Before the 2024 league year began, we heard that Jarrett Stidham had a good chance to open the season as the Broncosβ starting quarterback. Now, as the dust settles on the first wave of free agency, it appears that Stidhamβs hold on the QB1 job has only gotten stronger.
In evaluating the QB signings and trades that have taken place around the league, Mike Klis of 9News.com says that the Broncos βseem to be leaning towardβ having Stidham serve as the starter β at least at the beginning of the 2024 campaign β and using their No. 12 overall selection on a collegiate passer. After all, while Denver considered Sam Darnold, who ultimately signed with the Vikings, Sean Payton & Co. reportedly did not make a contract offer (per Klis, Darnold strongly preferred Minnesota anyway).
Likewise, Klis reports that the Broncos did their due diligence on former Patriots signal-caller Mac Jones, but they did not make a trade offer. New England ultimately dealt Jones to the Jaguars for a sixth-round pick. Klis also says that Denver was never in on high-priced free agent options like Kirk Cousins and Baker Mayfield, and he adds that the club has not shown any interest in Ryan Tannehill. While there are still free agents (Jimmy Garoppolo, Tannehill) and trade candidates (Trey Lance, Zach Wilson) that the Broncos could pursue, none of them would necessarily unseat Stidham.
Notwithstanding Klisβ expectation that the Broncosβ will use their top draft choice on a quarterback, Troy Renck of the Denver Post believes the team could trade back, unless a player like Michiganβs J.J. McCarthy should fall into that range, or unless Payton is particularly high on Oregonβs Bo Nix. Renckβs sources tell him that four quarterbacks will be selected within the top six picks of the draft, and it certainly seems to be a safe bet that the first three selections will be used on passers. The Bears (No. 1 overall) and Commanders (No. 2 overall) appear poised to draft QBs, and even if the Patriots (No. 3 overall) trade back, the team that trades with them may well use that pick on a quarterback. The price to leap up the draft board to select the third- or fourth-best QB prospect in the draft would be prohibitive for a team like the Broncos that is clearly in rebuild mode (to say nothing of the fact that the Vikings, who have the No. 11 overall pick, are better-positioned to make such a move).
Obviously, if the Broncos were to trade down as Renck suggests, that would…