Orchard Park, NY — Friday’s practice at One Bills Drive took a sudden and somber turn when Keon Coleman, one of Buffalo’s most dynamic young stars, quietly walked off the field. No injury. No conflict. No announcement. His helmet sat untouched on the sideline as he headed toward the exit, leaving teammates and coaches momentarily stunned.

Within minutes, the truth spread: his former college mentor — the man Coleman has long described as a second father — was in critical condition after being shot near a campus facility earlier this week, on November 13.
For Coleman, the news wasn’t just heartbreaking; it struck directly at the roots of who he is.
That mentor is John Beam, the longtime Laney College coaching legend whose guidance shaped Coleman’s early playing years before he climbed the NCAA ranks. Their time together wasn’t long, but it was defining. Beam wasn’t simply a coach; he was the one who taught Coleman discipline, direction, and the value of becoming a good man long before becoming a great athlete.

The shooting occurred in the Fieldhouse area at Laney College, where Beam was working. A man dressed in dark clothing entered the area and opened fire. Beam was rushed to the hospital in critical condition. The incident shook the California football community, but it hit Coleman the hardest.
Sources close to the situation say Coleman has quietly covered all of Beam’s medical costs for weeks, never seeking credit or public attention. For him, it was simple — a way to honor the man who taught him “how to tune out the noise and find his own answers.” When Coleman learned Beam’s condition had worsened Friday morning, he left practice immediately and began his trip back to the West Coast.
Head coach Sean McDermott fully supported Coleman’s decision and sent heartfelt messages to Beam’s family. He described the bond between the two as “one of those rare relationships in football that goes far beyond the game itself.”
Teammates said Coleman didn’t look like a star receiver walking off the practice field — he looked like a son rushing home to be with the man who once held his future together.