Denver Broncos news, analysis, roster, stats — The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com Colorado breaking news, sports, business, weather, entertainment. Tue, 12 Dec 2023 17:37:54 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.denverpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/cropped-DP_bug_denverpost.jpg?w=32 Denver Broncos news, analysis, roster, stats — The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com 32 32 111738712 Broncos Mailbag: What will it take to get WR Jerry Jeudy and RB Jaleel McLaughlin untracked? https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/12/broncos-mailbag-jerry-jeudy-struggles/ Tue, 12 Dec 2023 17:35:31 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5892283 Denver Post Broncos writer Parker Gabriel posts his Broncos Mailbag weekly during the season and periodically during the offseason. Click here to submit a question.

I have been reasonably content and without questions for several weeks but the current state of Jerry Jeudy’s play and discontent forces me to ask: What the heck? Is he really so upset at his perceived neglect at being targeted? When he is thrown the ball, his performance is often, quite lacking! That’s about as kind as I can be. How does it look from your professional perspective?

— A Referee, Greeley

The airing of grievances has re-commenced, eh, Ref? Kidding, kidding, thanks for writing in as always.

It’s turned into a bit of a funk with Jeudy, hasn’t it? Two of his three lowest production games by yards and targets have come in the past three weeks and in the other game — 51 yards against Houston — there were chances for so much more.

It’s not fair to put all of it on Jeudy. Against Houston in particular — as we detailed pretty extensively in a story Sunday — a bunch of different stuff all conspired against more big plays being made. Some of that is on him, some’s on Russell Wilson, some’s on the defense making good plays, pass protection and more. And, to Jeudy’s credit, he was able to see that and willing to acknowledge that during the week when I talked to him about it.

Against the Chargers, though, it did look like frustration set in. Either of the two deep balls could have been completed. Just one man’s opinion, but the first one didn’t look like a great throw from my seat and the second one was a tough chance, but I thought it got through the defensive back and on to Jeudy’s hands. The throw in the back corner of the end zone is the one you’ve got to have. It’s a four-point difference between getting a second foot down and not. Plain and simple.

Wilson last week insisted he has, “all the trust in the world in (Jeudy).” Quarterbacks tend to default to the guys they have that trust in when things go awry. Wilson always speaks highly of Jeudy in that regard but it’s also no secret that, this year, Wilson’s made the most hay getting the ball to Courtland Sutton in those situations and in the red zone. Sometimes it’s just the way the ball rolls, too. Sutton’s long touchdown against the Chargers was a play originally designed to go to Jeudy. Sometimes that’s the way it goes.

Jeudy’s really talented. His production hasn’t matched that talent. Even on a team that’s not putting up big passing numbers, he should be producing more. The simplest way I know how to say it is it’s on Wilson to get him the ball when he gets open and it’s on Jeudy to be able to stay the course mentally when that doesn’t happen.

It appears when Jaleel McLaughlin enters the game, the defense already knows he’s going to get the ball, since his ability to block is questioned. Any thoughts about using him in the slot or in the backfield with Javonte Williams and/or Samaje Perine?

— Curtis Hanlen, Bosque Farms, N.M.

Hey Curtis, it’s a good point and something we’ve mentioned previously. There was a stretch where the ball was going to McLaughlin — either a carry or a target in the passing game — more than 70% of the snaps he was on the field. That rate has come down but is still high – most recently 7 carries/targets in 13 snaps against the Chargers.

It’s kind of where they’re at offensively at this point. Williams is the go-to guy on early downs and Perine is the trusted pass-protector and pass-catcher on third down (and, when healthy, provides nice punch in the run game). That leaves McLaughlin to handle a handful of snaps a game, usually in situations where they can avoid leaving him in pass protection.

The conundrum: In order to use McLaughlin less, the Broncos would have to play him more. One of the many quirks that makes football great.

Hello Parker, this may not be a popular opinion, but Russell Wilson should be benched if the Broncos hope to make the playoffs. He is a liability on a team with little margin for error. Would it be the same if this were another player making so many mistakes, e.g., running into sacks, missing wide open receivers, not seeing open receivers? Why is he still on the field? Is Sean Payton making a case for waiving him next year? Because the evidence is piling up. Thanks!

— Joe C., Aurora

Hey Joe, Wilson isn’t perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but that’s not happening. And not just because he makes a lot of money and all that. There’s just no reason to think anything other than he gives the Broncos the best chance to win at this point.

It’s interesting: Wilson at this stage of his career misses on stuff that most quarterbacks don’t miss on. But he also still makes a handful of plays per game that most other quarterbacks don’t make. It sometimes leads to performances that aren’t the cleanest or the prettiest to watch, but recently it’s also led to a whole bunch of wins.

We’ve written extensively about the way his contract works, the decisions ahead, the imperfections in his game and all of that. But the caveat has always been and will continue to be that if you win, that stuff matters less. Right now, they’re winning. So you plow ahead trying to make the postseason and worrying less about what it looks like en route. If they falter down the stretch here and fall out of playoff contention, maybe Jarrett Stidham gets a game at the end of the year. But that situation or injury is the only way it’s happening over the next four weeks.

