The Buffalo Bills have been remarkably stable along the offensive line of late. Since the 2021 season, all five of their linemen have made at least 13 starts together. Most of their linemen have been exceptionally consistent, but they’ve also been exceptionally healthy. OVer the last two season,s their interior offensive line has been particularly healthy, as the trio of David Edwards, Connor McGovern, and O’Cyrus Torrence combined to start nearly every game.
With Edwards gone, having signed this
offseason with the New Orleans Saints, Buffalo is charged with finding his replacement in the starting lineup. The team has no shortage of possible solutions, but finding a replacement for someone so consistent will be a challenge.
In today’s edition of “91 players in 91 days,” we discuss one of the players vying for a roster spot—and, possibly, starting spot—this season.
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Name: Ar’Maj Reed-Adams
Number: 60
Position: G
Height/Weight: 6’5” 314 lbs.
Age: 24 (25 on 11/4/2026)
Experience/Draft: R; selected by Buffalo in the seventh round (No. 241 overall) of the 2026 NFL Draft
College: Texas A&M
Acquired: Seventh-round draft choice
Financial situation (per Spotrac): Reed-Adams signed a four-year rookie contract worth $4,509,752 overall. For the 2026 season, he carries a cap hit of $917,438 if he makes the 53-man roster. Buffalo will carry a dead cap charge equal to the signing bonus on the contract if Reed-Adams is released. That figure is $129,752.
2025 Recap: Entering his sixth season of NCAA eligibility, Reed-Adams was named a preseason First-Team All-American by the Associated Press. He was also voted First-Team All-SEC and named a Walter Camp PReseason All-American. Then, he backed up that hype by having a stellar season for the Aggies, starting 12 of 13 games at right guard and earning Second-Team All-American honors from the AP. He was also named a team captain. For his efforts, he earned an invite to the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine, where he ran the forty-yard dash in 5.28 seconds, leapt 29.5” in the vertical jump and 9’2” in the broad jump, and ran the three-cone drill in 7.88 seconds. While he did not do the bench press at the Combine, he did complete that workout at A&M’s pro day, where he put up 25 reps of 225 lbs. He redid the three-cone drill, as well, completing it in 7.72 seconds.
Positional outlook: Reed-Adams is one of three players listed solely at guard, with O’Cyrus Torrence and Nick Broeker the others. Tylan Grable and Jude Bowry are listed at tackle/guard, while Austin Corbett, Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, Connor McGovern, and Alec Anderson are listed at center/guard.
2026 Offseason: Reed-Adams is healthy, and he participated in offseason work before the team went on a pre-camp break.
2026 Season outlook: The interior offensive line is where the change is this season, at least on a line group that was fairly static for the last few seasons. With starter David Edwards having moved on, there is an opening at left guard. O’Cyrus Torrence is also in the final year of his contract, and while the Bills would be wise to re-sign him, there’s no guarantee that they’ll be able to make that happen. With that in mind, I’d love to project Reed-Adams on the 53-man roster, as he has the size, strength, and starting experience in college to step in and help.
But, it’s not so easy as saying “the Bills drafted this guy, so he’s going to be on the club.” Buffalo has so many versatile linemen who can slot in as reserves that it lessens the impact of a player who really is a guard only. Buffalo also drafted Bowry, and they did so in the fourth round, so he’s far more likely to find himself in the mix than is a seventh-round pick.
The Bills have been developing Van-Pran Granger over the last two seasons, and he has shown himself to be serviceable in limited action. They also signed veterans in Corbett and Lloyd Cushenberry, who is the only player listed exclusively at center on the roster. That’s four players who I wouldn’t assume will start for the Bills this season who I could see making the team ahead of Reed-Adams, so unless there are injuries or the patented Brandon Beane “flip an offensive lineman who’s going to be released for draft capital” move, Reed-Adams is facing an uphill climb due mostly to numbers.
I assume that Reed-Adams will have chances to run with the second team this summer, but he’s mostly going to be a third-teamer who needs to show his mettle in order to stick around. I’d look for Buffalo to release him and add him to the practice squad.













