The first sign of trouble came with a not-so-heated discussion, before the floodgates truly opened. A simple 9-yard out from Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence hit to Brian Thomas Jr. to further set up an end-of-half field goal, and he fell out of bounds, easy. Too easy. Broncos cornerback Pat Surtain II came over to discuss with safety P.J. Locke. Surtain’s hands splayed out. Something was amiss.
The second sign of trouble came with a punch to the mouth, with Denver already on the ropes. Jaguars wideout Parker Washington took another quick out in the third quarter, made Riley Moss miss, made Talanoa Hufanga miss, and strolled 63 yards down Mile High Lane. A touchdown later, and defensive end John Franklin-Myers trudged past a sideline of slouched shoulders, tugging off his helmet and going to chuck it. He thought better of it.
The third sign of trouble came with the finishing blow. Moss had Washington contained on a third-down grab in the fourth quarter, until he didn’t. Washington spun away again for a 24-yard gain. Moss lingered on his knees for a beat. Then took his palm and smacked the ground in front of him.
How many passing-game breakdowns have there been in recent weeks, for these Broncos?
“Too many,” head coach Sean Payton said, postgame.
Defensive players largely shrugged this off, after the Broncos’ three-month win streak was snapped Sunday night in a 34-20 loss to the Jaguars. Because what else is them for there to do? Denver’s still a 12-win team, as linebacker Alex Singleton pointed out postgame
“I’m not going to sit here and let you guys (expletive) on our parade,” Singleton chuckled. He grinned. His eyes didn’t really grin. “We have two games to go to be the number-one seed in the AFC.”
There’s no mistaking it, though: these Broncos have issues on the back-end to fix across those next two games and beyond, to play as deep as they’d like to. Lawrence picked defensive coordinator’s Vance Joseph scheme apart for four quarters, often sniffing out third-down blitzes and smoothly depositing the ball to his playmakers in a 23-of-36, 279-yard, three-touchdown performance. Payton said postgame that such a porous defensive performance “better be” an anomaly, and there’s plenty of reason to believe so.
Look deeper, though, and Sunday was not as much an anomaly as an eruption of bubbling issues. In the last four weeks, quarterbacks have combined for an 89.7 rating against Denver’s defense. The Commanders’ Marcus Mariota freewheeled his way on some zone-read concepts against the Broncos a few weeks back. The Packers’ Jordan Love dinked and dunked with abandon in the first half in Week 15. Lawrence blew the top off on Sunday.
They’ve all exploited the same nagging issues that haunted Joseph’s unit down the stretch of 2024 — as teams have targeted Bronco linebackers and safeties in advantageous matchups for a solid month. Here’s a quick roundup of tight-end performances against Denver’s defense in the last five weeks:
— Packers’ Luke Musgrave in Week 15: 4 catches, 52 yards.
Another matchup-problem gadget weapon reared his head Sunday, as the Jaguars’ Brenton Strange went for five catches for 39 yards. He ran away from Broncos linebacker Dre Greenlaw for a 23-yard gain midway through the second quarter. A few plays later, he boxed out Locke — with a bit of an obvious push-off — for a short touchdown.
“They scheme up plays pretty nicely,” Locke said, asked about problems containing tight ends and running backs in the passing game. “That’s it.
“I don’t think it’s problems. I don’t think it’s problems. That’s stuff we just gotta handle.”
Jacksonville head coach Liam Coen, though, repeatedly and obviously aimed at Bronco holes in coverage Sunday with a variety of targets. Greenlaw has been a step slow on a couple routes in recent weeks. Locke was effective against the run in his first start of the season at safety, but was picked on on a late-first-half field-goal drive by Jacksonville. Communication errors abounded, too, as Jacksonville went eight-of-15 on third downs.
On a short week before travelling to Kansas City for a Christmas Day game, the defense will gather to watch film Monday, Singleton said. They have overcome some early-season missed handoffs in match coverage before. And Singleton, for one, wants his unit to feel it, as he said.
“Like, am I happy about today? Not at all. It’s embarrassing,” Singleton said. “We shouldn’t do that. We need to play better. We need to get off the field. We need to make the plays.”
Just like 2024, however, the Broncos’ ability to make such plays will hinge on their health and stability at those two positions being attacked by play-callers: linebacker and safety. Denver signed Hufanga and Greenlaw in free agency to help beef up the Broncos’ coverage over the middle of the field. But Greenlaw suffered a hamstring injury Sunday after an already injury-plagued season, and Denver’s best coverage safety in Brandon Jones is on injured reserve.
There was plenty of verbal confidence from this Broncos defense in the locker room, on Sunday night. There was also a slight air of a unit shell-shocked.
“We gotta just stay in the fight, just keep going,” outside linebacker Jonathon Cooper said. “So we’ll figure out how to get better from this, for sure.”
With 3 weeks to go in the regular season, playoff spots are starting to be snatched up. With the Broncos, Seahawks and Rams being the first teams to clinch a playoff spot, many more will soon follow.
Including the Eagles, whose magic number jumped from 3 all the way to 1 on Sunday following a Raiders blowout and a Cowboys season that’s nearly over, courtesy of “Nine” and the Minnesota Vikings.
And the Eagles first opportunity to punch their ticket into the postseason comes a day earlier this week. With a Saturday night game against the Washington Commanders
The Last Match
January 26th 2025 was the last time these teams saw each other. In an NFC Championship Game division matchup. To end a conversation:
What would happen if Jalen Hurts played all 4 quarters of the Week 16 loss?
A game that saw the Eagles take a quick 14-0 lead that saw Hurts exit due to a concussion just 5 minutes into the game. The final score ended 36-33 after the Eagles defense couldn’t get a stop, and the offense led by Kenny Pickett could barely pick up a first down.
To open the NFC championship game, the Commanders led an 18 play, 54 yard drive that included two 4th down conversions and finished with 3 points. The Eagles answer to that drive? This Saquon Barkley60 yard TD on the Eagles opening play of the game.
What followed was an absolute rout. The Eagles saw a 12 point lead at halftime, before they took things personally and finished the game with a 21 point 4th quarter after forcing two turnovers by the Commanders.
Now, things will look a little different.
Saturday Night
Jayden Daniels has since been shut down for the season. With multiple injuries sidelining him for weeks at a time. Instead, the Eagles will play against their former backup QB Marcus Mariota who has lead his current team to a 1-3 record.
Having been eliminated from playoff contention weeks ago, the Commanders will have nothing to play for but draft position, and attempting to foil the Eagles playoff/seeding hopes.
However with a laundry list of injuries ranging from Laremy Tunsil, and Colson Yankoff listed Out for this week. With names like Trey Amos, Luke McCaffrey, Zach Ertz, Marshon Lattimore and Dorance Armstrong already on injured reserve, the Commanders will be thin at numerous positions. Hoping the Eagles can take advantage of a depleted team that thought they could repeat a 12-5 Cinderella run from only a year ago.
There are still things that absolutely remind us of his inexperience. But they don’t matter. Not anymore. Not this season, because the Broncos have reached the point of no looking back.
Against the best opponent they have faced, the Broncos knocked out the Packers, 34-26, on Sunday to clinch a second-consecutive playoff berth, while moving closer to securing the AFC’s top seed with a one-game lead over the Patriots.
If the road to the postseason goes through Denver, then it ends in Santa Clara for the Broncos. It is that simple.
No team is coming to Empower Field at Mile High with this altitude and with these fans and walking away with a win. For so long, the Broncos’ play suggested they would be an easy mark in the postseason, a notion reinforced by their winning their last five games by a combined 17 points.
Nobody is suggesting that anymore. Not now. Not after Dre Greenlaw screamed in the Packers’ face before the game and Nix punched them in the throat during it.
The Broncos will host Jacksonville next week, then face the Chiefs on Christmas without Patrick Mahomes, and finish with the Chargers. They can win out. Writing the sentence seems blasphemous since not even the 1998 powerhouse won 15 regular-season games.
If nothing else, the Broncos forced critics to shut up. By Nix playing the way he did, the Broncos squelched doubts. He was the reason they were so vulnerable, right? He sat in the cockpit of a mediocre offense that required finishes featuring everything but Al Michaels screaming, “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!”
Say that now with a straight face. The Texans are the best defense Nix has encountered, but the Packers are the most balanced. And all Nix did was complete 23 of 34 passes for 302 yards and four touchdowns.
Wide receiver Courtland Sutton (14) of the Denver Broncos pulls down a touchdown reception in front of cornerback Keisean Nixon (25) of the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, at Empower Field at Mile High Stadium in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
“He had a day, didn’t he?” mused receiver Courtland Sutton, who caught one of Nix’s touchdowns.
Green Bay’s Jordan Love looked like a more talented quarterback, especially when he collected 215 yards in the first half. But Nix was more efficient, more versatile, and once again closed like Mariano Rivera.
A fourth-and-2 from the 41-yard line with 9:08 remaining provided a snapshot of his performance.
Sean Payton called a timeout. The Broncos clung to a 27-26 lead.
Earlier in the season, they punt, and let the defense go to work. No questions. No discussion. There was no debate this time, either. It was time to go for the bold, a choice unthinkable two months ago when the Broncos’ offense looked more awkward than a giraffe on ice skates.
Payton dialed up a sideline strike to Sutton, which was eerily similar to the third-down play that failed. Forget what a coach says. You can tell how much he believes in a quarterback by the way he calls the game.
Head coach Sean Payton of the Denver Broncos, left, greets head coach Matt Lafleur of the Green Bay Packers after a 34-26 Broncos win on Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, at Empower Field at Mile High Stadium in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
In the biggest moment, Payton put the ball in Nix’s hands. And he lofted it into Sutton’s paws for a 26-yard gain. Four plays later, the Broncos scored. All the theories that Love would outplay Nix, that the kid would wilt in the spotlight were drown out by the full-throat cheers of 75,555 fans.
