Denver, CO
3-Round Mock Draft Sees New TE Weapon Projected to Broncos
Another week, another three-round Denver Broncos mock draft.
Having previously gone with Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty, Toledo interior defensive lineman Darius Alexander, and South Carolina linebacker Demetrius Knight Jr. in my first three-rounder, I followed that up by taking Ohio State wide receiver Emeka Egbuka, Ohio State running back TreyVeon Henderson, and Florida State interior defensive lineman Joshua Farmer in Mock 2.0.
The coming weeks leading up to the NFL draft will continue to present different plausible scenarios for the Broncos. Eventually, I’ll mock Michigan tight end Colston Loveland to the Broncos at No. 20 overall, who’s being projected to Denver a whopping 26.4% of the time, according to NFL Mock Draft Database, but the point of these mocks is a thought exercise in possibility.
For my three-round mock 3.0, let’s shake things up.
As it stands, the most probable areas the Broncos address in the upcoming draft are an offensive weapon or a defensive lineman. These positions, of course, make sense for the Broncos as they can fill both immediate and long-term needs.
In this mock, however, we are taking a completely different approach selecting the Senior Bowl star to help cap off what could be one of the best offensive lines in football for the foreseeable future.
The Broncos are exceedingly solid along the offensive line. The team is locked in at both tackle spots with Garett Bolles and Mike McGlinchey. Right guard Quinn Meinerz is one of the best interior players in the NFL.
The Broncos are also solid at left guard with Ben Powers, who is, at worst, a serviceable player. The weak link of the unit is center Luke Wattenberg.
Wattenberg is an adequate pass protector on the offensive line. He tends to “lose slowly” and his lack of strength can be hidden with help and pass protection plans from the scheme.
However, watching the Broncos’ run game last season and focusing on the offensive line, it’s exceedingly obvious that Wattenberg was a well below-average run blocker and the blinking red light among the starting five. Furthermore, he’s entering the final year of his contract, and with the Broncos already paying second and third contracts for all the other spots on the line, it seems exceedingly unlikely he’ll be retained beyond 2025.
Enter Zabel. Measuring in at just over 6-foot-5 and 316 pounds with 32-1/4-inch arm length, he’ll have to kick inside to the interior in the NFL, given his lack of length. He plays short-armed, as he much prefers to engage quickly and close space to compensate for his lack of length in pass protection. Those issues with space and length are mitigated on the interior.
Zabel is technical with his hands, plays with balance in pass protection, and shows adequate power in his base to anchor and drive defensive linemen out of gaps. Because of his height, he will have to work on playing with low pad level on the interior, but his strength and movement project him to be a good fit in zone or gap.
One interesting tidbit about Zabel’s fit in Denver is also the current data for quarterback Bo Nix. Undoubtedly, Nix had a fantastic rookie season and is on track to be a franchise quarterback for Denver.
The question is to what degree Nix can be great at the position. However, he came out of Year 1 as one of the NFL’s worst quarterbacks under pressure. Thanks to the scheme, the talent on the line, and Nix’s play himself, he was under pressure less often than nearly every quarterback in the NFL per dropback, but when he was feeling the heat, the stats were as poor as any other passer in the league.
This is not an indictment, as Nix could improve in this area greatly with better weaponry, growth, or just the general variance we tend to see in under-pressure statistics year-to-year.
Also, there have not been many coaches in the NFL that have poured resources into the offensive line, both at tackle and the interior, as Sean Payton did in New Orleans and now in Denver. Zabel is not a sexy pick at all, but with Daniel Jeremiah and Kyle Crabbs projecting Zabel at 18 in both of their most recent mocks, this doesn’t appear to be a reach at 20 in the slightest.
Zabel would fortify the Broncos’ offensive line into a very good unit and vault the unit into perennial top-five status. The O-line would become the identity of the Broncos offense going forward.
What happens next on the Broncos beat? Don’t miss out on any news and analysis! Take a second, sign up for our free newsletter, and get breaking Broncos news delivered to your inbox daily!
The Broncos have a massive impending need along the defensive line. With D.J. Jones hitting free agency this year and Zach Allen, Malcolm Roach, and John Franklin-Myers playing on the final year of their contracts next season, all four of Denver’s primary interior players are set to be phased out.
Rather than letting the room grow into an abject disaster next offseason, the Broncos should take advantage of a spectacular group of interior defensive linemen that should come off the board in the top 100 to 120 selections in April.
