Denver Broncos finally made a move and it was a big one

· Yahoo Sports

Nov 9, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Dolphins wide receiver Jaylen Waddle (17) makes a touchdown catch against Buffalo Bills cornerback Maxwell Hairston (31) during the first half at Hard Rock Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

After over a week of doing very little to excite the fanbase, the Denver Broncos dropped a nuke on Tuesday to execute a massive trade for Miami Dolphins wide receiver Jaylen Waddle. Denver sent their 1st, 3rd, and swapped 4th rounders with the Dolphins to close the deal. The offense looks a whole lot different now, doesn’t it?

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Broncos daily recap

It’s Jaylen Waddle is a Bronco Day! Here is a quick recap of the things we know and we’ll have more coming in the AM on this blockbuster trade by the Denver Broncos.

The Denver Broncos are trading for wide receiver Jaylen Waddle
It’s real, Broncos Country. Denver is going all-in. George Paton pulled the trigger on a deal to bring Jaylen Waddle to the Mile High City, sending a first-round pick and Day Two capital to Miami for a proven weapon who has posted three 1,000-yard seasons in five years and led the league with 18.1 yards per reception in 2022. With Bo Nix still on a rookie deal and the roster built to compete now, this is the kind of swing you have to take — and the Broncos took it.

Salary cap ramifications of the Jaylen Waddle trade
The cap math works — at least for now. Denver absorbs just a $4.9 million cap hit in 2026 with Miami eating the remaining $23.2 million. That’s incredibly manageable on a roster that just freed up space through the Jonathon Cooper and Quinn Meinerz restructures. The catch? Waddle’s number balloons to $33.8 million in 2027, so an extension or rework will be on the agenda before long. But that’s a problem for next March.

Bo Nix finally gets his offensive weapon with Jaylen Waddle
This is the piece the offense has been missing. Courtland Sutton is a contested-catch monster, but Denver hasn’t had a true speed-and-separation threat on the outside since the Emmanuel Sanders days. Waddle changes the math for defensive coordinators scheming against Sean Payton’s offense. Bo Nix now has a receiver who can take the top off a defense, win underneath, and turn short passes into chunk plays. Pair that with Davis Webb calling plays and a rebuilt offensive line, and suddenly this offense has a ceiling it didn’t have a week ago.

Under the radar

Warren Sharp of Sharpe Football Analysis shared this post covering Jaylen Waddle’s ranking among NFL wide receivers over the last five seasons. Of wide receives with 150+ receptions over that timeframe:

  • #3 in first down rate (46%)
  • #10 in success rate (55.5%)
  • #11 in EPA/target (+0.37)
  • #11 in yards/target (9.3)
  • #16 in YAC per reception (5.0)
  • #17 in accurate target catch rate (77%)

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The FEED happenings

TheNeutralMatt talks Broncos planning and the tight end position. 

Broncoman wasted no time dropping a post-Waddle trade NFL mock draft. Thoughts?

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Jaylen Waddle highlights

Scotty Payne, who runs our X account, gathered up a slew of Jaylen Waddle highlight clips after the trade today. Enjoy the Waddle content here.

That’s it for Jaylen Waddle day! Share anything you found from today in the comments section below. I am sure there is a ton of stuff we haven’t yet covered on this trade or Waddle’s potential impact on the Denver Broncos.

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