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2018 Denver Broncos season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NFL team season

2018 Denver Broncos season
OwnerThe Pat Bowlen Trust
General managerJohn Elway
Head coachVance Joseph
Home stadiumBroncos Stadium at Mile High
Results
Record6–10
Division place3rdAFC West
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersCBChris Harris Jr.
LSCasey Kreiter
RBPhillip Lindsay
OLBVon Miller
All-ProsLB Von Miller(2nd team)
Uniform

The2018 season was theDenver Broncos' 49thseason in theNational Football League (NFL) and their 59th overall.

After poor offensive statistics that resulted in a 5–11 record duringthe previous season, the Broncos hoped for improvement at thequarterback position, with the offseason signing ofCase Keenum as well as the breakthrough ofundrafted rookierunning backPhillip Lindsay. Another rookie that made an impact waslinebackerBradley Chubb, who recorded 12sacks following a slow start. However, for a third consecutive season, the Broncos scored 30 or more pointsonly once, and midway through the season, longtimewide receiverDemaryius Thomas was traded to theHouston Texans.

Following a 3–6 start, the Broncos put together a three-game winning streak, with hopes of turning their season around and competing for a playoff spot. However, key late-season injuries tocornerbackChris Harris Jr. (fractured fibula) and wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders (ruptured Achilles tendon) derailed those hopes, sending the Broncos to a season-ending four-game losing streak and a 6–10 record – only a one-win improvement from 2017.

For the first time since2010, the Broncos did not play theNew England Patriots during the regular season.

The Broncos missed the playoffs for a third consecutive season, suffered back-to-back losing seasons for the first time since19711972 and back-to-back double-digit losses for the first time since19661967, resulting in the firing ofhead coachVance Joseph at the end of the season. Joseph posted an 11–21 record in his two seasons as the Broncos' head coach. This was the third consecutive season with one game involving the Broncos getting at least 30 points.

This was also the 35th and final season under the ownership ofPat Bowlen, who died on June 13, 2019.

Coaching changes

[edit]
  • January 1: One day after the2017 regular season finale, the Broncos parted ways with six coaching assistants, firing special teams coordinatorBrock Olivo, running backs/assistant head coachEric Studesville, wide receivers coachTyke Tolbert, outside linebackers coachFred Pagac, defensive backs coachJohnnie Lynn and offensive line coachJeff Davidson.Bill Musgrave, who was promoted to offensive coordinator midway through the 2017 season, shed the interim tag, and remained as the full-time offensive coordinator.[1]
  • January 3:Sean Kugler was hired as the new offensive line coach, replacing Jeff Davidson. Kugler, who will focus on the guards and centers, was the head coach at theUniversity of Texas at El Paso from 2013 to 2017, and has previously served as an offensive line coach for theDetroit Lions (2004–2005),Buffalo Bills (2007–2009) andPittsburgh Steelers (2010–2012).[2]
  • January 4:Mike Sullivan was hired as the new quarterbacks coach, whileCurtis Modkins was hired as running backs coach. Sullivan was theNew York Giants' quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator during the previous three seasons (2015–2017), while Modkins served as theChicago Bears' running backs coach in 2017.Klint Kubiak, who was promoted to quarterbacks coach after Bill Musgrave was promoted to offensive coordinator midway through the2017 season, will remain on the Broncos' staff as an offensive assistant.[3]
  • January 9: Tom McMahon was hired as the new special teams coordinator. McMahon served in the same capacity with theIndianapolis Colts from 2014 to 2017.[4]
  • January 10: Chris Strausser was promoted from an offensive assistant to offensive line coach, and will focus on the tackles. Greg Williams was hired as a defensive backs coach, and will focus on the cornerbacks. Williams worked in the same capacity with the Indianapolis Colts during the previous two seasons.Zach Azzanni was hired as wide receivers coach. Azzanni worked in the same capacity with the Chicago Bears in 2017.[5]
  • June 13:DeMarcus Ware, a former Broncos' defensive lineman from 2014 to 2016, was hired as a part-time pass-rush consultant, and will tutor the Broncos' next crop of pass rushers.[6]

Front office changes

[edit]

On July 2,Tom Heckert Jr., who had worked as a director of pro personnel and senior personnel advisor since2013, stepped down from his position due to health concerns and the expiration of his contract. Heckert was diagnosed withamyloidosis in2015 and was placed on medical leave during the second half of that season. Heckert died on August 6, 2018, at the age of 51. Former Broncos'head coachGary Kubiak remained as the team's lone senior personnel adviser until the end of the season.[7]

Ownership sale

[edit]

On March 21, 2018, the Broncos announced that John Bowlen, the brother of majority ownerPat Bowlen, agreed to sell a portion of his minority stake in the franchise back to the team. The statement released by the team said:

"The Denver Broncos have reached an agreement to purchase a portion of minority owner John Bowlen's share of the team, pending final approval from the NFL that is expected in the next few days. This transaction further consolidates Pat Bowlen's majority, controlling ownership interest in the Broncos while keeping 100 percent of the team in the Bowlen family. The acquisition of this share is independent of Mr. Bowlen's succession plan that is being administered by the Pat Bowlen Trust. John has been a great partner for many years, and we are very pleased he will remain a minority owner of the Denver Broncos."[8]

Roster changes

[edit]

Free agents

[edit]

Unrestricted

[edit]
PositionPlayer2018 TeamNotes
OTAllen BarbreNone
RBJamaal CharlesNone
DEJared CrickNone
LBTodd DavisDenver Broncosre-signed March 14[9]
WRBennie Fowler IIIChicago Bearsoriginally anRFA,[10] signed with the Bears on April 16[11]
TEVirgil GreenLos Angeles Chargerssigned with the Chargers on March 14[12]
WRCody LatimerNew York Giantssigned with the Giants on March 19[13]
LBCorey NelsonPhiladelphia Eaglessigned with the Eagles on March 14[14]
QBBrock OsweilerMiami Dolphinssigned with the Dolphins on March 23[15]
OTDonald StephensonCleveland Brownssigned with the Browns on March 14[14]
GBilly TurnerDenver Broncosre-signed March 17[16]
DEBilly WinnNone

Restricted and Exclusive-Rights

[edit]
PositionPlayerTag2018 TeamNotes
LBZaire AndersonERFANoneassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 16,[17] waived September 1[18]
LBShaquil BarrettRFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 23[19]
LBJerrol Garcia-WilliamsERFANoneassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 23,[19]
placed oninjured reserve September 1[18]
DEShelby HarrisERFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 9,[20] re-signed April 16[17]
LBJoseph JonesERFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 16[17]
LSCasey KreiterERFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 6[21]
CMatt ParadisRFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 20[22]
placed on injured reserve November 12[23]
WRJordan TaylorERFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 16,[17]
placed on thePUP list September 1[18]
OTElijah WilkinsonERFADenver Broncosassigned tender on March 12,[10] re-signed April 16[17]

Signings

[edit]
PositionPlayer2017 TeamNotes
PKTaylor BertoletNonesigned March 21,[24] waived April 30[25]
CBTramaine BrockMinnesota Vikingssigned March 14[26]
WRCorey BrownBuffalo Billssigned July 27,[27] designated as waived/injured on August 15[28]
WRRiver CracraftPractice squadpromoted to the active roster on November 2[29]
CGino GradkowskiCarolina Pantherssigned November 12[23]
TETemarrick HemingwayPractice squadpromoted to the active roster on November 27[30]
QBKevin HoganCleveland Brownsclaimed off waivers on September 2[31]
WRAndre HolmesBuffalo Billsclaimed off waivers on December 5,[32] placed on injured reserve December 28[33]
CBAdam JonesCincinnati Bengalssigned August 26,[34] waived November 20[35]
QBCase KeenumMinnesota Vikingssigned March 14[36]
PMarquette KingOakland Raiderssigned April 5,[37][38] released October 8[39][38]
LSChristian KuntzNonesigned March 21,[24] waived June 14[40]
DTCaushaud LyonsNonesigned June 15,[41] waived September 1[18]
DTClinton McDonaldTampa Bay Buccaneerssigned March 21,[24] released September 1[18]
CBCraig MagerLos Angeles Chargerssigned December 19[42]
TEBrian ParkerNonepromoted from the practice squad on September 29[43]
CBHorace RichardsonNonesigned December 28[33]
CBC. J. SmithCleveland Brownsclaimed off waivers on April 13,[44] waived September 1[18]
CBJamar TaylorCleveland Brownssigned December 4, two weeks after being released by theArizona Cardinals[45]
SShamarko ThomasBuffalo Billssigned August 13,[46] released September 1,[18]
signed September 11,[47] waived December 11[48]
PColby WadmanNonepromoted from the practice squad to the active roster on October 6[39]
LBAaron Wallace Jr.Nonesigned December 28[33]
WRDeAndrew WhiteHouston Texansclaimed off waivers on August 15[28]

