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The Denver Broncos are considering linebacker Jimmy Rolder from Michigan as a potential fourth-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. Rolder, known for his instincts and physical play, has been ranked as the 11th-best linebacker in the draft class.
Jimmy Rolder played 43 games at Michigan, recording 118 tackles, 9 tackles for loss, 2 sacks, 1 interception, and 2 pass deflections.
The Broncos need depth at linebacker, as their current starters are over 30 and Rolder's instincts and physical play style fit their needs.
Jimmy Rolder is ranked as the 11th-best linebacker in the 2026 NFL Draft, according to The Athletic’s lead draft analyst, Dane Brugler.
Rolder's strengths include great instincts and tackling ability, while his weaknesses involve limited experience and concerns about his size and coverage skills.

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**Jimmy Rolder | Linebacker | Michigan**
**Strengths**
**The Athletic’s lead draft analyst, Dane Brugler**, on Michigan LB Jimmy Rolder
Given his relative lack of on-field experience, Rolder was a pleasant surprise on tape, because of his awareness and movement skills. He plays with multi-gap range, legit sideline-to-sideline speed and athletic upside in coverage. He isn’t explosive as a thumper but drops his firm pads into the ball carrier and rarely misses tackles (4.7 percent missed tackle rate in 2025). Rolder needs to iron out his overaggressive tendencies, but he plays with ascending instincts and the reactive athleticism to make plays in the NFL. If healthy, he will be an immediate contributor on special teams and offer the potential to become a weakside starter. **NFL.com’s draft analyst Lance Zierlein on Michigan LB Jimmy Rolder** Rolder’s instincts and run-game consistency make it hard to believe he was only a one-year starter in college. He plays low and leveraged with violent hands to shock and slip off blocks. He finds the best routes to the run gap and maneuvers around traffic with efficiency to tighten angles to the ball-carrier. He plays with good awareness and change of direction in space but has average pursuit speed and coverage talent. Few linebackers in this draft finish tackles with the technique and consistency he displays. If you trust the tape and ignore his lack of experience, Rolder profiles as a future starting inside linebacker.
He seems to fit what the Broncos like at linebacker. While Rolder is a tad bit undersized (height/arm length), he is an explosive downhill linebacker who plays a physical form of football. Displays great instincts, closes in quickly, and will bring you down. Has excellent tackling form and rarely allows a broken tackle. Add in the ability to blitz occasionally and contribute on special teams, and I can see the Broncos liking him. He also checks the character box for the Broncos. This new regime emphasizes character, and by all accounts, Rolder is the type of player coaches will love. If drafted, he would give the Broncos some depth behind Alex Singleton and Justin Strnad and potentially a player who can develop into a starter down the road. I like his overall game and believe he would be a solid pick for the Broncos in the 4th round.