For the fifth consecutive year, the John Elway-led Denver Broncos drafted a defender with their first pick. Without a doubt, it was a deft draft selection.
Denver traded up from No. 28 to No. 23 and took defensive end Shane Ray from the Missouri Tigers, a move that bolsters defensive end depth on a unit which will relentlessly rush the passer.
Sure, Ray had that run-in with the law, on I-70 nonetheless, being busted for marijuana possession on Monday. But the Broncos thought highly enough of the young man to believe getting high wasn’t going to be a recurring problem.
Instead, they were likely impressed with his high motor, his “quickest first step in football” according to Draft expert Mike Mayock and that Ray was a consensus All-American. Simply, they believe he was one of the top defensive ends in this year’s Draft, the move proved that.
At Missouri, Ray earned SEC Defensive Player of the Year as a junior in 2014. By playing with bad intentions on every snap, he recorded 14.5 sacks, a single-season school record, as well as 22.5 tackles for a loss with two forced fumbles. His explosiveness usually overwhelms offensive tackles, but when it doesn’t, Ray utilizes his hands and can power-rush opponents into the quarterback. And on stunts, his change of direction is sensational, looking more like a linebacker than a defensive end.
That’s where a question mark arises; will the Broncos put him at end or linebacker? Currently, he’s 6’2” and 245 pounds, meaning he’ll have to really put on some pounds to play on the line. Know what would help with that? Never mind.
According to the Draft experts, Denver had their eyes on Ray the entire week and moved up because they believed the Baltimore Ravens would take Ray at No. 26. And the reason it was such a smart move is simple; Denver needs depth at defensive end.
DeMarcus Ware enjoyed a renaissance year with the Broncos in 2014, but he’s still 33 years old. And Von Miller is a sack-dancing monster when he’s healthy and not in trouble for marijuana himself, but seeing him go down with the ACL tear in 2013 proved he’s not invincible.
Add in the release of backup end Quanterus Smith this week and the lack of depth became even more apparent.
Defensive end is the quarterback menace needed to disrupt the offense by upsetting time and rhythm. Elite defenses have multiple men who are feared by every opposing quarterback; Denver’s defense now has those men.
And it can’t be missed that Wade Phillips’ defense will more actively rush the quarterback than previous Broncos defenses.
It all adds up to what should be a fun season in the Mile High City, where quarterbacks’ bodies may be piled higher than those disgusting brown and yellow original jerseys in 1961 before they were burned at the 50 yard line.
When the Broncos traded to move up to No. 23, it meant sending center/guard Manny Ramirez to the Detroit Lions as well as a fifth-round pick this year and next year.
That leaves a certain void at center in Denver, who already had right tackle as a major need. As of now, the starters would be Ryan Clady at left tackle, Shelley Smith at left guard, Gino Gradkowski at center, Louis Vasquez at the other guard and Michael Schofield at right tackle. It would be a line leaving much to be desired and points to the Broncos likely taking multiple offensive linemen later in this Draft.
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5 Comments (1 conversation)
In all honesty i’m not extremly excited about this pick, i understand why we did it, it will help to give Ware a break every now and then to hopefully save some of that power for the playoffs, and crunch time games. But this is a fantastic example of drafting for the future rather than our current needs. Man Ram obviously wasn’t a great fit for our new system and trading him away frees up some much needed cap space, but with that we lost our most talented and experienced offensive lineman regradless of how well he fit, and we are now scarily empty on the OL. And giving up not only Manny but also our 28th overall pick, not to mention the 5th rounders, seems a bit too high for my liking.
hockeyhacker5
> with that we lost our most talented and experienced offensive lineman
You’re joking, right? Remember Vasquez and Clady? They are Pro Bowl players.
I misworded that and i’m glad you pointed it out, he definetly wasn’t our best and i’m ok with seeing him go but its the inclusion of the 28th overall that bugs me. Had it been just manny and the two fivers then i’d be 100% sold on this trade because we could have picked a lineman with the 28 but as of right now we haven’t adressed any of our immediate needs. The way i see it our entire season is riding on our OL holding up and giving manning a chance to work his magic and unless they find someone in the second who can be productive from day one i’m not gonna love this pick. I also have some worries about Clady, i understand he had a really rough injury that took sone time to heal up but i think it would be prudent to get somebody he can really show the ropes to in case his play is permenantly damaged.
hockeyhacker5
We got our OT in the 2nd, so let’s hope he can step in and contribute. Then there’s Schofield from last year’s draft, so at least one of them hopefully nails down a regular spot with good play. I agree that our OL is critical, but let’s give them a chance to see what it looks like a couple of games. Just having some stability would be an improvement.
I’d also like to point out that the 5th rounders we gave up in all honesty probably wouldn’t even make this team. We are a playoff/Super Bowl contender, not a young team needing bodies. I was really hoping we’d trade a couple of those late round picks to move up. I am excited we were able to get a guy who was projected to be a top 8 selection prior to Monday in the 20’s.