Baron Browning gives his honest reaction after trade from Broncos

“It’s always good to feel wanted,” Baron Browning said of the Cardinals trade. “You don’t want to talk to the girl who doesn’t want you.”

Earlier this week, the Denver Broncos traded pass rusher Baron Browning to the Arizona Cardinals in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick.

Browning and fellow edge defender Jonathon Cooper were both scheduled to become free agents in 2025 and the Broncos decided to keep Cooper, signing him to a four-year contract extension.

Cooper (5.5 sacks) and Nik Bonitto (6.0 sacks) were productive while Browning was on injured reserve this season, so it made sense for Denver to trade the outside linebacker for more draft capital.

After landing in Tempe, Arizona, Browning spoke to Cardinals media members for the first time on Wednesday. He was honest in his assessment of the situation and understanding of the team’s decision.

“We had a very talented room in Denver,” Browning said, via Howard Balzer of Cards Wire. “I was coming off an injury. Coop was playing well. Nik was playing well, so I think too they can’t pay both of us so just understanding the business side of it.”

Browning had a hunch that he might be on the move, but he remained a team-first player right up to the trade.

“I didn’t want to be a distraction to my teammates, be a distraction to my unit back in Denver,” the pass rusher said. “I was just ready for it to be done just to kinda get this fresh start and show what I can do. I know I’m a starter in this league and I know I can play at a high level so I’m just excited about this opportunity to do that here.”

Browning will now get a fresh start with the Cardinals, a team that had a high grade on him in the 2021 NFL draft.

“It’s always good to feel wanted,” Browning said. “You don’t want to talk to the girl who doesn’t want you. I would say it’s the same thing. I’m just happy they wanted me and I’m happy to be here.”

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New pass rusher reacts to being traded from Broncos to Cardinals

Baron Browning on coming to the Cardinals: ‘It’s always good to feel wanted’

It’s unknown whether new acquisition Baron Browning will be active for the Arizona Cardinals in Sunday’s game against the Jets, but the edge rusher is hopeful he will be in uniform.

Browning, who was acquired for a sixth-round pick in the 2025 draft, had one practice under his belt when he spoke to the media Wednesday.

Asked when he believes he’ll be ready to play, Browning said, “I’m just taking it day by day. I wouldn’t want to put a timetable on it. Obviously, I’d like to play this week, but I’m trusting in the coaches and following the plan they have for me.”

It’s usually a big adjustment when a player is traded during the season, but especially so with only eight games remaining for the Cardinals.

Browning admitted there were a “whirlwind of emotions with the process starting over. It’s like going to a new school, meeting new people, new faces, just trying to remember everybody and settle in.”

He welcomes the opportunity ahead, knowing his contract expires after the season.

“I think everything happens for a reason. I’m a firm believer in my fate. I don’t question anything. I just accept, embrace it and look forward to the opportunity.”

And while there can be some questioning because the team you were on decided to part ways, the flip side is the new team sees something they like.

“It’s always good to feel wanted,” Browning said. “You don’t want to talk to the girl who doesn’t want you. I would say it’s the same thing. I’m just happy they wanted me and I’m happy to be here.”

Cardinals defensive coordinator Nick Rallis, who was the Eagles linebackers coach in 2021 when Browning was drafted in the third round, recalls the evaluation he did that year and meeting with him over Zoom because COVID-19 resulted in there not being a combine that year.

Rallis said, “I did a lot of work on him coming out. I just remember asking him some questions where he was able to respond and give unbelievable answers. The awareness that he had obviously (showed) he was very well-coached in college. I was very impressed with him. He’s a very intelligent guy.

“Really loved the guy honestly, more than anything coming out. So excited to get to work with him. Obviously, the first time I’ve ever actually been able to get hands-on with him, but I know the character’s gonna fit right in. I love the skill set of what he showed in college and what he’s showed so far in the NFL.”

So, Baron, do you recall much about your discussion with Rallis?

