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Broncos could flip a WR to add more draft capital
Denver Broncos general manager George Paton. Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

Broncos could flip a WR to add more draft capital

The Denver Broncos have several positions of need but not enough draft picks to address them all.

With just five total picks in the 2023 draft — and none in the first two rounds — SI.com’s Albert Breer believes Broncos general manager George Paton may have to deal from Denver’s top position of strength, wide receiver, if he wants to pick anywhere in the first 64 picks.

“[Paton is] light on picks and wanting to accumulate some,” Breer wrote. “He could use No. 67 or 68 to do it, or he could work a trade with the surplus of receivers he’s got. The Broncos haven’t been shopping those guys, but I think at the right price, they might move one (if I had to guess, I think it’d take a first-rounder for Jerry Jeudy, and maybe a second-rounder for Courtland Sutton) with the idea that they get a little leaner and more flexible financially in the process.”

Sure, Paton told reporters during his pre-draft news conference last week that the team was “really high” on Jeudy and that he didn’t anticipate moving the 24-year-old wideout during draft week. It's a stance he's maintained all offseason.

But a receiver-needy team like Green Bay (No. 13), Baltimore (No. 22), Minnesota (No. 23), Buffalo (No. 27) or Kansas City (No. 31) that may want a proven veteran over gambling on a rookie WR could part with its first-round pick for Jeudy, who totaled 67 receptions for 972 yards and six touchdowns in 2022.

Trading a second-round pick for Sutton, who’s just 27 and has a 1,000-yard season and one Pro Bowl under his belt, might look more appealing than using that pick on any of the wideouts who should be available in Round 2 including Josh Downs, Jalin Hyatt, Rashee Rice, Marvin Mims, Jayden Reed and Jonathan Mingo.

If the Broncos don’t make any moves, it’ll be the second straight year they won’t pick in the first round, and it would mark the first time since 1995 that their first pick comes in Round 3 or later.

Michael Gallagher

Michael Gallagher is a longtime sports journalist based out of Nashville with a decade of experience covering college football, mixed martial arts and prep sports plus the NFL and NHL — specifically the Tennessee Titans and Nashville Predators. He’s covered several notable sporting events including an AFC Championship game, a Stanley Cup Final, an NHL All-Star Game and an NHL Stadium Series. Some of his past bylines can be found at the Nashville Scene, SB Nation, The Hockey News and Fox Sports Knoxville

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