The Broncos could go a number of directions as well on the interior defensive line. Ideally, GM George Paton finds a 1 technique to eat into some of the snaps Jones will be vacating along the line in free agency and to rotate with Roach, but long-term, the Broncos could add either a 0/1 technique or a 3/4i technique on the defensive front. Denver doesn’t necessarily need two-gapping space-eaters, but heavy-handed penetrators are likely the focus for the Vance Joseph-led defense.
Insert Ivey. He was primarily lineup up out wide during his career, but he has been versatile along his usage with ample reps over the B gap or head-up over the offensive tackle.
Ivey is not ridiculously explosive off the snap or from edge, nor does he have the looseness in his lower half that projects to a first-round graded player, but he has some of the heaviest hands in the entire class to jolt lineman, displays a variety of pass-rush moves that project well in one-on-one reps inside, and at almost 6-foot-6 and 283 pounds, and 33-¾-inch arm length, he has the style and frame to fit perfectly inside on Denver’s defense.
Admittedly, this is a round early for Ivey compared to the consensus, but I think he’s undervalued currently and could rise up after a good Combine in a crowded field of defensive linemen.
The Broncos will likely attempt to re-sign Allen long-term at some point prior to the 2025 regular season, but it seems unlikely the team will also re-up with Franklin-Myers (who was arguably the team’s best darkhorse offseason addition last year).
Ivey could come in and displace Jordan Jackson in 2025, eat into some of Allen’s ridiculous volume of reps last season, and understudy behind the 4i rushers while developing into a strong starter on the front in 2026 and beyond.
These mocks are going to feature a hodgepodge of different avenues for the Broncos. Maybe one day, there will be one where Denver doesn’t draft a single running back or tight end (much to the dismay of many in Broncos Country). This will not be that mock.
The Broncos are hunting for a “joker” this offseason. There are answers in the draft but it’s also possible the Broncos also attempt to fill that role via free agency or trade.
Even without the (overused) catch-all that the “joker” term has become in projecting this offseason, Denver needs better options at tight end and running back regardless of whether he offers plus ability in the receiving game.
Helm is an interesting option in a 2025 draft class that’s deep and talented at the tight end position. Listed at 6-foot-5 and 250 pounds, he possesses the prototype build for the position with the frame to play in line.
Helm had the highest number of in-line reps of any tight end in college football last season while also displaying soft hands at the catch point and after-catch fluidity and athleticism. If this draft wasn’t so saturated at the top of the tight end class, odds are he’d be getting a bit more buzz.
Despite the high volume of inline reps at Texas, Helm will need to continue to add strength and technique as a run blocker, specifically in the run game, where he’s too often stymied in his attempts to displace defenders. He’s athletic enough to be flexed into the slot or play at H-back and is adequate enough in-line to play the Y. He still has ample developmental upside, as he played more snaps in 2024 (843) than he did in 2022 and 2023 combined (721 snaps).
Even if Helm never develops into a long-term plus-starter, for a team that utilizes multiple tight ends and different personnel groupings as much as Payton and the Broncos have shown, he has an obvious role and path to the field and would help Denver become more multiple on the offensive side of the ball.
Follow Denver Broncos On SI/Mile High Huddle on Instagram, X, and Facebook and subscribe on YouTube for daily Broncos live-stream podcasts!
Denver, CO
Where To Eat Christmas Eve Dinner In Denver – 303 Magazine
For Christmas Eve dinner in Denver, options range from upscale steakhouses like Elway’s and Urban Farmer to Italian spots like Cranelli’s, seafood at Jax Fish House, Mexican at Kachina Cantina, and varied American/international cuisine at places like Tavernetta, Root Down, with many offering both dine-in and takeout for prime rib, seafood feasts, or holiday boxes, but reservations are essential.
Remember to book early, as many of these places fill up fast. Check the websites or call to confirm holiday hours and make reservations.
Steak & Upscale
Elway’s Downtown
Featuring their classic steakhouse menu plus festive additions like Duck Breast and Crab Stuffed Mushrooms.
Make a reservation HERE
Urban Farmer Denver
Offers prime rib and Peking duck to-go or dine-in options.
Make a reservation HERE
The Capital Grille
Another upscale steakhouse option for the holiday.
Make a reservation HERE
Italian & European

Cranelli’s Italian Restaurant
Featuring a la carte menu with seasonal luxuries.
Make a reservation HERE
Tavernetta
Featuring a la carte menu with seasonal luxuries.
Make a reservation HERE
Le French – 9+CO
Focusing on decadent food like oysters, foie gras, seafood, turkey/goose, and the iconic chocolate log cake.