“Bo has every single trait imaginable,” explained tight end Adam Trautman. “He’s super smart, super mobile; a huge part of his game that I don’t think a lot of people understand. You saw it all kind of come into fruition today.”
Nix was in his bag.
His dart to Lil’Jordan Humphrey for a score was the equivalent of a Paul Skenes’ fastball on the black. His pass to a leaping Troy Franklin was such a tight spiral you could have hung laundry on it. And the corner rainbow to a diving Sutton came with a velvet touch.
Earlier in the week, Nix was asked about nobody believing in the Broncos. He said his mother thought Denver would win. He delivered the answer tongue in cheek. He delivered passes on Sunday with a fist into the chest.
“After that first score he had this swagger about him that was really, really cool to see,” right tackle Mike McGlinchey said. “It’s been building the last few weeks and he was on fire. He is feeding off us as much as we are feeding off him. You look into his eyes and he’s saying, ‘Give me the ball.’^”
Faced with scrutiny and pointed criticism after a vomit-on-sweater performance against the Raiders last month, Nix regained his footing, finding traction as coach Payton started calling plays for who Bo is, not who he wants him to be.
The results are eye-opening over the past four games: 69.4 completion percentage on 154 passes with five touchdowns and one interception.
Against the Packers, Nix was supposed to get exposed. But it was Pat Surtain II’s interception of Love that flipped the script, left the Broncos playing downhill.
Denver looked nothing like a team that has trailed in all but one victory this season.
Defensive tackle Malcolm Roach (97) of the Denver Broncos celebrates the defense sacking quarterback Jordan Love (10) of the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, at Empower Field at Mile High Stadium in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
“We continue to prove over and over that our defense is going to play stout when need to and and our offense, we deliver when we have to,” Nix said. “As a team I think we are playing as good as we can play right now.”
The Broncos were better offensively, outgaining the Packers 391-362. They pressured with more purpose, posting three sacks to the Packers’ goose egg.
And the red-faced zone became a rumor. The Broncos went 4-for-4 on touchdowns inside the 20-yard line, compared to 1-for-4 for the Packers. Watching Brandon McManus kick field goals brought back memories of why Denver used to lose with regularity before Payton arrived.
The difference? The Broncos did not have Nix. A quarterback they trust. We no longer have to squint our eyes and think of Elway was like or what Manning could do. Those are heirlooms of the mind.
This was always Nix’s team. Sunday showed, it’s his time.
When the Las Vegas Raiders hired Pete Carroll to be their head coach in January, it was hard to imagine him getting fired within 12 months. He is a highly accomplished coach at both the NCAA and NFL levels, and as most remember, he guided the Seattle Seahawks to the Super Bowl championship in the 2013 season and came very close to winning another one the following year.
But the Raiders are tied for the NFL’s worst record at 2-11 and have a seven-game losing streak, and there are rumors that Carroll could be on the hot seat. They already fired Chip Kelly, another accomplished coach whom they hired to be Carroll’s offensive coordinator, after their Week 12 loss to the Cleveland Browns, and one has to wonder what direction they may head on if they want to give Carroll the axe.
ESPN insider Dan Graziano wrote in a recent article that he feels Vance Joseph, the Denver Broncos‘ defensive coordinator, could end up replacing Carroll.
“Joseph seems to be the name we’re hearing the most, because of Denver’s defensive success and his previous head coach experience (with Denver, oddly enough),” Graziano wrote. “People close to the situation point out that Joseph never had a stable quarterback situation in his first head coaching stint and didn’t have full autonomy over the hiring of his staff, so it would seem unfair to completely hold his 11-21 record against him. I think he gets several interviews and could be a strong candidate in a place such as Las Vegas, should that job come open.”
After a brief playing career in the NFL during the 1990s, Joseph spent many years as an assistant coach at the college and pro levels before becoming the Broncos’ head coach for the 2017 and 2018 seasons when they were rebuilding following Peyton Manning’s retirement. Denver fired him at the end of the 2018 campaign, and after four years as the Arizona Cardinals’ defensive coordinator, he returned to Denver in that same capacity.
Denver’s defense has dramatically improved under Joseph’s guidance. This season, the team is fourth in points allowed and third in total yards allowed, and even though the Broncos’ offense has been rather average overall, their defense has propelled them to an 11-2 record, which ties them with the New England Patriots for the NFL’s best record.
Las Vegas’ defense hasn’t been quite as bad as its offense this year, but it has been fairly weak. Perhaps Joseph could make something significant happen on that side of the football in 2026, especially with a superstar pass rusher such as Maxx Crosby.
Given Raiders quarterback Geno Smith’s substandard play this season and the uncertainty about his future with the team, perhaps it would be best for the franchise to embrace winning mostly with defense, as the Broncos have. Joseph could perhaps help build such a culture and resurrect the franchise after some two decades of mostly ineptitude.
Philip Rivers is back in an Indianapolis Colts uniform for the first time since he retired from the game of football following the 2020 season in which he led the team to an 11-6 season and a playoff appearance.
“Certainly, I wasn’t really hanging on to any hope of playing again. I kind of thought that ship had sailed. But something about it excited me. And it’s kind of one of those deals; the door opens and you can either walk through it and find out if you can do it or run from it,” Rivers said this week after being signed to the Colts practice squad after the season-ending Achilles injury to starting quarterback Daniel Jones.
While Rivers is stealing all of the headlines, the Colts reportedly attempted to land another quarterback as well.
In a conversation with the Denver Post, Broncos quarterback Sam Ehlinger revealed he received an offer from the Colts to rejoin the team with which he spent his first four seasons.
“We’re really happy here and enjoy the organization, the path we’re on and what we’re building,” Ehlinger said. “I want to be part of that. I was in Indianapolis for four years, and I love everybody over there. It’s just a difficult situation, obviously.”
Ehlinger had a chance to join the Colts active roster, but ultimately decided to remain on the Broncos practice squad.
He cannot respond to them all, of course. They come in hordes, from men and their wives and girlfriends across the world, people who have been stung with the same shock as he got after a visit to a urologist three weeks ago. It has been a whirlwind, Singleton admitted Wednesday. But he has not gotten swept away. He sees them.
With those messages comes responsibility, the 31-year-old Singleton knows. On his first day back practicing in Denver, weeks after surgery to remove a testicular tumor, a reporter asked him Wednesday: “Do you consider yourself an inspiration?”
The Broncos linebacker smiled, choosing his words carefully, well aware of the impact they could bring.
“It’s kinda not the greatest thing to talk about,” Singleton said, midway through a long response. “People don’t like talking about that area of their bodies, especially men. So, being able to stand here and do that, do I think it’s inspirational? I don’t know.
“But do I think I have a platform that I can share what I’m going through, to make sure everybody else understands that it’s OK, and to go to the doctor, and that early detection is good for you.”
A few weeks after finding out he had testicular cancer, a whirlwind of testing and waiting and more testing, Singleton resumed practicing Wednesday. He tugged back on a uniform with plenty of weight on his shoulder pads. Back as the green-dot signal-caller of this league-altering Broncos defense.
Between the white lines, though, one can let everything go, as Singleton said Wednesday. And the linebacker was simply happy to be back in uniform, a 31-year-old man who still describes himself as “like a little kid in this game.”
“The ACL was enough to appreciate it — I don’t know if I needed this,” Singleton said, chuckling, Wednesday, referring to his comeback from a torn ACL in 2024. “But you definitely appreciate all the little things. And, so, yeah. I love this game. Practice was the best.”
Head coach Sean Payton said the Broncos knew before last week’s bye that Singleton would be cleared for practice during Commanders week. And Singleton now has a real shot to make an appearance against Washington on Sunday Night Football — less than three weeks after announcing a cancer diagnosis — saying Wednesday he was “tracking” toward playing.
“The scans and all of that stuff were important, and when those came back positive, man, the relief, just for Alex — never mind the football player,” Payton said.
Indeed, despite his love for the game, there was a brief stretch where football didn’t matter a lick, as Singleton indicated. He’d talked to doctors about life possibilities, in general. Chemotherapy. Fertility. If he could have more children (he has one daughter, Tallyn).
He still doesn’t like saying the word “cancer” often, Singleton joked Wednesday. He’s still processing the last few weeks. He’s still undergoing testing to continue to make sure the disease hasn’t spread.
In the meantime, he will return to football as an advocate after his life has changed forever.
“It’s gonna be special,” Singleton said of playing again. “The ACL is — you come back from those. Everyone comes back from those now.
“But yeah, not a lot of cancer research on coming back and playing football.”
The Broncos have locked up another key member of one of the best-performing offensive lines in football.
On Tuesday night, Denver agreed to a four-year extension with center Luke Wattenberg, sources confirmed to The Denver Post. It’s a four-year, $48 million extension for Wattenberg, a source confirmed, with $27 million guaranteed.
The deal ties Wattenberg with the New Orleans Saints’ Erik McCoy as the fifth-highest-paid center in the NFL, with an average value of $12 million yearly.
The move comes just a day after head coach Sean Payton told reporters that he and general manager George Paton had spent time before last week’s bye discussing extensions and initiating conversations with a handful of players.
“The key is not affecting the mojo or how your team’s doing,” Payton said. “I’m always sensitive to that, especially when you’re playing well, because sometimes those can be difficult discussions.”
The Broncos clearly moved quick with Wattenberg, whose rookie deal was set to expire after the 2025 season. The crop of available 2026 free-agent centers was fairly slim, and Wattenberg would’ve likely commanded a hefty sum on the open market. Still, Wattenberg’s extension — if signed as a free agent in the offseason — would’ve made him the third-highest-paid center in 2025 free agency, behind the Bears’ Drew Dalman and the Jaguars’ Patrick Mekari.
