If Broncos rebuild works, process that led to Bo Nix will have played a critical role

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When Sean Payton led a Broncos contingent to Oregon in the middle of March, so much of the franchise’s offseason remained unsettled.

A few days into free agency, most of Denver’s biggest moves had been outbound.

Russell Wilson released. Justin Simmons, too. Jerry Jeudy traded. Josey Jewell clearly headed elsewhere.

The Broncos had made some additions, too, but more modest in nature. And nothing at quarterback.

On the back side of the NFL combine, the Broncos were headlong into evaluating the draft’s quarterback class but were just starting to really get to know the candidates.

In fact, the trip to Eugene and the University of Oregon to work out Bo Nix was Denver’s first private quarterback meeting of the spring.

By the time Payton and company left town, Denver’s critical quarterback decision and the offseason more broadly began to take shape. The course started to chart forward. A direction developed.

“That was kind of the start,” general manager George Paton said Thursday night after the Broncos had made Nix the No. 12 pick overall in the draft. “And then you get through more tape, and more tape and he was just an ideal fit for what we want here.”

Not only did Payton come away thoroughly impressed and with an inkling that perhaps they’d found their guy, but Denver also liked receiver Troy Franklin.

Around the same time, trade talks with the New York Jets started regarding quarterback Zach Wilson. Soon after, the teams added defensive lineman John Franklin-Myers to the conversations, too.

Now the draft is in the rearview mirror and all four of those players are Broncos. The 2024 roster is most likely not in complete, training-camp-ready form, but it is much closer as the calendar turns to May.

“You slowly build your roster in the offseason,” Payton said after a week in which Denver acquired two players via trade and drafted seven more. “You get them here in the offseason program and, each time we talk about a player we talk about a vision.”

This was always going to be an offseason of transition. Away from Russell Wilson. Toward the future. Further into Payton’s image. If it all goes to plan for Payton and Paton, these past six weeks will serve as a key chapter in the story.

At the conclusion of his first season in charge, Payton couldn’t even bring himself to say the foundation of his tenure had been put in place.

“We’re still putting the frickin’ pilings in based on what I saw,” he said in January.

The past three days, like the offseason so far, have proceeded in that manner. More layout and framing and wiring than final touches and decor. The past three days, like the offseason so far, have featured measured approach spiced by a dash of opportunism.

Take, for example, the trade up for Franklin. Denver thought he may get drafted in the second round, but at the end of Friday night he remained available. Payton and Paton knew they had flexibility with six picks when they left the building around midnight.

“Sean likes to sleep in a little bit, so I knew when I got a text at 6 a.m. saying ‘I really want this player,’ I said, well, we’ve got to figure this one out,” Paton said. “It was universal. There was consensus.”

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