With the addition of a new coaching staff and front office, things have changed quite drastically over the last six months for the Buffalo Bills.

The coaching staff has a tremendous influence on the caliber of players drafted and signed by the team. New regimes need players who fit their specific system and who also fit the characteristics that they find to be important. Fans have already started to see the type of athlete, on and off the field, that fits the Sean McDermott mold.

Buffalo’s new coaching staff and front office have added a number of players to the roster throughout the offseason. However, with training camp now just over two weeks away, the roster could start shrinking relatively soon as the team will start to cut their roster down to the maximum of 53 active players. Due to this, a number of Bills currently find themselves on the bubble, and may or may not be on the roster when Buffalo’s regular season kicks off on September 10.

Here are three players that are on the bubble for making the Bills’ 53-man roster.

Cardale Jones, QB

Then-general manager Doug Whaley selected Ohio State quarterback Cardale Jones in the fourth-round of the 2016 NFL draft. Seen at first as an untapped talent with a cannon-arm, Jones is slowing becoming the odd man out in the Buffalo quarterback room.

To make Jones’ case worse, his performance in the 2016 season finale against the New York Jets wasn’t encouraging. Jones finished 6 for 11 with 96 yards and an interception after the Bills benched E.J. Manuel in a strange season finale.

There are two significant reasons as to why Jones could be cut. The first reason is that Sean McDermott and Brandon Beane may not see Jones as the type of quarterback they’d like on their roster. Cardale is still a big project and would take a lot of work to develop into a starting quarterback. It would be surprising if either McDermott or Beane want to continue that project.

The second reason is that there seemingly isn’t a spot for Jones’ on the team’s depth chart. Backing up incumbent starter Tyrod Taylor will likely be T.J. Yates, a solid backup that would bring experience to Buffalo’s huddle. Behind Yates is former Pitt signal caller Nathan Peterman, who the team selected in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL draft. Many believed Jones to be a Rex Ryan project, just like how Peterman is seemingly a McDermott project.

The idea of the Bills keeping four quarterbacks on their roster after training camp doesn’t seem all that plausible, and all signs point to Buffalo parting ways with Jones this offseason. Preseason will have an influence on the evaluation and decision-making process, but keeping Yates and developing Peterman seems as though it would be the better move for the Bills at this time.