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Dre Greenlaw Will Fully Evolve the Denver Broncos’ Defense
Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

On Feb. 11, 2024, after a jaw-dropping freak injury, Dre Greenlaw stood on the Super Bowl LVIII sideline, his Achilles torn, watching the 49ers’ dreams slip away in overtime.

That gut-wrenching moment fueled his comeback, leading him to sign a three-year, $31.5M deal with the Denver Broncos in March 2025— a promise to transform an already elite defense into a terror.

However, a quad strain in training camp halted his momentum and forced him to land on short-term IR.

With his return looming for Week 7 against the Giants, the anticipation is electric. Greenlaw isn’t just a linebacker; he’s the missing piece to make the Broncos’ top-five defense an unstoppable force that can propel it to the top of the AFC West. 

Broncos’ Defensive Machine is Already Formidable

Denver’s 4-2 start rests squarely on a defense that’s been suffocating opponents all season. They rank second in points allowed (15.8 per game) and sixth in run defense (89 yards per game). Additionally, they rank first in sacks and fourth in pass defense (165 ypg). In fact, they just held the Jets to a whopping -10 net passing yards in their Week 6 win. 

Patrick Surtain II, the All-Pro cornerback, has been a shutdown artist, blanketing elite receivers and making life miserable for quarterbacks.

Edge rusher Jonathon Cooper brings relentless pressure from the outside, along with Nik Bonitto, who leads the league in sacks and is an early contender to win DPOY. Talanoa Hufanga brings the tenacity and downhill pressure from the safety spot, while Zach Allen, John Franklin-Myers, and D.J. Jones bully opposing lines up front.

At the same time, Alex Singleton provides steady tackling in the middle of the linebacker corps. But Singleton’s lack of top-end speed shows up against quicker tight ends and in open-field pursuits, leaving subtle gaps in an otherwise ironclad unit. Adding a versatile, three-down playmaker like Greenlaw could elevate them from great to dominant.

Greenlaw Fits Like a Glove

Vance Joseph’s 3-4 hybrid scheme is all about creating chaos: disguised blitzes that confuse offensive lines, sticky coverage that forces incomplete passes, and physical run-stopping that wears down ball carriers. This approach powered Denver’s gritty 21-17 victory over the Eagles in Week 5, where they held firm in the red zone against Philly’s elite offensive weapons.

Still, to win the AFC West, Denver is going to have to think about facing Kansas City’s explosive attack that they’ve always struggled with. Patrick Mahomes scrambling for yards and Travis Kelce exploiting seams expose the need for more athleticism at linebacker.

With Greenlaw progressing well and on track to get taken off IR, his debut against the Giants could be the spark that makes this unit truly unbeatable.

Greenlaw’s X-Factor

What makes Greenlaw so special is his all-around game. In 2023 with the 49ers, he posted a strong run-stop win rate and excelled in coverage, earning high marks from PFF. He earned an 88.9 coverage grade from PFF in 2022-2023.

He’s not a one-dimensional linebacker. He’s a rare specimen who can blitz off the edge, drop into zones to swat passes, and wrap up runners in the hole. Slot him into Denver’s lineup, and he becomes a multi-tool weapon, chasing down speedy backs like Omarion Hampton on the perimeter, mirroring Travis Kelce across the middle to erase those chain-moving routes, or adding extra heat on Mahomes to collapse the pocket faster.

His presence alone could tighten the run defense even more, preventing those creeping yardage totals that keep drives alive, and inject forced fumbles or hurried throws that flip field position.

Greenlaw’s history of big moments adds an intangible edge. In 2019, he made a game-saving tackle against Seattle. He picked off Packers QB Jordan Love twice in the 2024 NFC Divisional Game. That clutch gene is exactly what Denver needs in divisional battles.

Sean Payton had glowing reviews for Greenlaw. “He plays like Mike Tyson. He’s tough, physical, and built that way. There’s not a lot of leaky yard plays. He’s a knockback tackler. They stop where he hits them. There’s an intensity to how he plays.”

A Defensive Takeover, Week 7 and Beyond

Greenlaw’s return transcends a simple activation from injured reserve; it’s a strategic upgrade that signals Denver’s ambitions.

The defense has shouldered the load for Bo Nix’s developing offense through a 4-2 record, grinding out wins like the Eagles thriller, where late stops sealed the deal. But those nail-biters reveal the thin margin Denver plays with— one more explosive playmaker could turn wins into routs.

Greenlaw fills that void, providing the athleticism to cover ground and the instincts to anticipate routes, potentially swinging outcomes in a rivalry game against Kansas City or the Chargers. Imagine him blowing up a screen pass or batting down a Mahomes fade; one play like that could demoralize an opponent and energize Empower Field.

Looking ahead, the AFC West is a war zone considering Justin Herbert’s arm with the Chargers and Mahomes’ wizardry with the Chiefs.

Greenlaw doesn’t just patch weaknesses; he amplifies strengths, making Denver’s defense a buzzsaw that chews up game plans. His first snap back will be electric viewing, a moment when Broncos fans see their unit evolve in real time.

Greenlaw has been a part of teams carrying a rookie QB to contending for titles. His addition positions Denver as a legitimate threat.

So, Broncos Country, get ready— because the terror is about to get real.

This article first appeared on The Lead and was syndicated with permission.

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