The 28-year-old Wattenberg has become an integral part of a Broncos offensive front that currently ranks fourth in the NFL in pass-block win rate and ninth in run-block win rate, according to ESPN. Wattenberg won the starting job prior to the 2024 season in his third year in the league, authoring a strong year in pass protection in front of rookie quarterback Bo Nix.
“I think you’re going to see an ascension,” Payton said of Wattenberg during minicamp. “He’s exceptionally smart. I like his frame. He loves football. So I think that first year full-time starting is going to benefit him greatly.”
Wattenberg has started all 11 games in 2025, surrendering 10 pressures and committing eight penalties. The latter figure is second in the NFL among all centers, according to Pro Football Focus.
The deal continues a trend of Broncos leadership locking down its starting offensive line, as Denver has committed major money to the front in front of Nix. Denver inked All-Pro guard Quinn Meinerz to a four-year, $80 million deal in 2024’s offseason, and followed with an $82 million extension for stalwart left tackle Garett Bolles in December.
The Broncos drafted Wattenberg in the fifth round in 2022, after the center played five years at Washington.
But the Chiefs won a small battle that could prove important, in the weeks to come.
A few days after Denver’s landmark 22-19 win over Kansas City, the Broncos quietly maneuvered to try to sign running back Dameon Pierce, a 2022 fourth-round pick by the Houston Texans. After rushing for 939 yards as a rookie, Pierce’s production had slipped for three straight years, and Houston officially cut bait with the 25-year-old on Thursday. Pierce cleared waivers, and the Broncos put a contract in front of him, a source told The Denver Post.
Pierce signed a practice-squad deal with the Chiefs instead.
The choice could be meaningless in the grand scheme of things, but the Broncos’ interest in the 215-pound Pierce makes clear, at the very least, that Denver isn’t completely settled in life on the ground without J.K. Dobbins.
“Thought it was good,” Broncos head coach Sean Payton said of the team’s run-game, after the Kansas City win. “Good enough.”
Good enough might not be good enough during the next six weeks and likely playoff run without Dobbins, the bell-cow back who the Broncos placed on injured reserve Nov. 15 with a foot injury. The Broncos came into that Chiefs matchup ranked ninth in the NFL in rushing at 128.6 yards per game, as Payton often turned to Dobbins in the second half of games when his passing game struggled. They finished with just 21 carries for 59 yards total against Kansas City, and were largely carried by a monster effort from second-year quarterback Bo Nix.
Teams will likely scheme to take away Nix’s weapons in the passing games come January, though — from Courtland Sutton to Marvin Mims — and dare the Broncos to beat them on the ground without Dobbins. At present, there’s a minimal amount of experience and a minimal amount of demonstrated 2025 production in Denver’s backfield.
One key piece on the roster is third-year back Jaleel McLaughlin, who immediately leapt from gameday inactive into a key role as the Broncos’ No. 2 RB against the Chiefs. And one didn’t need much context to sense how much a goal-line touchdown against Kansas City meant to McLaughlin, who blew a few kisses to the crowd in Denver and roared after a ferocious backward push sent him over the plane in the third quarter.
“With Jaleel’s situation, just from the beginning of the season until now – I think he’s handled it very well,” receiver Troy Franklin said Monday. “He stayed ready. And when it came to one of our biggest games of the season so far, he showed up and he did what he needed to do for us.”
That may be just the start for McLaughlin. Third-string RB Tyler Badie’s role wasn’t going to change, cemented as head coach Sean Payton’s third-down back. Rookie RB RJ Harvey has produced in fits and starts this season. McLaughlin wound up earning six carries against Kansas City and two key goal-line reps in the third quarter, and could be in the line for plenty more in the coming weeks.
“Jaleel had a handful of good runs,” Payton said Monday. “I think with the flow of a normal game, he’s going to be important for us in this stretch.”
McLaughlin’s sheer heart, though, won’t carry the Broncos’ backfield for two months. Particularly in short-yardage situations. Denver is now absent a heavier back on the roster. Rookie Harvey is the largest option, at 5-foot-8 and 205 pounds. Badie weighs in at 197, and McLaughlin stands at all of 5-foot-7. Practice-squad stash Deuce Vaughn is 5-foot-6 and 176 pounds.
The Broncos made the decision to bring in Dobbins in the spring to have a veteran presence next to rookie Harvey. Pierce would’ve checked both boxes as a backfield addition, a Houston product in his fourth season who profiles as a more traditional power back.
There aren’t many appealing options floating around the free-agent market. Veteran Zack Moss ran for just 3.3 yards a carry last season before being benched in Cincinnati, and 30-year-old Jamaal Williams ran for 17 touchdowns in 2022 with the Lions but cratered in 2023 and 2024 with the Saints. The Broncos could look at 28-year-old Chris Evans, a former Cincinnati Bengal who they brought in for a tryout this offseason; they could also try to pry Pierce off the Chiefs’ practice squad, but that’d require offering him a spot on the active 53-man roster.
If Denver stands pat, they’ll need considerable inside-the-tackles production from rookie Harvey, who finished with just 30 yards on 11 carries Sunday. And continued change-of-pace juice from McLaughlin. And third-down consistency from Badie.
On Sundays this fall, Robert Bryant and 70-some other inmates at Lancaster Work Camp in Trenton, Florida, gathered in the facility’s dayroom around a 50-inch Samsung flatscreen television. They had to share. They shared everything. They slept in rows of bunk beds with no separation, and took turns using four showers and four toilets that had no stalls and no walls.
But on Sundays, Robert demanded the TV be tuned to whatever game the Denver Broncos were playing. And demanded nobody change the channel. This was his window into his best friend’s journey, some 1,750 miles away.
Pat Bryant and Robert Bryant first met playing youth football in the seventh grade in Duval County, Florida, and have called each other cousin ever since. They are not actually related. Or maybe they are. They’ve never traced the family tree far back enough. But they share the same surname and were raised upon an edict that snakes through the streets of Jacksonville.
“Loyalty,” Robert said on a call with The Denver Post in early November. “Loyalty comes first.”
Pat Bryant has never forgotten that, from Duval County to Illinois to the Broncos, through years fighting the gravitational pull that’s torn apart his inner circle. In March 2022, Robert was arrested for armed robbery and carrying a concealed firearm. Through the four-year sentence that followed, Bryant added money to an online Securus account so Robert could call him anytime. And Robert did.
“He kept me from going insane,” Robert said.
In mid-September, Bryant stood at his locker in Denver, gesturing at his phone. The rookie Broncos wide receiver pulled up his Securus app, and scrolled through several contacts at correctional facilities around Florida. ROBERT BRYANT. WALTER ROSAS. Bryant pointed to his notifications, where a voicemail from the Florida Department of Corrections awaited.
“See, them boys blowing me up right now,” he told The Post.
About eight or nine of his friends from Jacksonville are in jail, Bryant estimated. Sometimes he tries to help them or their families out.
“Every now and then, I’ll probably send about $1500,” he said. “But that (expletive) add up. With six, seven of them boys, that (expletive) add up.”
Bryant trailed off. He mumbled, looking back at his phone.
“That (expletive) add up.”
From the day that Robert met him in the seventh grade, Bryant wanted out of Duval County. Family was the foundation, and football was the vessel. It was easy to “fall into the street life” in Jacksonville, Robert reflected. But the street life had nothing for Bryant, his father, Patrick Sr., said. He tried to bring friends along with him. He begged them to stay straight. Not all of them heeded his words.
In Denver, Bryant has reached heights they all once saw for themselves on the fields of Jacksonville. He caught five passes for 82 yards in the Broncos’ 22-19 win over the Chiefs last Sunday, and he has established a foothold in head coach Sean Payton’s offense.
Bryant has left Duval County behind, but Robert and many others still live through his eyes. Bryant has not let them go, wherever he’s gone.
“This (expletive) like a dream come true,” he said in September. “… I see it as my livelihood. This is how I’m finna feed my family. I gotta do this for a minute. This don’t last forever. My main focus — trying to make some sort of mark, whether it’s on the field, off the field, whatever it is, just leave some sort of mark.
“So when I hang my jersey up, people gon’ remember who I am.”
Pat Bryant (13) of the Denver Broncos takes the field before the game against the Tennessee Titans at Empower Field at Mile High on Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
•••
Patrick Bryant Sr. once served as the athletic director of the Police Athletic League of Jacksonville. He spent long days monitoring games on weekends, so his son rarely went straight home after Pop Warner.
The idle hours after Bryant Jr. actually touched a football were often the most fun — he and friends running their imagination across the grass in Duval County.
They invented their own game. The rules were simple. They found an empty Gatorade bottle and tossed it high in the air. Whoever caught it had to run to a nearby gate to score. If they got tackled, though, they had to fling the bottle back into the air.
They called it throw ’em up, bust ’em up.
“I used to throw it, get tackled, throw it up, just keep catching that (expletive),” Bryant remembered. “When I got tired, I’d throw it up. Let somebody catch it. Then, I was gon’ tackle their ass.”
When Bryant put on a helmet, his Pop Warner team often struggled with blocking. Young kids don’t love blocking. Bryant was the exception. He sometimes waddled up to his father and asked if he needed to play center or guard. Then he’d sneak up on someone, and — before it was rendered illegal — throw a mean blind-side block.
The hits always made crowds murmur, Bryant Sr. remembered.
His son was fearless, Bryant Sr. said. But he still needed protection. The Bryants moved into a gated, middle-class neighborhood in Duval County because Bryant Sr. knew his kids — three boys, one girl — knew plenty of other kids who were in gangs.
Bryant had love, stability and friends. His friends didn’t all have the same. So he brought them over to his house. He met Robert in the seventh grade, and Robert still remembers Bryant throwing him a block that sprung him for his first touchdown. Bryant met 6-foot-6, 340-pound tackle Walter Rosas and basketball star Alim Denson, too. The four went on to play football together at Atlantic Coast High in Jacksonville.