Departures

[edit]
PositionPlayerNotes
RBC. J. Andersonreleased April 16[49]
GJ. J. Dielmandesignated as waived/injured on September 1[18]
WRCarlos Hendersondesignated as Reserve/Did Not Report on July 25[50]
suspended August 15 for one week for violating the league's substance abuse policy,[51]
waived September 1,[18] assigned to thepractice squad on September 3,[52]
released from the practice squad on September 13[53]
CBMichael Hunterwaived September 1[18]
OTCyrus Kouandjioreleased September 1,[18] re-signed November 20,[54] released December 4[45]
CBBrendan Langleywaived September 1[18] assigned to the practice squad on September 3,[52]
promoted to the active roster on November 20[35]
QBChad Kellyreleased October 24, one day after being arrested on criminal trespassing charges[55]
QBPaxton Lynchwaived September 2[31]
WRIsaiah McKenziewaived September 1,[18] re-signed September 2,[56] waived September 10,[57]
assigned to the practice squad on September 12,[58]
promoted to the active roster on October 25,[59] waived November 2[29]
NTKyle Pekowaived September 1,[18] assigned to the practice squad on September 3,[52]
waived September 11[60]
CBMarcus Riosdesignated as waived/injured on September 1[18]
TEAustin Traylorwaived September 1[18]

Trades

[edit]

Draft

[edit]
Main article:2018 NFL draft

Despite early reports that the Broncos would draft a quarterback, plus the draft of several offensive players, the Broncos stayed withCase Keenum,Paxton Lynch andChad Kelly going into mini-camps.[67][68]

2018 Denver Broncos Draft
RoundSelectionPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
15Bradley ChubbLBNC Statesigned June 21[69]
240Courtland SuttonWRSMUsigned May 10[70]
371Royce FreemanRBOregonsigned July 5[71]
99 *Isaac YiadomCBBoston Collegesigned May 26[72]
4106Josey JewellLBIowasigned May 10[70]
113DaeSean HamiltonWRPenn Statesigned May 10[70]
5156Troy FumagalliTEWisconsinsigned May 10,[70] placed oninjured reserve September 1[18]
6183Sam JonesGArizona Statesigned May 10[70]
217Keishawn BierriaLBWashingtonsigned May 10[70]
7226David WilliamsRBArkansassigned May 10,[70] waived September 1,[18]
assigned to thepractice squad on September 3[52]
*Compensatory selection[73]

Draft trades

[edit]
Trade partnerBroncos giveBroncos receiveSource
Arizona Cardinals2018 sixth-round selection (No. 182)Offensive tackleJared Veldheer[74]
Atlanta FalconsOffensive tackleTy Sambrailo2018 fifth-round selection (No. 163)[75]
Los Angeles RamsCornerbackAqib Talib2018 fifth-round selection(No. 160 – later traded back toLAR)[76]
2018 fifth-round selection (No. 160)Two 2018 sixth-round selections (Nos. 183 and 217)
Minnesota VikingsQuarterbackTrevor Siemian
2018 seventh-round selection (No. 225)
2019 fifth-round selection[77]
San Francisco 49ersRunning backKapri Bibbs
2017 fifth-round selection
2018 fourth-round selection (No. 109)[78]
Seattle Seahawks2018 fifth-round selection(No. 149 – fromWAS)2018 fifth-round selection (No. 156)
2018 seventh-round selection (No. 226)
[79]
Washington Redskins2018 fourth-round selection (No. 109)
Two 2018 fifth-round selections (Nos. 142 and 163)
SafetySu'a Cravens
2018 fourth-round selection (No. 113)
2018 fifth-round selection(No. 149 – later traded toSEA)
[80]

Undrafted free agents

[edit]

Allundrafted free agents were signed after the2018 NFL draft concluded on April 28,[81] unless noted otherwise.

2018 Denver Broncos Undrafted Free Agents
PlayerPositionCollegeNotes
WRBryce BoboColoradosigned August 3,[82] waived September 1[18]
LBBo BowerIowasigned June 15,[41] waived August 26[34]
WRMark ChapmanCentral Michigansigned July 26[83] waived September 1[18]
WRJohn DiarseTCUwaived September 1[18]
G/CNico FalahUSCsigned October 22[84]
OTAustin FleerColorado Mesasigned August 12[85] waived September 1[18]
LBJeff HollandAuburnwaived September 1,[18] assigned to thepractice squad on September 3,[86]
promoted to the active roster on November 30[87]
LBA. J. JohnsonTennesseesuspended during his senior year in 2014 due to legal issues,
signed August 13,[88] made the Week 1 roster, waived November 30[87]
OTLeon JohnsonTemplewaived August 12[85]
RBPhillip LindsayColoradomade the Week 1 roster
NTLowell LotuleleiBall Statewaived May 14[89]
STrey MarshallFlorida Statewaived September 1,[18] assigned to the practice squad on September 3,[52]
promoted to the active roster on December 11[48]
DEDeQuinton OsborneOklahoma Statesigned August 15,[28] waived September 1[18]
CAustin SchlottmannTCUwaived September 1,[18] assigned to the practice squad on September 3[52]
DEAntonio SimmonsGeorgia Techsigned June 15,[41] waived September 1[18]
QBNick StevensColorado Statesigned May 17,[89] waived June 14[40]
WRJimmy WilliamsEast Carolinadesignated as Reserve/Did Not Report on July 25[50]

Injuries

[edit]
  • May 30:LinebackerDeiontrez Mount ruptured hisAchilles tendon during organized team activities (OTAs), and was ruled out for the2018 season.[90] Mount was designated as waived/injured on June 14.[40]
  • August 13:SafetyJamal Carter was placed oninjured reserve, after suffering a torn hamstring during the team's first preseason game against theMinnesota Vikings.[46]
  • August 20:Offensive tackleMenelik Watson was placed on injured reserve due to a chest injury, and was released once he was declared healthy.[91]
  • September 2: SafetySu'a Cravens was placed on injured reserve due to a knee injury, with the designation to return to the roster after eight weeks,[56] and was reinstated to the active roster on November 2, two days ahead of the Broncos' Week 9 game vs. theHouston Texans.[29]
  • September 27:Tight endJake Butt suffered a tornACL in his left knee during practice, and was placed on the season-ending injured reserve. This was the third knee injury that Butt has suffered – he tore the ACL in his right knee twice while at theUniversity of Michigan (2014 and 2016), and missed his entire rookie season in2017 while rehabbing from the second knee injury.[92][43]
  • October 6:PunterMarquette King was placed on injured reserve due to a thigh injury, and was released on October 8.[39][38]
  • October 14:GuardRonald Leary ruptured his Achilles tendon during the team's Week 6 loss to theLos Angeles Rams, and was placed on injured reserve.[84]
  • October 28: LinebackerBrandon Marshall suffered a knee injury during the team's Week 8 loss to theKansas City Chiefs, and returned to practice on November 28.[93]
  • November 4:CenterMatt Paradis suffered a broken leg during the team's Week 9 loss to the Houston Texans, and was placed on injured reserve one week later, during the team's Week 10bye.[23]
  • November 16: GuardMax Garcia suffered a torn ACL during practice – two days ahead of the team's Week 11 win over theLos Angeles Chargers, and was placed on injured reserve four days later (November 20).[54]
  • November 25: During the team's Week 12 win over thePittsburgh Steelers, linebackerShaquil Barrett sustained a tear in his hip flexor, and missed a few weeks.[94] Also in Week 12, tight endJeff Heuerman suffered three broken ribs and a bruised lung, and was placed on injured reserve two days later.[30]
  • December 2: CornerbackChris Harris, Jr. suffered a broken fibula during the team's Week 13 win over theCincinnati Bengals. He was not initially placed on injured reserve, and hoped to return to action if the Broncos had made the playoffs.[32] However, after the Broncos were eliminated from postseason contention in Week 15, Harris was officially placed on injured reserve on December 19.[42]
  • December 5:Wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders ruptured his Achilles tendon during practice, and was placed on injured reserve.[32]
  • December 28:Running backPhillip Lindsay (wrist) and wide receiverAndre Holmes (ankle) were both injured during the team's Week 16 loss to theOakland Raiders, and were placed on injured reserve ahead of the Broncos' final season game.[33]

