
The Buffalo Bills continue searching for additional depth at wide receiver as competition intensifies throughout offseason workouts.
On Sunday, the organization added another intriguing option to the roster.
According to reports, the Bills have signed former Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Mac Dalena.
The move gives Buffalo another young playmaker looking to earn a role before training camp begins later this summer.
Dalena enters Buffalo after spending time with multiple NFL organizations since leaving college.
We have signed WR Mac Dalena.
đ°: https://t.co/TkV7ekubZT pic.twitter.com/O8risLbf3z
— Buffalo Bills (@BuffaloBills) June 1, 2026
The former Fresno State standout originally entered the league as an undrafted free agent with the Kansas City Chiefs following the 2025 NFL Draft.
He later spent time with the Seattle Seahawks before continuing his NFL journey elsewhere.
While he has yet to establish himself at the professional level, Dalena built an impressive résumé during his college career.
Over five seasons at Fresno State, he appeared in 59 games and developed into one of the program’s most productive receivers.
He finished his collegiate career with 126 receptions, 1,761 receiving yards, and 13 touchdowns.
His best season came in 2024.
Dalena surpassed the 1,000-yard receiving mark and scored eight touchdowns while emerging as one of the most reliable targets in the Mountain West Conference.
Those performances helped attract attention from NFL scouts despite going undrafted.
Buffalo’s coaching staff will now have an opportunity to evaluate whether his production can translate to the next level.
The Bills continue building competition behind an evolving receiving corps led by quarterback Josh Allen.
Every offseason addition represents another opportunity to uncover a hidden contributor before roster decisions become more difficult.
For Dalena, the signing represents another chance to prove he belongs in the NFL.
For Buffalo, it is a low-risk move that could potentially uncover valuable receiving depth ahead of the 2026 season.
Stay tuned to ESPN.