“They stayed at our house on the regular,” Bryant’s mother, Louanne Harris-Bryant, said. “They came to visit Pat. But they ended up being surrogate sons to us.”
Everyone was subject to the rules. No drugs. No alcohol. No going to anyone else’s place unless the Bryants knew who, what and where. Any girls who came over had to sit on the couch — with parents in the room.
“So,” Bryant Sr. recalled, “it was no funny business going around.”
Robert still clings to the memories. The four of them in the car after football practice one day, bumping a friend’s unreleased song before dropping Robert off at his house. Singing. Dancing.
“It wasn’t no care in the world,” Robert recalled.
The city’s temptations dragged them out of that car, away from innocence.
“Everybody know how Jacksonville is,” Robert said. “How, people talking crazy, this, that, this, that. You feel like you gotta prove a point. It pull you deeper into the streets.”
Illinois wide receiver Pat Bryant is kissed by his mom after the team’s 23-17 upset win over Kansas after an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024, in Champaign, Ill. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
•••
When Bryant was 13, one of his friends died from gun violence.
Loss, of one kind or another, has piled up since.
Rosas once had FCS and Group of Five scholarship offers, Atlantic Coast football coach Mike Montemayor recalled. He was sentenced to a seven-year prison sentence in 2022, on two counts of robbery with a deadly weapon. Denson was the captain of Atlantic Coast’s basketball team, and grew so close with Bryant that they called each other “twin.” He was sentenced to five years in county jail in 2022, on multiple counts related to grand theft auto and attempting to flee the scene of a crash.
Robert, who’d lost his father at 12 years old, stopped caring about football.
Bryant used to tell Robert that he had to make it for his friends and his dad. They wouldn’t want you to do this, Bryant told him.
“It was a challenge,” Robert said. “Going in one ear, and out the other. I went the whole opposite way. When, I wish — I wish, I should’ve listened to him.”
Montemayor used to tell Bryant: The sooner you leave, the better. Jacksonville would always be Jacksonville, he said. Nothing would change. And Bryant knew football was the exit lane.
He didn’t run much track and field in high school. He didn’t have blazing speed. Eventually, his 4.61-second 40-yard dash at the NFL combine became one of the biggest knocks on him as a prospect. Instead, Bryant honed in on his strengths as a receiver. He started catching 50 balls before and after practices to cut down on drops, Harris-Bryant recalled.
“I surrounded myself around people, like, I shouldn’t have been around,” Bryant recalled. “But I had the courage and the heart to, like – ‘Nah, I’m gonna go a different route.’”
In January 2023, as Bryant was slowly finding his footing in his second year at Illinois, Bryant Sr. sent his son a news story.
Denson had died in prison.
“That really shook him up,” Bryant Sr. remembered. “That shook him up for a while.”
Bryant couldn’t save his friends. He still tried. But he realized how to save himself after he lost his first friend at 13.
“That’s when that hit,” Bryant said when asked about when he knew he wanted out. “Like … ‘Two ways to this (expletive). You’re either gonna be dead, or in jail.’”
•••
In February, Broncos receivers coach Keary Colbert took a seat with Bryant at a table at the draft combine in Indianapolis. Colbert had a standard list of football questions to get through in 10 minutes, the same he asked every player on their first meeting.
They began talking. And talking. They talked about Jacksonville, and Illinois, and life in general. Colbert realized, with 10 minutes almost up, that he hadn’t asked a single question about football. He resolved to schedule a follow-up Zoom with Bryant.
And then they went back to just talking.
“I knew, sitting across from him at that little informal table … I knew he was a dog,” Colbert told The Post. “Like, I can tell he was a dog. You know what I mean? At that point, I knew what he was as a person, as a player.”
Illinois wide receiver Pat Bryant runs the 40-yard dash at the NFL football scouting combine in Indianapolis, Saturday, March 1, 2025. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
The personality was infectious, Colbert recalled. The film was, too. The blocking, the toughness and the 6-foot-3 frame jumped out to the Broncos’ staff. All the characteristics of the Sean Payton receiver archetype.
“If they don’t bite when they’re puppies, they generally never do,” Payton said in October. “And so, you saw it.”
It was not easy at first. Payton barked at Bryant multiple times in one open camp practice. He yanked him from one team rep.
That did nothing to his confidence.
In one September practice, Bryant lined up opposite former Broncos receiver Trent Sherfield on special teams and told the 29-year-old veteran that he “wouldn’t get downfield,” as Sherfield remembered.
“Even just at the beginning of training camp, the one thing I realized about Pat,” Sherfield told The Post, “was that he’s not afraid of anything.”
Slowly, Bryant has carved out a role in Payton’s offense by doing the dirty work. He’s told running backs to “find 13” on a block if they want to score, he said with glee after an October game. Bryant has won matchups over the middle with physicality and footwork, despite not possessing breakaway speed, and has racked up 10 catches for 185 yards in his last four games.
It’s just throw ’em up, bust ’em up in Denver. Different time. Different place. Same kid.
“If you’re good at the sport, you gon’ thrive, man,” Bryant said when asked in September about compensating for speed. “If you get to worrying about, ‘What advantage I got’ – I mean, obviously, you watch film. That’s a different story.
“But when you think about advantages and all that, my mindset’s like, ‘Bruh, where we’re going, I’m better than you. I don’t give a (expletive) about no stats. None of that. I’m a better football player than you.’”
Pat Bryant (13) of the Denver Broncos celebrates catching a touchdown pass from Bo Nix (10) during the second quarter against the Dallas Cowboys at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
•••
On Sunday, Oct. 26, Robert Bryant and the members of Lancaster Work Camp sat in the dayroom watching Broncos-Cowboys on that Samsung. Late in the second quarter, Robert saw Bryant isolate to the left side of the formation. His excitement rose.
Robert watched Bryant burst off the line, beat his man, and haul in a 25-yard ball from Bo Nix for his first NFL touchdown. He watched his friend turn to the crowd at Empower Field and hit the Mile High Salute — a move that instantly made Bryant a fan favorite in Denver.
Across the country in Trenton, Robert started jumping up and down and cheering so fiercely that a correctional officer stepped in.
You’re yelling too loud, Robert recalled the officer saying.
Listen, man, Robert replied. That right there’s my brother. He just scored.
“I’m almost finna cry,” Robert said.
Not everyone picked up when Robert called across his four years in jail. Bryant did. He flipped the camera on video calls and showed his friend around Illinois’ facility.
You almost home, Bryant told his friend. When you get out, come up here.
Rosas cries almost every night now, thinking of Bryant, three years into his seven-year sentence at the Jackson Correctional Institution in Malone, Florida. A year and a half ago, Rosas got into a prison fight and was stabbed 14 times, he told The Post. Family members and Bryant held their breath.
The first phone call he made to Bryant, after a month in solitary confinement, both haunts and galvanizes Rosas. He hears the pain, still, tearing through his best friend’s voice.
What are you doing, bro? I already lost Alim. I thought I lost you, too.
“There’s some times, I’ve felt down in here, man,” Rosas told The Post, his voice trembling over a jail phone. “I wanted to give up so much, man. But I know – I know I can’t do it. For him. I gotta do it for him. Alim already died in here. I gotta make it home.”
Bryant still talks to Rosas almost every day, and the two have made a plan for the 6-foot-6 Rosas to become Bryant’s personal security guard when his sentence is done in 2028. Almost three years after Denson’s death, the 22-year-old Bryant is now the godfather of his old friend’s daughter, too.
“He always told us, like, ‘Man, we good,” Robert recalled. “‘We’re gon’ make it out of here. Just keep playing sports. We gon’ make it.’”
“Sure enough, he made it,” Robert added. “And he ain’t leave nobody behind.”
On Nov. 3 at 8 a.m., Robert Bryant was released from Lancaster Work Camp after successfully completing his sentence. He got home and got his phone.
The city is preparing to transform the decommissioned rail yard into a mix of residential, retail and more to surround the planned retractable roof stadium, which city leaders hope will draw other large-scale events to the city.
At the nearby La Alma Recreation Center Wednesday night, the city kicked off a series of community meetings to hear resident feedback about the new stadium plan, specifically for what the city is calling the Burnham Yard Small Area Plan.
Hundreds of people showed up to the open house, including the mayor as well as representatives from the city and the Broncos.
The community feedback period is expected to last a year. Wednesday’s meeting focused on broader visions and values, while the next meeting in February is expected to include concept alternatives for the project.
Denver Broncos
“You’ll have activations every single day of the year, it’s not just game day,” Denver Mayor Mike Johnston told reporters at the open house. “This will be a great place to live, or to come to dinner at a restaurant, or to come to shop, whether you’re coming to a game or not… You’ll have activations every single day of the year. It’s not just game day.”
Johnston said the project will be “an unprecedented economic boost for this neighborhood and for the city,” and that during the public feedback period people will “have a lot of input into what the types of uses… they want to see here.”
Michael Hughes, a metro resident and transportation advocate with the West Corridor Transportation Management Association, says he wants the stadium “to fit into all the ways that we can travel: train, bus, carpool, all of it.”
“I just imagined that the owners of the Broncos, who travel by private jet because they can, would pick a place where they could land a private jet and walk across the street to a new stadium in a suburban location,” Hughes told Denver7. “So I’m surprised and actually really encouraged that they chose to stay in Denver.”
Michael Hughes
Hughes says he is confident an expanded RTD station at 10th and Osage on one side of the stadium and plans for Front Range Passenger Rail on the other side will eventually come to fruition and give the project and the nearby neighborhoods much-needed transportation flexibility.
“So far it looks to me like they’re really thinking about this in the way that Coors Field developers and the Rockies thought about it,” he said. “That the building should be part of the city, it should fit into the neighborhood, it should be walkable. The transportation should work for the surrounding neighborhood as well as for the stadium itself. So I’m encouraged that this is gonna fit in really well.”
