NFL 2026
Team June 7, 2026 · Touchdown Week Staff

The Broncos chased Jaylen Waddle for months. Now they have their separation weapon.

Denver traded for the Dolphins receiver after losing the AFC Championship Game to New England. At OTAs, the early reviews center on the one thing the Broncos' offense lacked: a receiver who makes every route look the same.

The Broncos had wanted Jaylen Waddle for a while, pursuing him before the November trade deadline and restarting talks before free agency. They finally landed him from Miami, the most significant move of an offseason that began with a loss to New England in the AFC Championship Game. The early OTA impressions suggest he fixes a specific problem.

How did Denver get him?

A trade with the Dolphins, completed after a long pursuit. The Broncos chased Waddle before the 2025 deadline, couldn't get it done, then circled back before March free agency and finished the deal. It was Denver's biggest roster move following a season that ended one win short of the Super Bowl. For a team that close, adding a proven separation receiver was the logical swing.

What do the early reviews say?

They focus on his route-running deception. Safety Talanoa Hufanga praised Waddle's ability to 'make every route look the same,' the quality that turns a 10-yard stop into a coverage nightmare because the defender has to honor the deep threat. Sean Payton highlighted Waddle's instincts and his rare ability to 'stop fast' as well as run fast. Waddle described his own role simply: 'fast, physical and exciting,' while saying he'd 'earn and build' his place in the offense.

What does he fix for the Broncos?

Two concrete weaknesses. Denver completed just 38.7 percent of its deep attempts (20-plus air yards) and ranked 29th in three-and-outs in 2025. Waddle's speed stretches the field and his separation underneath moves the chains, attacking both problems at once. Courtland Sutton noted the complementary fit: with Waddle drawing coverage, the two receivers can manipulate defenses and even help the run game. Waddle posted 910 yards and six touchdowns in a down Miami season and ranked 11th in yards per route, so the production base is there.

What's the ceiling with Bo Nix?

High, if the deep ball comes around. Nix has the arm and the Broncos have the structure under Payton; what they lacked was a receiver who could win one-on-one down the field and reliably separate. Pairing Waddle with Sutton gives Denver a true 1-2 punch for the first time in Nix's career. The bet is that a contender that fell one game short adds the missing piece and pushes through. The OTA buzz is encouraging, but the real test is whether the deep-passing numbers climb in the fall.

Sources

  • ESPN: Early impressions of new Broncos WR Jaylen Waddle at OTAs

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Published June 7, 2026 Touchdown Week Staff