Parker, our win over the Chargers was easily the most dominant I’ve seen our team since Sean Payton became coach. What’s changed since our slow start? We were on the cusp of the season fading into a top-three pick, but now we’re a game away from the AFC West lead.

— Ryan, Castle Rock

Yo Ryan, thanks for the note. It’s a lot of things, but let’s put it as simply as possible:

1. The defense went from one of the worst starts in NFL history to being one of the stingiest groups in the league. Obviously a combination of things at play, but they’ve made a bunch of personnel moves that have paid off – jettisoning Randy Gregory and Frank Clark, giving Ja’Quan McMillian the nickel spot, starting Fabian Moreau, getting P.J. Locke and Baron Browning healthy, etc. — and defensive coordinator Vance Joseph has adjusted on the fly.

2. The offense settled into, for the most part, leaning on what it does best. Run the ball, play-action off of it and protect the football. You see what happens when they get away from that, but also how it’s a recipe for success. Then when the game’s on the line, they’ve found ways to get the job done more often than not.

Agree with you that Sunday was pretty convincing. They missed on a few chances and let the Chargers hang around for a while, but overall it felt like they were in control pretty much from the time the defense got that early red zone stand after Wilson’s first-play interception.

Hey Parker, last month I asked you who’s making the Pro Bowl on how we’ve played so far. Who do you have going now? I’m changing my answers to Courtland Sutton (he’s second in the league with 10 touchdown catches), Ja’Quan McMillian (he just makes plays) and Quinn Meinerz (he’s having a breakout year).

— Nick Winters, Colorado Springs

Yeah Nick, the Broncos certainly have more candidates than last time we did this exercise. I agree with your three and would think cornerback Pat Surtain II and safety Justin Simmons would also be good bets.

Good on you for coming around to my suggestion from a month ago about Meinerz. He’s really played well.

And it’s hard to say enough good things about McMillian, who could go from practice squad rookie to Pro Bowler. He’s already set the Broncos’ single-season record for tackles for loss by a cornerback (though nickel and corner aren’t exactly the same thing) with seven.

According to the Broncos, he’s also one of just two players in the NFL this year with multiple sacks, interceptions, forced fumbles and fumble recoveries. That’ll work.

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5892283 2023-12-12T10:35:31+00:00 2023-12-12T10:37:54+00:00
Keeler: Broncos DC Vance Joseph didn’t just beat Patrick Mahomes. He didn’t just beat the Chiefs. He broke them. https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/vance-joseph-broncos-broke-patrick-mahomes-chiefs-nfl/ Tue, 12 Dec 2023 02:27:52 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891619 Vance Joseph didn’t just beat the Chiefs. He broke them like plates at a Big Fat Greek Wedding.

Before the Broncos turned Patrick Mahomes upside down in Week 8 and shook him like a snow globe, No. 15 was Showtime.

He’s been Redbox ever since.

Mea culpa, VJ. I was wrong. We were wrong. Broncos Country wanted a scapegoat for that 70-burger in Miami. Your office was the closest to the sacrificial altar.

And if the wonks who vote on NFL Assistant Coach of the Year are paying attention, that baby oughta be your to lose, Vance. You got it right. Sean Payton got it right. George Paton got it right. Greg Penner got it right.

Instead of shedding blood, the Broncos shed disgruntled veterans. Instead of blowing up the bathroom, they retiled the shower. Every little tweak hit like a sledgehammer.

They identified a new boundary corner (Fabian Moreau) who could handle the traffic from QBs avoiding Pat Surtain II. They found a star in nickelback Ja’Quan McMillian, a college free agent out of East Carolina whose quiet case for a Pro Bowl nod — seven TFLs, two interceptions and two fumbles forced over his last eight games — gets louder by the week.

They handed the keys to Baron Browning, Jonathon Cooper and Nik Bonitto, then watched them drive tackles batty. No team in the NFL has more sacks over the past three weeks than the Broncos’ 18.

Explosion plays vanished. Missed tackles felt like unhappy accidents. In his 13 games as defensive coordinator, Joseph’s defense somehow transformed from a rusty, flaming dumpster into Optimus Prime. Welcome to The Vance Vance Revolution.

If the buddy-cop tandem of Payton & Paton are half as smart as they think they are, they’ll get in Penner’s ear, rip up whatever’s left of VJ’s contract and let Joseph name his price.

It’s been so long — too long — since Broncos Country found something they could trust falling in love with again. You don’t let that feeling walk away easy.

Now that you mention it, the last seven weeks have been so much fun, the only thing missing for Joseph’s cadre is a clever nickname, right? Some proper shorthand, along the lines of “Orange Crush” and “No-Fly Zone”, for one of the most remarkable defensive units in the history of a franchise that’s been defined by them.

Open to suggestions, of course. “Team Takeaway?” “The Turnover Train?”

Here’s another stab, take it or leave it: The Mahomes-Wreckers.

The NFL is an unabashed cut-and-paste, copycat league. Other great defensive minds have proffered theories toward an antidote for the logic-bending, gravity-defying, generational genius of Mahomes, the Chiefs’ QB1.

Joseph might’ve just written the definitive book on the subject.

Before Kansas City visited Empower Field on Oct. 29, the Chiefs were 6-1. The Broncos were roadkill.

