The Broncos offense is utterly inept, ranking last in scoring, so it's time to draft wideouts who can score touchdowns.
The stacked 2023 class holds several options who can bolster Denver's passing game. Jaxon Smith-Njigba (Ohio State) is an intriguing option with superstar potential, despite a hamstring injury dismantling his junior season.
Jaxon Smith-Njigba put on a show in the Rose Bowl @jaxon_smith1 pic.twitter.com/vYfLhGwRJm
— ESPN College Football (@ESPNCFB) August 16, 2022
"He's still the same guy who put up 95 catches for 1,595 yards and nine scores a season ago. He's an uber-reliable slot option with (yards after the catch) ability," Pro Football Focus' Marcus Renner writes.
Although Courtland Sutton, Jerry Jeudy and K.J. Hamler flashed glimpses of potential, each struggles with inconsistency and injury.
Denver's wide receiving corps doesn't have a single player on track to cross the 1,000-yard mark, and it's scored eight touchdowns, tied for last in the league.
Consequently, quarterback Russell Wilson posted a career-low 35.0 QBR in 11 starts, so he needs a future star he can trust. Perhaps Smith-Njigba fills the starring role.
Per Tankathon, Denver (3-9) holds the No. 25 pick in the 2023 NFL Draft. It predicts Smith-Njigba will go earlier, but the Broncos could pull off a trade to move up.
Other prospects like Rashee Rice (SMU) and Jaylin Hyatt (Tennessee) will remain too. Rice is second (1,355) on college football's receiving yards leaderboard, while Hyatt is fourth (1,267).
You should cover Jaylin Hyatt. Just my thoughts pic.twitter.com/OJMV7Ys9Bl
— Big Cat (@BarstoolBigCat) October 29, 2022
Each could help fix Denver's punchless passing offense.
Rashee Rice is a top 10 receiver in college football pic.twitter.com/TqWtm8VtVa
— Texas Football Life (@txfblife) September 18, 2022
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