EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Addison Lynch hasn’t just landed on his feet; he’s sprinted right into a massive opportunity in the Big Apple. Less than two weeks after being shown the door by Sean Payton in Denver, the 36-year-old specialist has been tapped as the new defensive backs coach for the New York Giants. This move marks Lynch’s fifth NFL stop and reunites him with a revamped Giants staff looking to overhaul their secondary for the 2026 campaign.
Broncos House Cleaning Triggers League-Wide Shuffle
The transition comes on the heels of a brutal “Black Monday” in Denver. Following a heartbreaking Divisional Round exit to the Buffalo Bills, Payton wasted no time detonating his offensive and defensive assistant groups. Lynch, who climbed the ladder from defensive quality control in 2023 to cornerbacks coach by 2025, was one of three assistants fired, alongside Offensive Coordinator Joe Lombardi and Wide Receivers Coach Keary Colbert.
While Denver hits the reset button, New York is capitalizing. Lynch brings a reputation for technical precision, having previously honed defensive backs with the Chargers, Raiders, and Lions. He now joins a Giants squad energized by the arrival of Head Coach John Harbaugh, who is aggressively building a staff to compete in the NFC East.
The Exodus: Where Denver’s Staff Landed
Lynch isn’t the only former Bronco finding a new home. The pipeline from Denver to Buffalo has been particularly active, with the Bills—now led by newly minted Head Coach Joe Brady—snagging two key defensive minds.
2026 Broncos Coaching Departure Tracker
- Addison Lynch (CBs Coach): Hired by New York Giants (DBs Coach)
- Pete Carmichael (Senior Asst): Hired by Buffalo Bills (Offensive Coordinator)
- Jim Leonhard (DBs Coach): Hired by Buffalo Bills (Defensive Coordinator)
- Zack Grossi (Passing Game Specialist): Hired by Baltimore Ravens
- Joe Lombardi (OC): Fired (Free Agent)
- Keary Colbert (WRs Coach): Fired (Free Agent)
“I want to thank these coaches for playing an important role in elevating our program over the last three seasons. We made strides, but in this league, ‘good’ isn’t good enough. We’re chasing greatness, and sometimes that requires difficult changes.” — Sean Payton, Denver Broncos Head Coach
What This Means for 2026
For the Giants, hiring Lynch is a strategic play to stabilize a secondary that flashed potential but lacked consistency last fall. Lynch’s familiarity with complex defensive schemes—gleaned from his time under defensive masterminds like Payton and his previous stops—aligns perfectly with Harbaugh’s vision for a disciplined, turnover-focused defense.
For Denver, the pressure is mounting. With Davis Webb promoted to Offensive Coordinator and Bo Nix entering a critical third year, Payton is betting everything on fresh voices to unlock the offense. The departure of experienced hands like Leonhard and Carmichael removes a safety net, meaning the 2026 season will be a true test of Payton’s ability to rebuild on the fly.