On a cold day in Hades, VJ’s defense forced five turnovers, picking off The Grim Reaper twice and sacking him three times.

“Well, you know, Mahomes was sick”, they sniffed.

“Yeah, it was the snow,” they scoffed.

Was it?

In Kansas City’s six games that followed, the Chiefs are 2-4. The defending Super Bowl champs have scored a Shurmuresque 19 points per game during that stretch, while surrendering 1.83 sacks per tussle.

Denver Broncos linebacker Jonathon Cooper (0) celebrates after sacking Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) during the second half at Empower Field at Mile High on Oct. 29, 2023 in Denver. The Denver Broncos beat the Kansas City Chiefs 24 to 9 during week 8 of the NFL regular season. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
Denver Broncos linebacker Jonathon Cooper (0) celebrates after sacking Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) during the second half at Empower Field at Mile High on Oct. 29, 2023 in Denver. The Denver Broncos beat the Kansas City Chiefs 24-9 during week 8 of the NFL regular season. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

Context: In the seven games before Broncos 24, Mahomes 9, Andy Reid’s finest averaged 25.4 points per game and allowed just one sack per tilt.

During that 6-1 start, Mahomes threw for at least 280 yards four different times. During the 2-4 run since, one that includes the Chiefs’ first loss to the Broncos in forever, No. 15’s only managed to hit that mark once.

So much for sick.

So much for snow.

“Vance and these guys have done a really good job of bringing combinations, if you will, which makes it a little harder,” Payton reflected Monday.

“I think it’s a little bit contagious. I think there (are) certain plans you have for certain styles and certain quarterbacks. Some of these guys are too good to sit in the pocket and they’re too talented. Somehow, you have to disrupt the passing game. And it’s either at the line of scrimmage and re-routing receivers, or it’s with the quarterback. (VJ’s defense has) done a good job.”

When the recovery becomes even more impressive than the failure, it’s not just good, coach. It’s historic.

And when the stuff this league is cutting and pasting is yours, it’s not just flattery. It’s gospel. The AFC West is a race again, and Hallelujah.

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5891619 2023-12-11T19:27:52+00:00 2023-12-11T19:54:43+00:00
Upon Further Review: How Broncos fooled Chargers’ defense on key scoring drive in fourth quarter https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/broncos-fooled-chargers-defense-nfl-week-14/ Tue, 12 Dec 2023 01:03:36 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891744 The Broncos had the Chargers’ defense looking silly on Sunday afternoon.

Denver faced a third-and-1 at Los Angeles’ 10-yard line when it lined up in a T formation with quarterback Russell Wilson under center and running back Javonte Williams, fullback Michael Burton and tight end Chris Manhertz behind him.

Wilson got the Chargers to bite on a play-fake to Williams, then the nine-time Pro Bowler rolled to his left. As this was happening, tight end Adam Trautman ran undetected into the end zone, where he caught a 10-yard touchdown pass from Wilson to take a 24-7 lead with 3:11 left in the fourth quarter.

A day after the Broncos’ seventh victory, head coach Sean Payton said there’s no better feeling than when a play works as intended. But it has to be the right situation.

“The challenge, honestly, as a play-caller, is you really have to be true to the situation,” Payton said. “If I’m guilty, or if any of us are guilty of something, it’d be like you’re wanting to open it too quickly, and it’s not ready. It has to be right.”

If the play seemed familiar, it’s because it was. Payton got the idea from the Jacksonville Jaguars after they ran the same play against the Chargers in last year’s AFC Wild Card game. The Jaguars were down by two points with 1:28 left in regulation when they lined up in a T formation at Los Angeles’ 41-yard line.

Instead of quarterback Trevor Lawrence passing the ball on fourth-and-1, he handed the ball off to running back Travis Etienne Jr., who cut to the outside for a 25-yard gain that helped set up the game-winning field goal.

“You’re rewinding it, you’re rewinding it, and all of a sudden you see something, and then you begin to tinker with it, and you put it in,” Payton said.

Payton hoped the Chargers would take the bait if they faked the handoff to Williams. However, Williams didn’t expect Trautman to catch the ball. Throughout the week, Williams said the team ran the play with the intent of Wilson running with the ball.

Even if Wilson didn’t throw in the end zone, he had enough room to convert the first down and possibly a touchdown.

“It worked, so I’m glad (Wilson threw it),” Williams said.

The Broncos’ 13-play, 75-yard scoring drive was one of their most impressive this season. It was methodical and textbook football. More importantly, it sucked the life out of the Chargers after they had just cut the deficit to 17-7.

On the first play, Williams rushed up the middle for a 20-yard gain — his second-longest run of the season. Williams had five carries for 34 yards during the drive. In addition to being effective in the run game, the Broncos were 4-for-4 on third down. Wilson connected with Trautman on two third-down plays, including the touchdown at the end.

By the time Denver reached Los Angeles’ 10, the Chargers were out of timeouts.

“That’s just complementary football,” inside linebacker Alex Singleton said.

Extra Points

• Broncos offensive lineman Luke Wattenberg stepped up and played 32 snaps at right guard after Quinn Meinerz went to a local hospital due to an elevated heart rate. Rookie linebacker Drew Sanders played 32 defensive snaps after edge rusher Nik Bonitto went down with a knee injury.