He laughed and said, “I ain’t gonna lie. I don’t remember. The years, they start blending together, game plans. I remember talking to him, but I don’t remember our conversation in detail. I know I liked his energy, so I’m glad to be here with him and JG (head coach Jonathan Gannon).

When Gannon was asked Wednesday about his early impressions of Browning, he dead-panned, “Really good handshake.”

The Broncos played him on the inside as a rookie and after switching to the outside in 2022, he totaled 9.5 sacks the next two seasons. This year, he was waylaid by a foot injury early in Week 2 and after missing four games, returned as a backup for the last three games.

Browning has confidence in his ability, saying, “It wasn’t the year I hoped to start off with. I had a great training camp and having that foot injury was a minor setback, but everything happens for a reason. I think everything happens in God’s timing.

“If you watch the tape, I feel like I’ve been rushing the passer at a high level, even though I haven’t had the production I want this season. But I know it’s coming. I’m trusting the process and continuing to approach work every day with the same mindset to get better.”

Asked if he had a sense a trade might be brewing, he said, “A little bit, but for me, I didn’t want to be a distraction to my teammates, be a distraction to my unit back in Denver. I was just ready for it to be done just to kinda get this fresh start and show what I can do. I know I’m a starter in this league and I know I can play at a high level so I’m just excited about this opportunity to do that here.”

He also understood the direction the Broncos decided to go.

They had selected Jonathon Cooper in the seventh round in 2021 and then Nik Bonitto in the second round in 2022. Cooper recently signed a four-year contract extension worth $54 million with $16.7 million guaranteed and Bonitto stepped up this season when Browning was injured.

Browning said, “We had a very talented room in Denver. I was coming off an injury. Coop was playing well. Nik was playing well, so I think too they can’t pay both of us so just understanding the business side of it.”

Whatever his status is this week, both Browning and Rallis are glad the team’s bye is next week.

Rallis said, “That’s an extra week that you can really kind of get back to some of the basics and not worry about a specific opponent or new calls to a scheme. So yeah, that’s a big week.”

“The bye definitely allows time to settle in a little more and have a little more time and not just trying to crunch all this information in,” Browning said.

Teammates also weighed in on the addition, including quarterback Kyler Murray who analyzes numerous players coming to the NFL.

“I think anytime you can add a player with the caliber that Baron has (it’s good),” Murray said. “I know he was a five-star (recruit), one of the best players coming out of high school. Went to Ohio State, so I was very familiar with the rankings and all that stuff even then. I personally know what he is capable of.

“I think he’s had some injuries that has kept him off the field, which we all deal with. When he is on the field, he’s very explosive. Has the ability, obviously. I’m excited for him. I’m excited for the opportunity that he adds to the team and (for him) to come off the edge and get the passer because that’s a crucial part of the game.”

Even though it wasn’t the flashy acquisition people hoped for, players still appreciate general manager Monto Ossenfort making a move.

“It shows how much (he) believes in this team and how much he’s willing to (do) to get this team better,” linebacker Mack Wilson Sr. said. “We felt like our pass rush was a need with (Dennis) Gardeck going down. Baron (is) a high-caliber guy that can do everything at both levels. Athletic, rush, and can drop in coverage. It’s a great addition.”

Time will tell if it is, but a sixth-round pick and being responsible for only $1.558 million in salary for the rest of the season is a small price to pay to find out.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Sean Payton comments on why Broncos traded Baron Browning

“He totally understood,” Broncos coach Sean Payton said of trading Baron Browning. “He was looking forward to getting more snaps.”

The Denver Broncos replaced outside linebacker Baron Browning in the starting lineup when he spent four weeks on injured reserve with a foot injury earlier this season.

When Browning returned from the injury, he never reclaimed the starting job as Nik Bonitto (6.0 sacks) and Jonathon Cooper (5.5 sacks) took over as the team’s top two edge rushers.

Browning and Cooper were both scheduled to become free agents in 2025. Cooper has been healthier and more productive than Browning, and the Broncos rewarded him with a four-year contract extension.

