DENVER — Enjoy the parade while it lasts, Broncos Country. Yes, the confetti has barely settled from that Divisional Round heartbreak, and yes, the AFC West crown finally resides in Denver after a decade of Kansas City tyranny. Going 14-3 with an 11-game heater was electric, and we all know the “what if” game regarding Bo Nix’s ankle will haunt barstool debates for years.
But the NFL stands for “Not For Long.”
While Denver pops champagne, the rest of the division is loading their weapons. The Chiefs are wounded but dangerous, the Chargers are desperate, and the Raiders might finally be waking up. If these three specific offseason dominoes fall, Denver’s 2026 title defense could be over before Week 1 kicks off.
1. The Speed Trap: Kansas City Chiefs Draft Jeremiyah Love
The thought of Patrick Mahomes with a generic running back is bad enough. Giving him Jeremiyah Love at pick No. 9 is borderline unfair. The Notre Dame product isn’t just a runner; he’s a geometric problem for defensive coordinators.
We saw the scouting report from NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein, and “scary” is an understatement. Love brings a violent, one-cut burst that Denver’s linebackers—who thrived on speed in 2025—might struggle to contain. He clocked track-star numbers in South Bend, and his ability to erase pursuit angles turns 5-yard checkdowns into 50-yard nightmares.
The Chiefs’ offense sputtered last year because they lacked a true home-run hitter in the backfield. Love fixes that instantly. He can split out wide, mismatch a linebacker in the slot, or take a handoff and vanish. If Kansas City lands him, the Broncos’ top-ranked defense faces a pick-your-poison scenario: stack the box and let Mahomes feast, or play light and watch Love average 6.0 yards per carry.
2. The Iron Wall: Chargers Sign Tyler Linderbaum & Braden Smith
Let’s call it what it was: The Chargers’ 2025 offensive line was a turnstile. Joe Alt and Rashawn Slater watching from the sidelines turned Justin Herbert into a piñata. But with over $60 million in projected cap space, Los Angeles can flip the script overnight.
Rumors are swirling that the Ravens and Tyler Linderbaum are miles apart on a deal after Baltimore shockingly declined his option. If L.A. backs up the Brinks truck for the league’s best center and pairs him with veteran tackle Braden Smith (fresh off his contract expiry in Indy), the Chargers go from “soft” to “bully” in 24 hours.
Imagine a trench unit featuring a healthy Slater kicking inside or staying at tackle, flanked by Alt, Linderbaum, and Smith. That’s not an O-line; that’s a fortress. Herbert having 4+ seconds to throw? That’s a problem Denver’s pass rush isn’t ready to solve.
3. The Wildcard: Raiders Find “The Guy” in Fernando Mendoza
For years, the Broncos have treated the Raiders like a “Get Right” week. That stops if Vegas hits on a quarterback. Fernando Mendoza is the name circling the Raiders’ draft room, and the buzz is deafening.
Mendoza isn’t the flashiest prospect, but he’s a pure distributor—a “point guard” quarterback who processes defenses fast and gets the ball out. If he lands in Vegas and clicks early, the Raiders transform from a chaotic mess into a frisky, stable operation. Denver can handle chaos; they can’t handle a competent Vegas team that controls the clock and doesn’t turn the ball over.
“We know what they’re doing. Everyone loads up to beat the champ. But if KC gets that kid from Notre Dame? Man, we better have our track shoes laced up tight.”
— Anonymous Broncos Defensive Starter
NHANFL Verdict
Denver enters the 2026 offseason as the hunted. If the Chiefs add elite speed, the Chargers buy a wall, and the Raiders solve their QB equation, the AFC West becomes a shark tank. General Manager George Paton needs a masterclass this spring, or that 2025 division title will look like a fluke rather than a dynasty.

