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Mock Draft Watch

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Buffalo Bills Mock Draft Watch 8.0 | 2026

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No. 26 – EDGE Gabe Jacas, Illinois

No. 26 – EDGE Cashius Howell, Texas A&M

Already possessing a pair of sizable starting outside linebackers in Greg Rousseau and Bradley Chubb, the sack-hungry Bills could be intrigued by this fastball off the edge. Howell's 30 1/4-inch arm length is a legit concern, but new Bills defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard spent the past two years in Denver watching Nik Bonitto and Jonathon Cooper terrorize quarterbacks with substandard measurements.

TRADE to No. 30 – G Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon

It feels like the Bills could take many avenues if they stay in the first round, including linebacker, receiver or defensive line. But interior offensive line is a sneaky position considering the departure of David Edwards, plus the impending free agency of O'Cyrus Torrence. Pregnon (86.7 overall PFF grade) and his versatile skill-set would compete to start the bat next to new Bill Austin Corbett.

No. 26 – WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State

Tyson still could give the Bills something they've long lacked: a weapon capable of creating consistent separation on the outside.

No. 26 – EDGE Malachi Lawrence, UCF

Lawrence brings the juice the Bills' edge group is lacking. He's one of the draft's most explosive athletes and showed flashes of turning those traits into production down the stretch last fall.

No. 26 – LB Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech

The Bills were buffaloed at the point of attack last season, with not one but two safeties (Cole Bishop and Jordan Poyer) finishing with more tackles than any of the club's linebackers. It would be a surprise to see Rodriguez go in the first round, but his instincts and playmaking ability would add an immediate jolt to the Bills' defense, and he won't be available when their turn comes around again at No. 91 overall.

No. 26 – IOL Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M

Buffalo lost David Edwards in free agency and now replace him with one of the best pass-blocking offensive guards. Chase Bisontis had a strong performance at the NFL combine and is now tasked with protecting Josh Allen.

No. 26 – CB Avieon Terrell, Clemson

The brother of All-Pro corner A.J. Terrell, Avieon has had a ton of production in three seasons at Clemson, recording 25 passes defended, 125 total tackles, eight forced fumbles, four sacks, and three interceptions in 1,860 defensive snaps played in that span.

Having drafted Maxwell Hairston in the first round last year, taking Terrell would give them an extremely talented cornerback duo for years to come.

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