Broncos May Be Running Out Of Time With Marvin Mims Jr

As Marvin Mims Jr. enters his contract year with the Denver Broncos, his dual role as a wide receiver and a Pro Bowl returner plays a significant factor in determining his worth and future with the team.

Marvin Mims Jr. is heading into a contract year, and the Broncos are about to find out what the market thinks he’s worth.

That’s the real tension here. Mims is already a two-time Pro Bowl and All-Pro returner, but special teams aces don’t usually cash in like premium receivers unless they’re also making a real impact on offense. Denver has used him as a receiver, sure, but mostly in a limited role - more like the No. 5 option than a player who forces a team to open the vault.

A new report from The Denver Post’s Luca Evans gives a clearer sense of where the money might land. Evans spoke with agents around the league, and the range they floated for Mims was eye-opening.

"Several NFL agents who spoke to The Post for background on the league-wide demand for receivers pinpointed Mims’ current value, indeed, upwards of $10 million per year on the open market," Evans wrote. "One agent with several wide-receiver clients projected Mims could command between $11 to $13 million annually, which could rise 'depending on how well he does this season,' as the agent said."

That may only be the starting point. A useful comp is Rashid Shaheed, who signed for $17 million per year with the Seattle Seahawks.

The comparison makes sense. Both players are receivers first and returners second, and both have stacked up accolades as return men.

Mims, though, has the stronger return résumé: he was a second-team All-Pro in 2023, his rookie year, and a first-team All-Pro in 2024. Shaheed is a two-time Pro Bowl returner as well.

If Mims’ camp pushed for something around $18 million annually, that would put Denver in a tough spot. The Broncos already have other key players heading toward contract years, and Bo Nix’s extension window is coming too.

His eligibility opens up in 2027, but the Broncos would be motivated to move fast once they can. That next deal could start at $40 million a year and climb to as much as $50 million, depending on how the 2026 season goes.

Even if Nix’s money wouldn’t hit the cap right away, it still matters. The Broncos may have a short-term opening to spend elsewhere, but there are limits. Courtland Sutton’s 2027 cap hit is set at $28.4 million, and Jaylen Waddle’s is $27 million, making a big Mims extension harder to justify at top-of-market receiver money.

And yet Mims matters in Denver in a way the stat line doesn’t fully capture.

He was the first draft pick of the Sean Payton era, and he’s been exactly the kind of team player coaches love: willing to line up wherever they need him, whether that’s at receiver, running back, or as a gadget piece. He has changed games with field position as a returner and has also delivered on offense when called upon.

That showed up in the playoffs last season, when injuries hit the Broncos’ receiving group and Mims stepped into a bigger role. He made big plays in both postseason games and finished as the team’s leading receiver in the playoffs.

Payton has been clear that Mims doesn’t need to prove he can help on offense.

“Every time we continue to ask him down the field, give him these opportunities, he takes advantage of it," Payton said of Mims during mandatory minicamp. "He’s been very consistent.

It’s just a matter of getting those touches. But very important games, even in Buffalo-I could point to a number of games.

It’s a good problem to have, but he’s doing well.”

Mims has also acknowledged frustration with his offensive role at times, but he has stayed firm about wanting to remain in Denver beyond the 2026 season. His recent move to fire his agent and hire Athletes First is another signal that he wants a new deal done.

The Broncos have several players in line for extensions, including Mims, cornerbacks Riley Moss and Ja’Quan McMillian, plus starters Ben Powers and Brandon Jones. Denver has already made the point itself: it can’t pay everybody.

So the question becomes which names rise to the top. Mims has a strong case, not just because of his return work, but because of what he’s meant to the Payton rebuild since 2023 and because he’s consistently answered when Denver has asked more of him.

If Mims is willing to work toward something team-friendly, there’s a path for both sides when camp opens at the end of July.

In Other News...

Vance Joseph Is Making One Broncos Defensive Issue Non-Negotiable

Over the past two seasons, the Broncos have built one of the NFLs most disruptive defenses, finishing among the leagues best at getting after the quarterback and leading the league in sacks. Even so, the one area that kept them from feeling fully complete in 2025 was the turnover battle, where the takeaways did not match the pressure they were creating up front.

That is why Vance Joseph has made turnover margin a non-negotiable point of emphasis heading into 2026, and players noticed it as soon as offseason work began. The message was clear from the start in May: if Denver wants its defense to stay elite, it has to turn more of those stops into game-changing takeaways. [Read more 🡒]

Broncos Face A Bigger Malcolm Roach Decision Than It First Seemed

Malcolm Roachs contract with the Broncos looked straightforward enough when he arrived on a two-year deal in 2024, then got more interesting when Denver extended him before that original pact could run out. The team already picked up his option bonus for 2026, which locked in his salary for that season and 2027, while leaving 2028 as the first year without guaranteed money. For Denver, that structure is more than a bookkeeping detail. It gives the front office room to work with the cap while keeping a useful defensive lineman in place.

The bigger question is how aggressively the Broncos want to keep pushing that flexibility forward. They can continue using option bonuses to lower cap hits in the near term, or choose a different path that leaves more room now and less pain later if Roach is no longer part of the plan. With 2028 still unsecured and the contract built to allow different outcomes, Denver has a real decision to make about whether to treat Roach as a long-term piece or simply a manageable part of the roster puzzle. [Read more 🡒]

Broncos Suddenly Linked To A Veteran Tight End Fans Will Debate

Denver added more bodies to the tight end room in the 2024 NFL Draft, taking Justin Joly and Dallen Bentley to deepen a position group that already includes Evan Engram and a few other names. Even with that influx, the Broncos still have a clear dividing line there: Engram is the only proven receiving threat, and the rest of the room is built more for depth than for changing how opposing defenses have to play them.

Bryan De Ardo of CBS Sports floated a veteran option who could alter that picture, pointing to a player whose skill set would make sense in Sean Paytons offense because of the way it can create after-the-catch opportunities. The appeal is obvious enough for Denver, but so is the downside, because bringing in another established pass catcher at tight end would force some hard roster decisions and could squeeze out a player like Lucas Krull before camp even gets interesting. [Read more 🡒]