Sean Payton already has a plan for Jaylen Waddle, and it starts with a familiar spot.
The Denver Broncos made their splash earlier this offseason by trading a bundle of draft capital to pry the star receiver away from the Miami Dolphins, giving Bo Nix a major new weapon and reshaping the look of the passing game. Waddle now joins Courtland Sutton to form a dangerous tandem, and Denver’s offense, which was already ranked in the top half of the NFL for scoring in 2025, suddenly has another layer of speed and playmaking.
Payton made it clear the Broncos didn’t wait until after the trade to figure out how Waddle would fit. The role was already mapped out.
“Absolutely," Payton said on if the Broncos had a role in mind for Waddle when trading for him. "You could start slot to outside, or go outside to slot, just pick.
There’s a crystal-clear vision prior to the trade as to, ‘All right, this is what we see, this is where he plays and these are the things that we feel like he’s exceptional at.’ Then, ‘Let’s apply them into what we’re doing."
"I think we have a pretty good idea of where [to play him]. Then it’s just the nuances with the routes, what we’re calling things, the correct depths, that type of thing.”
Waddle’s usage in Miami backs up that kind of flexibility. Per PFF, the Dolphins lined him up on the outside on more than 73% of his snaps, while he worked from the slot on 25% of them.
That versatility is a big part of why Denver paid such a steep price to get him. And while Waddle can move around, Payton said the Broncos see him beginning on the perimeter.
“Outside. That’s where his home will be initially, and there may be some packages where we have some flex, but he’s doing too well outside," Payton said.
That gives Denver a clear starting point with a receiver who brings elite speed and route-running ability. It also gives the Broncos a deeper picture at the position, with Marvin Mims and Pat Bryant among the players behind Waddle and Sutton.
Payton likes the shape of that room, and he likes that the group has another year in his system as training camp nears later this month. The task now is simple in theory and tricky in practice: identify what each receiver does best and put them there.
"There’s depth at that room. There are things that the guys do very well," Payton said of the Broncos' wide receivers.
"Our job is to find those strengths and put them in those positions. He [WR Jaylen Waddle] has been a great addition, and we’re just getting started."
In Other News...
Riley Moss Is Forcing A Broncos Decision They Cant Ignore
Riley Moss has gone from promising depth piece to one of the Broncos most important defensive answers since earning a starting job in 2024. His play on the outside has given Denver something it has long needed, a reliable No. 2 corner who can hold up against NFL receivers and create the kind of disruptive moments that change games.
That kind of production does not stay cheap for long, especially at a premium position, and Moss is already moving into the class of corners who can force a front office to think ahead. Denver has to weigh what it wants the secondary to look like beyond this season, with Moss not set to reach free agency until 2027 and the future shape of the room tied to how the younger pieces behind him develop. [Read more 🡒]
Dolphins Just Got Dragged Into A Wild NFL Scenario Again
CBS Sports writer Carter Bahns took a World Cup-style swing at the NFL calendar, dividing the league into groups and then running a full knockout bracket through the season. In that alternate setup, the Broncos came out of group play on top, handled a Round of 16 game, and kept themselves in the mix long enough to make the format feel a little too real for comfort.
Denvers path in the simulation included a tight knockout win over the 49ers before the run ended in the quarterfinals, which is exactly the sort of what-if that can make a fan think twice about how much a single matchup can change in a tournament setting. Bahns exercise ultimately had the Rams lifting the trophy, but the Broncos place in the bracket was enough to make the whole idea feel like more than a gimmick. [Read more 🡒]
Jaylen Waddle Just Sent A Strong Message About Denver's Receivers
Jaylen Waddles arrival in Denver has already started to change the conversation around the Broncos passing game. During offseason practices, the former Dolphins receiver has been upbeat about what he has seen from the wideout room, and that matters for a team trying to build more than just a deeper rotation. A receiver of Waddles caliber does not just add speed and separation, he also raises the standard for everyone lining up around him.
Courtland Sutton is part of the appeal, too, because the Broncos now have the kind of top-end talent that can make a defense pick its poison. Waddle has clearly noticed the chemistry in the room, and the early signs suggest Denvers offense may be getting a much cleaner fit than most outside observers expected. The real question now is how quickly that connection turns from offseason optimism into something the Broncos can lean on when the games start counting. [Read more 🡒]