• Denver’s defensive backs are making an impact in the pass rush. P.J. Locke is the first Broncos safety in team history to record a sack in three consecutive games. He is the first NFL safety to accomplish the feat since the Dolphins’ Brandon Jones in 2021. Meanwhile, cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian is the first Broncos cornerback to record at least 0.5 sacks in back-to-back games since Ray Crockett in 1996. McMillian has even set the franchise’s single-season record for most tackles for loss by a defensive back with seven.

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5891744 2023-12-11T18:03:36+00:00 2023-12-11T18:19:36+00:00
Broncos coach Sean Payton says team is taking aim at the AFC West: “We’re a game out in our division. That’s how we’re looking at it” https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/broncos-playoff-chances-sean-payton/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 21:13:17 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891462 LOS ANGELES — Week by week, as the Broncos have tried to lift themselves out of a hole they dug over the season’s first six games, most of the conversation has centered on whether Denver can get back into the postseason picture.

Head coach Sean Payton has his sights set on a different destination. It’s not just about sneaking in.

“Obviously, we’re a game out in our division,” he said of the AFC West race on Monday. “That’s how we’re looking at it.”

Indeed, Kansas City has won the division seven straight years but looks as vulnerable as perhaps at any point during that streak. The Chiefs dropped a home game Sunday against Buffalo and in the process fell to 8-5, just a game clear of the surging Broncos. They have lost two straight and three of their past four.

A division title isn’t impossible for the Broncos, but it’s also not particularly likely. Denver and Kansas City split their season series, and the next tiebreaker is division record. Currently the Chiefs are 3-1 and Denver 2-2. Each team has a pair of division games remaining — one each against the Los Angeles Chargers and Las Vegas. At present, Kansas City has the edge in common opponents played, which is the third level of tiebreaker.

Even still, the fact that the Broncos can even have this conversation at this point in the season shows how far they’ve come.

“The truth is, in our season we’re 5-1 over the past six weeks and now 6-1,” quarterback Russell Wilson said after Sunday’s win. “I think there’s great belief. (I) told the guys in the huddle before the last knee, ‘Stay humble and hungry, let’s keep going.’

“We’re not even at our best yet, and that’s a good thing.”

Denver’s going to need its best to make the playoffs in any capacity.

Here’s a rundown of where several outlets peg the Broncos’ postseason chances with four games to go:

New York Times: 50% postseason, 9% division title

Sumer Sports: 41.3%, 5.3% division title

ESPN: 38% postseason, 8% division title

In the AFC, teams are jumbled up around the cut line. The Broncos are one of six teams that are currently 7-6. At the moment, there are two spots behind the four division leaders and then 8-5 Cleveland.

“I’m sure we’ve seen it like this either in the NFC or the AFC, but I can’t recall having been a part of it,” Payton said of the big group of teams sporting the same record this late in the season. “We kind of talked about this last week. This next quarter pole is obviously going to define a lot for a lot of teams, and fortunately we’re one of those teams. We’ve just got to focus on the next job.

“But it is unusual.”

For all the moving parts and changing odds, the approach for Denver is pretty simple: Win the last four games and you’re in. Take care of business against the three AFC teams left on the schedule and you’ll have a great chance.

“It’s shaping up to be a pretty good race to the end,” Denver running back Javonte Williams said. “We’re just trying to focus on these last four games we’ve got and win all of those. The ball’s in our court.”

Williams was reluctant, though, to forecast the Broncos’ odds.

“Yeah I can’t really speak too much on it,” he said with a laugh. “Coach Payton told me I talk about the playoffs too much, so I’ve got to chill.”

Denver Broncos cornerback Ja'Quan McMillian (29) swats the ball away from Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Easton Stick (2) in the second quarter, picked it up and ran into the end zone, but the play was called back and ruled an incomplete forward pass at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. on Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Broncos cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian (29) swats the ball away from Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Easton Stick (2) in the second quarter at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. on Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

The Broncos are going to be talking a lot more about the playoffs if they win on the road Saturday night at Detroit, and likely over the final four weeks of the season regardless.

“I think we’re steady climbing,” Wilson said. “Climbing a mountain is not easy. There’s going to be bumps in the way and there’s going to be stuff that’s going to try to knock you off. We just have to stay focused on the peak and stay focused on what we’re trying to do and understanding that we’re doing this together.

“It’s going to take all of us.”

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5891462 2023-12-11T14:13:17+00:00 2023-12-11T16:57:40+00:00
Ciara and Russell Wilson welcome baby girl https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/ciara-russell-wilson-baby-girl-amora-princess-birth/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 20:52:21 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891513 Ciara and Russell Wilson are parents again.

The couple announced the birth of their daughter, Amora Princess Wilson, on Monday, a day after the Denver Broncos defeated the Los Angeles Chargers.

“2 wins in less than 24 hours!” Russell Wilson posted on Twitter, adding the baby made her debut at 9 pounds and 1 ounce.

Amora is the fourth kiddo to join the bunch. The Wilsons share a daughter Sienna, 6, and a son Win, 3. Ciara’s first child, 9-year-old Future Zhair, is with her ex, Future.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter, In The Know, to get entertainment news sent straight to your inbox.

