
Ian Hartitz breaks down fantasy football fallout of the trade of Jaylen Waddle to the Denver Broncos, and how it could improve the overall offense.

The NFL is getting wild on Saint Patrick's Day: The Miami Dolphins have traded WR Jaylen Waddle to the Denver Broncos in return for their first-round, 30th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
From the Broncos standpoint, the move is a major splash after they were largely content to sit back during the first week of free agency. The need for a WR upgrade was certainly there this offseason, so failure to secure any of the bigger-name free agents perhaps led to this choice. It was also going to be a gamble to expect any of the draft's big-six WR options at the position to be available by pick 30 (they were all off the board by pick No. 26 in Matthew Freedman's latest mock draft).
Oh yeah, Jaylen Waddle is also pretty f*cking good at football. The five-year veteran averaged a crisp 75 receptions, 1,008 yards, and 5.4 touchdowns in five seasons in South Beach despite sharing the passing game with Tyreek Hill and having to deal with some rough play from Tua Tagovailoa in recent years.
The integration of Waddle in this Denver offense is pretty perfect:
The Sutton-Waddle partnership suddenly gives the Broncos their best one-two punch at the position since Demaryius Thomas and Emmanuel Sanders—and you can argue it's been even longer since somebody brought Waddle's downfield speed element to the equation.
Waddle also managed to pick up his yardage quite efficiently along the way. We can see this in his yearly yards-per-target numbers, which led the league at his best, but have remained very solid in more recent years as well.

As for the 2026 ranks: Waddle previously came in between WR22 and WR25 between the four Fantasy Life rankers, and he might actually stay there considering …
Ultimately, I'm moving Waddle up just a touch ahead of veterans Terry McLaurin and Mike Evans. He's my WR20 and in the same tier as fellow young ballers DeVonta Smith and Luther Burden.
Meanwhile, I'm holding steady on Sutton's standing as my WR32—he's ahead of guys like DK Metcalf and Michael Wilson—but the added target competition makes it tough for me to consider jumping him ahead of the likely early first-round rookies as well as guys like Christian Watson and DJ Moore.
A similar sentiment is true for Bo Nix, who was my QB13 (highest of the Fantasy Life rankers) before the trade, and still comes in there for me ahead of stationary pocket passers like Matthew Stafford and Jared Goff, but behind Trevor Lawrence and Justin Herbert.
As for the Dolphins … yikes. This is truly one of the saddest wide receiver depth charts I've ever seen.

Malik Washington did some good things last year, but the bigger moral of the story here is that the Dolphins seem more live than ever to draft a receiver at pick No. 11. It would be a lot of fun to see them go with either Arizona State WR Jordyn Tyson or USC WR Makai Lemon, assuming Ohio State WR Carnell Tate is off the board. Whoever winds up landing in Miami will instantly have one of the highest target ceilings at the position.
Elsewhere in Miami: Sorry, Malik Willis, and I guess we'll see how much the organization truly loves De'Von Achane considering their current willingness to part ways with some of the team's best players.




