A weekly look at what the Buffalo Bills must fix:

There is no team worse at scoring touchdowns in the red zone this season than the Bills, who rank 32nd in the NFL with a 41.2 percent efficiency rate inside the opponents' 20-yard line.

After the Bills' 0-for-4 showing in the red zone was a key part of the Kansas City Chiefs' 17-13 comeback win Sunday, the Bills must move quickly to correct the issue when they meet the Miami Dolphins on Thursday night.

As for how to do that, there are a pair of players yearning for the opportunity to put the Bills back on track in the red zone.

First is Anthony Dixon, who has the NFL's fifth-best average yards after contact on his runs this season. Dixon, who ran just once in the red zone for no gain, told Matthew Fairburn of Syracuse.com that he feels he could "solve the situation" the Bills face in the red zone.

The second player is Mike Williams, who was inactive Sunday for the second time in the past four games. Williams, who has been sparsely used since Kyle Orton took over at quarterback, had 14 red zone touchdowns from 2010-2012 for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, tied for 15th-most in the NFL over that span.

"Still, to this day, I feel like I'm that type of player," Williams told ESPN on Monday of his early-career red zone prowess. "I think it's just about the opportunities and reps. I just think when I get those, I think it will be a lot better for me and hopefully for the team."

Whomever is trying to catch passes for the Bills in the red zone, the underlying issue could be Orton's accuracy. He completed just 4 of 11 passes in the red zone Sunday, a 36.4 percent completion rate that was the fifth-worst by a quarterback with at least 10 red zone pass attempts in a game this season.