Make a reservation HERE
Seafood & American

Jax Fish House & Oyster Bar
Featuring seven Fresh Fishes, Five Golden Courses, and an unforgettable Christmas Eve.
Make a reservation HERE
Local Jones
Savor carving stations, classic holiday favorites, specialty desserts, and more
Make a reservation HERE
Root Down
Creative American cuisine with global influences offering prix fixe or a la carte menue
Make a reservation HERE
Mexican & Latin

Kachina Cantina
Features a Christmas Eve Prime Rib special.
Make a reservation
SOL Mexican Cocina
Featuring Prime Rib served with Truffle Parmesan Mashed Potatoes, Bacon Brussels Sprouts & Maple Syrup Glazed Carrots
Make a reservation HERE
Denver, CO
Keeler: Broncos, Sean Payton reuniting with Justin Simmons would be surprise. Denver becoming AFC West’s next dynasty would not be.
The Grinch has more room for nostalgia in his heart than one Patrick Sean Payton.
Before we get to the good stuff, just know that what applies to Von Miller and Payton absolutely applies to Justin Simmons, too. Even though the Broncos now have a starting safety slot wide open while a former Pro Bowl safety in Simmons is local and looking for a gig, the locker room in Dove Valley might not be big enough for the both of them. Although stranger things have happened, and it’s almost Christmas.
Speaking of presents, the Chiefs finally returned the AFC West throne to the store, receipt and all, after hogging that thing for 3,270 days. Eight years, 11 months, and 14 days, officially.
A child born on New Year’s Day 2017, the actual start of the Kansas City Chiefs’ AFC West dynasty, would be halfway through third grade as of Monday. At last, Heaven help us, we can clearly see the end, a light at the end of long, red tunnel of darkness.
The Chiefs were mathematically eliminated from the postseason this past Sunday. Kansas City is slated to be $43.8 million over the cap in 2026. Travis Kelce just turned 36. Chris Jones will be 32 next summer. Mahomes will be 31 next September, and his left knee just went kablooey in a home loss to the Chargers. Legends live forever in our hearts, but every anterior cruciate ligament comes with an expiration date.
The second-hardest thing in the NFL is to win a championship. The hardest is to pull it off multiple times. It never ceases to amuse me how the most popular sports league in America, land of me-first, is simultaneously a screaming bastion of socialism and enforced parity. The good of all before the one.
Bad teams get the best draft picks. A salary cap that prevents elite teams from hoarding all the elite players, so long as those elite players want to get paid. And they do.
All that being said, the Broncos (12-2) aren’t just poised to win a division title this fall. They’re in a really good position to follow in the Chiefs’ cleats and go on a little dynastic run of their own. And we’ll give you five reasons why:
1. The Chiefs’ best players are getting old
Even if Kelce, who can become an unrestricted free agent next year, elects to return, the Chiefs’ books are looking fairly lopsided. Per Spotrac, Kansas City will have 44.9% of its cap space for 2026 taken up by four players who will be 31 years or older: Jones ($44.85 million), K Harrison Butker ($7.3 million), LB Drue Tranquill ($7.5 million) and Mahomes ($78.2 million).
The Broncos’ 31-and-older club, depending on what becomes of linebacker Alex Singleton, is slated to take up 24.9% of next year’s cap.
2. The Chargers’ best players are already old
The Bolts have 33.3% of their active roster cap tied up in 17 players who are at least 29 years old. And at least 10 of those guys are scheduled to hit the open market after this season.
QB Justin Herbert is better with one good hand than most NFL signal-callers are with two. He’s just 27. Although working with Jim Harbaugh has been known to age people prematurely.
3. The Broncos’ best players are … not
The Broncos went into Week 1, per PhillyVoice.com, with the eighth fewest number of players among NFL rosters who were aged 29 or older (10).
Bo Nix, the QB1 who keeps rising to the moment, is 25 and on a rookie contract through 2027 (for now).
Also signed through ’27, per Spotrac.com (deep breath): CB Pat Surtain II, RT Mike McGlinchey, DL Zach Allen, WR Courtland Sutton, LT Garett Bolles, OLB Jonathon Cooper, OLB Nik Bonitto, S Talanoa Hufanga, DB Jahdae Barron, DL D.J. Jones, LB Dre Greenlaw, G Quinn Meinerz, DL Malcolm Roach, C Luke Wattenberg, OLB Jonah Elliss, RB RJ Harvey, CB Kris Abrams-Draine, K Wil Lutz and P Jeremy Crawshaw. Oh, and WRs Troy Franklin and Pat Bryant.