Staff

[edit]
2018 Denver Broncos staff

Front office

  • Owner –Pat Bowlen
  • President/CEO –Joe Ellis
  • President of football operations/general manager –John Elway
  • Director of player personnel –Matt Russell
  • Senior personnel advisor –Gary Kubiak
  • Director of pro personnel – A.J. Durso
  • Director of college scouting – Brian Stark
  • Director of football administration – Mike Sullivan
  • Director of team administration – Mark Thewes
  • Director of player development –Ray Jackson
  • Director of football analytics – Mitch Tanney

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

Final roster

[edit]
2018 Denver Broncos roster
Quarterbacks(QB)

Running backs(RB)

Wide receivers(WR)

Tight ends(TE)

Offensive linemen(OL)

Defensive linemen(DL)

Linebackers(LB)

Defensive backs(DB)

Special teams(ST)

Practice squad

Reserve

Rookies in italics
53 active, 15 reserve, 10 practice squad

Preseason

[edit]
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
1August 11Minnesota VikingsL 28–420–1Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
2August 18Chicago BearsL 23–240–2Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
3August 23atWashington RedskinsW 29–171–2FedExFieldRecap
4August 30atArizona CardinalsW 21–102–2State Farm StadiumRecap

Regular season

[edit]

Schedule

[edit]
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
1September 9Seattle SeahawksW 27–241–0Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
2September 16Oakland RaidersW 20–192–0Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
3September 23atBaltimore RavensL 14–272–1M&T Bank StadiumRecap
4October 1Kansas City ChiefsL 23–272–2Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
5October 7atNew York JetsL 16–342–3MetLife StadiumRecap
6October 14Los Angeles RamsL 20–232–4Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
7October 18atArizona CardinalsW 45–103–4State Farm StadiumRecap
8October 28atKansas City ChiefsL 23–303–5Arrowhead StadiumRecap
9November 4Houston TexansL 17–193–6Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
10Bye
11November 18atLos Angeles ChargersW 23–224–6StubHub CenterRecap
12November 25Pittsburgh SteelersW 24–175–6Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
13December 2atCincinnati BengalsW 24–106–6Paul Brown StadiumRecap
14December 9atSan Francisco 49ersL 14–206–7Levi's StadiumRecap
15December 15Cleveland BrownsL 16–176–8Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap
16December 24atOakland RaidersL 14–276–9Oakland–Alameda County ColiseumRecap
17December 30Los Angeles ChargersL 9–236–10Broncos Stadium at Mile HighRecap

Note: Intra-division opponents are inbold text.

Game summaries

[edit]

Week 1: vs. Seattle Seahawks

[edit]
Week One: Seattle Seahawks at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Seahawks737724
Broncos7103727

atBroncos Stadium at Mile High,Denver, Colorado

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • SEA – Sebastian Janikowski 35-yard field goal, 13:59.Seahawks 10–7.Drive: 6 plays, 78 yards, 1:46.
  • DEN –Emmanuel Sanders 43-yard pass from Case Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 10:29.Broncos 14–10.Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 3:30.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 51-yard field goal, 5:25.Broncos 17–10.Drive: 6 plays, 30 yards, 2:33.

Third quarter

  • SEA –Brandon Marshall 20-yard pass from Russell Wilson (Sebastian Janikowski kick), 6:02.Tied 17–17.Drive: 5 plays, 41 yards, 1:56.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 53-yard field goal, 2:01.Broncos 20–17.Drive: 4 plays, 0 yards, 0:54.

Fourth quarter

  • SEA –Tyler Lockett 51-yard pass from Russell Wilson (Sebastian Janikowski kick), 14:46.Seahawks 24–20.Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 2:15.
  • DEN –Demaryius Thomas 4-yard pass from Case Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 11:11.Broncos 27–24.Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:35.

Top passers

  • SEA – Russell Wilson – 19/33, 298 yards, 3 TD, 2 INT
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 25/39, 329 yards, 3 TD, 3 INT

Top rushers

  • SEA –Chris Carson – 7 carries, 51 yards
  • DEN – Philip Lindsay – 15 carries, 71 yards

Top receivers

  • SEA – Will Dissly – 3 receptions, 105 yards, TD
  • DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 10 receptions, 135 yards, TD

For an eighth consecutive year, the Broncos kicked off the season at home, with theSeahawks as their Week 1 opponent. Following an interception of Broncos' quarterbackCase Keenum by Seahawks' safetyEarl Thomas midway through the first quarter, quarterbackRussell Wilson connected with tight endWill Dissly on a 15-yard touchdown pass. The Broncos responded on their next possession, with Keenum throwing a 29-yard touchdown pass to running backPhillip Lindsay. After a 35-yard field goal by placekickerSebastian Janikowski gave the Seahawks a 10–7 lead early in the second quarter, the Broncos claimed the lead with a 43-yard touchdown pass from Keenum to wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders. A 51-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus later in the second quarter increased the Broncos' lead to 17–10. At the two-minute warning, Janikowski missed wide left on a 51-yard field goal, however, he got a second chance as the result of an offsides penalty on Broncos' cornerbackTramaine Brock. Janikowski missed wide left again on the second attempt – from 46 yards out. Three plays later, the Broncos' reached the Seahawks' 26-yard line, and were hoping to increase their lead heading into halftime, however, Keenum was intercepted by safetyBradley McDougald.[95]

Following an exchange of turnovers midway through the third quarter – a fumble recovery by Broncos' linebackerVon Miller off Seahawks' running backChris Carson and another interception of Keenum by McDougald, the Seahawks pulled even, with Wilson connecting with wide receiverBrandon Marshall on a 20-yard touchdown pass. Following an interception of Wilson by Broncos' safetyJustin Simmons, a 53-yard field goal by McManus later in the third quarter gave the Broncos a 20–17 lead. On the second play of the fourth quarter, the Seahawks reclaimed the lead, with Wilson launching a 51-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverTyler Lockett. The Broncos then drove 75 yards in seven plays, culminating in Keenum's third touchdown pass of the game – a 4-yarder to wide receiverDemaryius Thomas in the corner of the end zone with 11:18 remaining in the game. The play was reviewed by instant replay, but was upheld as the result of Demaryius Thomas keeping both of his toes in the end zone. Both teams punted on their next two possessions, and after the Seahawks were forced to burn all three of their team timeouts, they had one last possession with 1:01 remaining in the game, however, Wilson was intercepted by cornerbackAdam Jones at the Seahawks' 40-yard line, ending the game.[95]

Week 2: vs. Oakland Raiders

[edit]
Week Two: Oakland Raiders at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Raiders397019
Broncos00101020

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

Game information

First quarter

  • OAK –Mike Nugent 26-yard field goal, 9:33.Raiders 3–0.Drive: 9 plays, 67 yards, 5:27.

Second quarter

  • OAK – Mike Nugent 46-yard field goal, 11:47.Raiders 6–0.Drive: 9 plays, 43 yards, 4:54.
  • OAK –Marshawn Lynch 1-yard run (kick blocked), 0:35.Raiders 12–0.Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:51.

Third quarter

  • DEN –Royce Freeman 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 9:06.Raiders 12–7.Drive: 11 plays, 75 yards, 5:54.
  • OAK –Seth Roberts 20-yard pass fromDerek Carr (Mike Nugent kick), 5:25.Raiders 19–7.Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 3:41.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 39-yard field goal, 2:43.Raiders 19–10.Drive: 10 plays, 54 yards, 2:42.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN – Case Keenum 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 5:58.Raiders 19–17.Drive: 14 plays, 67 yards, 7:08.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 36-yard field goal, 0:06.Broncos 20–19.Drive: 10 plays, 62 yards, 1:52.

