Broncos Fans Wont Like How The League Now Views Evan Engram

Evan Engram faces mounting pressure to reclaim his former success as the Broncos' first-choice tight end after a forgettable 2025 season and exclusion from top NFL rankings.

Evan Engram’s first season in Denver didn’t just disappoint - it vanished.

The Broncos brought him in on a two-year free-agent deal in what looked like one of the splashiest moves of the 2025 offseason, especially after beating out the Los Angeles Chargers in a bidding war. Instead, Engram turned in a year that fell far short of the hype. He finished with 50 catches for 461 yards and one touchdown, production that looks modest on paper and, by the sound of it, felt even lighter on the field.

That’s what makes the latest ESPN positional rankings sting even more. ESPN polled NFL executives, coaches and scouts on the league’s best players at each spot, and when the tight end list came out, Engram was nowhere to be found.

Not in the top 10. Not among the honorable mentions.

Not even in the group that “also received votes.” He got zero.

The list leaned heavily toward younger names like Brock Bowers, Trey McBride, Tyler Warren and Colston Loveland, with Travis Kelce still hanging on in the top 10. Engram, meanwhile, was left off entirely despite the fact that he caught 114 passes for the Jaguars the season before he signed with Denver.

That’s the gap the Broncos are now trying to bridge. He’s still the clear No. 1 tight end on the depth chart heading into 2026, even after Denver added Justin Joly and Dallen Bentley in the draft.

But the team needs a lot more from him than it got last season, and it needs it early. Getting Engram involved in the passing game from the jump could be a major key for the offense.

There’s still a player in there worth betting on. Engram had eight games last season in which he caught two passes or fewer, but his 2023 season showed just how dangerous he can be when things click. That year, his 114 receptions were the second-most ever in a season for a tight end at the time.

The Broncos have to figure out which version is real in this offense. If Engram is closer to the 2023 player, Denver has something to work with.

If last season is the new normal, then the label he’s carrying now - an aging shell of his former self - may stick. And if that happens, the final year of his contract will be here before anyone in Denver wants it to be.

In Other News...

Broncos Fans Wont Like This New RJ Harvey Prediction

RJ Harvey gave the Broncos plenty to like in his rookie season, turning his second-round selection into a productive debut with 896 yards and 12 touchdowns. But even after that kind of first impression, the path to a bigger role in 2026 is not getting any clearer, especially with Denver re-signing J.K. Dobbins and adding Jonah Coleman in the fourth round.

The early read around the backfield points to a three-man rotation, which is never the kind of setup that helps one young runner build momentum. Dobbins looks positioned to lead the group, while Harvey and Coleman may be left sorting out the rest of the touches, a development Broncos fans probably did not have in mind when Harvey flashed so much promise a year ago. [Read more 🡒]

Broncos Still Have One Defensive Hole They Cannot Ignore Before Camp

The Broncos have spent the offseason trying to tighten up a defense that still looks one piece short of complete, and linebacker is the spot that keeps coming up. With training camp approaching, Denver has been mentioned as a team that could use another proven body in the middle, especially after experts pointed to linebacker depth as a potential area for improvement.

Bobby Okereke fits the profile of a player worth weighing, even after an underwhelming season by his standards. The former Giants linebacker was released and is still on the market, but his track record of heavy tackling and years of production gives Denver a real option to consider if it wants more certainty before camp opens. [Read more 🡒]

Ben Powers Is Suddenly Facing Real Pressure In Broncos Lineup

The Broncos head into the 2026 season with one of the leagues better-looking offensive lines, anchored by Garett Bolles, Quinn Meinerz, Luke Wattenberg, Ben Powers and Mike McGlinchey. But the left side of that group is no longer as settled as it once seemed, because Denver got useful play from Alex Palczewski when Powers was out and liked enough of what it saw to reward him with a new contract.

There is also a fresh layer of competition coming from the draft. Kage Casey, a fourth-round pick who played tackle in college, is being looked at at guard in rookie minicamp, which tells you the Broncos are not treating that spot as untouchable. Powers still has the inside track, but with Palczewski established and Casey in the mix, Denver suddenly has more options than it did a year ago. [Read more 🡒]