Years before Zach Allen and John Franklin-Myers became Broncos teammates, they connected on social media: “Basically, like, game recognize game”

Zach Allen saw a path­way to suc­cess for him­self even from 2,500 miles away.

In ear­ly Octo­ber 2021, Allen was in the midst of his third sea­son with the Ari­zona Car­di­nals. He had two career sacks to his name after injuries plagued each of his first two sea­sons. And only recent­ly had he come under the tute­lage of future Hall of Famer J.J. Watt in the desert.

He had con­fi­dence, to be sure, but not so much to rein­force it.

“I was real­ly incon­sis­tent, but I was like, ‘OK, I think I can do this,’” Allen told The Den­ver Post recently.

Across the coun­try, New York Jets defen­sive line­man John Franklin-Myers was a year old­er and a year more estab­lished. When he inked an in-sea­son, four-year exten­sion worth $55 mil­lion that came with $30 mil­lion guar­an­teed, Allen took notice.

“I remem­ber watch­ing his tape and think­ing that I liked the way this guy plays,” Allen said. “Then you see him get paid. So I just shot him a DM on Insta­gram and said, ‘Hey con­grat­u­la­tions on every­thing.’ That gave me a lot of hope, like, OK, a guy that plays a sim­i­lar style is get­ting rec­og­nized and respect­ed in this league. That gave me a lot of confidence.”

The two struck up a friend­ship and con­sis­tent dialogue.

“Basi­cal­ly, like, game rec­og­nize game,” Allen said.

Not only did they play sim­i­lar styles, they came to real­ize, but they shared a sim­i­lar pass-rush­ing ethos.

They thought, as many play­ers do, it would be cool if some­day they got the chance to play together.

Unlike most who muse about the pos­si­bil­i­ty, the pair now actu­al­ly gets that chance in Denver.

Allen cashed in him­self in the spring of 2023 with a three-year, $45.75 mil­lion con­tract from the Bron­cos. The exten­sion Franklin-Myers signed even­tu­al­ly made him a cap casu­al­ty in New York despite con­sis­tent pro­duc­tion and Den­ver pounced to add him via trade for almost noth­ing dur­ing April’s NFL draft.

They won’t put on the pads togeth­er until August. The most exten­sive work they may get togeth­er against anoth­er team might come in one joint prac­tice against Green Bay in mid-August. But Allen thinks Franklin-Myers’ addi­tion to Denver’s front line will not just be an upgrade over last year because he’s racked up 200-plus pres­sures over the past four sea­sons, but because it will unlock Allen’s game, too.

“Every day we’re talk­ing for like an hour just on our own,” Allen said. “When we get this, we should do this. What we see. Things we like, things we don’t like. It’s been a real­ly, real­ly good process.”

A year ago, the Bron­cos played more two-down as the year went along. Jonathan Har­ris start­ed the sea­son play­ing upward of 60% of defen­sive snaps but saw that time wane as the sea­son pro­gressed. Nobody turned into a dif­fer­ence-mak­er out­side of Allen and defen­sive tack­le D.J. Jones.

“Last year there was a lot of try­ing to move me around a lot to posi­tions I wasn’t super com­fort­able with,” Allen said. “Then ‘J’ gets here and then it’s like, OK, pick one. We both under­stand that you’re going to have a hard down every once in a while but that means the oth­er guy gets a one-on-one.”

If a defen­sive line is sol­id across the board, an offen­sive line at least has to play hon­est­ly. If Bat­man finds Robin, all the better.

“When you look at the top sack num­ber guys, they always have a tan­dem,” Allen said. “It’s not like there’s just one guy who’s just a world-beat­er on his own. When you have that, it’s real­ly spe­cial. Last year, it was a lit­tle incon­sis­tent and it was frus­trat­ing at times. But when­ev­er you get the one-on-one I tru­ly believe you have to win. That’s what I get paid to do and that’s what my job is.

“I feel like I did it well last year but I feel even bet­ter this year. Real­ly excit­ed to see where it goes.”

So, too, is head coach Sean Pay­ton. The Bron­cos fin­ished near the bot­tom of the league in win rates in both pass rush and run stop­ping. The club spent the off­sea­son over­haul­ing the defen­sive line by adding Franklin-Myers but also Mal­colm Roach and Ange­lo Black­son via free agency. On the edge, they’ll lean into their trio of Nik Bonit­to, Baron Brown­ing and Jonathon Coop­er plus rook­ie Jon­ah Elliss.

“It’s all a puz­zle rel­a­tive to how we play these guys,” Pay­ton said. “So when you have depth and you have flex­i­bil­i­ty of where you can play, (that’s good). We know kind of where we’d like to play Zach, where we’d like to play D.J., and yet if you’re thin, some­times you don’t have that luxury.

“I like where the num­bers are there, and we got some expe­ri­ence that we brought in there, both at the end and the tack­le position.”

By the time the 2023 sea­son end­ed, Allen had put togeth­er a sol­id first year in Den­ver. He fin­ished with 60 pres­sures, accord­ing to Pro Foot­ball Focus, the No. 8 mark in the NFL. He played in every game for the first time in his career.

Team-wise, though, Denver’s front sev­en wasn’t good. The defense didn’t grade out well over­all. The Bron­cos fell short of the playoffs.

Stand­ing on the precipice of a few weeks’ worth of sum­mer vaca­tion, Allen sound­ed like a guy who couldn’t wait to get back to try to build on the indi­vid­ual side but more per­ti­nent­ly the team side.

“The more and more you’re in this league, the more you real­ize that it’s fun and also help­ful to play with real­ly good play­ers,” Allen said. “That’s all you can ask for. And I think we real­ly have some­thing spe­cial. I think we’ve seen it through this whole OTA and everything.

“There’s no pads, but there’s a dif­fer­ent tem­po, dif­fer­ent speed it’s being played at and I think it’s going to be real­ly cool when the pads come on.”

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