The latest update on Chris Harris Jr. is that there is no update.

Per Nicki Jhabvala of The Athletic, the disenchanted Denver Broncos cornerback will not report Monday for the start of Organized Team Activities as he continues angling for a new contract.

This will mark the second major offseason event that Harris is absent for. He previously skipped the team's voluntary pre-draft minicamp last month, and hasn't shown his face in Dove Valley since the workout program began April 2.

The sides went radio silent in the lead-up to, and during, the NFL draft, which ran from April 25-27. Harris reportedly issued general manager John Elway a pay-me-or-trade-me ultimatum, prompting Elway to work the phones but failing to find any takers for the 30-year-old Pro Bowler.

“As I said, now that the draft’s over, we’ll make contact and we’ll touch base with them and see where they are," Elway said in his post-draft address. "There was no contact with Chris or about Chris today, and so we’ll continue down that path and see what happens.”

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Although communication has yet to intensify, Jhabvala reports that Elway and his right-hand administrative man, contract chief Mike Sullivan, spoke to Harris' agent, Fred Lyles, "over the last couple of weeks, and the expectation is they will continue to talk."

Despite committing $54 million in free-agent deals to CBs Kareem Jackson and Bryce Callahan, the Broncos were expected to further bolster the position via the draft, if only to protect themselves against Harris' holdout or potential departure. They defied conventional thinking, however, by ignoring the position entirely.

This, Elway cautioned, had more to do with the board falling a particular way than hope about assuaging Harris' supposed desire to become the richest corner in football, topping Miami's Xavien Howard, who recently inked a five-year, $76.5 million extension that includes $46 million guaranteed and an average annual value of $15.05 million.

“We had opportunities but the direction that we went, we felt that we were better off that way," Elway said. "By the time we got into—it was just different choices that you make. ... At corner, we’re still in pretty good shape at corner."

Harris is entering the final year of the five-year, $42.5 million extension he inked in 2014, a deal he's severely outplayed. He's due $7.8 million in base salary and will count $8.766 million against Denver's salary cap for 2019 — the sixth-most expensive player on payroll.

As of publication time, the Broncos have $10.520 million in available cap room, according to Spotrac.com. They will need to set aside roughly $6.719 million to sign their six-player rookie class.