Johnston says the city wants to “end the era of the old stadiums, where you have a stadium with 80 acres of parking lots around it.”
“What we want is a place that’s a great activation on game day, but is a place where people live and work all the time, and that feels like it’s connected to the history and the place,” he said.
Several residents in nearby neighborhoods like La Alma-Lincoln Park, however, are wary about the changes the project could bring, including traffic, safety and affordability.
Denver7
Denver Mayor Mike Johnston speaks with Misty Lubin-Salazar after she expressed concerns about the Burnham Yard project’s impact to the surrounding neighborhoods.
One woman, Misty Lubin-Salazar, raised her concern at the end of Johnston’s press conference, asking him what he can do to assure residents that they won’t be forced out of the community. The two then chatted for a few minutes.
Lubin-Salazar has lived near the proposed stadium site for 15 years, with family in the area for more than 40 years.
Misty Lubin-Salazar
“It’s definitely an exciting prospect to have the stadium just right down the street, but at the same time, really concerned about the residents that are already here and making sure that we’re not going to be driven out by rising property taxes, or making it unaffordable for both home ownership and rental properties as well,” she told Denver7.
Johnston told reporters and Lubin-Salazar that the community feedback process won’t be rushed, and there is time to address those concerns and form a community benefits agreement.
“That is reassuring,” Lubin-Salazar said afterward. “But [they] also need to make sure that there are the right people kind of at the table, that are going to raise awareness and have those conversations with whoever needs to have them.”
The stadium is set to open in 2031.
Check out the Broncos’ full Large Development Review pre-application in the document below:
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J.K. Dobbins, your offensive MVP for Weeks 1-10, is lost for the season. You’re replacing those touches by committee from here on out. A dash of RJ Harvey. A smidgen of Jaleel McLaughlin, now your best downhill, between-the-tackles runner by default.
But might we humbly suggest replacing a pinch of Tyler Badie with more pinches of Mims out of the backfield?
Or Mims out of the slot?
Or Mims out of anywhere?
You can fake a run game over the last seven games of the regular season. You know when you can’t fake it? Against Buffalo or Baltimore in mid-January. Even at home with 80,000 Broncomaniacs at your back, screaming to Mile High Heaven.
“(When) I get the ball. I want to make the most out of it,” Mims told me this past summer. “That’s something I pride myself in, is being an explosive playmaker.
“So being a ‘gadget’ guy is a good thing; when someone (ESPN) tells you you’re the NFL’s best at something. It’s something that you kind of raise your ears at … but, yeah, I mean, when I see ‘gadget’ (player) I think, ‘explosive playmaker.’ Whether it’s in the return game, offense, screen game, deep pass, give me the ball. I want to make the most out of it.”
Want to make the most of what’s left of this offense after the bye? Feature more of Mims in it.
The ex-Oklahoma star appeared on 15 snaps against the Chiefs — just 24% of the offensive plays. Fullback Adam Prentice (19 snaps) got more run with the first-team offense against Kansas City than Mims, a two-time Pro Bowl return man.
Yes, some of that was choosing discretion over valor. Mims can’t scare anybody from injured reserve. He’s coming off concussion protocol.
Although by the time the Broncos take the field at Washington on Nov. 30, he’ll be four weeks removed from the ding he took against Dallas on Oct. 26.
No skill player left at Payton’s disposal is as singularly explosive as Mims. And he reminded us all why against KC with another special-teams masterpiece — 101 punt return yards, a new single-game high, and the most by a Bronco since Trindon Holliday’s 121 in 2013. Mims’ 70-yard runback in the first quarter was another career best, putting the defending AFC champions on their heels at the Chiefs’ 21-yard line.
He’s averaging 11.0 yards per touch from scrimmage since he entered the league. Badie is averaging 7.0 yards. McLaughlin is averaging 4.6 yards. If you don’t want to trust your eyes, fine. Trust the math.
Payton knows how to do quirky, how to improvise when injuries wreck his best-laid plans. In New Orleans, he made Taysom Hill the archetype modern “gadget” weapon. The former BYU star became a 6-foot-2 utility piece. From 2019-2023, Hill bounced between tight end, receiver and quarterback, depending on whatever Sean had cooked up. Hill recorded five straight seasons with Payton in which he threw at least six passes, ran the ball at least 27 times, and picked up at least four receptions. Over those years, Hill averaged 456.8 passing yards, 392.6 rushing yards and 150.4 receiving yards per season.
Payton is the NFL’s Baron Frankenstein, the mind of a mad scientist merged with Bill Parcell’s crusty soul. So why does it feel as if the only guy who can truly stop Mims with a head of steam in the open field is his own head coach?
“For me, it’s like a daily race,” Mims continued. “Just going in every day, working hard. Because with me, I’m a big person (about) wasting time. I hate wasting time. I hate when someone wastes my time.”
“That sounds like your boss,” I said.
“If I’m going to go in there and I’m going to lift, I’m going to practice, I’m going to go ahead and give (it) my all,” he continued. “Because at the end of the day, if I’m not giving my all, I’m wasting my own time. What am I even doing here? So that’s been a big thing for me. So I don’t really do goals — just every day, every second, I just want to do the right thing. And then, from that point on, you’ll reap what you sow.”
This team is on the brink of sowing something special. What good is a killer gadget if you leave it on your tool belt every Sunday?
In a game that could live for months in Denver sports memory, the Broncos outlasted the Chiefs 22-19 at Empower Field on Sunday to take pole position of the AFC West.
OFFENSE — B
It’s been a season of stop-and-go for Bo Nix and the offense. In a notable development Sunday, the problem was often not Nix — who’s been heavily criticized for his play the last two weeks — or head coach Sean Payton, who’s been heavily criticized for his play-calling the last two weeks. Wide receiver Troy Franklin had a couple of killer drops in the first half, and Nix was sacked twice on the opening drive.
Nix was in rhythm all game, though, in an encouraging sign for the second-year quarterback’s progress. He connected on two monster deep shots to Franklin and Pat Bryant in the second half, and Nix looked poised both hanging in the pocket and on the move en route to a 295-yard day. And in a final tour de force, Nix orchestrated his fifth game-winning drive of the season with a clutch 32-yard bomb to Franklin, the deep connection finally clicking as Payton’s unit made enough plays to close a monumental win.
DEFENSE — A-
Payton had so much deserved trust in defensive coordinator Vance Joseph’s unit on Sunday that he declined one fourth-quarter holding penalty on the Chiefs to get to a third-and-9 — even though accepting the penalty would’ve set Kansas City back to second-and-19.
That said, playing Patrick Mahomes comes with several degrees of peril. And after a banner first half, Denver’s defense started to sag in the second half. Mahomes aired out a 61-yard bomb for Tyquan Thornton in the third quarter for the longest passing play of the year against Joseph’s unit, and leveraged a rough third-and-20 defensive pass-interference call on Riley Moss for an eventual score to take the lead. But Joseph hung tough, and the Broncos came up with a massive three-and-out stop on a late Chiefs drive to hand the ball back to Payton.
SPECIAL TEAMS — A+
A Darren Rizzi tour de force. Having Marvin Mims Jr. back after a two-game absence for a concussion certainly helped. The Broncos’ All-Pro returner whizzed for a 70-yard punt return in the first quarter to set up a field goal, and Denver’s kickoff and punt units soundly outplayed Kansas City in a key divisional matchup.
Kicker Wil Lutz went 5 of 5 on field goals and made the game-winner in another monumental day, and rookie punter Jeremy Crawshaw got his mighty leg back underneath him with two punts. And in a coaching tour de force, offensive tackle Frank Crum came up with a monumental blocked extra point in the fourth quarter to hold the Chiefs’ lead to 19-16.
COACHING — A-
In a familiar script, Payton couldn’t get out of Payton’s own way early on, orchestrating a fantastic opening drive only to kill momentum with a flea-flicker call from RJ Harvey to Nix that nearly got picked off. And the Broncos’ offensive operation struggled enough that CBS Sports’ Tracy Wolfson reported on the game broadcast that Nix was begging Payton to get play-calls in quicker.
Interesting note here from Tracy Wolfson, who said Bo Nix was “begging” Sean Payton to get a third-down call in faster.
“The offensive line came off and said ‘We need to change the tempo.’”
Evidently, Payton was listening. Or something clicked. Because the Broncos started to play with tempo in the second half, as Nix started dealing on a third-quarter touchdown drive. The ultimate hat-tip here, of course, goes to Joseph, who continued to establish himself as one of the hottest head-coaching names in the business. Mahomes has now accounted for a grand total of three touchdowns in four matchups against Joseph in his second tenure in Denver, and Joseph dialed up one of the gutsiest calls of the Broncos’ season — a third-and-10 nickel blitz from Ja’Quan McMillian to sack Mahomes and stuff the Chiefs on their final offensive drive.
The Kansas City Chiefs play the Denver Broncos on Sunday, and the Patrick Mahomes said that “we can find a way to win the AFC West”. Colin Cowherd asks if this is realistic for the Chiefs as they are 5-4.
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Kansas City Chiefs star Travis Kelce had a heated moment with Denver Broncos defensive back Ja’Quan McMillian in the second quarter on Sunday.
Kelce brought in his second catch of the game and helped the Chiefs get a first down on a 10-yard catch. Several Broncos players were needed to bring Kelce down, including McMillian who went over the top and landed on the tight end’s chest.
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) and quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) lead their team onto the field before a game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High on Nov. 16, 2025 in Denver, Colorado.(Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
As Kelce got back up, he and McMillian were in each other’s faces. Some curse words seemed to be exchanged as they went back into their respective huddles. At that time, Kelce had two catches for 14 yards but it was getting tougher for the Chiefs’ offense to get through the Broncos’ defense.
Kansas City ended the drive with a Harrison Butker field goal. The game was tied 6-6.
