1. Wide receiver The lack of a solid No. 2 receiver to draw some attention away from Eric Moulds was a big reason for the offensive drop-off in 2003. Josh Reed is quick, but he isn't fast enough to draw double-teams away from Moulds. Though Bobby Shaw provides excellent depth and is coming off a strong year, he lacks strength and must line up in the slot to be effective. Drafting a receiver with speed is important. The team could take Washington's Reggie Williams, a premier first-rounder, if he fell to it at No. 13, but drafting LSU's Devery Henderson in the second round or Washington State's Devard Darling in the third could also do the trick.
2. Tight end Mark Campbell and Dave Moore sustain their blocks and don't drop many passes. However, they lack the speed and agility of elite pass-catching tight ends. Running back Travis Henry is dangerous, and Buffalo needs a tight end who can make defenses pay for overplaying the run and biting on play-action. The Bills could draft Florida's Ben Troupe with their first pick, but if they take a defensive end or receiver first, Georgia's Ben Watson or Minnesota's Ben Utecht also could contribute right away.......READ MORE HERE...
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