Team Recap

Broncos — 2026 Draft Recap

2026 NFL Season · Monday, May 11

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The Rundown

Welcome back to Muffed. The Broncos walked into the 2026 draft without a first-round pick — that chip got cashed in earlier — so Denver's class has no top-32 headliner to anchor it. Instead, George Paton and Sean Payton played the middle and back of the board, seven picks total, shaped around two ideas: get younger on both lines, add explosion to the passing game. The on-paper headliner is a third-round defensive tackle out of Texas A&M, but the soul of this haul is the two fourth-rounders Paton flat-out said would define the class.

Start with run defense — Denver's highest pick lives here. At sixty-six overall, the Broncos took Tyler Onyedim, a twenty-three-year-old defensive tackle from Texas A&M. The college line is workmanlike — forty-eight tackles, nine for loss, three sacks — but the traits are what made him a third-rounder. Onyedim posted a Relative Athletic Score of 8.31, and quick definition: Relative Athletic Score is a zero-to-ten grade benchmarking combine and pro-day testing against every player at his position since 1987. That 8.31 lands him in the top fifteen percent of defensive tackles ever measured. And here's the thing — Denver's 2025 run defense was already fine, minus seventeen rushing expected points added on the season, which is a positive result for a defense. So Onyedim isn't a bandage. He's the youth infusion Paton openly wanted up front. Late in the seventh at two-fifty-seven, Denver added Buffalo linebacker Red Murdock as the forced-fumble dart throw — Payton's most enthusiastic line of the presser was, quote, he may hold the record for forced fumbles, end quote. The 6.81 athletic score says average traits, real motor.

Denver's 2025 rushing offense was neutral — roughly zero rushing expected points added, eighteen scores on the ground — so the one pick spent here had to be an efficiency injection, not a desperation hire. At one-oh-eight, it was Jonah Coleman, running back, Washington, and the first of the two fourth-rounders Paton said would define the class. One hundred fifty-six carries, seven hundred fifty-eight yards, fifteen rushing touchdowns — second in the Big Ten, twenty-third nationally — plus thirty-one catches for three hundred fifty-four yards. The number that pops: plus zero point three three predicted points added per play — the college version of NFL expected points added — and plus fifty-seven on the season. Elite efficiency in round four. Payton specifically called out the pass-protection frame and third-down viability — physical, smart, tough, and the protection traits don't need to be projected the way they usually do with college backs.

The offensive line got the other defining fourth-rounder, three picks later at one-eleven: Kage Casey, tackle out of Boise State with guard-tackle versatility. The Relative Athletic Score is 6.85 grading him as a guard — sixtieth-percentile range — and Paton was explicit that the swing-tackle, swing-guard flex is what made Casey the pick over a third running back. Denver's 2025 pass protection allowed twenty-three sacks across seventeen games, which is genuinely good. Casey isn't a panic move. He's the youth-on-the-line piece Paton kept circling back to.

Denver's 2025 passing offense produced plus fifty-three expected points added at plus zero point zero eight per dropback — fine, not explosive — and Paton said the word explosion specifically when describing what this draft was supposed to add. Two tight ends, two different jobs. In round five at one-fifty-two, Denver took Justin Joly, a twenty-two-year-old tight end from North Carolina State whose seven receiving touchdowns ranked second in his conference. Payton put him in the F-tight-end bucket — the move piece, the flex. Then with the very last pick of the draft, two-fifty-six, Mr. Irrelevant himself: Dallen Bentley out of Utah. Forty-eight catches, six hundred twenty yards, six touchdowns, plus zero point three five predicted points added per play for a total of plus twenty-four in the Big 12. Serious production for the final pick of the entire draft. And Bentley smashed his testing — 9.40 Relative Athletic Score, top six percent of tight ends ever tested. Payton categorized him as the inline Y, the bigger body who works down the field.

Pass defense got one swing at two-forty-six: Miles Scott, safety, Illinois. Sixty-four tackles, four pass breakups, a 7.87 Relative Athletic Score — top fifteen percent for free safeties. Payton said Scott's a converted receiver with seven career interceptions and natural ball skills, and he came recommended by Denver players who were his teammates at Illinois.

Pick of the draft has to be Jonah Coleman, and the argument is scarcity of trait. You could make the case for Onyedim on round value, or Bentley on the testing-versus-slot gap. But Coleman is the only player in this class who pairs top-of-conference touchdown production with elite efficiency and the pass-protection frame that keeps him on the field on third down. Three-down backs in round four are rare. Payton said openly that most college backs need third-down protection projection — Coleman doesn't. That's the pick that bends Denver's offense.

Looking to 2026, the real question isn't whether the headline picks hit — it's whether seven picks and no first-rounder is enough to move the depth chart on a team that already paid its way into Waddle and is leaning on returning starters. Paton said it himself: younger on both lines, more offensive explosion. On those two narrow goals, the haul lines up. The stress test is whether a class built on day-two-and-three swings delivers real snaps when the lights come on.

The Bottom Line

7 picks in the 2026 NFL Draft

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