DENVER — The Denver Broncos own the No. 30 overall pick in next month’s NFL Draft, and the front office is looking beyond the immediate horizon. Fans clamor for an explosive offensive weapon, but Sean Payton’s staff might just pull the trigger on a defensive ballhawk. If you connect the dots between the current roster and the looming salary cap reality, an Emmanuel McNeil-Warren Broncos pairing makes entirely too much sense.
Reading the Safety Room
Denver currently fields one of the nastiest safety tandems in the league with Talanoa Hufanga and Brandon Jones. The duo routinely punishes crossing routes and locks down the deep third. But peel back a layer, and the long-term depth looks thin. Reserve safety P.J. Locke, who logged heavy minutes down the stretch and into the postseason, hits the open market next week. More pressingly, Jones enters the final year of his three-year deal after the 2026 campaign.
Because Denver boasts a relatively stable roster heading into free agency, they possess a rare luxury. They do not have to force a pick on a player who must start in Week 1. They can draft for 2027 and beyond. The scouting department held a formal interview with Toledo safety Emmanuel McNeil-Warren at last week’s Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. The 6-foot-3, 201-pound senior flashed a 35.5-inch vertical and clocked a 4.52 in the 40-yard dash. He brings a violent, downhill playing style that perfectly fits what Denver wants on defense.
You could almost feel the collective groan from Broncos Country when ESPN draft analysts mocked a defensive back to Denver. Fans want points. But defensive championships are built on relentless preparation and drafting a year ahead of a problem.
“I know that was a bit of a controversial pick with a lot of Broncos fans. Everybody wanted an offensive weapon. But my thinking behind that, honestly, is Brandon Jones is entering the final year of his deal and they need that do-it-all safety on the back end… He has really good ball skills too, supremely athletic as well.”
— Jason Reid, ESPN Draft Analyst
Free Agency Implications / What’s Next
The NFL’s legal tampering period opens next week. The first wave of free agency will provide massive clarity regarding Denver’s draft board. If the Broncos let Locke walk and fail to add veteran depth, the McNeil-Warren rumors will only intensify.
Drafting McNeil-Warren at No. 30 represents a brilliant chess move. It gives Denver a dynamic, big-bodied safety who can play on the roof of the defense or slide into the box to erase tight ends. He forces turnovers—logging nine career forced fumbles in college—which satisfies Payton’s demand for a defense that steals extra possessions. Taking him now resets the financial clock in the secondary, giving the Broncos supreme leverage when Jones’ contract expires.

