Terry Pegula’s bombshell presser didn’t just explain why Sean McDermott was fired—it hung the Keon Coleman selection around a coach’s neck and instantly turned the sophomore receiver into the poster child for a fractured Bills front office.
One sentence from Terry Pegula turned a quiet Wednesday press conference into a Buffalo earthquake. “It was the coaching staff that pushed for Coleman.” In that moment, the Bills’ rookie-year flame-out at receiver stopped being a footnote and became evidence of the internal civil war that cost Sean McDermott his job.
Why Pegula Lit the Fuse
Brandon Beane had just fielded heat for failing to reload Josh Allen’s weaponry last offseason. When reporters kept circling Keon Coleman’s stagnant Year 2, Pegula jumped in to shield his GM. The owner’s message: Don’t blame Beane; blame the coaches who stampeded the war room for Coleman at pick 33.
Pegula later insisted he wasn’t referencing McDermott, but the damage was done. The public now knows Buffalo’s draft room was split—and that the owner is willing to expose it to protect his GM.
The Pick That Keeps Hurting
- April 2024: Bills trade back twice, still grab Coleman atop Round 2.
- Week 1 2024: Coleman erupts: 8-112-1 vs. Baltimore.
- Week 5 2024: Benched for opening series vs. New England after tardiness.
- Week 9 2024: Healthy scratch vs. Tampa Bay—third disciplinary action in 20 career games.
- Season finish: 38 catches, 404 yards, 4 TDs—numbers that barely move the needle in an AFC loaded with star wideouts.
What Beane Really Said
Pressed to reconcile Pegula’s version, Beane walked a tightrope: “Coleman was my pick… but we always consider other positions.” Translation—he signed off, yet the coaching staff’s lobbying carried extra weight. That admission confirms the rift and explains why the receiver’s leash was so short once maturity issues surfaced.
Inside the Locker-Room Fallout
Players liked McDermott; several posted heart emojis the moment he was fired. They also like Coleman, whose easygoing personality plays well with teammates. Now the second-year wideout must walk past a locker room that knows ownership just hung a draft miss on “coaches” while the GM hides behind plausible deniability. That’s awkward chemistry heading into 2025 OTAs.
Cap & Roster Chess
Coleman’s fully-guaranteed rookie deal runs through 2027, so cutting him saves zero cash. Trading him now would be selling at an all-time low and telegraph that the new regime is dumping previous regime mistakes—never a great look for a franchise that still has to recruit free agents to western New York. Expect Buffalo to pump resources into his development publicly while privately adding veteran competition via free agency and a premium 2025 draft pick.
Coaching Search Ripple Effect
Every head-coach candidate now knows Pegula will throw staff under the bus if a high pick flops. Expect agent chatter about “draft autonomy” to dominate negotiations. The next coach will either demand final say on Round 1-2 selections—or insist the GM absorb full responsibility, closing the rare public gap that exploded in Orchard Park this week.
Bottom Line for Bills Mafia
Keon Coleman isn’t just fighting to prove he can separate from NFL corners; he’s fighting to escape a front-office grenade. If he blossoms in 2025, the story becomes “coach-killer turned savior.” If he plateaus, he’ll be forever tagged as the pick that helped get McDermott fired. In Buffalo, that’s legacy-defining weight.
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