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29. Chris Harris

Despite a good career at Kansas, Chris Harris went undrafted in 2011, but he found a home with the Denver Broncos where he played in all 16 Games of his rookie season, starting four of them. 

By 2013 he was cemented as a starting Cornerback, and in 2014 he would be named to his first of three straight Pro Bowls, the last of which saw him secure a First Team All-Pro Selection.  Harris would also help the Broncos win Super Bowl 50, and in 2018 he would earn his fourth Pro Bowl.  Harris played one more year with Denver before signing with the Los Angeles Chargers as a Free Agent in 2020.  He had an even 20 Interceptions as a Bronco.

28. Ryan Clady

A 1st Round Pick (12th Overall) in 2008, Ryan Clady would have an excellent rookie campaign where he was named a Second Team All-Pro and finished third in Offensive Rookie of the Year voting.  Clady, who was instituted as the starting Left Tackle as soon as he began his professional career, would be named to his first Pro Bowl and First Team All-Pro and he would remain an upper echelon Offensive Lineman with three more Pro Bowls and one more First Team All-Pro nod.  A torn ACL would take him out of the 2015 season, but he would finish his career in 2016 with a final season with the New York Jets.
Arguably the best Safety in the American Football League days of the Denver Broncos, Goose Gonsoulin would lead the AFL in Interceptions as a rookie in 1960, which coincidentally was also the “rookie” year of the AFL.  Gonsoulin would finish in the top eight in pick the next five seasons, and he would be an AFL All-Star four times while also being named a First Team All-AFL selection twice.  At the time of his signing with the San Francisco 49ers in 1967, he was the all-time leader (though passed) in Interceptions with 40.

Gonsoulin entered the Broncos Ring of Fame as part of the first class in 1984.

27. Riley Odoms

Drafted 5th Overall in 1972 from the University of Houston, Riley Odoms would have a very good career in the NFL, which all transpired in Denver.  Odoms was one of the better receiving Tight Ends of his day, and he would be named to four Pro Bowls (1973, 1974, 1975 & 1978) with two of those seasons earning him a First Team All-Pro nod.  He would retire with 396 Receptions for 5,755 Yards and 41 Touchdowns.