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce runs after catching a pass as Denver Broncos cornerback Jahdae Barron (23) defends during the first half an NFL football game Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025, in Denver.(AP Photo/Jack Dempsey)
Kelce has quietly put together one of the best starts to the season among tight ends through 10 weeks. He had 41 catches for 540 yards and three touchdowns as the Chiefs came out of the bye week with a 5-4 record.
McMillian, who is in his fourth season with the Broncos, has 29 tackles, five pass breakups, two forced fumbles and two sacks in 10 games. He joined Denver as an undrafted free agent out of East Carolina in 2022.
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) before the game against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High on Nov. 16, 2025.(Ron Chenoy/Imagn Images)
Both teams entered the AFC West matchup in need of a victory for their own reasons. The Broncos to stay in the race for the division title and the Chiefs to stay alive in the race for a wild card spot.
Parker Gabriel, Broncos reporter: Kansas City 23, Denver 21
The Broncos are 6-2 in one-score games. The Chiefs are 0-4. And yet K.C. is a 4-point road favorite against the team with the NFL’s longest home winning streak. Sean Payton will readily remind anyone listening that you are what your record says you are, but your record does not necessarily forecast what you’re expected to be going forward. The West tightens by one turn.
Luca Evans, Broncos reporter: Kansas City 24, Denver 20
This is not the week to be missing J.K. Dobbins, Pat Surtain II and Alex Singleton, who are among the 10 most important players on this Broncos roster. Kansas City is vulnerable. So is Denver, suddenly, with a rash of injuries and absences. Let’s circle back to this matchup in Week 17 on Christmas.
Troy Renck, columnist: Broncos 19, Chiefs 17
Everything screams loss for the Broncos with their injuries and the Chiefs’ urgency. But the reality is the Broncos have a path to victory. Every big game Patrick Mahomes has lost over the last few years involves a defensive line capable of making him miserable. The Broncos will get to Mahomes, and the upset hinges on creating turnovers and a short field for Bo Nix. The template is the Texans game.
Sean Keeler, columnist: Broncos 23, Chiefs 22
If Andy Reid’s 22-4 career record after a bye doesn’t scare you, this number might: The Chiefs are 14-1 in division road tilts since 2016 from Nov. 1 to the end of the regular season. That one loss? The “KC JV Game” here in Week 18 of last year. When they try, they fly. But once you get that 2015 vibe, it’s hard to let that go. With Empower rocking and the defense rolling, Mile High Magic somehow finds a way.
Sean Payton wears Jordans, Lululemon sweats, and cashes $15 million checks. But here is a little secret: He is at his best when he gets no respect. When everyone thinks he has no chance.
Such is the case Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs. This is the biggest game in Denver since the 2015 season. What was supposed to serve as a platform to provide a definitive answer about the AFC West instead has raised an uncomfortable question.
With workhorse running back J.K. Dobbins officially ruled out with a foot injury, McLaughlin is primed for a toss in the fire against the Chiefs. He has received just one carry in 2025, stashed as inactive for nine of 10 games after finishing second on the Broncos in touches in 2024. Dobbins’ absence leaves at least 15 carries a game available to the rest of Denver’s backfield.
Rookie second-rounder RJ Harvey will likely pick up much of the slack. But McLaughlin is “ready,” head coach Sean Payton said Friday. Read Luca Evans’ story.
Broncos-Chiefs series: Here we go again. The Broncos endured a long period of futility in this matchup — 16 straight losses from November 2015 to early October 2023 — before finally toppling the Chiefs 24-9 on Oct. 29, 2023. Denver split this series 1-1 last year, drubbing Kansas City 38-0 in the final game of the regular season as the Chiefs rested their starters. The Broncos are 56-73-0 against the Chiefs all-time.
In the spotlight: Can Nik Bonitto and company take down Patrick Mahomes?
On Monday night, the Broncos’ 26-year-old edge rusher stood in a parking lot in Federal Heights, depositing box after box of Thanksgiving meals into the trunks of families pulling through a makeshift drive-thru in Thrive Church.
Bonitto wore a hoodie, sweats and a large black brace on his wrist. He has been wearing the brace since hurting his wrist in the Broncos’ Week 1 opener against the Titans. The splint didn’t much hurt his ability to pick up turkeys. And it certainly hasn’t hurt his ability to gobble up opposing offenses, as Bonitto put together another dominant performance against the Raiders last Thursday with eight pressures and 1.5 sacks.
But the greatest challenge of Bonitto’s career year — first in the NFL in QB pressures (51), third in sacks (9.5) — will come Sunday, when the Chiefs and one of the NFL’s most elusive quarterbacks come to Empower Field.
“That’s the guy that everybody looks to when it comes to sacking the quarterback,” Bonitto said Monday. “He’s one of the best in our game, so, for sure — it’s going to be exciting.”
The Patrick Mahomes of the last three years is not quite the same game-breaker the NFL saw in his mid-20s. He has dropped from the league’s undisputed top quarterback to just arguably the top dog. He lingers tied for 10th in yards per attempt (7.4) and a distant 12th in passer rating (98.2) through 10 weeks. The Chiefs are more vulnerable than at any point since the Mahomes Era began in 2018, sitting at 5-4 and a distant third in the AFC West.
First-round rookie tackle Josh Simmons has missed the last four weeks while dealing with a family matter. Defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo’s unit has been typically excellent but has sagged on third down and in the red zone. And yet, Kansas City is still as complex to navigate as a laser maze because of the 30-year-old Mahomes, who’s playing a shiftier brand of football than ever.
Mahomes’ sack rate the past two years has been the highest of his career. Still, the Chiefs rank ninth in the NFL overall in sack rate allowed. And Mahomes has gotten the ball out at an average rate of 2.69 seconds in 2025 — more than 0.2 ticks faster than any season of his NFL career. He is a shapeshifter under center, capable of adjusting his style and timing with each passing season in Kansas City. And this year, with a shaky situation at tackle between Simmons and backup Jaylon Moore, Mahomes is either punishing teams on quick intermediate routes or with his legs.
Opposing defenses fear Mahomes much more than running back Isiah Pacheco or Kareem Hunt, as the Chiefs have faced one of the highest rates of defensive-back-heavy formations in the NFL when running the ball, according to the league’s Next Gen Stats. Pacheco and Hunt haven’t been able to take much advantage against a light box, both averaging less than 4.5 yards a carry on such attempts. But Mahomes has feasted: 7.8 yards a carry and 266 yards with his legs when defenses go with seven or less near the line of scrimmage.
His one weakness? Pressure. Mahomes is 28-of-71 passing when under duress, according to Next Gen Stats. Broncos defensive coordinator Vance Joseph has done an outstanding job of throwing pressure at Mahomes across the Broncos and Chiefs’ last three meetings, and held him to a total of two touchdowns in that time.
“It’s more about getting them covered, and making them hold the ball enough until we can get there,” Joseph said Thursday.
Denver will need another monster effort from Bonitto and company at Empower Field on Sunday in a game that could assert them as the new class of the AFC West.
“This division’s been run by the Chiefs for so many years now,” Bonitto said Monday. “So, I mean, if we’re going to want to be that team to win the division and reach the goals that we said we want, we’re gonna have to go through them and beat them.”
Who has the edge?
When Broncos run: Denver will play without bell-cow J.K. Dobbins for the first time this year, in some truly horrendous timing. Suddenly, rookie RJ Harvey will be thrown to the wolves against Chris Jones, Nick Bolton and company. Harvey has only gotten 10-plus carries once this year, and is averaging 3.3 yards a carry outside of a 50-yard pop in Week 1. Kansas City has a top-12 rushing defense through nine games in 2025. Edge: Chiefs
When Broncos pass: Bo Nix has been a bottom-tier NFL quarterback this year outside of the fourth quarter. The clutch gene helps. Against the Raiders last week, the script actually flipped. Nix was in rhythm in the second quarter before completely falling out of it in the second half. Denver will need juice from Nix early and late against Kansas City with Dobbins out and an untested Harvey in the run game. This is the kind of matchup where the Broncos start to determine if he’s the guy for a long-term extension after 2026. Edge: Chiefs
When Chiefs run: The key here is Patrick Mahomes. Lead back Isiah Pacheco’s health is up in the air after a sprained MCL in Week 8, and backfield mate Kareem Hunt has averaged 3.6 yards a carry across his last four NFL seasons. But Mahomes is on pace for the best rushing season of his career, and has put up 123 yards on the ground and two touchdowns in his last two games. The Broncos have handled dual-threat QBs with aplomb this year, but Mahomes is a different kind. Slight edge: Broncos
When Chiefs pass: The Broncos still don’t have cornerback Pat Surtain II (pec). The Chiefs have Mahomes, even if coordinator Vance Joseph has proven effective at containing him. WR1 Rashee Rice has been back for three weeks, too, adding a much more dangerous element to Kansas City’s attack. Slight edge: Chiefs
Special teams: Chiefs punter Matt Araiza has pinned the second-highest percentage of boots inside the 20 (54.5%) of any punter in the NFL this season. Broncos rookie Jeremy Crawshaw now sits below league-average in that category, and the punting differential in Raiders-Broncos nearly swung a game for Las Vegas. The Broncos do get a huge lift with the return of All-Pro Marvin Mims Jr., and Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker has been iffy this year. Edge: Even
Coaching: The Andy Reid-Matt Nagy-Steve Spagnuolo trio is as proven as any in the NFL. Joseph is one of the highest-regarded defensive coordinators in the NFL at the moment, but Sean Payton has plenty to prove with his play-calling and offensive execution after the past two weeks. Slight edge: Chiefs
Tale of the tape
Broncos
Chiefs
Total offense
334.6 (13th)
370.1 (7th)
Rush offense
128.6 (9th)
121.2 (12th)
Pass offense
206.0 (18th)
248.9 (5th)
Points per game
23.5 (17th)
26.1 (9th)
Total defense
270.7 (3rd)
291.8 (6th)
Run defense
91.2 (4th)
104.6 (12th)
Pass defense
179.5 (6th)
187.2 (7th)
Points allowed
17.3 (3rd)
17.7 (4th)
By the numbers
1,908: Patrick Mahomes’ passing yards this season when he isn’t pressured, the most in the NFL.
