Denver Broncos HC Sean Payton Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The Denver Broncos made some of the biggest moves of the NFL offseason, trading a first-round pick to hire head coach Sean Payton and then immediately overhauling the roster. While there is building excitement in Denver, some around the NFL are questioning the team’s spending.

From the moment NFL free agency opened, Payton and general manager George Paton began spending. The Broncos immediately signed offensive linemen Mike McGlinchey and Ben Powers, strengthening the pass protection for Russell Wilson.

Shortly after addressing the offensive line, Denver added more talent on both sides of the ball. Quarterback Jarrett Stidham, running back Samaje Perine, defensive lineman Zach Allen and tight end Chris Manhertz all signed lucrative multi-year contracts. As a result, Denver has been one of the highest-spending NFL teams this offseason.

NFL executives speaking to The Athletic’s Mike Sando questioned the Broncos’ spending on defensive lineman Zach Allen. As one team official said specifically, clubs liked Allen but Denver paid him at a ‘crazy’ price.

“We liked Zach and would have been interested in the $10 million range,” one of these execs said. “Then we heard he had something north of $13 million and then he signed for $15 million and it is, ‘OK, that is crazy.’ He has durability issues, too.” 

Anonymous NFL executive on Denver Broncos signing Zach Allen to a $16M APY

The contracts McGlinchey and Allen signed are largely the focal point of criticism. Allen was a productive player last season for the Arizona Cardinals and reuniting him with defensive coordinator Vance Joseph should lead to success. However, Allen is now the 11th-highest-paid defensive end in the NFL, ahead of Trey Hendrickson, DeMarcus Lawrence and Nick Bosa.

McGlinchey, a former top-10 pick, ranked 57th in PFF‘s pass-blocking grade (65.4) last year, allowing 27 pressures with six sacks surrendered in 561 pass-blocking snaps and he didn’t rate as a top-25 offensive tackle in run-blocking this past season. yet, Denver made him one of the highest-paid offensive tackles in football.

Ultimately, Payton and Paton may be proven right in their decisions on spending and it’s less of an issue when the contracts are paid by one of the richest NFL owners. However, it’s evident many in the NFL wouldn’t be surprised if the Broncos regret awarding these contracts in a few years.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Atlanta to be first race of NASCAR's In-Season Tournament
West Point alum made history in his MLB debut with Reds
Heat legend cautions Lakers against hiring JJ Redick
Welcome to the WNBA: Caitlin Clark sets infamous record in debut
Jalen Brunson leads Knicks to blowout win in Game 5 vs. Pacers
Nikola Jokic torches DPOY to lead Nuggets past Wolves in Game 5
Oilers use late heroics to tie Canucks at two games each
Watch: Astros pitcher ejected after foreign substance check
Kirk Cousins not angry with Falcons because winning is 'hard enough'
Bronny James has surprising comments on potentially teaming up with LeBron
Bills add two-time Super Bowl champ to new-look WR room
Brewers lose team-leading home run hitter to injured list
Sandy Alderson denies involvement in Mets, Billy Eppler IL controversy
Twins reliever shut down for six weeks with patellar tendon tear
Chris Finch throws shade at Nuggets star over Rudy Gobert’s fine
Cardinals head coach warns not to bet against Kyler Murray
Details emerge on Jason Kelce’s role at ESPN
Rangers defenseman wins Mark Messier Leadership Award
Ex-NFL head coach takes over as Arena Football League commish
Yankees young stud takes major step in return from injury