The Denver Broncos head into preseason with most of their roster picture already sharpened, but that doesn’t mean August is meaningless. Quite the opposite. With a few spots still up for grabs and the 53-man roster not fully settled, this is the stretch where fringe players can force their way into the conversation.
Training camp opens in less than a month, and Denver’s preseason slate begins August 14 in Atlanta. Over three games, these six players have the clearest path to changing their standing with the team.
Hakeem Butler is one of the more intriguing names in the mix. The Iowa State standout arrived in the league with real buzz after the Arizona Cardinals took him in the fourth round of the 2019 draft, but his NFL start didn’t go the way anyone expected. Even so, Butler has kept finding work thanks to strong showings in spring football, and Denver is the latest team to take a look after signing him following the most recent UFL season.
The Broncos already appear set at wide receiver with Courtland Sutton, Jaylen Waddle, Marvin Mims Jr., Troy Franklin and Pat Bryant locked in. That leaves the possibility of one more opening, and Butler’s 6-foot-5-inch frame gives him a shot to claim it.
At tight end, Caleb Lohner is another player worth watching. Sean Payton made sure to highlight him during OTAs, and now the former basketball player gets his chance to prove he can carry that momentum into actual game action. Denver drafted two tight ends, but Lohner still has a real path to the roster if he has a strong summer.
Up front, Tyler Miller enters the picture as an undrafted tackle trying to break into a room that already looks pretty solid. The Broncos have Frank Crum as a rotational swing tackle and Alex Palczewski as a versatile backup, but Miller could make things interesting if he pushes Matt Peart out of the mix.
Sean Fresch brings a different kind of value. He was the first player Denver signed from the spring league, and after the Broncos added Hakeem Butler, they followed by bringing in Butler’s St.
Louis Battlehawks teammate. Fresch has to show he can hold up as a defensive back, but his best route onto the team is probably as a return specialist.
Denver has kept that kind of player before with Trindon Holliday, Diontae Spencer and Tremon Smith, and if Fresch can carve out that role, it could make the contract negotiations for Mims extremely interesting.
Red Murdock may have been the draft’s “Mr. Irrelevant,” but the landing spot matters more than the label here.
The Broncos are thin at inside linebacker, and that could be the team’s biggest weakness going into the season. With a cluster of undrafted players behind starters Alex Singleton and Justin Strnad, Murdock has a chance to emerge as the primary backup after the preseason.
Then there’s Sam Ehlinger, who enters camp with a very specific target on his back. Bo Nix is the starter, and that isn’t changing anytime soon.
But Denver will sort out the backup quarterback job this summer, and Jarrett Stidham’s grip on the role is no longer as secure as it once looked. Stidham has held that spot for the last two seasons, and he was also the backup in 2023 behind Russell Wilson, but his shaky performance in last year’s AFC Championship Game has opened the door for Ehlinger.
The Broncos believe Ehlinger has the talent to take the job.
In Other News...
Broncos Still Have One Roster Question They Cant Ignore Before Camp
The Broncos have spent much of the offseason building out a deeper, more versatile roster, but there is still a familiar summer task in front of them as camp approaches. Even with upgrades already in place, the defense could use more insurance at linebacker, safety and edge rusher, especially after a few roster changes have nudged those spots into the spotlight.
That is why the free-agent market still makes sense as a place to look, with veteran names like Bobby Okereke, Jabrill Peppers and Jadaveon Clowney standing out as possible fits. Each would bring a different kind of help, whether it is steadiness in the middle, experience on the back end or another proven body up front, and the Broncos may not want to let those options disappear before the first practice snaps arrive. [Read more 🡒]
Broncos May Have Landed More Than Backfield Insurance In Jonah Coleman
Jonah Coleman may have arrived in Denver as a fourth-round pick, but there is already a case building that he is more than just extra depth behind the Broncos established backs. Some evaluators have treated him like a sleeper with starter upside, the kind of runner who could eventually handle more than a specialized role if his game translates the way they expect. For a team that has spent the offseason sorting out its backfield, that kind of projection gives the selection a little more weight than a simple insurance move.
Coleman enters a room that already includes RJ Harvey and J.K. Dobbins, so playing time will have to be earned, not assumed. Still, the Broncos have reason to think a committee setup can work in their favor, especially if Coleman can help lighten the load and keep everyone fresher over the long haul. If he settles in quickly, Denver may have found a back who can do more than wait in the wings. [Read more 🡒]
Broncos Have One AFC West Edge That Could Change Everything
If the Broncos are going to make a serious push in the AFC West, it may start where games are often won and lost: up front. Denver has a case for owning the divisions best line play on both sides of the ball, and that kind of edge can travel in January if the rest of the roster keeps pace.
The 2025 numbers back up the argument. The Broncos were stout against the run, disruptive in the pass rush and steady in pass protection, a combination that gives them a foundation few rivals can match. Even with J.K. Dobbins part of the conversation before his injury, the larger picture is the same for Denver: if the trenches stay dominant, the path to the top of the division gets a lot clearer. [Read more 🡒]
