John Elway gets a ton of credit for the Denver Broncos' revival this decade, and much is well deserved, but you'd never know it by judging his recent NFL Draft classes.

FOX Sports compiled every team’s five-year draft record (2012-2016), ranking the classes by a predetermined point total, which I'll let them explain:

So here is the formula we used: teams scored 5 points for Pro Bowl player (when the nomination occurred while on the team's roster), 3 points for a 2016 starter and 1 point for a 2016 rostered player (IR counts). Additional Pro Bowl nods earned and extra point and players traded or lost for value (trades or compensatory picks) yield a point, too.

Coming in at No. 29 are the Broncos, who earned more points than only the Saints, Jets, and Titans. Those teams combined for a whopping one playoff appearance over that five-year time span, with the Saints qualifying as a wild card in 2013. The Broncos made the postseason in every year but 2016, and won the Super Bowl in 2015.

Crazy, huh?

Here's the breakdown via FOX Sports writer Brett Smiley:

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Elway took over as the football czar in 2011, and immediately hit a home run with Miller, a future Hall-of-Famer. His 2012 haul yielded a ridiculous amount of quality (Derek Wolfe, Brock Osweiler, Ronnie Hillman, Malik Jackson, Danny Trevathan). That's a grand slam.

But -- here's an interesting nugget -- the Broncos no longer have any member of the 2013 class on their current roster. They lost the final two this offseason, with Sylvester Williams and Kayvon Webster bolting in free agency. Elway nabbed Matt Paradis and Bradley Roby in 2014, but also Michael Schofield and Cody Latimer, a bust of a second-round selection.

The jury is still out on Elway's last two draft classes. He found some definite gems (Trevor Siemian, Andy Janovich), but whiffed on others (Ty Sambrailo, Jeff Heuerman). The Broncos' second-round pick last year, defensive end Adam Gotsis, barely saw the field. Fifth-rounder Connor McGovern, despite the offensive line imploding on a weekly basis, was a healthy scratch all season.

Elway is certainly one of the league's elite executives, the architect of a club that's already appeared in two Super Bowls under his reign. But there's little doubt that many of his draft choices have left much to be desired.

Follow Zack Kelberman on Twitter: @Kelberman247