NFL Free Agency opens up on Wednesday, with the legal tampering period beginning on Monday. The top free agents usually all commit to a team during that period, so be ready to rock and roll to start next week.
Denver, CO
On receiving end of Nikola Jokic’s dimes, Aaron Gordon’s confidence is high: “I’ve got the best hands in the business”
Aaron Gordon was running a fade route, straight downfield, but the ball wasn’t lofted up for him to chase. It was thrown on a line, about head height. As he turned to make a catch, multiple defenders were converging on the space between him and the trajectory of the ball.
“It’s not a great pass,” Gordon’s high school coach, Tim Kennedy, recalled.
But Gordon was already mastering a rather niche art: ensnaring the unpredictable and the unwieldy.
The Archbishop Mitty sophomore extended his left arm while in stride, trying to get the first touch on the ball before his opponent. He tipped the pass up and over the traffic — over his shoulders, too — and collected it in his right hand.
“It could have been a pick-six going the other way, a change in momentum,” Kennedy said. “But he was able to absorb a bad pass and not have it cost us.”
The play occurred in a high school basketball game, not a football game. Gordon flushed it in transition. But Kennedy’s word choice was appropriate. With athletic reflexes and reliable hands that would make NFL quarterbacks jealous, Gordon’s receiving skills have become an underrated cornerstone of the Denver Nuggets’ offense, often turning dangerous risks into thrilling highlights.
“He’s always in the right spots, and he’s a strong guy,” Nikola Jokic told The Denver Post. “So whenever we pass it to him, even if it’s a bad pass, he’s gonna catch it and finish.”
No other quarterback in the NBA thrives on the thrill of passing quite like Jokic. Nobody else stoically delights at slinging it through improbable windows: between the raised hands of an opposing center in guarding position, or bouncing over a defender’s outstretched leg into an empty space he expects his receiver to occupy. Behind his own back. Over his head. Over entire unsuspecting defenses.
Someone has to be capable of keeping up with his inventive style for it to work. Gordon is a natural at it. The Nuggets collectively are well-accustomed to handling Jokic’s unpredictable dimes, but Gordon bears the brunt of that responsibility in the dunker spot.
“That’s the best passer in the business,” he told The Post. “I’ve got the best hands in the business.”
If he sounds cocky, it’s because his hands have always been that good. When he played football as a kid, he started at running back but eventually switched to tight end as he grew into a standout athlete in the Bay Area. He was done with football by high school, as much as his school tried to convince him otherwise. His dexterity was clear. He simply brought it to the basketball court instead.
Gordon’s talent and potential were a formula for him to be more of an on-ball player at the time, even though he wasn’t an especially adept ball-handler. His size relative to other teenagers made scheming easy at first: Throw it to him in the post and let him go to work.
“But we would have to challenge him in practices, just to make it tough. Send doubles and triple-teams, because that’s what he was seeing in games,” Kennedy said. “So his ability to catch in traffic was something he got used to almost immediately as a freshman.”
Brandon Abajelo had just moved from Las Vegas when he met Gordon by matching up against him in an eighth-grade rec game. Gordon was already huge for his age (hands included, Abajelo noticed). The new kid pulled off an upset by swatting the ball away from Gordon the first time Gordon went at him one-on-one. Gordon’s competitive fire was ignited. Abajelo didn’t have much luck the rest of the game, but they became close friends and won two state titles together in high school.
From that first interaction alone, Abajelo learned an important truth: If Gordon wanted the ball in his hands, he would get it. Triple-teams be damned.
“A lot of times if I was ever in trouble — if I’m on the wing and I’m getting doubled — the fail-safe is just, throw it in the air and Aaron will go get it,” Abajelo said. “… You try to make a good pass. That doesn’t always happen. But there was a big room for error in terms of where you throw it.”
Understanding that margin of error might have made Gordon’s teammates a little complacent in their precision occasionally, but it also trained Gordon as a receiver even more.
“We weren’t always the best passing team,” Kennedy said bluntly.
By the time Gordon was a senior, he was playing a variety of positions, even running point. Opposing teams were hyper-aware of his high-flying dunk potential, so they scouted and denied any plays designed to end in an alley-oop to Gordon. Kennedy had to tell his other players not to hunt the lob and force bad passes. Gordon was developing as a receiver, sure, but not by catching a ton of 50-50 balls at the rim.