8: Chiefs All-Pro Chris Jones’ quarterback hits through nine games this year, on pace for his fewest total since 2017.
28: Broncos All-Pro Zach Allen’s quarterback hits through 10 games this year, the most in the NFL.
8: Difference between Allen’s QB-hit total and second-place Nik Bonitto’s (20), the same difference between Bonitto’s total and 19th-place Leonard Williams.
4: Bo Nix’s game-winning drives in 2025, the most in the NFL.
18%: Percentage of snaps Broncos linebacker Dre Greenlaw has played where he’s recorded a tackle.
X-factors
Broncos: LB Justin Strnad. He’s stepped up for two years in the face of injuries, and Strnad will step back into the limelight against Kansas City after starting ILB Alex Singleton revealed Monday he’d had surgery to remove a testicular tumor. Strnad said Monday the Broncos will be playing for Singleton, and this Kansas City matchup will put Strnad’s skills in coverage and pass-rush on full display as Vance Joseph tries to disrupt Patrick Mahomes.
Chiefs: WR Xavier Worthy. He’s one of the fastest players in the league, but — much like the Broncos’ utilization of speedster Mims — Worthy’s usage comes and goes with each passing week. Andy Reid said this past week that Kansas City isn’t “down on Xavier Worthy,” and the Broncos will need to account for Worthy on every single snap without defensive leaders Pat Surtain II and green-dot captain Singleton.
Post predictions
Parker Gabriel, Broncos reporter: Kansas City 23, Denver 21
The Broncos are 6-2 in one-score games. The Chiefs are 0-4. And yet K.C. is a 4-point road favorite against the team with the NFL’s longest home winning streak. Sean Payton will readily remind anyone listening that you are what your record says you are, but your record does not necessarily forecast what you’re expected to be going forward. The West tightens by one turn.
Luca Evans, Broncos reporter: Kansas City 24, Denver 20
This is not the week to be missing J.K. Dobbins, Pat Surtain II and Alex Singleton, who are among the 10 most important players on this Broncos roster. Kansas City is vulnerable. So is Denver, suddenly, with a rash of injuries and absences. Let’s circle back to this matchup in Week 17 on Christmas.
Troy Renck, columnist: Broncos 19, Chiefs 17
Everything screams loss for the Broncos with their injuries and the Chiefs’ urgency. But the reality is the Broncos have a path to victory. Every big game Patrick Mahomes has lost over the last few years involves a defensive line capable of making him miserable. The Broncos will get to Mahomes, and the upset hinges on creating turnovers and a short field for Bo Nix. The template is the Texans game.
Sean Keeler, columnist: Broncos 23, Chiefs 22
If Andy Reid’s 22-4 career record after a bye doesn’t scare you, this number might: The Chiefs are 14-1 in division road tilts since 2016 from Nov. 1 to the end of the regular season. That one loss? The “KC JV Game” here in Week 18 of last year. When they try, they fly. But once you get that 2015 vibe, it’s hard to let that go. With Empower rocking and the defense rolling, Mile High Magic somehow finds a way.
After all, the orange and blue went 2-0 over the last seven days to extend Denver’s lead atop the AFC West with an 8-2 record. The Broncos set up a showdown with the Chiefs (5-4) at Empower Field on Nov. 16 that could officially end the Mahomes-Reid stranglehold on the division.
It’s how they got there. A victory over the Texans (18-15) was due to a brilliant defense and a very timely injury to Houston quarterback C.J. Stroud. A win over the Raiders (10-7) on Thursday night was an exercise in sheer agony. Brilliant defense again, but mostly agony.
Payton insisted midweek that he had everything he needed inside Broncos Park Powered by CommonSpirit. Against Vegas, his offense showed him otherwise.
Several reports over the last few weeks had the Broncos sniffing around at offensive additions, primarily at wide receiver. Denver was allegedly a suitor for New Orleans wideout Rashid Shaheed, only to be pipped by the Seahawks.
NFL reporter Jordan Schultz then claimed the Broncos reached out to the Dolphins to inquire about Shaheed clone Jaylen Waddle, only to find the reported asking price — a first-round draft pick, at the least — to be too steep.
Considering the Colts (7-2) coughed up two first-round picks to free star cornerback Sauce Gardner from the Jets, it puzzled the kids in the GTW offices why the Broncos wouldn’t consider a corresponding move in kind. Nix will only be on a rookie contract for so long, and the Broncos’ cap situation improves significantly in 2026.
Waddle would be an upgrade over Troy Franklin. But we’re not sure he’d be a significant improvement over Marvin Mims Jr., assuming the latter is good to go. And it would be a waste of a first-rounder to land a guy that Sean Payton would likely just be asking to block on screens anyway.
DePodesta is a Rockie! — C
The GTW gang is torn on this one. We’re mildly and pleasantly surprised that Rockies CEO Dick Monfort hired a director of baseball operations from a) outside the organization; and b) outside his genetic family tree. Baby steps, after all, are still steps.
That said, Paul DePodesta coming to Colorado is, if not straight outta left field, at least from the gap in left-center.
DePodesta was at the forefront of the analytics movement in baseball, although that forefront was multiple decades ago – the “Peter Brand” character in the movie “Moneyball” was based on DePodesta and his work with Billy Beane.
Not Peter Brand also hasn’t worked for a baseball club in 10 years. During that aforementioned decade, he was pulling strings behind the scenes with the Cleveland Browns, who might be the NFL’s equivalent of the Rockies in terms of dysfunction. With the Browns, he was part of the trade that brought Deshaun Watson to Cleveland for six draft picks — six! — and then agreed to ink Watson to a five-year, $230-million deal. Which panned out for the Browns even worse than that trade-and-sign with Russell Wilson worked for the Broncos.
We’ll try to keep an open mind, here, although we can’t shake the feeling that Monfort thought he was actually hiring actor Jonah Hill, who played Brand in “Moneyball.” Although if Paul can somehow get Kris Bryant off the books, he’ll already be a 70% improvement over Bill Schmidt.
The AFC West-leading Denver Broncos (7-2) ride a six-game winning streak into Thursday night’s prime-time matchup against the struggling Las Vegas Raiders (2-6) at Empower Field at Mile High.
How to Watch Raiders vs Broncos
When: Thursday, November 6, 2025
Time: 8:15 PM ET
TV Channel: ABC (KTNV – Las Vegas), ABC (KMGH – Denver) (Local Only)
Will Lutz kicked a 34-yard field goal as time expired on Sunday to lift the Broncos to an 18-15 road win over the Houston Texans. The defense kept the Texans out of the end zone, surrendering five field goals, and the offense drove 48 yards in 50 seconds to set up Lutz’s game-winning kick. Bo Nix threw two touchdown passes in an inconsistent showing, as he was just 18-of-37 for 173 yards and threw an interception. On the season, Nix has completed 61.2% of his throws for 1,976 yards and 17 touchdowns with six picks, while J.K. Dobbins leads the ground attack with 695 yards at a 5.1-yard-per-carry clip.
Las Vegas closed to within a point with 16 seconds left in overtime on Sunday, but Geno Smith’s potential game-winning two-point conversion pass was batted down as the Raiders took their second straight loss, 30-29, to the visiting Jacksonville Jaguars. Smith was 29-of-39 for 284 yards and four touchdowns, three to Brock Bowers, who finished with 12 receptions for 127 yards. On Tuesday, Las Vegas traded its top target, receiver Jakobi Meyers, to the Jaguars for two third-day picks in next year’s draft.
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After two weeks of special teams errors and repeated frustration from head coach Sean Payton, Broncos special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi placed himself squarely under the bus on Thursday.
“We cannot be the reason that we’re losing field position, and things like that,” Rizzi told reporters Thursday. “But listen, it starts with me. Always starts with me as a coordinator, and trickles down to the players.
“So, I certainly take full responsibility on getting it cleaned up.”
The Broncos have endured weeks of inconsistent play under the veteran coordinator, who came to Denver in the offseason from New Orleans as a former colleague of Payton. It all boiled over in the last two games, with a communication error preceding a concussion for All-Pro returner Marvin Mims Jr. and multiple players running out late on special teams units against the Texans last Sunday.
Rizzi explained that a recent rash of injuries jumbled substitutions against Houston, and he said Denico Autry’s first-quarter field-goal block last Sunday was “frustrating” given a weeklong emphasis on protection. Rizzi, though, gave credit to the play of offensive linemen Calvin Throckmorton, Frank Crum and others on a game-winning field goal from Lutz and expressed confidence in his ability to right the ship.
“I’ve always prided myself on being an organized, disciplined guy,” Rizzi said. “I think you guys probably know that about me by now. And so, those are things we gotta get cleaned up.
“And we will. We’ll get that done this week.”
Broncos release former All-Pro special-teamer: Rizzi’s units will continue to cycle through some change against the Raiders on Thursday night after the Broncos waived safety J.T. Gray with an injury designation. The specialist landed on Monday’s injury report with a hamstring injury after playing 21 special teams snaps in the Broncos’ 18-15 win over Houston.
The Broncos signed Gray, a second-team All-Pro with the Saints in 2024, off the Ravens’ practice squad in mid-October. Rizzi called him the “best coverage player that I’ve coached,” and Denver could’ve used some juice on its kick units. But Gray was inactive his first two games in Denver, and the Broncos are now cutting ties.
Mims back at practice: After a laundry list of an injury report on Monday, the Broncos had a cleaner bill of health at practice Tuesday. Mims was back and limited at practice after missing Sunday’s game with a concussion. Cornerback Riley Moss and safety Brandon Jones were also present during stretching and limited, after both landed as would-be DNPs on Monday’s report.
