The Buffalo Bills signed Kurt Coleman less than a week ago, but he's already really excited about being with his new team. The veteran safety recently signed a deal worth a little over $1 million with the chance to make up to $2 million through incentives.

Coleman got released by the Saints back in February, and didn't receive a ton of known interest on the open market. Coleman entered the league as a seventh-round pick of the Eagles back in 2010, and has done a nice job sticking around ever since.

Speaking to the media recently, Coleman explained why he picked Buffalo and why he's so high on the team's chances to make a Super Bowl, per Ryan Talbot of NYUP.com.

“I looked at the situation. I looked at the roster. I’ve been watching Buffalo and obviously the familiarity with Sean McDermott makes this transition so much smoother. I know what he wants out of me as a player. And I know what to expect out of him as a coach. And I think the great thing about this is I always feel like that every team that I try to choose as my career goes on is I want to pick a team that… they don’t have to be the so-called favorite pick in the media, but I want a team that has the ‘it,’ that has the chemistry, that has the foundation, the nucleus to make it there. And I feel like this team really does. I think the great thing about this is the defense is phenomenal.”

Coleman will slide in as a nice replacement for safety Rafael Bush, who retired the day he was signed. Over his length career, Coleman has made 132 appearances and 83 starts. Coleman has played on a Super Bowl team before with the Panthers, so he knows what he's talking about.