The Broncos have spent a long time trying to solve linebacker, and that search is exactly why Red Murdock is worth circling now.
Denver’s defense has been elite in plenty of places, but the middle of it has been a different story. Since the Super Bowl 50 title run more than 10 years ago, the Broncos have kept cycling through options at linebacker, never quite landing on the same kind of stability they once had with Danny Trevathan and Brandon Marshall.
That’s the backdrop for Murdock, the team’s final pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. He may not have arrived with much fanfare, but the Broncos have seen this movie before. Trevathan was also a late-round swing who turned into something much bigger.
Trevathan went 188th overall in 2012, the last pick of Denver’s draft class that year. He entered a linebacker room with Joe Mays and Wesley Woodyard already in place, while the team continued hunting for a long-term answer. Nate Irving had been taken in the third round the year before, but he couldn’t carve out a real role as a rookie.
What made Trevathan intriguing was simple: production. The Broncos knew he was a tackling machine at Kentucky, even if the testing numbers didn’t exactly jump off the page. His 2.24 RAS pointed to a player with real athletic concerns, but the tape kept showing a linebacker who found the ball, made plays and stayed around it.
Over his final three college seasons, Trevathan piled up 287 total tackles in his last two years alone, along with 27.5 tackles for loss, 6 sacks, 4 interceptions and 9 forced fumbles. That kind of production outweighed the concerns, and it eventually translated.
Murdock brings a similar kind of profile, even if the draft path was different. He was Mr.
Irrelevant in his class, and while he may have slipped because of athletic limitations, his 6.81 RAS was still respectable. At Buffalo, the numbers were eye-catching in a hurry: 298 total tackles, 30 tackles for loss, 7 sacks and 13 forced fumbles over his last two seasons.
That production is why there’s at least a familiar feel here. Like Trevathan, Murdock could be the kind of late pick who forces his way into the conversation sooner than expected.
For now, he’s buried behind Alex Singleton, Justin Strnad and possibly Jordan Turner and Karene Reid when camp opens. That’s the Sean Payton way: nothing handed out, everything earned.
Still, Murdock made a strong early impression at OTAs and minicamp. Even without pads, he looked sharp, quick to process and instinctive - the kind of traits that matter when a rookie is trying to climb fast.
If he can make his mark on special teams and win over defensive coordinator Vance Joseph during training camp, Murdock could start moving up the depth chart in a hurry. That’s how Trevathan did it, and Denver would love to see the same story play out again.
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