"It'd be great. I grew up watching the Bills," he said. "My mom was a fan. I've been to plenty of games. It'd be something you write in a book. Plus, I could learn a lot from a seasoned veteran like LeSean McCoy."

Ollison, who once met McCoy when he returned to campus as a honorary captain during a spring ball game, already shares something with the five-time Pro Bowl back. Both are on a short list of Pitt running backs to finish their career with multiple 1,000-yard rushing seasons. The only other Panthers to do it are Hall of Famer Tony Dorsett, Curvin Richards, Dion Lewis and James Conner.

"It's a great accomplishment. It's something I'll remember for the rest of my life," he said. "I'm really excited that it happened. I'm proud to be a part of that list of great running backs. Definitely an honor."

But Ollison isn't focused on past accomplishments. He's trying to convince an NFL club that he's more than just a big body at 6-2, 225.

"I know I'm a big back who is powerful and gets downhill really fast," he said. "Really just an all-around player who can block and catch the ball. The ultimate team player. Someone who is going to do everything right on and off the field."

Add in the fact that he's had to learn four different offensive schemes under four different offensive coordinators and his special teams experience, it's the kind of college resume that finds a way onto NFL rosters.

"I've run every offensive scheme you can think of," he said. "So when I get to the NFL a new scheme won't be an issue for me."

Ollison just wants to hear his name called on draft weekend and by no means is he playing favorites, but if the Bills make the call he'd be over the moon.