Pretty good core, that. Especially when you consider that only five of those guys are 30 years or older — and one of those five happens to be Lutz.
4. GM George Paton has the drafting part down
And he always did. Nine of Denver’s 11 starters are former Broncos draft picks or former collegiate free agents. As are five of the 11 guys who usually start for Vance Joseph’s defense. The more expensive Nix’s contract becomes, the more important hitting on rookies immediately is going to get.
5. Sean Payton has done this before
Yes, Sunshine Sean loves the screen game more than Homer Simpson loves Duff Beer. Yes, he holds fools and journalists in equal disdain. But the man also won seven division titles in New Orleans, including four straight (2017-2020) after his 2012 suspension. From 2018-2022, talk about the Broncos largely focused on the franchise’s sagging floor. Now it’s about the ceiling. Whether you like him personally or not, there’s no denying the degree to which Payton flipped the script.
Tom Brady was 42 when he signed with Tampa Bay and 45 when he retired for the second time. Rob Gronkowski hung ’em up for the USAA life at age 33. Savor the now. When a window opens, you don’t walk through it. You sprint like there’s a raging, snorting Nederland moose in hot pursuit.
In the NFL, age is a running clock. As any Broncomaniac can tell you, there’s one defensive coordinator worse than Belichick, a mastermind not even Mahomes, Brees, Elway or Manning could lick: Father Time. For the first time in a decade, he’s finally on the Broncos’ side.
Denver, CO
What drivers will face traveling into mountains near Denver on I-70 amid Floyd Hill bridge building
Drivers heading west from metro Denver into the mountains on Interstate 70 on Monday and Tuesday face overnight closures, and 20-minute stops through Thursday at the base of Floyd Hill, the latest traffic disruptions for bridge building as part of the Colorado Department of Transportation’s $800 million reconstruction of I-70 through Clear Creek Canyon.
The nighttime closures this week, scheduled from 9 p.m. until 5 a.m., are planned around the I-70/U.S. 6 interchange at exit 244 and include on- and off-ramps.
Drivers also should expect to wait at 20-minute stops multiple times per day from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on I-70 starting Monday, and continuing through Thursday, according to a CDOT notice.
But officials said there would be no planned traffic disruptions during the holidays from Dec. 20 to Jan. 5.
CDOT contractors will be blasting rock in the canyon above eastbound and westbound I-70 between the Veterans Memorial Tunnels and the Homestead Road interchange near Idaho Springs. And drivers may face intermittent traffic stops along the Central City Parkway, County Road 314, U.S. 6, and U.S. 40, CDOT officials said.
CDOT contractors are building a temporary framework to support their upcoming construction of a concrete bridge on I-70. When it’s done, the bridge will carry westbound drivers through a new route that CDOT officials say will be safer and improve traffic flows through the canyon, which long has loomed as a bottleneck.
The rebuilt highway, with an added westbound express toll lane, eventually will carry drivers through a widened canyon on viaducts 115 feet above Clear Creek. This safer route, designed to improve visibility for drivers, is expected to allow speeds of 55 miles per hour in areas now marked 45 mph.
Depending on the weather this week, disruptive construction work may shift to Wednesday and Thursday, CDOT officials said.
The I-70 Floyd Hill Project involves about eight miles of I-70 in the mountainous area between Evergreen and the eastern edge of Idaho Springs. CDOT officials have promised that, as part of the project, they’ll improve the Clear Creek Greenway trail and ensure safer routes for wildlife.
Construction began in July 2023. The project is expected to conclude in 2029.
Drivers learn more by calling CDOT at 720-994-2368 or by texting floydhill to 21000 and signing up for text alerts. CDOT officials also said information about weather, road conditions, and travel impacts is available at COtrip.org.
-
Washington1 week agoLIVE UPDATES: Mudslide, road closures across Western Washington
-
Iowa2 days agoAddy Brown motivated to step up in Audi Crooks’ absence vs. UNI
-
Iowa1 week agoMatt Campbell reportedly bringing longtime Iowa State staffer to Penn State as 1st hire
-
Iowa3 days agoHow much snow did Iowa get? See Iowa’s latest snowfall totals
-
Miami, FL1 week agoUrban Meyer, Brady Quinn get in heated exchange during Alabama, Notre Dame, Miami CFP discussion
-
Cleveland, OH1 week agoMan shot, killed at downtown Cleveland nightclub: EMS
-
World1 week ago
Chiefs’ offensive line woes deepen as Wanya Morris exits with knee injury against Texans
-
Minnesota1 week agoTwo Minnesota carriers shut down, idling 200 drivers