Top passers

  • OAK – Derek Carr – 29/32, 288 yards, TD
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 19/35, 222 yards, INT (1 rushing TD)

Top rushers

  • OAK – Marshawn Lynch – 18 carries, 65 yards, TD
  • DEN – Philip Lindsay – 14 carries, 107 yards

Top receivers

  • OAK –Amari Cooper – 10 receptions, 116 yards
  • DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 4 receptions, 96 yards

The Broncos' offense went three-and-out on four of their six first half possessions. They reached the Raiders' 18-yard line on their fifth possession, which was aided by a 53-yard run by running backPhillip Lindsay, however, a pass attempt by quarterbackCase Keenum intended for tight endJake Butt near the goal line was intercepted by Raiders' cornerbackRashaan Melvin. TheRaiders took a 12–0 lead on a pair of field goals by placekickerMike Nugent – a 26-yarder on the opening drive followed by a 46-yarder early in the second quarter – and a 1-yard touchdown run by running backMarshawn Lynch just before halftime. The extra-point attempt on the Lynch touchdown was blocked by Broncos' linebackerShaquil Barrett.[96]

The Broncos got on the scoreboard on the opening possession of the second half, with a 1-yard touchdown run by running backRoyce Freeman. The drive was kept alive by an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on Raiders' linebackerBruce Irvin, after the Raiders' defense had stopped the Broncos on third down at the 9-yard line. The Raiders responded on their next possession, with a 20-yard touchdown pass from quarterbackDerek Carr to wide receiverSeth Roberts at the 5:31 mark of the third quarter. The Raiders were held scoreless for the remainder of the game, and the Broncos pulled to within a 19–10 deficit, with a 39-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus. The Raiders then drove to the Broncos' 33-yard line, and faced a 4th-and-1, however, instead of kicking a long field goal, the Raiders opted for a short pass from Carr to fullbackKeith Smith, which fell incomplete. The Broncos then assembled a 14-play, 67-yard drive, with Keenum diving for a 1-yard touchdown on a 4th-and-goal quarterback draw, narrowing the Raiders' lead to 19–17 with 6:02 remaining in the game. Keenum's run was reviewed, but upheld by instant replay. The Raiders gained two first downs, reached midfield and forced the Broncos to burn the last two of their three team timeouts, but were forced to punt just before the two-minute warning. Following an offensive holding penalty that drove the Broncos back to their own 10-yard line, Keenum engineered a 10-play, 62-yard drive, culminating in McManus kicking a game-winning 36-yard field goal with only 10 seconds left. The drive was keyed by a 26-yard completion from Keenum to wide receiverTim Patrick, who evaded tackles by Raiders' cornerbacksGareon Conley andLeon Hall, who unsuccessfully tried to keep Patrick from scampering out of bounds with both teams out of timeouts. The Broncos' defense thwarted the Raiders' last desperation play of the game.[96]

Notes

With a temperature of 92 °F (33 °C), this was the hottest home game in Broncos' franchise history.[97]

Week 3: at Baltimore Ravens

[edit]
Week Three: Denver Broncos at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos1400014
Ravens10107027

atM&T Bank Stadium,Baltimore, Maryland

Game information

First quarter

  • DEN –Royce Freeman 6-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 13:29.Broncos 7–0.Drive: 1 play, 6 yards, 0:04.
  • BAL –Alex Collins 6-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 10:57.Tied 7–7.Drive: 5 plays, 48 yards, 2:32.
  • DEN –Emmanuel Sanders 35-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 7:02.Broncos 14–7.Drive: 8 plays, 70 yards, 3:55.
  • BAL – Justin Tucker 52-yard field goal, 3:38.Broncos 14–10.Drive: 8 plays, 40 yards, 3:24.

Second quarter

  • BAL –Javorius Allen 12-yard pass fromJoe Flacco (Justin Tucker kick), 8:26.Ravens 17–14.Drive: 9 plays, 52 yards, 3:49.
  • BAL – Justin Tucker 52-yard field goal, 0:00.Ravens 20–14.Drive: 4 plays, 16 yards, 0:26.

Third quarter

  • BAL – Javorius Allen 1-yard run (Justin Tucker kick), 7:26.Ravens 27–14.Drive: 14 plays, 82 yards, 6:19.

Fourth quarter

  • No scoring plays.

Top passers

  • DEN –Case Keenum – 22/34, 192 yards, INT
  • BAL – Joe Flacco – 25/40, 277 yards, TD

Top rushers

  • DEN – Royce Freeman – 13 rushes, 53 yards, TD
  • BAL – Alex Collins – 18 rushes, 68 yards, TD

Top receivers

  • DEN –Demaryius Thomas – 5 receptions, 63 yards
  • BAL – Javorius Allen – 5 receptions, 86 yards

In their first road game of the season, the Broncos were plagued by several penalties, in a 27–14 loss at theBaltimore Ravens. After Ravens' punterSam Koch has his punt blocked byJoseph Jones on the opening possession of the game, the Broncos grabbed the early lead on the next play, with a 6-yard touchdown run by running backRoyce Freeman. The Ravens countered, with running backAlex Collins rushing for a 6-yard touchdown. The drive started at the Broncos' 48-yard line, after Broncos' cornerbackIsaac Yiadom was flagged for an unnecessary roughness penalty while on the sidelines. The Broncos grabbed a 14–7 lead on their next possession, with a 35-yard touchdown run by wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders on an end-around. However, the Broncos were held scoreless for the remainder of the game. The Ravens pulled to within a 14–10 deficit late in the first quarter, with a 52-yard field goal by placekickerJustin Tucker, and took the lead for good midway through the second quarter, with a 12-yard touchdown pass from quarterbackJoe Flacco to running backJavorius Allen. The play was initially ruled down at the 1-yard line, but changed by instant replay. After the Broncos went three-and-out, the Ravens were attempting to add to their lead, but Tucker's 43-yard field goal attempt was blocked byJustin Simmons and recovered byChris Harris, Jr., who scampered down the sideline for a touchdown. However, Harris' touchdown was nullified by an illegal block penalty on the return byBilly Turner, pushing back the first play of scrimmage of the Broncos' next drive back to near midfield. Three plays later, the Broncos reached the Ravens' 25-yard line, however, on the fourth play, Ravens' linebackerTerrell Suggs forced a fumble off Broncos' quarterbackCase Keenum, and running backPhillip Lindsay was ejected from the game just before the two-minute warning for unsportsmanlike conduct while trying to recover the fumble. This pushed the Broncos out of field goal range, and another field 52-yard field goal by Tucker gave the Ravens a 20–14 lead at halftime.[98]

The Ravens added to their lead on their first possession of the second half, with a 1-yard run by Allen, which was the final scoring play of the game. The drive was aided by a defensive offsides penalty on Broncos' defensive endDerek Wolfe on a 3rd-and-4. The Broncos committed three costly penalties on their next drive – offensive holding onGarett Bolles that negated a 39-yard pass completion from Keenum to wide receiverDemaryius Thomas at the Ravens' 11-yard line, a holding call onConnor McGovern at the Ravens' 31-yard line and an unnecessary roughness flag onRonald Leary that pushed the Broncos out of field goal range. The Broncos reached the Ravens' 5-yard line on their first possession of the fourth quarter, but Keenum was intercepted byPatrick Onwuasor, who ran 89 yards for a touchdown. However, the touchdown was nullified by an illegal block on the return. The Broncos had one more possession, but turned the football over on downs with three minutes remaining in the game, and the Ravens ran out the clock.[98]

Week 4: vs. Kansas City Chiefs

[edit]
Week Four: Kansas City Chiefs at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Chiefs3731427
Broncos3107323

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

Game information

First quarter

  • DEN –Brandon McManus 42-yard field goal, 11:33.Broncos 3–0.Drive: 7 plays, 51 yards, 3:27.
  • KC –Harrison Butker 33-yard field goal, 6:03.Tied 3–3.Drive: 10 plays, 60 yards, 5:30.

Second quarter

  • KC –Patrick Mahomes 8-yard run (Harrison Butker kick), 9:33.Chiefs 10–3.Drive: 12 plays, 89 yards, 5:39.
  • DEN –Royce Freeman 13-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 6:37.Tied 10–10.Drive: 5 plays, 78 yards, 2:56.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 34-yard field goal, 0:00.Broncos 13–10.Drive: 12 plays, 60 yards, 2:17.

Third quarter

  • KC – Harrison Butker 21-yard field goal, 9:32.Tied 13–13.Drive: 12 plays, 72 yards, 5:28.
  • DEN –Phillip Lindsay 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 2:05.Broncos 20–13.Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, 4:33.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN – Brandon McManus 46-yard field goal, 12:47.Broncos 23–13.Drive: 6 plays, 48 yards, 2:43.
  • KC –Travis Kelce 2-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 6:27.Broncos 23–20.Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 6:20.
  • KC –Kareem Hunt 4-yard run (Harrison Butker kick), 1:39.Chiefs 27–23.Drive: 8 plays, 60 yards, 2:56.