]]>
5891513 2023-12-11T13:52:21+00:00 2023-12-12T09:24:03+00:00
Kizsla vs. Gabriel: Who is the MVP of this 6-1 run for the Broncos? https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/broncos-debate-mvp-vance-joseph/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 20:25:59 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891426 Kiz:  Don’t need a computer simulator to tell me the odds or tea leaves to foresee the future. The Broncos are going to make the playoffs. I guarantee it. Predicted a 10-7 record before the season, but I never thought it could happen this way. How did we get here? Never a doubt, eh?

Gabriel: Never a doubt. My 8-9 prediction has me currently looking like the opposite of you, Kiz: a real downer instead of a constant ray of sunshine. We got here because the Broncos suddenly started winning the exact kind of games they’ve lost for the better part of the past seven years: Close games. Physical games. 50/50 games. The kind that pockmark the NFL every week. Of course, Sunday wasn’t quite that. It was a pretty thorough beatdown from Sean Payton’s team over a Chargers team and coach in Brandon Staley who looks headed for more rocky road.

Kiz: I don’t know if I believe the Broncos can end the reign of Kansas City as boss of the AFC West. But since beating the Chiefs, Denver has been the best team in the division. Get in the playoffs and the Broncos have a defense to do some damage. Where’s the Super Bowl played this season?

Gabriel: How does the desert sound to you, Kiz? A stretch of February in Las Vegas will be good times for a pair of teams and a big swath of the whole NFL operation. The Broncos? Well … let’s not get too far out ahead of our early winter skis just yet, OK? But we wouldn’t be having this conversation without some really impressive performances across the board, right? So, who you got for MVP of this season-turning run, Kiz?

Kiz: While the connection between Wilson and Sutton has been jaw-dropping, the Broncos would be nowhere near the playoff discussion without the transformation of a defense that was in shambles after surrendering 70 points to Miami. So I have to give the MVP of this amazing turnaround to defensive coordinator Vance Joseph … and can’t wait for the first playoff game against the Dolphins. It’s fate, eh?

Gabriel: Yeah, difficult to go wrong with Joseph. Amazing to say, given the way the season started, but don’t think it’s possible to rule out him getting at least initial interviews during what’s shaping up to be a wild NFL head coaching carousel this winter. My vote for MVP of this run: Justin Simmons. Consider that he spent almost all of training camp dealing with a hip/groin injury and then looked a half-step off his normal ball-hawking self over the first two weeks. Then he missed defensive debacles against Miami and Chicago dealing with the same injury. So let’s call it Week 5 when Healthy Justin started playing this year. My abacus here says they’ve been pretty good with Healthy Justin. How far can Denver take it? We’re fixin’ to find out.

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5891426 2023-12-11T13:25:59+00:00 2023-12-11T16:48:08+00:00
Broncos stock report: P.J. Locke making case to keep starting role after Kareem Jackson returns https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/broncos-stock-report-chargers-win-pj-locke/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 20:21:02 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891419 Assessing the Broncos’ stock in the wake of a 24-7 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium.

Stock Up

OLB Jonathon Cooper

The Broncos’ third-year outside linebacker has been solid all season and continued to impress in Sunday’s road win against Los Angeles. He helped set up Denver’s first touchdown when he intercepted a pass tipped by Baron Browning. The Broncos’ edge group is young and ascending, but it’s been through some machinations and growing pains this season. In all of that, Cooper’s been the most consistent, and he’s carried the heaviest workload.

S P.J. Locke

Locke is playing a really good starting partner next to Justin Simmons, and he’s not going to easily give up his starting spot to Kareem Jackson when Jackson returns from suspension next week. Locke’s capable of playing the deep half in coverage, is doing his job in run support and, in perhaps the most pleasant surprise for Denver, he’s become a really good blitzer. Locke had seven tackles, a strip sack and a quarterback hit against the Chargers.

DE Zach Allen

The Broncos paid Allen big money in free agency to be this kind of player. He’s going to gamble in gaps, and occasionally teams will be able to run the ball past him. But the longer Allen’s first season in Denver goes, the more impact he’s making as a pass-rusher. He had a sack and three hits Sunday against the Chargers and is up to five sacks for the season. One more will give him a career high. According to Pro Football Reference, he’s already tied his career best in quarterback hits. Allen’s also carrying a heavy workload, having played 82% of Denver’s defensive snaps this year.

G Luke Wattenberg

Good on the second-year offensive lineman for being ready to roll when his number got called. It’s particularly impressive for Wattenberg because when he got his chances as a rookie, he struggled mightily. The former Washington guard and center was overpowered and got run through too often in limited playing time last year, but he jumped in for Quinn Meinerz on Sunday and held his own just fine.

Stock Down

Team health

The Broncos notched a big victory, but it could end up being a costly one, too. Between Nik Bonitto’s left knee injury, Meinerz’s heart-rate issue and various other bumps and bruises, it’s probably the most question marks Denver has left a game with this year. The team wasn’t going to avoid it forever. But complicating matters is a short week to Saturday night’s game at Detroit.

