football

Why Denver Broncos committed long term to George Paton

Yahoo Sports

Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images Denver didn’t have to give George Paton a contract extension this week. That makes the timing notable. The Broncos extended their general manager through 2030 because they believe the foundation already in place deserves a longer commitment.

When ownership starts talking about alignment and sustainable success, it usually means they feel the toughest part of the roster rebuild is behind them. In announcing Paton’s five-year extension, owner Greg Penner highlighted Paton’s relationship with Sean Payton and the team’s overall direction. The Broncos also pointed to results.

Since Payton arrived in 2023, Denver claims it has averaged 11 wins per season, made back-to-back playoff appearances, and earned the AFC’s No. 1 seed in 2025. That doesn’t sound like an organisation still uncertain about its structure.

George Paton’s extension goes beyond stability Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images The bigger story is not just that Paton stayed. It is that the Broncos are publicly backing his approach to building the roster. The team highlighted 36 trades, 45 draft picks, 55 unrestricted free-agent signings and 13 contract extensions during Paton’s time in charge.

That sounds like a front office that believes its process has produced enough core talent to justify continuity rather than another pivot. It also matters that Denver specifically pointed to players developed or retained under Paton, including Marvin Mims Jr. , Nik Bonitto, Quinn Meinerz and Pat Surtain II.