Top passers

  • KC – Patrick Mahomes – 28/45, 304 yards, TD
  • DEN –Case Keenum – 21/33, 245 yards, INT

Top rushers

  • KC – Kareem Hunt – 19 carries, 121 yards, TD
  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay – 12 carries, 69 yards, TD

Top receivers

After an exchange of field goals in the first quarter – a 42-yarder by Broncos placekickerBrandon McManus and a 33-yarder byChiefs' placekickerHarrison Butker, Chiefs' quarterbackPatrick Mahomes scrambled for an 8-yard touchdown and Broncos' running backRoyce Freeman ran for a 14-yard touchdown – both midway through the second quarter. A 34-yard field goal by McManus just before halftime gave the Broncos a 13–10 lead. A 21-yard field goal by Butker on the Chiefs' opening possession of the second half tied the game. A 1-yard touchdown run by running backPhillip Lindsay later in the third quarter, coupled with a 46-yard field goal by McManus early in the fourth quarter gave the Broncos a 23–13 lead. Mahomes then engineered a 12-play, 75-yard drive, culminating in a 2-yard touchdown pass to tight endTravis Kelce to narrow the Broncos lead to 23–20 with 6:30 remaining in the game. After the Broncos went three-and-out, the Chiefs grabbed a 27–23 lead, with a 4-yard touchdown pass to running backKareem Hunt. The drive featured a critical third-down conversion, in which Mahomes threw left-handed to wide receiverTyreek Hill while being pursued out of bounds by Broncos' linebackersVon Miller andShane Ray. The drive was also marred with controversy, in which the Broncos claimed that the referees missed a delay-of-game call on a critical third-down play. With 1:39 remaining in the game and no timeouts, the Broncos attempted a rally, and reached the Chiefs' 28-yard line with 32 seconds remaining after a 36-yard completion from quarterbackCase Keenum to tight endJeff Heuerman. On the next play, Keenum overthrew wide receiverDemaryius Thomas down the sideline on a potential game-winning touchdown. With 16 seconds left, and facing a 4th-and-10, Keenum completed a pass to wide receiverCourtland Sutton, and Sutton attempted a hook-and-lateral, which was fumbled and recovered by Chiefs' defensive endJustin Houston, but ruled incomplete after instant replay, ending the Broncos' rally attempt.[99]

Notes

This was the first of two games in which the Broncos wore their alternate navy blue jerseys – the other wasWeek 15 vs. the Cleveland Browns.[100]

Week 5: at New York Jets

[edit]
Week Five: Denver Broncos at New York Jets – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos730616
Jets02131034

atMetLife Stadium,East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • NYJ –Isaiah Crowell 77-yard run (Jason Myers kick), 13:57.Tied 7–7.Drive: 1 play, 77 yards, 0:12.
  • NYJ –Robby Anderson 76-yard pass fromSam Darnold (Jason Myers kick), 10:46.Jets 14–7.Drive: 3 plays, 76 yards, 0:50.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 30-yard field goal, 3:58.Jets 14–10.Drive: 11 plays, 79 yards, 4:04.
  • NYJ – Robby Anderson 35-yard pass from Sam Darnold (Jason Myers kick), 1:13.Jets 21–10.Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 2:45.

Third quarter

  • NYJ – Jason Myers 49-yard field goal, 4:52.Jets 24–10.Drive: 13 plays, 64 yards, 6:34.

Fourth quarter

  • NYJ – Jason Myers 30-yard field goal, 12:59.Jets 27–10.Drive: 4 plays, –1 yard, 2:01.
  • NYJ –Terrelle Pryor 20-yard pass from Sam Darnold, 5:10.Jets 34–10.Drive: 6 plays, 93 yards, 3:54.
  • DEN –Demaryius Thomas 42-yard pass from Case Keenum (pass failed), 3:18.Jets 34–16.Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 1:52.

Top passers

  • DEN – Case Keenum – 35/51, 377 yards, 2 TD, INT
  • NYJ – Sam Darnold – 10/22, 198 yards, 3 TD, INT

Top rushers

  • DEN –Phillip Lindsay – 12 rushes, 61 yards
  • NYJ – Isaiah Crowell – 15 rushes, 219 yards, TD

Top receivers

  • DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 5 receptions, 105 yards, TD
  • NYJ – Robby Anderson – 3 receptions, 123 yards, 2 TD

After forcing a fumble on theJets' opening drive, the Broncos took the early lead, with an 8-yard touchdown pass from quarterbackCase Keenum to wide receiverCourtland Sutton. However, the Jets took control of the game in the second quarter. The Broncos' defense allowed Jets' running backIsaiah Crowell to rush for 219 yards, including a 77-yard touchdown, and quarterbackSam Darnold threw three touchdown passes – including a 76-yarder to wide receiverRobby Anderson. From the second quarter onward, the Broncos' offense only managed a 30-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus and a 42-yard touchdown pass from Keenum to wide receiverDemaryius Thomas – the latter of which occurred after the game had been decided in the Jets' favor.[101]

Week 6: vs. Los Angeles Rams

[edit]
Week Six: Los Angeles Rams at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Rams677323
Broncos3071020

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

  • Date: October 14
  • Game time: 2:05 pm. MDT
  • Game weather: 25 °F (−4 °C), mostly cloudy
  • Game attendance: 76,109
  • Referee:Shawn Smith
  • TV announcers (Fox): Dick Stockton, Mark Schlereth and Jennifer Hale
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

  • LAR –Cairo Santos 26-yard field goal, 11:23.Rams 3–0.Drive: 7 plays, 63 yards, 2:03.
  • LAR – Cairo Santos 39-yard field goal, 4:21.Rams 6–0.Drive: 9 plays, 71 yards, 4:26.
  • DEN –Brandon McManus 28-yard field goal, 0:03.Rams 6–3.Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 4:18.

Second quarter

  • LAR –Todd Gurley 10-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 10:57.Rams 13–3.Drive: 7 plays, 66 yards, 4:06.

Third quarter

  • LAR – Todd Gurley 1-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 6:09.Rams 20–3.Drive: 8 plays, 58 yards, 4:00.
  • DEN –Emmanuel Sanders 22-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 1:34.Rams 20–10.Drive: 1 play, 12 yards, 0:31.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN – Brandon McManus 24-yard field goal, 8:54.Rams 20–13.Drive: 5 plays, 57 yards, 1:20.
  • LAR – Cairo Santos 21-yard field goal, 3:15.Rams 23–13.Drive: 13 plays, 72 yards, 5:39.
  • DEN –Demaryius Thomas 1-yard pass from Case Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 1:22.Rams 23–20.Drive: 9 plays, 77 yards, 1:53.

Top passers

  • LAR –Jared Goff – 14/28, 201 yards, INT
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 25/41, 322 yards, 2 TD, INT

Top rushers

  • LAR – Todd Gurley – 28 rushes, 208 yards, 2 TD
  • DEN –Royce Freeman – 9 rushes, 22 yards

Top receivers

  • LAR –Robert Woods – 7 rushes, 109 yards
  • DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 7 rushes, 115 yards, TD

TheRams took an early 6–0 lead, with a pair of field goals by placekickerCairo Santos – a 26- and a 39-yarder. Near the end of the first quarter, quarterbackCase Keenum completed what was initially ruled as a 44-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders, who was immediately flagged for a taunting penalty against Rams' cornerbackTroy Hill, which would have been penalized on the kickoff. However, instant replay determined that Sanders was ruled down at the 1-yard line by contact, where the unsportsmanlike conduct penalty was assessed. The Broncos were forced to settle for a 28-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus. A 10-yard touchdown run by Rams' running backTodd Gurley was the only scoring play of the second quarter. The Broncos reached the Rams' 28-yard line on the first possession of the second quarter, only to have a holding penalty on offensive tackleGarett Bolles push them out of field goal range. Following an exchange of punts to start the second half, the Rams increased their lead to 20–3, with a 1-yard run by Gurley. On the Rams' next possession, quarterbackJared Goff was intercepted by Broncos' safetyDarian Stewart on a deflected pass deep in Rams' territory, and two plays later, Keenum connected with Sanders on a 22-yard touchdown pass near the end of the third quarter. After forcing a Rams' punt, the Broncos reached the 6-yard line, but were forced to settle for a 24-yard field goal by McManus at the 8:57 mark of the fourth quarter. The Broncos' defense prevented the Rams defense from reaching the end zone, however, Santos responded with a 21-yard field goal to give the Rams a 23–13 lead with 3:19 remaining. Without any timeouts, the Broncos reached the end zone in nine plays, and pulled to within a 23–20 deficit, with a 1-yard touchdown pass from Keenum to wide receiverDemaryius Thomas with 1:27 remaining in the game, in what would be Thomas' final touchdown as a Denver Bronco. However, the onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, and the Rams ran out the clock.[102]

This wasDemaryius Thomas' final home game atBroncos Stadium at Mile High as a Bronco, as he would be traded to theHouston Texans on October 30.[103]

Week 7: at Arizona Cardinals

[edit]
Week Seven: Denver Broncos at Arizona Cardinals – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos21147345
Cardinals307010

atState Farm Stadium,Glendale, Arizona

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • DEN – Emmanuel Sanders 64-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 14:40.Broncos 28–3.Drive: 1 play, 64 yards, 0:11.
  • DEN –Royce Freeman 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 0:21.Broncos 35–3.Drive: 15 plays, 70 yards, 6:39.