WR Marvin Mims Jr.

The Broncos just haven’t been able to figure out a way to get Mims going offensively. Russell Wilson targeted him right out of the gate Sunday on the first play, but the placement was a bit off and it got intercepted. Denver’s timing and blocking are getting a little bit better in the receiver screen game as the season goes along, but Mims finished with a modest two catches for 11 yards.

Goal-to-go offense

The first one was easy. Cooper’s interception set the Broncos up at the 3-yard line, and Javonte Williams scampered in on the first play. The second one? Not so much. Wilson threw three straight incompletions, the last of which was originally ruled a touchdown, but Jerry Jeudy couldn’t get his back foot down in bounds. According to NFL stats, the Broncos have scored on just 52.2% of goal-to-go scenarios compared to a 71.8% league average.

Deferring

Actually deferring when Denver wins the coin toss isn’t the problem. It’s what they’ve done to start the third quarter that’s been brutal. The Broncos started the second half with the ball for the 11th time in 13 games Sunday and went three-and-out. Again. On those 11 drives, Sean Payton’s offense has now punted nine times (one total first down) and missed two field goals. Gaining nine yards before willingly taking a delay of game penalty actually, somehow, goes down as Denver’s best effort to open the third quarter since the bye week.

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5891419 2023-12-11T13:21:02+00:00 2023-12-11T14:00:26+00:00
Broncos RG Quinn Meinerz returning to Denver Monday, coach Sean Payton says: “Quinn is healthy and is going to be fine” https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/broncos-quinn-meinerz-hospital-release/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 17:52:47 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891181 LOS ANGELES — Broncos right guard Quinn Meinerz was released from a Los Angeles-area hospital Monday and is returning to Denver.

Head coach Sean Payton on Monday morning didn’t say much more than that, but confirmed, “Quinn will be back today. That’s really the update we have.”

Meinerz reported chest tightness and shortness of breath to the Denver training staff around halftime of Sunday’s 24-7 Broncos win over the Los Angeles Chargers and was transported to a local hospital as a precaution, sources told The Denver Post. Meinerz had an elevated heart rate, and his doctors decided to keep him for overnight observation rather than clearing him to return to Denver with the team after the game.

Players after the game expressed confidence that Meinerz was in good spirits. Payton acknowledged similar Monday when he was answering a question about second-year guard Luke Wattenberg, who filled in ably for Meinerz in the second half Sunday.

“Certainly relieved that Quinn is healthy and is going to be fine,” Payton said.

The rest of Payton’s summation regarding Wattenberg, a fifth-round pick out of Washington in 2022, showed the confidence he has overall in Denver’s depth up front.

“We feel like we’ve got a really strong developmental group of offensive linemen,” Payton said. “They’re smart and tough, and they’ve got the traits we’re looking for. He’s done a good job and I thought he played well coming in in a moment like that. I’m pleased with our depth there.”

Williams reacts to first rushing TD in two years: Broncos running back Javonte Williams has truly reaped the benefits of the work he put in during his rehab from a torn ACL suffered last season. In the first quarter on Sunday, Williams recorded his first rushing touchdown since 2021. Even though Williams has two touchdown receptions in 2023, being able to score off a handoff was a special feeling for the former North Carolina standout.

“It felt good just (because of) all the hard work that I’ve put in to get to the spot I’m in now,” said Williams.

Williams had a solid performance against the Chargers, rushing for 66 yards on 17 carries. This season, he has 650 rushing yards while averaging 3.8 yards per attempt despite suffering a season-ending knee injury in October 2022. He was recently named the team’s 2023 Ed Block Courage Award winner for his dedication and approach to the rehab process.

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5891181 2023-12-11T10:52:47+00:00 2023-12-11T17:28:25+00:00
Broncos, Ja’Quan McMillian dominate Chargers, author another chapter in turnaround story: “This is the best defense, by far, I’ve ever been a part of” https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/10/broncos-beat-chargers-nfl-week-14-playoff-hunt/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 04:21:30 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5890884 INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Ja’Quan McMillian still couldn’t believe his misfortune after the game.

He thought he had a touchdown.

No, not thought.

“I know I did,” he said with a smile.

The grin, of course, came easily despite the fact that he’ll never watch tape of this game and believe Easton Stick’s hand was moving forward when McMillian rocked him, jarred the ball loose, picked it up on his own and ran it into the end zone.

The grin came easily because the Broncos’ bottle rocket of a nickelback is writing himself a starring role in this defense’s Hollywood turnaround story.

Credit for another dominating outing? That’s easy. He gets plenty.

Credit for helping turn the most maligned unit in the NFL into one of the most intimidating? Oh, yeah.

“The guy who has that athletic ability but also is smart is the perfect combination,” defensive end Zach Allen said of McMillian after the game. “… He’s been awesome and he’s been a huge reason why we’ve been winning these games.”

A 24-7 win here against the Los Angeles Chargers marked the Broncos’ first divisional road triumph in 1,526 days but also the team’s sixth victory in their past seven games.

It came on the strength of a defense embodied by its short-in-stature-only nickel.

“It’s fun when you’re making plays and all the guys are making plays and flying around and doing their job and focused on the details,” McMillian said. “And it’s fun when you’re winning. It’s always fun when you’re winning.”

