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Broncos’ Potential Trade Package for A.J. Brown Revealed in Blockbuster ESPN Proposal

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INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - DECEMBER 08: A.J. Brown #11 of the Philadelphia Eagles warms up prior to a game against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium on December 08, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Katelyn Mulcahy/Getty Images)

In a recent trade proposal, ESPN’s Bill Barnwell outlined a scenario that would send Eagles star wide receiver A.J. Brown to Denver in exchange for a defensive starter and multiple draft picks.

It’s the kind of aggressive move that could instantly reshape the Broncos’ offense around quarterback Bo Nix.

Proposed trade details:

Broncos receive: A.J. Brown, 2026 fifth-round pick

Eagles receive: CB Riley Moss, 2026 second-round pick, 2027 fifth-round pick

On paper, it’s a blockbuster. In reality, it’s complicated.

Why ESPN Thinks the Broncos Would Make the Move

Barnwell’s reasoning centers on fit.

Brown, 28, is coming off what many viewed as a down season, finishing with 78 catches for 1,003 yards and seven touchdowns.

But even that production ranked among the league’s better outputs.

He finished sixth in ESPN’s receiver score metric and 12th in yards per route run despite tension-filled moments in Philadelphia, including sideline frustration with head coach Nick Sirianni during the playoffs.

Barnwell argued Brown would be “the wideout of Bo Nix’s and Sean Payton’s dreams.” 

For Nix, Brown’s size and ability to win contested catches would give him a reliable target when coverage is tight.

For head coach Sean Payton, it’s a familiar blueprint. 

Payton built elite offenses around bigger-bodied receivers like Marques Colston and Michael Thomas in New Orleans.

Brown could immediately step into that alpha role in Denver while sliding Courtland Sutton into a strong No. 2 spot.

The Broncos were one game away from the Super Bowl before Nix’s injury derailed their AFC Championship hopes. 

Adding a true WR1 might be the final piece.

Why the Proposed A.J. Brown Trade Is Risky for the Broncos

From Philadelphia’s perspective, trading Brown isn’t simple.

A pre-June 1 deal would leave the Eagles with roughly $43.5 million in dead money.

That’s steep, even with a $300 million-plus cap.

There’s also the value question.

Brown’s 2025 season featured playoff drops and visible frustration, arguably lowering his trade stock. Moving him now could mean selling at his lowest point.

For Denver, the cost is significant.

Riley Moss has held his own opposite Pat Surtain II and posted an 88.2 passer rating allowed last season.

With 2025 first-round pick Jahdae Barron waiting in the wings, the Broncos may view Moss as expendable.

However, giving up a starting corner and a second-round pick while absorbing Brown’s contract is a major commitment.

Still, Super Bowl windows don’t stay open forever.

If Denver believes it was truly “a quarterback away,” as some around the league suggest, then surrounding Nix with a dominant, physical WR1 could be exactly what pushes them to the next level.

The real question isn’t whether Brown would help.

It’s whether the Broncos think he’s worth what it would cost to get him.

For now, the latest proposal would send A.J. Brown and a 2026 fifth-round pick to Denver for Riley Moss, a 2026 second-rounder and a 2027 fifth-round pick.

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