The Palm Beach Post

Elway: 2017 draft class needs to step up

- By Arnie Stapleton

ENGLEWOOD, COLO. — While John Elway and his staff wrap up preparatio­ns for next week’s NFL draft, it’s the Denver Broncos’ 2017 draft class that’s really on the clock.

“We’re hoping they can help us this year,” Elway said Thursday.

A half dozen of Elway’s 2017 draft picks either missed their entire rookie season or played so sparingly that they remain virtual unknowns.

Only first-round pick Garrett Bolles had much of an impact, but he was one of the most penalized players in the league and was openly mocked in the locker room by several veterans after the tough-talking left tackle was bowled over by Redskins linebacker Ryan Kerrigan on Christmas Eve, which they had warned him would happen if he didn’t fix his poor technique. Aside from Bolles, who started all 16 games, the 2017 draft class couldn’t get onto the field, combining for zero starts and missing a combined 75 games while playing sparingly in 37.

A year after an offensive-defensive rift opened in the Broncos locker room, there was a simmering generation­al gap in 2017. Several veterans, including Chris Harris Jr. and Todd Davis, said the rookie class just didn’t grasp the NFL leap until the season was already a lost cause thanks to an eight-game skid, their longest in 50 years.

Three of last year’s picks didn’t play at all — third-round wide receiver Carlos Henderson (hand), fifth-round tight end Jake Butt (knee) and seventh-round quarterbac­k Chad Kelly (knee, wrist). Three others hardly played.

Defensive end DeMarcus Walker, Denver’s second-round pick, managed a single sack in 10 games after losing weight to move outside. Third-round cornerback Brendan Langley had one punt return for 6 yards. And sixth-round running back De’Angelo Henderson carried the ball just seven times for 13 yards after a terrific training camp.

Meanwhile, fifth-rounder Isaiah McKenzie played much more than expected. Coach Vance Joseph raised eyebrows by handing the rookie from the University of Georgia the starting punt returner’s job early in training camp even as other position battles raged on, most notably at quarterbac­k between Trevor Siemian and Paxton Lynch.

Joseph also stuck with McKenzie through a half dozen fumbles that left players privately fuming the coaches were rewarding the rookie for his persistent gaffes.

McKenzie’s mistakes weren’t limited to special teams. He cost Denver a chance at points just before halftime in Week 16 when he forgot the Broncos didn’t have any more timeouts, caught a pass and instead of stepping out of bounds spun back to the middle of the field and was tackled at the 20 as time expired.

If the Broncos are to rebound in 2018, a big bounceback from their entire 2017 draft class would surely help.

“Yeah, our expectatio­ns are that that class participat­es a lot more this year than it did last year,” Elway said. “At least that’s the hope.”

Butt was a projected firstround­er last year before he blew out a knee in his bowl game and slipped to the fifth round. If healthy, he could provide a big boost to an offense that was anemic last season.

“Jake seems to be running around in good shape,” Elway said.

Kelly could be the wild card in the quarterbac­k room this summer because he has the chops to beat out Lynch as Case Keenum’s backup, which could prompt Elway to finally move on from Lynch, whom he moved up to select in the first round two years ago only to see him languish on the bench for two years.

Somebody else who needs to shake off a shaky rookie season is Joseph. He inherited a 9-7 team that was one year removed from a Super Bowl triumph and went 5-11 with eight double-digit losses last year.

Joseph kept his job but brought in several new assistants as he tries to become the first head coach in the Super Bowl era to reach the playoffs after winning four fewer games than the one he inherited.

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