Denver did not plan to re-sign Browning in 2025, so it made sense to trade him to the Arizona Cardinals in exchange for a late-round draft pick. It’s a positive outcome for both parties as Browning is now poised to get more playing time with the Cardinals before hitting free agency.

“Well in fairness to Baron even, we had a long talk, and just the contract year, the amount of snaps — he can get more snaps [in Arizona],” coach Sean Payton said Wednesday. “It’s the puzzle of trying to look outwards too and certainly he’s been a part of what we’ve been doing.

“So it’s never easy to trade someone, and yet I thought just in our visit, George [Paton] and I and Baron sitting down he totally understood. He was looking forward to getting more snaps and certainly in the year for him it’s important.”

Browning will aim to finish the year strong with the Cardinals and then cash in during free agency next spring. The Broncos, meanwhile, will move forward with Cooper, Bonitto, Jonah Ellis and Dondrea Tillman.

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Around the NFC West: Cardinals move for pass rusher signals intent

Around the NFC West: Cardinals move for pass rusher signals intent

The Arizona Cardinals surprisingly sit atop the NFC West after nine completed weeks. Our beloved Seattle Seahawks are a dead-last 4-5, but remain one game outside the division lead in a tight-knit quartet. The Cardinals made a move at Tuesday’s NFL trade deadline that signals their aggressive intent for the remainder of the season.

Cardinals general manager Monti Ossenfort acquired pass rusher Baron Browning from the Denver Broncos in exchange for a sixth-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. Browning has appeared in just five contests this season, totaling five pressures and zero sacks. Playing time had been difficult to come by in Denver due to their depth on the edge.

The Cardinals have recorded a middling 21 sacks in nine games this year. The results have been somewhat encouraging considering head coach Jonathan Gannon has lost both Dennis Gardeck and BJ Ojulari to season-ending injuries. Rushing the passer was a massive concern after finishing 30th in sacks last season with just 33 quarterback takedowns.

Browning has accumulated 11 career sacks and 82 pressures. The former Ohio State standout earned a career-best grade of 73.5 from Pro Football Focus after totaling five sacks and 35 pressures last season. Browning should immediately help the Cardinals on the defensive line.

The Seahawks’ struggling offensive line has another productive pass rusher in the division. The Seahawks and Cardinals are scheduled to play in Weeks 12 and 14. The Cardinals believe they can capture the NFC West.

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Broncos’ updated depth chart following the NFL trade deadline

Here’s a look at the Broncos’ updated depth chart following the NFL trade deadline.

After trading outside linebacker Baron Browning to the Arizona Cardinals, the Denver Broncos have updated their depth chart ahead of Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Last week, the Broncos elevated linebacker Kwon Alexander and fullback Michael Burton to the game-day roster, so we left them on the below depth chart, just note that they are not currently on the active roster.

Here’s how the depth chart stands going into Week 10.

Broncos offensive depth chart

WR Marvin Mims Troy Franklin
LT Garett Bolles Matt Peart
LG Ben Powers Calvin Throckmorton
C Alex Forsyth
RG Quinn Meinerz Alex Palczewski
RT Mike McGlinchey Frank Crum
TE Adam Trautman Greg Dulcich Lucas Krull
WR Courtland Sutton Lil’Jordan Humphrey Devaughn Vele
RB Javonte Williams Jaleel McLaughlin Audric Estime
FB [Michael Burton] Nate Adkins
QB Bo Nix Jarrett Stidham Zach Wilson

Broncos defensive depth chart

DE Zach Allen Jordan Jackson
NT D.J. Jones Malcolm Roach
DE John Franklin-Myers Eyioma Uwazurike
SLB Jonathon Cooper Jonah Elliss
WLB Nik Bonitto Dondrea Tillman
ILB Justin Strnad [Kwon Alexander]
ILB Cody Barton Levelle Bailey
LCB Pat Surtain Levi Wallace Tremon Smith
RCB Riley Moss Damarri Mathis Kris Abrams-Draine
NCB Ja’Quan McMillian
S P.J. Locke JL Skinner
S Brandon Jones Devon Key Keidron Smith

Broncos special teams depth chart

PK Wil Lutz
KO Wil Lutz
P Riley Dixon
H Riley Dixon
LS Mitchell Fraboni
KR Marvin Mims Tremon Smith Jaleel McLaughlin
PR Marvin Mims Tremon Smith

Playing at home, the undefeated Chiefs are considered big favorites against the Broncos this week.