Instead, it was a matter of versatility. Opponents tried to defend him with a physicality that bordered on excessive — he was experiencing the eventual Jokic treatment — so Kennedy would try to send Gordon through multiple screening actions. “He was used to coming at different angles and catching it at different spots, whether it’s that short corner, the high post, low post, even at the wing,” Kennedy said.
The dunker spot in Denver’s ball movement-oriented offense has become Gordon’s baby. He observed Jokic’s masterful court vision and learned to space the floor and cut with pin-point timing that complements the two-time MVP. He has always been a gifted rim-runner. When Jokic saw through multiple Golden State defenders during a fast break in January, Gordon noticed and accelerated. He knew where the bounce pass would end up.
As for actually gathering and controlling the advanced-level passes, Gordon benefitted from a combination of his adolescent experience and naturally athletic hands.
“You just have a coach throw a ball at you as hard as he possibly can, over and over, until you catch it,” he told The Post after snagging and finishing one of Jokic’s recent no-look assists.
The one in question was a cheat code. Denver drew up an after-timeout play in which Gordon slipped behind the defense along the baseline while Jokic and Jamal Murray ran a pick-and-roll. It was supposed to end with Jokic passing, Gordon finishing. It wasn’t supposed to end with Jokic blindly going over the back of his head.
It was as if Jokic simply had to keep Gordon on his toes, even at the possible expense of accuracy.
“He makes me look good,” Jokic said.
Want more Nuggets news? Sign up for the Nuggets Insider to get all our NBA analysis.
Denver, CO
Five takeaways from Denver’s restaurant report
Marlee Brown serves guests at Trybal African Speakeasy in Denver on Feb. 25, 2026. (Kevin Mohatt/Special to The Denver Post)
Denver’s restaurant scene is in crisis.
So much so that the city, VisitDenver and Austin, Texas-based restaurant financing company InKind commissioned a report to detail the industry.
Denver’s rising tipped minimum wage, which has more than doubled since 2019 and sits at $16.27 an hour, was the biggest complaint of local restaurateurs. But the 67-page document outlined a host of other problems creating an unfavorable environment for operators in the city.
“The energy of the city used to flow through our dining rooms,” a longtime, independent full-service operator said, according to the report. “Now it feels like people go out less often, spend more cautiously, and are more likely to stay home or order in.”
The report was written by Adam Schlegel, who co-founded Snooze A.M. Eatery and Chook Charcoal Chicken, and Dana Faulk Query, the co-owner of Big Red F Restaurant Group. To compile it, they surveyed over 150 establishments, conducted interviews with operators and brokers and analyzed profit and loss statements along with publicly available datasets.
Here are five takeaways:

Denver lost thousands of restaurant jobs between 2020 and 2025
Bureau of Labor Statistics data indicates that Denver had 6% fewer restaurant sector workers in 2025 than at the beginning of 2020. That’s largely due to a 15% decline in the full-service restaurant category, according to the report.
Before the start of the pandemic, restaurant employment in Denver was growing at a 2.3% annual rate. If it had continued at that rate, there would be 10,000 to 15,000 more workers today than there actually are, according to the report.
Restaurants employ 7.9% of Denver’s total workers, down 8.7% from 2019, and account for 13% of the city’s tax revenue, the report said.

Restaurants would have needed 40% sales growth to offset rising expenses
According to the report, from 2019 through 2024, hourly labor costs increased 50% to 55%, rent increased 23% and cost of goods sold rose 22%. Profits, on the other hand, declined 20%.
Sales increased by 5%, but an analysis by the report’s authors determined that number would need to be in the 36% to 40% range to offset the aforementioned hikes.
The number of guests coming through restaurant doors is also decreasing, the report said. And Denver reported the sharpest decrease of major metros in restaurant spending this past fall.
“This mismatch has left many operators with limited options beyond reducing labor hours, eliminating positions, delaying hiring, or closing altogether,” the report said.

Denver’s costs and prices are on par with New York and L.A.’s
The report said Denver’s dining scene looks less like a middle-America growth market and more like a “high-cost coastal city” without the population size to support it. Though it acknowledged that Denver’s rising wages have closed the cost of living gap compared with before the pandemic, it’s paid the price with lost jobs and other rising costs.
According to the Washington Hospitality Association’s 2025 Cost of Dining Report, Colorado’s menu prices are 5.1% above the national average and Denver’s are about 2.7% above the average for the 20 largest U.S. cities. That puts it firmly in the high-cost tier of American dining markets.
But rather than garnering the growth and attention that “tier one” cities like New York and Los Angeles get, Denver is in the category of “high-wage, tight-labor” cities like San Francisco, Portland and Seattle.
