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Denver selects Indiana WR Omar Cooper Jr.

Denver selects Indiana WR Omar Cooper Jr.

Welcome to The Denver Post’s second Broncos mock draft of the offseason. The next installment will come the week of March 16, following the initial wave of NFL free agency.

What a difference a week in Indianapolis makes. The Broncos arrived at the NFL Combine last week with Sean Payton still publicly holding the play-sheet for Denver’s offense — only for Payton to announce he’ll step back as more of a CEO and hand the reins to 31-year-old Davis Webb.

How much will that impact the Broncos’ offseason approach? Probably very little, outside of Webb having a more active hand in Denver’s meetings with prospects and decision-making in the Broncos’ overall utilization of personnel. But Denver did its share of due diligence on skill prospects in Indianapolis, with a few potential early-round targets starting to generate some serious buzz.

The Broncos still have almost two months of pre-draft meetings to conduct and tape to grind, but their areas of interest are slightly clearer, afteeir Payton made clear Denver will take a hard look at repositioning itself at linebacker, running back and tight end. With that in mind and a week of intel collected, here’s The Denver Post’s second stab at a Broncos mock draft.

The Post’s Broncos reporters Parker Gabriel and Luca Evans spun through Pro Football Focus’s mock-draft simulator for this exercise, which is only one broad tool that doesn’t actually wholly measure the areas NFL teams might have interest. The parameters, again: no trades, and a look at other prospects considered in early slots.

Round 1, pick No. 30: WR Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana

The Post went with safety Emmanuel McNeil-Warren in that aforementioned first mock draft. This pick is plenty more buzzy.

The case for Cooper is simple: he just caught 13 touchdowns for the national champion Indiana Hoosiers, has produced as both a heavy-outside and heavy-slot target in subsequent seasons, and is a legitimate after-the-catch weapon. The Broncos lacked a consistent threat over the middle in their passing game in 2025, and Cooper caught 25 of 28 targets for 352 yards and three touchdowns in the short and intermediate middle third of the field for Indiana last year, according to data compiled from Pro Football Focus.

He’s got sure hands, too, dropping just five passes in 171 targets at Indiana, according to PFF. If he can show the Broncos and Payton that he can stay on the field as a run-blocker, too, Cooper could be a hand-in-glove fit to help Bo Nix level up in 2026.

Other options considered: DT Peter Woods, Clemson; DT Lee Hunter, Texas Tech; WR Chris Bell, Louisville. The Post heavily considered going with a defensive tackle here, and Denver will sit in a prime position to grab an impact interior defensive lineman on Day 1. Woods and Hunter could be instant-impact guys to fill the void left by the likely departure of John Franklin-Myers. Bell, too, came away from the combine looking like a perfect fit for the Broncos and Payton in everything but health, as it’s unclear if he’ll be ready for training camp in 2026 after tearing his ACL late in the 2025 season. Bell has been mentioned here for two consecutive mocks now.

Jacob Rodriguez #10 of the Texas Tech Red Raiders reacts after the Oregon Ducks defeated the Red Raiders 23-0 in the 2025 College Football Playoff Quarterfinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium on Jan. 01, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

Round 2, pick No. 62: ILB Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech

Finally, The Post got its guy.

Rodriguez blew away most concerns about his frame (6-foot-1, 231 pounds) with a fantastic performance at the combine this week. A time of 6.9 seconds in the three-cone drill, which measures change-of-direction quickness, was the best of any linebacker that tested. Rodriguez spoke highly of an initial formal meeting with the Broncos in Indianapolis, too, calling the organization “really aligned” and praising how their staff asked him questions.

The only issue here: the guy who’s the most obvious in March is rarely the guy who actually comes off the board in April. And Rodriguez’s stock is so high that he could easily slide up boards into the back of the first round. Would the Broncos actually swing on him that high? Debatable. But he’s a great value here as Denver looks to retool its inside linebacker room.

Other options considered: RB Jadarian Price, Notre Dame. Honestly, nobody. This pick was the equivalent of Kevin Costner’s Sonny Weaver Jr. chucking that piece of paper onto the table that read “Vontae Mack no matter what” in the movie “Draft Day.” Jacob Rodriguez, no matter what, indeed. But The Post was pretty surprised to see Price still available at No. 62, and just wiped him from consideration entirely, since he could easily rise earlier in Day 2 or even at the back of Day 1 in a running back class that’s thin at the top.

Austin Barber #58 of the Florida Gators celebrates after a game against the Florida State Seminoles at Doak Campbell Stadium on Nov. 30, 2024 in Tallahassee, Florida. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)
Austin Barber #58 of the Florida Gators celebrates after a game against the Florida State Seminoles of a game at Doak Campbell Stadium on Nov. 30, 2024 in Tallahassee, Florida. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

Round 3, pick No. 94: T Austin Barber, Florida

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