Broncos May Have Landed More Than Backfield Insurance In Jonah Coleman

A promising late-round find, Jonah Coleman might just prove to be the steal of the 2026 draft for the Denver Broncos, leaving other NFL teams to second-guess their choices.

People around the league are already circling Jonah Coleman as one of the 2026 draft’s better value picks, and the Broncos’ fourth-rounder is starting to collect serious praise before training camp even gets rolling.

NFL Draft On SI’s Justin Melo pushed Coleman up to No. 2 on his re-ranking of the top 10 sleeper picks from the class, saying teams will be kicking themselves for letting him slide all the way to Denver at No. 108 overall. Melo called Coleman “a potential three-down starting running back at the next level” and pointed to the crowded Broncos backfield as the challenge ahead, with RJ Harvey and J.K. Dobbins already in place.

“Jonah Coleman is a potential three-down starting running back at the next level. He's joining a crowded Denver Broncos backfield that already has RJ Harvey and J.K.

Dobbins occupying it. Coleman is talented enough to carve out a role for himself by replacing one of the backs ahead of him.

The ex-Washington Huskies playmaker had better tape in 2024 than 2025, which possibly contributed to his 108th overall landing spot. Teams will regret letting him get that far,” Melo wrote.

Coleman wasn’t on Melo’s original sleeper list that came out shortly after the draft, but Broncos tight end Justin Joly did make the cut. Melo has stayed upbeat about both Denver picks, even if that’s where his enthusiasm for the class stops.

The early read on Coleman has been pretty straightforward: he looks like a ready-made NFL back. His football character and intangibles fit what Denver tends to value, and the Broncos are betting on that profile again with this selection.

The one thing that raised a flag was his weight and conditioning, but he showed up to rookie camp at 220 pounds, which eased that concern. Coleman’s weight has fluctuated, especially at Washington, and the Broncos are clearly going to want him keeping that part of his game in line if he wants a real shot at carving out a role.

That role may be more available than it looks on paper. Denver re-signed Dobbins to a two-year deal and gave him $8 million guaranteed, taking a swing that he can finally stay healthy. It’s an understandable gamble: before the foot injury that ended his season in Week 10 last year, Dobbins was a top-five individual rusher in the NFL.

When Dobbins was healthy, the Broncos’ run game looked dangerous. Harvey handled the RB1 work in relief, but he wasn’t ready to fully take over the job. In the time they were both active, Dobbins and Harvey combined for 20 carries as Denver’s top two backs, with 15 going to Dobbins and five to Harvey.

That workload setup is where Coleman could come in. If Denver wants to be careful with Dobbins and trim back the wear and tear, there’s room for another back to absorb a small piece of the pie. A split like 10 carries for Dobbins, five for Harvey and five for Coleman would fit the committee approach Sean Payton has used for years, and Coleman gives the Broncos what he called a “three-headed monster.”

At the floor, Coleman is insurance if Dobbins misses time again. At the ceiling, he’s the third back who handles short-yardage and goal-line work, where his power and toughness between the tackles can matter most.

But he isn’t just a bruiser. Coleman has enough burst and wiggle to matter in more than one phase, and while his jump-cut may not be on Harvey’s level, it still stands out.

One way or another, Coleman looks like a player Denver plans to use this season.

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