“Establishments grew, but employment is up only modestly versus 2013 and down from 2019 in key categories, signaling staffing strain rather than robust job growth,” the report details.
Denver’s scene is lagging compared with the rest of the state
While dining out across Colorado has taken a hit since the start of the pandemic, the report shows that the changes are most pronounced in Denver. The industry hasn’t bounced back on par with the rest of the state, the report says.
With full-service restaurants in particular, employment and the number of establishments has dropped significantly more than the category across the state. Employment across the entire sector dropped 4.3% in Denver from 2019 to 2024 while seeing a 3.3% decline everywhere else in Colorado.
“Collectively, these findings indicate that Denver’s restaurant workforce challenges are not the result of poor management or short-term disruptions, but of sustained cost pressures that increasingly limit employers’ ability to maintain staffing levels, create new jobs, and invest in long-term workforce development,” the report says.
Despite improvements, city bureaucracy still a challenge
Architects, general contractors and operators said that while each individual city department is helpful in a vacuum, the process is fragmented and disjointed. Based on interviews with restaurant owners, those delays can cost up to $70,000 a month between operating expenses and lost revenue, the report said.
That’s despite improvements made to the permitting process by Mayor Mike Johnston, including the launch of Denver’s Permitting Office in May and programs like around downtown express permitting.
Denver, CO
Ranking the Broncos free agent needs on offense
I figured now would be a good time to do a little discussion around the Denver Broncos and where we think their top priorities should be on offense when free agency kicks off.
Broncos top FA needs on offense
Tim Lynch: For free agency, I’d say running back and tight end are the highest on my wish list.
I’d say pay big for a top free agent running back and ensure you have a monster two-headed backfield next season. They need a superior run-blocking tight end and, if they move on from Evan Engram, a pass-catcher too.
Christopher Hart: I agree with Tim. Those are the biggest needs for the offense. Getting a top-notch running back and a tight end capable of playing inline to replace Adam Trautman is a must. The two players I advocated a few weeks ago were running back Travis Etienne and tight end Cade Otton. Both would be fantastic additions and help take Denver’s offense to the next level in 2026.
Scotty Payne: Playmaker is the top and biggest need. That includes a RB, TE, and/or WR in that order.
Need to improve the run game regardless, need some sort of production out of the TEs as well as improved blocking, and if they can get a true WR1, that would be great too.
Ross Allen: I think we’re all in agreement.
Getting someone who can be the dominant running back and have RJ Harvey serve that glamorous “joker” role would be huge for this offense. And given that they also don’t have a legitimate playmaker at the receiving position hurts them. A TE or WR can fill that role.
Sadaraine: The #1 need for the Broncos on offense is a top-notch running back. I will be blown away if the Broncos don’t sign a top-tier free agent running back to upgrade the offense (and no, J.K. Dobbins wouldn’t be that guy…not with his injury history).
There’s a significant gap in need after that until we start talking about tight ends and receivers. I think we’re more likely to see more money spent on a tight end than a receiver, but this offense could use both to be sure.
Ian St. Clair: Not to beat a dead horse, but running back is the biggest need and priority for this team when free agency starts. Having a consistent and effective running game will make Nix and the offense exponentially better. It will make the team better. After running back, the Broncos need to figure out their tight end.
Adam Malnati: Give Bo a weapon. I don’t care which position. Yes, RB is a need. Yes, TE is a need (thanks a lot Evan Engram). Still, a weapon would be nice.
Predictably, we’re all heavily keyed in on running back and tight end. That was a big part of our free agent profile coverage too and for good reason. There have been many rumors around Denver looking to target both positions next week and where there is smoke there is usually fire.
The question really becomes: go big or go affordable? With the championship window open, I’m leaning go big on premium play-maker positions this offseason.
Where do you stand on this discussion? Give us your top free agent needs on offense and how you hope the Broncos address them next week.
Denver, CO
Denver area events for March 5
-
World1 week agoExclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
-
Wisconsin5 days agoSetting sail on iceboats across a frozen lake in Wisconsin
-
Massachusetts3 days agoMassachusetts man awaits word from family in Iran after attacks
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
-
Maryland5 days agoAM showers Sunday in Maryland
-
Florida5 days agoFlorida man rescued after being stuck in shoulder-deep mud for days
-
Denver, CO1 week ago10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
-
Oregon1 week ago2026 OSAA Oregon Wrestling State Championship Results And Brackets – FloWrestling