『Broncos WR Projections — Can Nix Hit 4,000 Yards & Produce Two 1,000‑Yard WRs | Orange & Blue Today』のカバーアート

Broncos WR Projections — Can Nix Hit 4,000 Yards & Produce Two 1,000‑Yard WRs | Orange & Blue Today

Broncos WR Projections — Can Nix Hit 4,000 Yards & Produce Two 1,000‑Yard WRs | Orange & Blue Today

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On today’s Orange & Blue Today, Andrew Mason and Cecil Lammey break down Mike Clay’s projections for the Broncos’ wide receiver room — and what they tell us about Bo Nix, Jaylen Waddle, Courtland Sutton, and the rest of Denver’s passing attack in 2026.

The big question: Does Bo Nix go over 4,000 yards passing — and if he does, what does that mean for Jaylen Waddle and Courtland Sutton. Clay’s numbers suggest both could push for 1,000 yards, with Waddle as the clear WR1 and Sutton operating as a “1A” who still dominates in the red zone.

But does Waddle’s arrival change Sutton’s touchdown profile. Does Sutton still get the end‑zone love, or does Waddle’s speed and spacing shift the math. And if the top two receivers command so much volume, what does that mean for Troy Franklin, Pat Bryant, and Marvin Mims.

Clay’s projections paint a clear picture of hierarchy, usage, and opportunity — and the fellas break down exactly what it means for the Broncos’ offense.

🔥 In this episode:

  • Does Bo Nix hit 4,000 yards — and what that unlocks for the WR room

  • Why Waddle is the WR1 and Sutton is the “1A” with red‑zone upside

  • Whether Denver can realistically have two 1,000‑yard receivers

  • How Waddle’s presence affects Sutton’s touchdown projection

  • What Clay’s numbers say about Franklin, Bryant, and Mims’ roles

Drop your take — can Nix support two 1,000‑yard WRs in 2026, or does the volume spread out too much.

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