Third quarter

  • ARI –Larry Fitzgerald 4-yard pass fromJosh Rosen (Phil Dawson kick), 8:33.Broncos 35–10.Drive: 11 plays, 63 yards, 4:11.
  • DEN –Phillip Lindsay 28-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 3:32.Broncos 42–10.Drive: 3 plays, 43 yards, 1:35.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN – Brandon McManus 41-yard field goal, 5:35.Broncos 45–10.Drive: 4 plays, –11 yards, 2:13.

Top passers

  • DEN – Case Keenum – 14/21, 161 yards, TD, INT
  • ARI – Josh Rosen – 21/39, 194 yards, TD, 3 INT

Top rushers

  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay – 14 rushes, 90 yards, TD
  • ARI –David Johnson – 14 rushes, 39 yards

Top receivers

  • DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 6 receptions, 102 yards, TD
  • ARI –Christian Kirk – 3 receptions, 57 yards

The Broncos' defense returned two interceptions offCardinals' quarterbackJosh Rosen for touchdowns in the first quarter – one by linebackerTodd Davis and the other by cornerbackChris Harris, Jr., and wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders received and threw a touchdown pass, in a 45–10 rout of the Cardinals. Running backsRoyce Freeman andPhillip Lindsay each rushed for a touchdown, and after surrendering a combined 593 rushing yards in their previous two games against theLos Angeles Rams andNew York Jets, the Broncos' defense allowed only 69 rushing yards.[104]

Notes

The Broncos improved their all-time series record against the Cardinals to 9–1–1.[105] This was the only game during the2018 season in which the Broncos scored 30 or more points.

Week 8: at Kansas City Chiefs

[edit]
Week Eight: Denver Broncos at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos770923
Chiefs31314030

atArrowhead Stadium,Kansas City, Missouri

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • KC –Travis Kelce 9-yard pass fromPatrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 9:31.Chiefs 10–7.Drive: 4 plays, 55 yards, 2:10.
  • KC –Sammy Watkins 13-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (kick failed, wide left), 0:54.Chiefs 16–7.Drive: 8 plays, 92 yards, 4:24.
  • DEN –Tim Patrick 24-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 0:05.Chiefs 16–14.Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 0:49.

Third quarter

  • KC – Sammy Watkins 10-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 10:16.Chiefs 23–14.Drive: 9 plays, 83 yards, 4:44.
  • KC –Kareem Hunt 23-yard pass from Patrick Mahomes (Harrison Butker kick), 5:12.Chiefs 30–14.Drive: 4 plays, 32 yards, 1:53.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN –Jeff Heuerman 4-yard pass from Case Keenum (run failed), 14:57.Chiefs 30–20.Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 5:15.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 36-yard field goal, 1:48.Chiefs 30–23.Drive: 10 plays, 46 yards, 2:12.

Top passers

  • DEN – Case Keenum – 23/34, 262 yards, 2 TD, INT
  • KC – Patrick Mahomes – 24/34, 303 yards, 4 TD, INT

Top rushers

  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay – 18 rushes, 95 yards, TD
  • KC – Kareem Hunt – 16 rushes, 50 yards, receiving TD

Top receivers

  • DEN –Courtland Sutton – 3 receptions, 78 yards
  • KC – Sammy Watkins – 8 receptions, 107 yards, 2 TD

For the second time in the month of October, the Broncos faced theirAFC West rivalKansas City Chiefs. A 1-yard touchdown run by running backPhillip Lindsay gave the Broncos the early lead. The Chiefs got on the board, with a 24-yard field goal by placekickerHarrison Butker, a drive that was aided by a defensive pass interference penalty on Broncos cornerbackBradley Roby on a 3rd-and-19. Broncos' placekickerBrandon McManus missed wide right on a 55-yard field goal attempt, one play after wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders was tackled for a 6-yard loss on an end-around. The Chiefs took the lead in the second quarter with two touchdown passes by quarterbackPatrick Mahomes – a 9-yarder to tight endTravis Kelce and a 13-yarder to wide receiverSammy Watkins – the latter with a missed extra point attempt. The Broncos pulled to within a 16–14 deficit just before halftime, with quarterbackCase Keenum connecting with wide receiverTim Patrick on a 24-yard touchdown pass. The Chiefs then increased their lead to 30–14 on their first two possessions of the second half, with two more touchdown passes by Mahomes – a 10-yarder to Watkins, followed by a 23-yarder to running backKareem Hunt.[106]

On the first play of the fourth quarter, the Broncos responded, with Keenum throwing a 4-yard touchdown pass to tight endJeff Heuerman. However, the two-point conversion attempt was unsuccessful, which would have pulled the Broncos to within a one-score deficit. The Broncos' defense forced a turnover on the Chiefs' next possession, with safetyJustin Simmons intercepting a pass from Mahomes at the Broncos' 39-yard line. However, four plays later, after the Broncos had reached the Chiefs' 39-yard line, Keenum was strip-sacked byDee Ford, with Chiefs' linebackerBreeland Speaks recovering the fumble. The Broncos' defense forced a Chiefs punt, however, on the next possession, Keenum was intercepted by cornerbackKendall Fuller near midfield. Following an exchange of punts, and after burning two of their three team timeouts, the Broncos drove 46 yards in ten plays, with a 36-yard field goal by McManus pulling the Broncos to within a 30–23 deficit just after the two-minute warning. The Broncos' defense forced a three-and-out from the Chiefs, and the Broncos had one last offensive play, however, with only four seconds left and no timeouts, their last desperation play of the game was unsuccessful.[106]

Notes

This wasDemaryius Thomas' final game as a Bronco, as he would be traded two days later on October 30 to the Houston Texans, who Denver would host in their following game.[107]

The Broncos lost their seventh consecutive game against the Chiefs – surpassing the team's longest losing skid against the Chiefs since a six-game streak from 1970 to 1973.[108]

Week 9: vs. Houston Texans

[edit]
Week Nine: Houston Texans at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Texans790319
Broncos377017

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • HOU –DeAndre Hopkins 16-yard pass from Deshaun Watson (kick failed, wide right), 11:05.Texans 13–3.Drive: 3 plays, 22 yards, 1:19.
  • DEN –Devontae Booker 14-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 5:33.Texans 13–10.Drive: 4 plays, 87 yards, 2:30.
  • HOU – Kaʻimi Fairbairn 46-yard field goal, 0:00.Texans 16–10.Drive: 3 plays, 20 yards, 0:18.

Third quarter

  • DEN –Jeff Heuerman 12-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 5:57.Broncos 17–16.Drive: 12 plays, 81 yards, 5:56.

Fourth quarter

  • HOU – Kaʻimi Fairbairn 37-yard field goal, 14:06.Texans 19–17.Drive: 13 plays, 56 yards, 6:51.

Top passers

  • HOU – Deshaun Watson – 17/24, 213 yards, 2 TD
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 26/42, 290 yards, TD

Top rushers

Top receivers

  • HOU – DeAndre Hopkins – 10 rushes, 105 yards, TD
  • DEN – Jeff Heuerman – 10 receptions, 83 yards, TD

TheTexans took the lead on their game's opening drive, with a 7-yard touchdown pass from quarterbackDeshaun Watson to tight endJordan Thomas. A 44-yard field goal by Broncos' placekickerBrandon McManus put the Broncos on the scoreboard. However, after running backDevontae Booker lost a fumble deep in Broncos' territory early in the second quarter, the Texans capitalized, with Watson connecting with wide receiverDeAndre Hopkins on a 16-yard touchdown (with a missed extra point attempt). Following an exchange of punts, Booker redeemed himself, with a 14-yard touchdown run. With only 22 seconds remaining in the first half, McManus missed wide right on a 62-yard field goal attempt, giving the Texans a short field and an opportunity to score. Broncos' head coachVance Joseph attempted to ice Texans' placekickerKaʻimi Fairbairn prior to attempting a half-ending 46-yard field goal. The initial attempt missed wide right, but Fairbairn's second attempt was successful, giving the Texans a 16–10 lead. The Broncos took their first and only lead of the game, with quarterbackCase Keenum throwing a 12-yard touchdown pass to tight endJeff Heuerman, which was the only scoring play of the third quarter. The Texans reclaimed the lead early in the fourth quarter, with a 37-yard field goal by Fairbairn. The drive was extended as the result of a defensive holding penalty on Broncos' safetySu'a Cravens on a third-down play. Following an exchange of punts, the Broncos, trailing 19–17, had one last offensive possession, and reached the Texans' 33-yard line, however, McManus missed wide right on a 51-yard field goal as time expired.[109]

Notes

Wide receiverDemaryius Thomas, who was traded by the Broncos to the Texans earlier in the week, made his debut in a Texans' uniform.[62]

Week 11: at Los Angeles Chargers

[edit]
Week Eleven: Denver Broncos at Los Angeles Chargers – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos077923
Chargers676322

atStubhub Center,Carson, California

  • Date: November 18
  • Game time: 2:05 pm. MST/1:05 p.m.PST
  • Game weather: 69 °F (21 °C), clear
  • Game attendance: 25,462
  • Referee: Pete Morelli
  • TV announcers (CBS): Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts and Evan Washburn
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

  • LAC –Michael Badgley 46-yard field goal, 7:00.Chargers 3–0.Drive: 13 plays, 52 yards, 6:47.
  • LAC – Michael Badgley 45-yard field goal, 0:39.Chargers 6–0.Drive: 8 plays, 55 yards, 4:04.