The Broncos got back to that in a much-needed bounce back after last week’s last-second loss at Houston. Now they are 7-6, still the hottest team in the AFC West and have everything in front of them even if the path to the postseason remains studded with obstacles.

Denver Broncos wide receiver Courtland Sutton (14) makes a one-handed catch for a touchdown against Los Angeles Chargers cornerback Michael Davis (43) in the third quarter at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Denver Broncos wide receiver Courtland Sutton (14) makes a one-handed catch for a touchdown against Los Angeles Chargers cornerback Michael Davis (43) in the third quarter at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

In fact, they almost got tripped up right out of the gates against a reeling Los Angeles team.

After Denver’s defense started the game by forcing a punt, quarterback Russell Wilson threw a first-play interception deep in his own territory that set Justin Herbert and the Chargers up 13 yards from pay dirt.

Four plays later, however, Joseph’s group had the first of five fourth-down stops on the afternoon and kept the game scoreless.

“Sean and ‘VJ’ were talking about starting fast and we did exactly that,” said safety P.J. Locke, who provided coverage on Justin Herbert’s fourth-down pass into the end zone at that early pivot point and finished the game with seven tackles, a sack and forced fumble. “Once we did that, we were just in rhythm the entire game.

“That gave us a little boost right there.”

They were just getting started.

L.A. missed all 12 of its third-down tries, didn’t hit a fourth down until the fourth quarter and needed 49 minutes, 23 seconds before it got to the end zone.

Six different players logged a sack on Herbert and then Stick after Herbert was knocked out of the game with a fractured finger.

Inside linebacker Alex Singleton (14 tackles) snuffed out the Chargers’ first drive with a third-down takedown of Herbert, and safeties Locke and Justin Simmons blasted Stick in a three-play span around the two-minute warning to close out the half.

“It comes a time when you’ve got to pressure the quarterback and (Joseph) is calling the dogs,” Locke said. “Somebody’s going to make a play.”

That confidence has steadily grown over the past two-plus months as Joseph’s defense morphed from historically bad into a group that believes it can do anything.

“Instead of survival, you’re trying to excel, which is the way defense is made to be played,” said Allen, a centerpiece of the Broncos’ free agency play who played the first four years of his career for Joseph in Arizona. “VJ, he calls a great game and everyone is going to get their opportunities. It’s a really fun defense to be a part of.

“This is the best defense, by far, I’ve ever been a part of. It’s the most fun we’ve had playing football right now.”

A month from now, teams will be preparing for Wild Card weekend. If the Broncos are still kicking at that point, it will be in large part because Joseph’s group continues on this course.

They haven’t given up more than 22 points since a Week 5 loss to the New York Jets. That afternoon at Empower Field, the Jets rolled to 407 yards.

Then on a short week, Denver gave up 389 at Kansas City but only surrendered 19 points. In retrospect, it was the beginning of a major turnaround.

Not coincidentally, McMillian had three tackles for loss that night at Arrowhead Stadium.

All he’s done since then is make big plays.

Denver Broncos tight end Adam Trautman (82) slams the football down in celebration with quarterback Russell Wilson (3) after his touchdown against the Los Angeles Chargers in the fourth quarter at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. on Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. The Broncos won 24-7. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Denver Broncos tight end Adam Trautman (82) slams the football down in celebration with quarterback Russell Wilson (3) after his touchdown against the Los Angeles Chargers in the fourth quarter at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. on Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023. The Broncos won 24-7. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

All the Broncos have done since then is turn themselves into a contender for the playoffs — and, after the Chiefs lost Sunday at home to Buffalo, maybe even the AFC West — instead of the No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft.

None of it is unexpected to the kid from East Carolina, who’s gone from an undrafted practice squad player as a rookie to a Pro Bowl candidate in his second season.

All he wanted was a chance.

All the Broncos needed was a spark.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” McMillian said. “I’ve done this on every level if you go back. College I’ve done it. High school I’ve done it. But just to do it on this level, it’s a blessing.

“Whoever is watching, hopefully they find out who No. 29 is.”


AFC playoff race tightens up at the bottom

The race for the final two Wild Card spots in the AFC tightened up considerably Sunday, with six teams sitting at 7-6 by the end of the day. All told, 11 of 16 teams in the AFC will be above .500 heading into the final four weeks. That will give conference games an added degree of importance down the stretch, especially with one of the top playoff tiebreakers being record vs. conference opponents. The good news for the Broncos: They have the easiest remaining schedule of the 7-6 teams with just one opponent (Detroit) over .500. Here’s a look at where each team stands, including their remaining opponents:

Overall vs. AFC Week 15 Week 16 Week 17 Week 18 Opp. record
Pittsburgh 7-6 5-4 at Indianapolis (7-6) Cincinnati (7-6) at Seattle (6-7) at Baltimore (10-3) 30-22 (.576)
Indianapolis 7-6 5-4 Pittsburgh (7-6) at Atlanta (6-7) Las Vegas (5-8) Houston (7-6) 25-27 (.480)
Houston 7-6 4-4 at Tennessee (4-8) Cleveland (8-5) Tennessee (4-8) at Indianapolis (7-6) 23-27 (.460)
Denver 7-6 4-5 at Detroit (9-4) New England (3-10) L.A. Chargers (5-8) at Las Vegas (5-8) 22-30 (.423)
Buffalo 7-6 4-5 Dallas (9-3) at L.A. Chargers (5-8) New England (3-10) at Miami (9-3) 26-24 (.520)
Cincinnati 7-6 3-6 Minnesota (7-6) at Pittsburgh (7-6) at Kansas City (8-5) Cleveland (7-6) 30-22 (.576)

