Erik Beimfohr advised passing on Curtis Samuel, Keon Coleman and Dalton Kincaid until their DraftKings prices fall sharply, arguing Buffalo has repeatedly whiffed on skill-position additions and is now a run-heavy offense by design. He rattled off a laundry list of failed experiments—Cole Beasley, mid-season Amari Cooper chatter, an aging Stefon Diggs exit, plus misses on Samuel and Coleman—then pointed out that the Bills ranked bottom-third in early-down pass rate last season despite having Josh Allen in his prime. Beimfohr’s takeaway: if an offense is both inefficient at identifying pass catchers and reluctant to throw, ancillary options carry capped ceilings and belong nowhere near their current double-digit round ADPs. The lone exception he is drafting is Khalil Shakir, whom he called "a great pick," but everyone else is a hard fade until the market corrects.