Second quarter

Third quarter

  • LAC –Antonio Gates 6-yard pass from Philip Rivers (kick failed, wide left), 9:56.Chargers 19–7.Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 5:04.
  • DEN –Royce Freeman 3-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 2:24.Chargers 19–14.Drive: 3 plays, 18 yards, 1:21.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay 2-yard run (run failed), 12:17.Broncos 20–19.Drive: 7 plays, 73 yards, 3:33.
  • LAC – Michael Badgley 30-yard field goal, 6:47.Chargers 22–20.Drive: 8 plays, 60 yards, 5:30.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 34-yard field goal, 0:00.Broncos 23–22.Drive: 7 plays, 76 yards, 1:51.

Top passers

  • DEN –Case Keenum – 19/32, 205 yards
  • LAC – Philip Rivers – 28/43, 401 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT

Top rushers

  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay – 11 rushes, 79 yards, 2 TD
  • LAC –Melvin Gordon – 18 rushes, 69 yards

Top receivers

  • DEN –Courtland Sutton – 3 receptions, 78 yards
  • LAC – Keenan Allen – 9 receptions, 89 yards

A pair of first quarter field goals by placekickerMichael Badgley – from 46 and 45 yards out – gave theChargers the early lead. The Broncos grabbed the lead early in the second quarter, with a 41-yard touchdown run by running backPhillip Lindsay. On the next possession, Chargers' quarterbackPhilip Rivers was intercepted by cornerbackChris Harris, Jr., giving the Broncos the football near midfield. However, on the fifth play of the drive, the Broncos opted to convert a 4th-and-1 at the Chargers' 16-yard line instead of kicking a field goal, but Lindsay was stopped for no gain. The Chargers regained the lead on their next possession, with Rivers connecting on a 4-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverKeenan Allen, one play after Rivers was nearly intercepted in the end zone on a deflected pass.[110]

The Chargers took the opening possession of the second half and added to their lead, with Rivers throwing his second touchdown pass – a 6-yarder to tight endAntonio Gates. However, Badgley missed wide left on the extra point attempt, keeping the score at 19–7. The Broncos went three and out on their first offensive possession of the second half, and the Chargers were attempting to pull away from the Broncos on their next possession. However, as the Chargers reached the Broncos' 35-yard line, Rivers was intercepted by linebackerVon Miller on a screen pass attempt, and Miller returned the interception to the Chargers' 18-yard line. The Broncos capitalized three plays later, with running backRoyce Freeman rushing for a three-yard touchdown.[110]

After forcing a three-and-out from the Chargers, the Broncos took a 20–19 lead early in the fourth quarter, with Lindsay rushing for a 2-yard touchdown on a direct snap. QuarterbackCase Keenum's two-point attempt was unsuccessful, as he was stopped just short of the goal line. The Chargers then drove to the Broncos' 12-yard line in eight plays, and a 30-yard field goal by Badgley gave the Chargers a 22–20 lead with 6:51 remaining in the game. The Broncos were attempting a rally, and reached the Chargers' 45-yard line with four minutes remaining in the game, but were forced to punt. The possession was extended by a fumble from wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders that was reversed by instant replay and ruled as an incomplete pass, as well as a Keenum interception that was nullified by a defensive holding penalty on Chargers' safetyJahleel Addae. The Chargers got the football back, and attempted to run out the clock after gaining one first down and forcing the Broncos to burn all of their timeouts, but were forced to punt just after the two-minute warning. With 1:51 remaining in the game and the Broncos backed up to their own 8-yard line, Keenum engineered a 7-play, 76-yard drive, culminating in placekickerBrandon McManus kicking a game-winning 34-yard field goal as time expired. The Chargers unsuccessfully tried toice McManus, calling a timeout prior to McManus' first attempt.[110]

Week 12: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

[edit]
Week Twelve: Pittsburgh Steelers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Steelers0107017
Broncos377724

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

Game information

First quarter

  • DEN –Brandon McManus 41-yard field goal, 6:26.Broncos 3–0.Drive: 8 plays, 39 yards, 3:10.

Second quarter

  • PIT –Chris Boswell 41-yard field goal, 6:29.Tied 3–3.Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, 5:20.
  • DEN –Matt LaCosse 10-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 3:27.Broncos 10–3.Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 3:02.
  • PIT –Alejandro Villanueva 2-yard pass from Chris Boswell (Chris Boswell kick), 0:00.Tied 10–10.Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 3:27.

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

  • DEN –Phillip Lindsay 2-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 9:17.Broncos 24–17.Drive: 11 plays, 79 yards, 5:43.

Top passers

  • PIT – Ben Roethlisberger – 41/56, 462 yards, TD, 2 INT
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 15/28, 197 yards, 2 TD

Top rushers

  • PIT –James Conner – 13 rushes, 53 yards
  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay – 14 rushes, 110 yards, TD

Top receivers

  • PIT – JuJu Smith-Schuster – 13 rushes, 189 yards, TD
  • DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 7 rushes, 86 yards, TD

The Broncos donned their orange color rush uniforms in the Week 12 matchup against thePittsburgh Steelers, who were victimized by several missed scoring opportunities. On the Steelers' first possession, placekickerChris Boswell's 48-yard field goal attempt was blocked byJustin Simmons. The Broncos took the early lead, with a 41-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus – the only scoring play of the first quarter. The Steelers then drove down the field, attempting to take their first lead, with quarterbackBen Roethlisberger completing a pass to tight endXavier Grimble along the sidelines. However, Broncos' safetyWill Parks forced a fumble just before Grimble reached the goal line, with the football going out of the end zone for a touchback. Following a Broncos' punt, Boswell atoned for his earlier blocked field goal attempt, with a 41-yard field goal. The first touchdown of the game came courtesy of a 10-yard touchdown pass from Broncos' quarterbackCase Keenum to tight endMatt LaCosse at the 3:33 mark of the second quarter. The Steelers then marched down the field, and were attempting a 19-yard field goal attempt to close out the first half, however, the Steelers' special teams caught the Broncos off-guard, with a 2-yard touchdown from Boswell toAlejandro Villanueva on a fake field goal pass to tie the game at 10–10.[111]

Following an exchange of punts to begin the second half, the Steelers grabbed their first (and only) lead of the game, with Roethlisberger launching a 97-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverJuJu Smith-Schuster. Following a three-and-out from the Broncos, the Steelers were attempting to add to their lead, however, Roethlisberger was intercepted by cornerbackChris Harris, Jr. The Broncos capitalized two plays later, with Keenum connecting with wide receiverEmmanuel Sanders on a 5-yard touchdown to tie the game at 17–17. Following another exchange of punts, the Steelers reached the Broncos' 23-yard line, however, Broncos' cornerbackBradley Roby forced a fumble off Steelers' running backJames Conner near the end of the third quarter. The Broncos once again capitalized, with an 11-play, 79-yard drive, culminating in a 2-yard touchdown run by running backPhillip Lindsay. This gave the Broncos a 24–17 lead at the 9:22 mark of the fourth quarter. Both teams punted on their next possession, and the Steelers, with only one timeout, had one last offensive possession with 4:26 remaining in the game. Just before the two-minute warning, the Steelers reached the Broncos' 3-yard line, with a first-and-goal. However, on the third play after the two-minute warning, Roethlisberger's short pass intended for wide receiverAntonio Brown was intercepted by linebackerShelby Harris for a touchback – the Steelers' fourth turnover of the game – to seal the win for the Broncos.[111]

Week 13: at Cincinnati Bengals

[edit]
Week Thirteen: Denver Broncos at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos0714324
Bengals037010

atPaul Brown Stadium,Cincinnati, Ohio

  • Date: December 2
  • Game time: 1:00 pm. EST/11:00 am. MST
  • Game weather: 63 °F (17 °C), sunny
  • Game attendance: 44,392
  • Referee: Ronald Torbert
  • TV announcers (CBS):Spero Dedes andAdam Archuleta
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

  • No scoring plays.