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New Cardinals OLB Baron Browning begins at back of depth chart

The newly acquired Browning is behind Jesse Luketa and rookie Xavier Thomas to begin his time with the Cardinals.

The Arizona Cardinals acquired outside linebacker Baron Browning from the Denver Broncos in a trade on Monday. He will have to work his way up in the depth chart.

The team released its Week 10 depth chart on Tuesday as they prepare to play the New York Jets at home. Browning is at the back of the rotation at outside linebacker.

The two starters at outside linebacker are again Zaven Collins on the weak side and Jesse Luketa on the strong side.

Browning is third on the depth chart behind Luketa and rookie Xavier Thomas, while Collins is ahead of Julian Okwara and Victor Dimukeje.

Now, the Cardinals rotate their outside linebackers and they do not play on on only one side. But Browning will have get worked into the rotation for his role.

The Cardinals play the New York Jets this week at home and then have their bye week.

At best, Browning will have a small role this week before a likely increase after the bye week.

For now, the believed starting-caliber pass rusher will have to work his way up from the back of the depth chart.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Two former Ohio State Buckeyes dealt prior to NFL Trade Deadline

Two Ohio State Buckeyes, Marshon Lattimore and Baron Browning, were dealt prior to the 4 p.m. ET NFL Trade Deadline Tuesday.

The NFL Trade Deadline was Tuesday at 4 p.m. EST, and there were multiple contenders trying to fill holes on their roster in order to contend for a Super Bowl in the coming months.

In doing so, a couple of Ohio State Buckeyes found new teams, Marshon Lattimore and Baron Browning being a few of them.

As for Lattimore, he is going from a 2-7 Saints to a 7-2 Commanders, and he might not be upset about that one.

Lattimore has played for the Saints since being drafted by them with the 11th overall pick in the 2017 NFL Draft. The four-time Pro Bowl corner has had 30 tackles and two passes defended on the season in seven starts.

As for Baron Browning, he’s heading from the Denver Broncos to the Arizona Cardinals.

Browning was taken by the Broncos with the 105th overall pick (3rd round) in the 2021 NFL Draft. He’s in his final year of his rookie contract and has just seven combined tackles in five games, two starts, on the season.

Broncos’ updated 53-man roster after NFL trade deadline

Here’s a look at the Broncos’ updated 53-man roster following the NFL trade deadline.

Following the passing of 2024 NFL trade deadline, the Denver Broncos have set their 53-man roster for Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

The Broncos traded outside linebacker Baron Browning to the Arizona Cardinals in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick on Monday. That ended up being the team’s only trade ahead of the deadline.

Here’s a look at the updated active roster following the Browning trade.

Denver Broncos 53-man roster

Position Name Number
QB Bo Nix 10
QB Jarrett Stidham 8
QB Zach Wilson 4
RB Javonte Williams 33
RB Jaleel McLaughlin 38
RB Audric Estime 23
FB/TE Nate Adkins 45
TE Greg Dulcich 80
TE Adam Trautman 82
TE Lucas Krull 85
WR Courtland Sutton 14
WR Marvin Mims 19
WR Troy Franklin 16
WR Devaughn Vele 17
WR Lil’Jordan Humphrey 84
OT Garett Bolles 72
OT Mike McGlinchey 69
OT Frank Crum 73
OT Alex Palczewski 63
OL Matt Peart 79
G/C Quinn Meinerz 77
G Ben Powers 74
C/G Alex Forsyth 54
OL Calvin Throckmorton 76
DE Zach Allen 99
DE John Franklin-Myers 98
DL D.J. Jones 93
DL Malcolm Roach 97
DL Eyioma Uwazurike 96
DL Jordan Jackson 94
OLB Jonathon Cooper 0
OLB Nik Bonitto 15
OLB Jonah Elliss 52
OLB Dondrea Tillman 92
ILB Cody Barton 55
ILB Justin Strnad 40
ILB Levelle Bailey 56
CB Pat Surtain 2
CB Ja’Quan McMillian 29
CB Riley Moss 21
CB Levi Wallace 39
CB Kris Abrams-Draine 31
CB Tremon Smith 1
CB Damarri Mathis 27
DB Devon Key 26
DB Keidron Smith 43
S Brandon Jones 22
S P.J. Locke 6
S JL Skinner 34
K Wil Lutz 3
P Riley Dixon 9
LS Mitchell Fraboni 48

