The Denver Broncos didn’t spend the offseason chasing headlines. They spent it trying to keep the machine intact.
That approach earned the Broncos a B+ from NFL Media’s Matt Okada, who pointed to a roster that stayed mostly together after a strong playoff run and a front office that leaned hard into retention rather than splashy outside additions.
“The Broncos' offseason has been predicated heavily on re-signing important assets, rather than adding new ones. Losing [John] Franklin-Myers on the defensive line definitely hurt, though Denver added a potential replacement with its first pick in the draft -- 66th overall. But otherwise, the roster has remained largely the same after a strong playoff run that might have been a sudden ankle injury and a Denver blizzard away from the Super Bowl,” Okada wrote.
That’s the cleanest summary of Denver’s spring: one major move, a lot of continuity, and not much else. The Broncos waited weeks after free agency opened before bringing in an outside player, settling on depth safety and special teams contributor Tycen Anderson. Their real swing came almost immediately in the new league year, when they pulled off the Jaylen Waddle trade with the Miami Dolphins.
After that, the outside additions basically stopped. Denver’s answer was to bring back 17 of its own free agents and preserve as much of a 14-win roster as possible.
The biggest departure was Franklin-Myers, and that one still stands out. The Broncos not only let him leave in free agency, but Franklin-Myers said they never reached out at any point to check on what kind of money or contract he was seeking. For an interior defensive lineman who posted 14.5 sacks over two seasons in Denver, that made for a curious exit.
Still, the Broncos have options to absorb the loss. Based on what defensive coordinator Vance Joseph said during minicamp, Malcolm Roach could open as the starter, with Eyioma Uwazurike rotating in on passing downs. 2025 third-rounder Sai'vion Jones and rookie third-rounder Tyler Onyedim could also work their way into the mix.
The Waddle trade is the move that changes the shape of the offense. Okada described him as a player who can add something Denver was missing and suggested he could fit into Sean Payton’s vacant “Joker” role.
“The one big add was Waddle, acquired in a mid-March trade. He provides an element to the passing attack that was largely lacking last year, and could even thrive in Sean Payton's vacant 'Joker' role. Ultimately, Denver lost very little and gained just enough to pick up where its breakthrough 2025 campaign abruptly left off,” Okada wrote.
There’s a little debate baked into that idea. Payton’s “Joker” label has traditionally been for a tight end or running back used as a mismatch weapon, and the Broncos already have that box checked.
Evan Engram was supposed to be the tight-end version of the role, though he didn’t fully become the mismatch piece Denver wanted. He still finished third on the team in receiving in his first season with the Broncos.
Then there’s RJ Harvey, who gave the offense exactly that kind of weapon out of the backfield. As a rookie, he caught 47 passes for 356 yards and five touchdowns, making him Payton’s true “Joker” back. With new offensive coordinator Davis Webb taking over play-calling duties, Engram could take a bigger step in Year 2.
The broader picture is simple: Denver brought back almost everything. The Broncos are set to return roughly 90% of their snaps, with Bo Nix back after his ankle fracture, the entire starting offensive line intact, and every skill-position starter returning alongside Waddle. The rookie additions include running back Jonah Coleman and tight end Justin Joly.
On defense, the starting lineup is back across the board except for Franklin-Myers. The specialists return too, including Marvin Mims Jr. as the returner, though he is in a contract year.
That continuity is the point. It may not have made for a dramatic March, but the Broncos clearly chose stability over churn. Payton and George Paton have now won 32 games over the past three seasons, and their bet this offseason was that keeping the core together would matter more than shopping for volume.
There was a risk in letting Franklin-Myers walk, but Denver has enough front-seven talent to cover for it if Roach, Uwazurike, Jones or Onyedim can help replace the pass rush. Nik Bonitto and Zach Allen should help carry that load as well.
And Waddle is the piece that can raise the whole thing. Davis Webb compared his arrival to Stefon Diggs joining Buffalo in 2020, a move that helped spark Josh Allen’s Year-3 jump. Webb sees a similar path in Denver with Waddle and Bo Nix, who is also entering his third year.
So yes, the offseason was quiet. From the outside, it was probably boring. But Denver’s front office made its choice early and stuck with it: keep the core, add one major weapon, and trust the rest to hold.
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 🡒]