Cornerback Pat Surtain II was seen doing rehab work on the side field, along with tight end Nate Adkins and linebackers Drew Sanders and Garret Wallow. Kicker Lutz, meanwhile, landed on Tuesday’s injury report as a DNP with an illness.
Lutz and Payton have ‘unique relationship’: On Lutz’s game-winning 34-yarder against the Texans, Payton was caught by television cameras venturing out to holler at Lutz — mouthing “right through!” and gesturing at the uprights.
The two have a “very unique relationship,” Rizzi said. Lutz has been Payton’s kicker for eight seasons, dating back to 2016 with the New Orleans Saints.
“I think he knows Sean’s going to probably say something on the way out,” Rizzi joked. “He probably says more than just that at other times.”
The question started innocently enough, only for Sean Payton to obfuscate the Broncos’ intentions as much as possible.
With the trade, and you’re in a buyer position, philosophically, do you believe in the benefit–
“With what trade?” Payton said on a Monday conference call, interrupting a reporter.
Philosophically, do you believe in sending a message to the team that you’re all in?
“We would never make a trade to send a message to the team,” Payton said. “Everyone in the locker room, our players, coaches, management, front office, knows that we’re all in to win.
“The trade would take place — this supposed trade — if we found value in something that could help us,” Payton continued. “Period. That’s it. We’re not looking to send a message.”
As Tuesday’s 2 p.m. trade deadline approaches, the NFL world is keeping a close eye on the Broncos’ aggressiveness, as the club evaluates a potential Payton-dubbed supposed trade. Denver is 7-2 and a game up in the AFC West entering a key stretch run, with two divisional games against the Chiefs remaining. They also still carry a litany of glaring issues, making them a potential buyer at the deadline.
But would they gamble away draft picks for an all-in rental?
“We’ll see,” Payton responded when asked Monday if Denver was in a position where they wanted to make a move.
Payton and others have expressed public confidence in the current Broncos roster. Anything is possible in the next 24 hours, but a trail of breadcrumbs leads to a single most likely outcome: Denver either stands pat or doesn’t make an overall massive splash.
“It is what it is,” Payton said in Sunday’s postgame presser when asked to evaluate his team at the halfway point. “It’s our record. I lost track…”
Someone reminded him that the Broncos are 7-2.
“There you go,” Payton continued. “That’s how I see it. That’s pretty good.”
Trade rumors have floated around the Broncos for weeks. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that Denver is one of a few teams that’ve made a call inquiring about wide receivers. And Denver has a few positions where it could look to upgrade or find depth: receiver, tight end and left guard, most notably.
But there are considerations with each of those position groups that muddy the waters.
In his almost 20 years as an NFL head coach, Payton’s teams have never traded for a wide receiver at the deadline. In late October, offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi also expressed faith in the receivers Denver has on its roster when asked if they could look to the deadline for WR help. Plus, Denver gave $16.5 million guaranteed to tight end Evan Engram in the offseason and still hasn’t figured out how to consistently use him in its offense (0 catches on 3 targets at the Texans Sunday).
The Broncos could also look for help at inside linebacker, but Vance Joseph’s defense revolves around ILB Alex Singleton as a primary on-field communicator. Denver’s is also ramping up inside linebacker Dre Greenlaw to full speed after he missed seven of the first nine weeks while rehabbing a quad and serving a one-game suspension. Greenlaw played 37% of the Broncos’ defensive snaps Sunday and was in on some fourth-quarter looks. His usage should only rise.
“It’s good to have him in the lineup. It was tough waiting and making that decision,” Payton said, referring to the Broncos’ move to put Greenlaw on injured reserve earlier in the year, “but hindsight, it was worth it.”
Denver could evaluate offensive-line help at the deadline, with left guard Ben Powers’ eventual return from a biceps tear uncertain. But the tea leaves, for now, aren’t showing a massive swing. Backup Alex Palczewski has filled in ably the past three weeks, and there’s plenty of overall confidence already brewing inside the Broncos’ locker room.
“We are at the point where we expect to give ourselves a chance to win every game,” quarterback Bo Nix said Sunday, after an ugly 18-15 win over the Texans. “The expectations are that we’re going to compete and find a way, however it looks.”
Well, the Houston Texans’ 2025 season was officially pushed to the brink on Sunday afternoon at NRG Stadium, in a costly 18-15 loss to the Denver Broncos. Sure, there was the loss itself, which pushed the Texans precariously close to the mathematical abyss at 3-5. But there was so much more.
First and foremost, the Texans lost their quarterback C.J. Stroud, for the second time in three seasons, to a concussion, on a nasty open field hit in which Stroud had given himself up on a slide. However, the Texans also lost their best offensive lineman, Tytus Howard, to a concussion.
On top of that, the Texans not only lost the game, but performed embarrassingly poorly across the board on offense, particularly in the red zone, squandering two 1st-and-goal situations inside the Broncos’ two yard line. Put simply, this offense is a joke. It’s an abomination, and there is no help on the way. We will discuss that below.
For now, on yet another infuriating Sunday, here are the winners and losers:
WINNERS
Ka’imi Fairbairn’s five field goals provided all of the Texans offense on Sunday. Credit: Jack Gorman
4. Texans special teams
In what we knew would be a low scoring game, between two sensational defenses, big plays on special teams could look large. The Texans’ special teams are what essentially staked them to the 15-7 lead that they held into the fourth quarter. A recovery of a buffed punt right before halftime handed the Texans a field goal, and a 12-7 lead. Jaylin Noel’s 45 yard punt return set up the Texans’ final field goal. Another Noel punt return and a Bronco face mask penalty gave the Texans the ball at their own 44 yard line. Ka’imi Fairbairn kicked five field goals. Tommy Townsend punted frequently and very well. Frank Ross had his guys ready to go.
3. Kamari Lassiter
The Texans’ defense, as a whole, performed well enough to win this game. 18 points allowed is above their season average, but their season average is the best in the NFL. Considering the Texans’ offense had five straight second half series end in punts, on a total of 18 plays, there was no rest for the weary. Lassiter probably best embodied the day for the Texans’ defense, as he lead the team in tackles and was largely excellent in pass coverage. The second year corner is really coming into his own.
Janice McNair was inducted into the Texans’ Ring of Honor on Sunday. Credit: Jack Gorman
2. Janice McNair
Aside from the effect on the standings, the most disappointing thing about Sunday’s loss is that it occurred on the day in which the franchise’s co-founder and matriarch, Janice McNair, was inducted into the team’s Ring of Honor. An active philanthropist and outstanding human being, she deserved a better outcome in this game. By the way, this is the first loss for the Texans on the day of a Ring of Honor enshrinement. The days celebrating Andre Johnson, J.J. Watt, and Bob McNair all ended in victory on the field.
1. Sean Payton
Back in the 2023 coaching carousel season, Payton and DeMeco Ryans were arguably the two biggest names. Every team in the market for a head coach wanted to talk to Ryans, and the Texans actually talked to Payton in a first interview, before eventually hiring Ryans. While Ryans’ defense dominated Payton’s offense throughout the afternoon, it was eventually Payton’s offense that was able to make enough plays, and take advantage of questionable Ryans decision making (more on that in a moment) to get the win.
LOSERS
C.J. Stroud left the game on Sunday with a concussion. Credit: Jack Gorman
4. C.J. Stroud
Stroud was off to a decent enough start, 6 of 10 for 79 yards, until the second quarter, when Broncos defensive back Kris Abrams-Draine splattered Stroud’s brains with a heavy hit on a Stroud scramble. Stroud gave a thumbs up as he was leaving the field, after being down on his back for several minutes, but he is now in concussion protocol, and will likely miss some time.
3. Davis Mills
This means that it’s onto the Texans’ backup quarterback, Davis MIlls, who is now in his fifth year with the team. Like Stroud, Mills is in his first season in Nick Carey’s system, and on Sunday, Mills looked like he was in his first DAY in the system. The team was 1-12 on third downs with Mills under center, and on the final six drives of the game, Mills was the steward of 21 plays for 48 yards, including four 3-and-outs, and six punts. Mills was dreadful.
Nick Carley’s play calling down near the goal line was brutal. Credit: Jack Gorman
2. Nick Caley
Of course, it doesn’t help that he is in an offense where the plays all look designed to add an insurmountable degree of difficulty to generate just a few yards. Whatever Caley has architected here is not working, and his play calling in two goal-to-go situations inside the Broncos’ two yard line was comical. On the first one, Caley called three run plays into the teeth of the Broncos’ strength, their defensive line, before a false start negated what would have been a failed QB sneak by Stroud, allowing the Texans to kick a field goal. On the second series, Mills was at quarterback, and Caley called a QB sneak from the two yard line (here is where the crying emoji goes), and a penalty and sack eventually had them kicking a 41 yard field goal. Again, this offense is a joke. Nick Caley is a joke.
1. DeMeco Ryans
And here we are again. Eventually, this all falls back on Ryans. Sure, his defense is incredible, and he is to be commended for establishing a culture and a vibe on that side of the ball. Ultimately, though, he is responsible for the offense, too. Hell, if nothing else, he is responsible for hiring Nick Caley. The most frustrating thing about this team, aside from the complete futility of the offense, is the inability to self scout certain elements of the team. How does Jaylin Noel go from clear impact guy the last two games to an afterthought behind Christian Kirk? How does Dare Ogunbowale see the field on offense? Most importantly, in THIS game, how does Ryans think the Texans are going to get into field goal range with 1:09 left in the game when they’ve punted on five straight drives? The Texans could have taken this game to overtime, and instead they ran three clock-stopping plays and gave the ball back to Denver with 50 seconds left and two timeouts left at their own 36 yard line. One big Bo Nix scramble later, it was essentially over. Ryans has had a bad third season.