision to sign Dre’Mont Jones as one of the moves he liked least. The edge-rusher addition stands out because the Patriots lost K’Lavon Chaisson after what Walder called a solid season, then replaced him with a more expensive option.
“ One area that still looks a bit weak is edge rusher. New England lost K'Lavon Chaisson in free agency after a solid season and replaced him with Jones. Putting aside that Chaisson signed with the Commanders for a cheaper contract than Jones was signed to, I would rather have held on to Chaisson, as Jones recorded a pass rush win rate at edge in just the 22nd percentile.” said Walder.
New England handed Jones a three-year, $36.5 million deal, a contract that averages $12.16 million per year. That’s not far behind what Buffalo gave Bradley Chubb, who signed a three-year, $43.5 million contract worth $14.5 million annually.
For the Bills, the comparison is pretty straightforward. Chubb has been the more productive player, and Buffalo appears to have landed the stronger edge rusher without matching the Patriots’ commitment to Jones. In a division race where every roster move gets measured against the team next door, that kind of gap matters.
Buffalo also enters this stretch with a busier offseason overall. The Bills added Bradley Chubb, C.J.
Gardner-Johnson, Geno Stone, and Dee Alford on defense, then traded for DJ Moore to help the offense. After their playoff loss to the Denver Broncos, the roster and coaching changes have left Buffalo looking much different heading into 2026.
That’s part of what makes the Patriots’ offseason look so uneven from a Bills perspective. New England did trade for A.J.
Brown from the Philadelphia Eagles, but it came at the cost of a 2028 first-round pick. Still, the Jones signing is the move now getting the side-eye, and for Buffalo fans, that only adds to the sense that their rival may not have matched the Bills’ better additions.
In Other News...
Stevie Johnson Just Raised The Stakes For Keon Coleman In Buffalo
Keon Coleman enters this season with more to prove than most third-year receivers, and the backdrop from last year still lingers. He was a healthy scratch for multiple games, his name popped up in trade speculation, and the noise around him only grew after the owners unusual comments, turning what should have been a developmental year into a test of patience and professionalism.
Now he is spending time with Stevie Johnson, one of the more productive receivers in Bills history, in an effort to sharpen the details of his game and reset the conversation. Johnson has been openly bullish on Colemans ceiling, and Buffalos new staff has signaled belief too, with Joe Brady planning to make him a major part of the offseason and Josh Allen voicing confidence in what Coleman can become. [Read more 🡒]
Bills Fans Should Watch This Receiver Battle More Closely Than Expected
Stephen Gosnells path through Buffalo has already followed the familiar undrafted-receiver route: sign, stick around, keep developing, and try to turn offseason reps into something more meaningful. After spending the 2025 season on the practice squad, the wideout is back in the Bills pipeline on a reserve/future deal and was part of offseason workouts heading toward 2026, which keeps him on the radar even if he is still more of a project than a roster lock.
The wider interest here is less about whether Gosnell crashes the 53-man roster and more about how Buffalo chooses to keep grooming him if he doesnt. A return to the practice squad remains a real possibility, and a gameday elevation during the season would not be out of the question if he continues to show growth. For a receiver group that always seems to have one or two jobs open to the right developmental player, Gosnell is the kind of name worth watching a little more closely than his current status suggests. [Read more 🡒]
Bills Fans May Not Have Realized They Just Saw This Pass Rusher's End
Joey Bosas one-year run in Buffalo may already stand as the last chapter of a decorated career, even if nothing has been officially announced. The five-time Pro Bowler gave the Bills real impact last season, staying on the field for 15 games and helping set the tone off the edge with production that fit exactly what Buffalo wanted from a veteran pass rusher.
The Bills have moved quickly to reshape that group since then, adding Bradley Chubb and drafting T.J. Parker to reinforce the pass rush. Bosa remains unsigned as free agency moves on, and for a player who once looked like a premium difference-maker, the longer he stays on the market, the more his lone season in Buffalo starts to look like the end of the line. [Read more 🡒]
