Buffalo needs its young wideout focused, accountable, and ready to contribute.
Keon Coleman is no longer a rookie, and that makes the past two weeks even more disappointing. The Bills made him a healthy scratch in back to back games, and reports point to one clear reason. Coleman showed up late to a team meeting the Friday before Buffalo’s Week 11 matchup. The team responded by sitting him down for that game, then keeping him inactive again the following week.
By year two, players are expected to understand how the league works. They know the standard. They know punctuality and discipline are non negotiable. Coleman now understands that the consequences for slipping are real. This was not about drops, routes, or matchups. It was about accountability.
And the timing could not be worse for Buffalo. The offense needs the exact traits Coleman brings. No one else on the roster blends his size, strength, and high point ability. He is the only receiver built to dominate in contested situations and give Josh Allen a margin for error when windows tighten. He can bully corners at the catch point. He can flip the geometry of the offense just by being on the field.
That is why these scratches matter. Coleman’s physical gifts are rare, and his role should be secure, yet he watched from the sideline because the coaches could not trust his approach off the field. When a second year player loses his spot due to a late meeting, it raises questions about habits and focus. Coaches can work with a player who makes mistakes while competing. They struggle with one who breaks routine before the pads even go on.
The Bills need Coleman to lock in now, not later. The offense has been searching for a consistent downfield threat and a true red zone matchup winner. Without that presence, defenses cheat inside and dare Buffalo to win outside the numbers. Coleman can change all of it. His ceiling remains high. His value is obvious.
But talent has never been enough in this league. Coleman has reached the stage of his career where growth has to come from preparation, not potential. He has the chance to reset the direction of his season, regain his footing, and become the weapon Buffalo drafted him to be.
The path is simple. Show maturity. Show focus. Show he understands what these past two weeks cost him. If he does, his talent will carry him the rest of the way.
The Bills are ready for him to take that step. Now he has to take it.