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5890884 2023-12-10T21:21:30+00:00 2023-12-10T22:06:21+00:00
Kiszla: It’s a horse race! The hot breath of the Broncos now on the neck of Patrick Mahomes in AFC West. https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/10/broncos-russell-wilson-courtland-sutton-chiefs-nfl-playoffs-mark-kiszla-column/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 04:05:25 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5890862 INGLEWOOD, Calif. — With the hot breath of Blucifer on the back of his neck, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes better not look back. The devil wears orange and blue, and he’s dangerously closer to the Chiefs than it might appear in their rearview mirror.

“We’re in a horse race,” quarterback Russell Wilson said Sunday, after the Broncos dismantled those Thunderdolts from Los Angeles. Denver routed the Chargers 24-7 in a game that was no contest after a devilish Denver defense broke the spirit and stole the soul of Los Angeles quarterback Justin Herbert with a goal-line stand early in the first quarter.

But enough of my silly football poetry. Let’s just stick to the facts, ma’am: Since the last Sunday in October, when they snapped a 16-game losing streak to Kansas City, the Broncos’ record is 6-1, while the dead Chiefs walking are 2-4.

Playoffs? Playoffs! Playoffs?

Yes, and a Wild Card berth is not the only prize the Broncos can aim for down the stretch of this NFL season. With four games remaining in the regular season, Denver finds itself only one game out of first place in the AFC West, a division the Chiefs have won seven years in a row.

By now you’ve memorized the M.O. of these Broncos. Play nasty defense, harass the quarterback, pound the rock and wait for one big play from quarterback Russell Wilson that, more times than not, seems to end with a no-freaking-way catch by Courtland Sutton.

“He’s like a big power forward,” said Broncos coach Sean Payton, admiring the way Sutton wins 50-50 balls as much with his muscle as his hops.

The big play that secured this W for Denver arrived with five minutes, 55 seconds remaining in the third quarter, when some jazzy improvisation between Wilson and Sutton resulted in a one-handed grab of a 46-yard touchdown pass that staked the Broncos to a 17-0 lead.

On a play that went delightfully off script when the Denver offensive line allowed Wilson more than six seconds to improvise before throwing the football, Sutton made touchdown magic by listening to a voice inside his head.

“Top down,” Sutton recalled. “Literally I heard (Wilson) in my head saying: ‘Top down.'”

Perception is the result of recognition. Exploit the space the defense has given.

The little confession by Sutton that Wilson was the little birdie in his ear delighted the veteran quarterback.

Sutton “did a great job, because he was going deep, came back for a second and then went deep again,” Wilson said.

That chemistry between a quarterback and receiver, in which no words needed to be spoken, was worth six points to the Broncos.

I mention this football ESP between Wilson and Sutton for a very specific reason. While nobody in the NFL mentions Wilson in the same breath as Mahomes when speaking of elite quarterbacks, anybody who has watched the championship reputation of the Chiefs slowly unravel can tell you this truth: The K.C. offense has been reduced to not much more than whatever magic can be conjured between Mahomes and tight end Travis Kelce.

While Mahomes and Kelce have connected on 80 passes for 896 yards and five touchdowns in 2023, Denver’s QB-WR1 duo has exceeded that production in the most important category, with Sutton hauling in 53 catches for 799 yards and 10 touchdowns — the most scores by any Broncos receiver in a single season since the late, great Demaryius Thomas in 2014.

“I try to play with a certain attitude and demeanor and it came from the way (Thomas) played the game,” Sutton said.

In a city where a gallon of regular gas costs $5.19, Los Angeles has too many problems the other six days of the week to worry about the Chargers on Sunday. Broncos Country achieved such an overwhelming and nearly unopposed takeover of SoFi Stadium that Denver linebacker Alex Singleton felt confident exhorting the crowd for noise before the snap of a fourth-down play by backup Easton Stick, who replaced Herbert after the most overrated quarterback in the NFL departed with a finger injury.

With a 7-6 record, there’s every reason to believe the Broncos can end their long playoff drought, so long as they sweep the remaining AFC teams on their schedule (the reeling Chargers, wretched Patriots and reprehensible Raiders).

All the AFC rivals ahead of Denver in the wild-card race now feel the hot breath of Blucifer on their necks. The Broncos are taking names, checking boxes and kicking keisters. The long playoff drought is close enough to being over that everybody who loves this team can almost taste the champagne.

Win by win and week by week, Payton noted, “It’s one less question about one more demon we have answered.”

Want more Broncos news? Sign up for the Broncos Insider to get all our NFL analysis.

]]>
5890862 2023-12-10T21:05:25+00:00 2023-12-10T21:25:38+00:00