The Denver Broncos don’t have many obvious soft spots heading into 2026, and that’s exactly why ESPN had to get a little picky.
After an offseason built around keeping the core intact and adding Jaylen Waddle to the wide receiver room, Denver looks solid almost everywhere. But if there’s one area that still feels a step short of being a real strength, it’s tight end.
ESPN’s Mike Clay singled out that spot as the Broncos’ biggest weakness on a roster he otherwise sees as strong on both sides of the ball.
“The Broncos look good on both sides of the ball, so I'll be picky and go after a position group that didn't improve as much as expected last season despite the addition of Evan Engram," Clay wrote. "The veteran tight end played a career-low 42% of Denver's snaps and found the end zone once. The 32-year-old will compete with Adam Trautman, Nate Adkins, Lucas Krull and rookie Justin Joly for snaps.”
Denver did add depth in the draft with a couple of Day 3 picks, but that still doesn’t automatically make the room a strength. It may be good enough.
It may even be fine. But compared with the rest of a playoff-ready roster, tight end looks like the spot with the least top-end punch.
That’s where a late free-agent move could come into play.
If the Broncos wanted to give the position a little more juice before camp, they’d need a veteran who can stretch the field in Sean Payton’s offense while also holding up as a blocker. In other words: someone who can fit into multiple-tight-end looks and do more than just occupy a jersey.
One available name that checks both boxes is Jonnu Smith.
The 30-year-old spent last season in a limited role on a lackluster Pittsburgh Steelers offense under Arthur Smith, but he still has the kind of profile that could make sense in Denver. Two years ago with the Miami Dolphins, he earned a Pro Bowl nod after posting career highs with 88 catches and 884 receiving yards, while tying his career best with eight touchdowns.
On a short-term, low-cost deal, Smith could walk into Denver’s tight end room and immediately create competition. At the very least, he’d give the Broncos another option to sort through in camp while trying to rediscover the production he flashed in 2024.
If it clicked, Smith would fit between Engram and Adam Trautman on the depth chart and give Bo Nix another reliable target. And for an offense looking to keep stacking weapons, that’s never a bad thing.
Of course, Denver may decide the current group is enough and trust the rookies to provide the spark. But if the Broncos agree with Clay that the tight end room still needs work, Smith is a name worth watching as training camp approaches.
In Other News...
Sean Payton Reportedly Floated A Shocking Broncos Plan Behind Closed Doors
Sean Payton apparently spent part of 2024 thinking well outside the usual coaching box, according to an ESPN report that linked the Broncos coach to a wild idea involving Bill Belichick. Belichick had already moved on from New England after the 2023 season, and the notion was never anything close to a formal plan, but it speaks to how much respect Payton still had for one of the sports most accomplished coaches.
The report says the concept never got traction inside Denver, and it is easy to see why. Even in a league that thrives on bold swings, the logistics would have been unusual enough to make the whole thing feel more like a thought experiment than a workable football decision. Belichick eventually took a different path anyway, landing at North Carolina in December 2024, while Tom Brady was publicly calling him the greatest coach in the game on a podcast discussion. [Read more 🡒]
Broncos Underdog Is Suddenly Pressuring A Crowded Receiver Battle
The Broncos went into the spring with what looks like a fairly settled wide receiver room for 2026, with the top end of the depth chart already taking shape. But undrafted rookie Dane Key has made enough noise in OTAs and mandatory minicamp to keep himself in the conversation, which is no small thing for a player trying to crack a group that already has several roster locks.
Keys appeal is easy to see. He arrived with a solid college rsum at Kentucky and the kind of size and ball skills that can make an undrafted player harder to ignore once the practices get competitive. If he keeps that momentum going, the Broncos may have to decide whether he can push for one of the final receiver spots or settle into a practice squad path that still keeps him in the building. [Read more 🡒]
Sean Paytons Davis Webb Endorsement Says A Lot About Denvers Offense
Davis Webb is stepping into his first year as Denvers offensive coordinator with the task of calling plays, and Sean Paytons message around that transition says plenty about how the Broncos want their offense to function. Payton has made clear he trusts Webbs ability, while also acknowledging that the two will keep working together as the season unfolds.
Payton even reached back to his own early days calling plays, pulling up a box score from a 1999 preseason game when he was the Giants quarterbacks coach to make a point to Webb. It was the kind of veteran-to-apprentice reminder that fits Denvers current setup, where the coach who has seen just about everything is still willing to teach while letting a new play-caller find his own rhythm. [Read more 🡒]