With a 53-man roster and a 17-player practice squad, Denver has 70 players under contract, plus several players on injured reserve.

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Recapping the moves Broncos made ahead of NFL trade deadline

The Broncos made one trade ahead of the NFL trade deadline.

Denver Broncos coach Sean Payton downplayed the NFL trade deadline in recent weeks and at least one report suggested the team would stand pat ahead of the deadline.

Perhaps that was a smokescreen.

The Broncos shipped outside linebacker Baron Browning to the Arizona Cardinals on Monday in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick. That ended up being the team’s only trade, but it wasn’t their only transaction.

Denver also gave a four-year, $60 million contract extension to fellow pass rusher Jonathon Cooper, locking him up through the 2028 season.

The Broncos could also get some reinforcements on the injury front this week. Denver wide receiver Josh Reynolds (finger) and center Luke Wattenberg (ankle) are both eligible to return from injured reserve and linebacker Drew Sanders is “close to returning” from an Achilles injury.

Broncos move before NFL trade deadline

  1. OLB Baron Browning traded to Cardinals
  2. OLB Jonathon Cooper signed to extension

With the deadline now passed, Denver’s full attention turns toward Sunday’s showdown with the Kansas City Chiefs on the road.

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4 reasons why Cardinals’ trade for Baron Browning makes sense

Baron Browning was not a player most fans were looking for in a trade, but the deal makes sense for several reasons. Here are four:

The Arizona Cardinals announced a deal before Tuesday’s NFL trade deadline, acquiring outside linebacker Baron Browning from the Denver Broncos in exchange for their 2025 sixth-round draft pick.

It wasn’t a trade that exciting many fans, many who were hoping for a more well-known pass rusher like Maxx Crosby, Za’Darius Smith, Azeez Ojulari or Arden Key.

But while Browning isn’t a name that moves the needle much, acquiring him made sense for a few reasons.

Why?

Trade cost

With how general manager Monti Ossenfort views the draft, it seemed unlikely he would deal a Day 1 or Day 2 pick for a potential rental player.

The Giants reportedly weren’t going to move Ojulari for a Day 3 pick.

The Cardinals only had to deal away a sixth-rounder for Browning.

He’s better than what they have

While Browning’s numbers aren’t eye-popping, he is a more talented pass rusher than any player the Cardinals currently have on the active roster. He had 9.5 sacks between 2022-2023. Julian Okwara’s 2021 season of five sacks matches Browning’s five in 2022, but that’s it. Browning simply has more pass-rushing talent than Okwara, Zaven Collins, Jesse Luketa and Victor Dimukeje. Rookie Xavier Thomas is promising, but he is also a fifth-round rookie.

Broncos Wire’s Jon Heath described him as a starting-caliber edge player. Right now, only Collins fits that description on the Cardinals. Other guys start, but they aren’t really starting-caliber.

He is young and has upside

Rather than adding a player like Za’Darius Smith, who is 32 years old, they get someone still ideally ascending in the NFL. He matches what the rest of the roster looks like. And, should he stay healthy, he has very good upside.

He won’t be super expensive to re-sign

Browning will be a free agent after the season, but because his production has not been great and he has dealt with injuries, he should be easy to re-sign.

They believe BJ Ojulari will be great. He, for now, is in their long-term plans. Collins has an extension through the next two seasons. Browning probably can be signed for something similar or less to Collins’ contract.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.