Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen did not exactly have a great rookie campaign this past season, throwing for 2,074 yards, 10 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions while completing just 52.8 percent of his passes and registering a passer rating of 67.9 in 11 starts.

Obviously, part of Allen's problem was accuracy, and the Bills understand that and want him to make more conservative throws instead of trying to utilize his arm strength to go for it all.

“We love his aggressiveness,” said Bills general manager Brandon Beane, according to Mark Gaughan of The Buffalo News. “He thinks he can make any throw, and he can physically, but sometimes that’s not the smart play. I think that’s what Josh is learning. That’s natural. He’s so competitive that he wants to pick up that first down now, and sometimes it’s OK to take the swing pass for 5 yards and get it to second and 5, instead of a harder throw 18 yards down the field in a tight window that has a 50-50 chance and now it’s second and 10.”

Allen completed just 75 percent of his passes within 10 yards of the line of scrimmage during his rookie campaign, well below the league average of 81 percent.

Bills offensive coordinator Brian Daboll says that Allen needs to do a better job of taking what the defense gives him.

“People are playing Josh a little bit different than they play some other people, whether it’s a deeper safety, the corners bailing off,” said Daboll. “I think we can help ourselves, too, by taking what they give us on some of those verticals.”