Second quarter

Third quarter

  • DEN –Courtland Sutton 30-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 11:27.Broncos 14–3.Drive: 2 plays, 33 yards, 0:40.
  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay 65-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 7:35.Broncos 21–3.Drive: 4 plays, 85 yards, 2:01.
  • CIN –Cody Core 30-yard pass fromJeff Driskel (Randy Bullock kick), 2:45.Broncos 21–10.Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 4:50.

Fourth quarter

  • DEN – Brandon McManus 29-yard field goal, 0:23.Broncos 24–10.Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 2:16.

Top passers

  • DEN – Case Keenum – 12/21, 151 yards, TD
  • CIN – Jeff Driskel – 25/38, 236 yards, TD, INT

Top rushers

  • DEN – Phillip Lindsay – 19 rushes, 157 yards, 2 TD
  • CIN –Joe Mixon – 12 rushes, 82 yards

Top receivers

  • DEN – Courtland Sutton – 4 receptions, 85 yards, TD
  • CIN –Tyler Boyd – 6 receptions, 97 yards

Neither team advanced past their opponent's 43-yard line through their first three possessions, until the Broncos' fourth possession, in which placekickerBrandon McManus missed wide left on a 50-yard field goal attempt. The first points of the game came courtesy of a 6-yard touchdown run by Broncos' running backPhillip Lindsay at the two-minute warning. TheBengals then drove down the field, however, the Broncos' defense limited the Bengals to a 35-yard field goal by placekickerRandy Bullock just before halftime. Following an exchange of punts to begin the second half, the Broncos increased their lead, with quarterbackCase Keenum connecting with wide receiverCourtland Sutton on a 30-yard touchdown pass. The Bengals reached the Broncos' 30-yard line on their second possession of the second half, however quarterbackJeff Driskel, playing in place of the injuredAndy Dalton, was intercepted by cornerbackJustin Simmons at the 7-yard line. The Broncos capitalized four plays later, with Lindsay rushing for a 65-yard touchdown. The Bengals responded, with Driskel throwing a 30-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverCody Core to narrow the Broncos' lead to 21–10. Despite a lost fumble by Broncos' running backRoyce Freeman near midfield toward the end of the third quarter, the Bengals' offense did not advance past the Broncos' 47-yard line for the remainder of the game. With 2:49 remaining in the game, linebackerBradley Chubb forced a fumble off Driskel, and with the Bengals out of timeouts, a 29-yard field goal by McManus with only 27 seconds left put the game out of reach.[112]

Week 14: at San Francisco 49ers

[edit]
Week Fourteen: Denver Broncos at San Francisco 49ers – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos007714
49ers3170020

atLevi's Stadium,Santa Clara, California

  • Date: December 9
  • Game time: 2:05 pm. MST/1:05 pm. PST
  • Game weather: 54 °F (12 °C), overcast
  • Game attendance: 69,449
  • Referee: Shawn Smith
  • TV announcers (CBS): Andrew Catalon and James Lofton
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

  • SF –Robbie Gould 40-yard field goal, 10:23.49ers 3–0.Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, 4:37.

Second quarter

  • SF – Robbie Gould 29-yard field goal, 13:01.49ers 6–0.Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 4:09.
  • SF –George Kittle 85-yard pass fromNick Mullens (Robbie Gould kick), 9:47.49ers 13–0.Drive: 1 play, 85 yards, 0:13.
  • SF –Dante Pettis 1-yard pass from Nick Mullens (Robbie Gould kick), 0:08.49ers 20–0.Drive: 7 plays, 72 yards, 0:59.

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Top passers

  • DEN – Case Keenum – 24/42, 186 yards, TD
  • SF – Nick Mullens – 20/33, 332 yards, 2 TD, INT

Top rushers

Top receivers

  • DEN –Tim Patrick – 7 receptions, 85 yards
  • SF – George Kittle – 7 receptions, 210 yards, TD

The Broncos fell behind 20–0 at halftime, and the defense allowed 210 receiving yards to49ers' tight endGeorge Kittle – 85 of which came on one play, which resulted in a 49ers' touchdown. PlacekickerRobbie Gould added two field goals – a 40-yarder in the first quarter followed by a 29-yarder in the second quarter, and quarterbackNick Mullens also threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverDante Pettis. The Broncos' offense accumulated only 70 total yards on their first six possessions (excluding a kneel down before halftime), went 2-for-15 on third down conversions and running backPhillip Lindsay, who rushed for 157 yards against the Bengals duringthe previous week, was held to just 30 yards rushing. The Broncos finally got on the scoreboard at the six-minute mark of the third quarter, with a 3-yard rushing touchdown by Lindsay. The Broncos' offense failed on two 4th-down conversions on their next two possessions, and with only 3:57 remaining in the game, a 1-yard touchdown pass from quarterbackCase Keenum to wide receiverDaeSean Hamilton pulled the Broncos to within a 20–14 deficit. However, the Broncos' defense was unable to prevent Mullens from converting two crucial third-down pass completions prior to the two-minute warning, forcing the Broncos to burn two timeouts – the other timeout was lost another on an unsuccessful challenge, and leaving the Broncos with only eight seconds for one last desperation pass play, which was snuffed out by the 49ers' defense.[113]

Week 15: vs. Cleveland Browns

[edit]
Week Fifteen: Cleveland Browns at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Browns730717
Broncos733316

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • DEN –Brandon McManus 44-yard field goal, 8:16.Broncos 10–7.Drive: 12 plays, 61 yards, 6:44.
  • CLE – Greg Joseph 40-yard field goal, 4:53.Tied 10-10.Drive: 9 plays, 53 yards, 3:23.

Third quarter

  • DEN – Brandon McManus 42-yard field goal, 1:41.Broncos 13–10.Drive: 8 plays, 36 yards, 4:08.

Fourth quarter

  • CLE – Antonio Callaway 2-yard pass from Baker Mayfield (Greg Joseph kick), 11:44.Browns 17–13.Drive: 6 plays, 48 yards, 2:57.
  • DEN – Brandon McManus 29-yard field goal, 4:35.Browns 17–16.Drive: 13 plays, 64 yards, 7:09.

Top passers

  • CLE – Baker Mayfield – 18/31, 188 yards, 2 TD, 1 INT
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 31/48, 257 yards, 2 INT

Top rushers

Top receivers

TheCleveland Browns took the early lead, with quarterbackBaker Mayfield launching a 31-yard touchdown pass to wide receiverBreshad Perriman. After going three-and-out on their first two possessions, the Broncos got on the scoreboard later in the first quarter, with quarterbackCase Keenum rushing for a 1-yard touchdown, then grabbed the lead midway through the second quarter, with a 44-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus. Cleveland responded on their next possession, with a 40-yard field goal by placekickerGreg Joseph. The Broncos were attempting to re-take the lead on their next possession, reaching the Cleveland 29-yard line, however Keenum was intercepted by Cleveland safetyJabrill Peppers in the end zone for a touchback. The Broncos' defense subsequently returned the favor, as Cleveland reached the Broncos' 30-yard line just before halftime, however, Mayfield was intercepted by safetyDymonte Thomas near the goal line. After forcing a fumble off Mayfield, a 42-yard field goal by McManus gave the Broncos a 13–10 lead late in the third quarter.[114]

After forcing a Cleveland punt, Keenum was intercepted by cornerbackT. J. Carrie at the Broncos' 48-yard line on the second play of the fourth quarter. Six plays later, Cleveland capitalized and took a 17–13 lead, with a 2-yard touchdown pass from Mayfield to wide receiverAntonio Callaway. With 11:49 left in the game, the Broncos drove 64 yards in 13 plays, and instead of trying to convert a 4th-and-1 at the Cleveland 6-yard line, they elected for a 29-yard field goal by McManus to pull within a 17–16 deficit with 4:39 left. Cleveland drove down to the Broncos' 10-yard line and forced the Broncos to use the last two of their three team timeouts. However, instead of trying to increase their lead with a field goal, Cleveland attempted to run out the clock, but running backNick Chubb was stopped for a 2-yard loss on a 4th-and-1 at the Broncos' 12-yard line. The Broncos reached midfield with 1:12 remaining in the game, however, after Keenum spiked the football on first down and two incomplete passes, Keenum was sacked by Peppers to end the Broncos' rally attempt.[114]

Notes

This was the Cleveland Browns' first victory over the Broncos since1990, snapping an 11-game losing streak to the Broncos.[114] The Broncos own a 23–6 all-time record vs. Cleveland (including the playoffs).[115] The Broncos wore their alternate navy blue jerseys for this game.[100] This game featured Broncos' linebackerBradley Chubb playing against his cousin, Cleveland running back Nick Chubb. With the loss, coupled with theTennessee Titans' victory over theNew York Giants the following day, the Broncos were officially eliminated from postseason contention.

Week 16: at Oakland Raiders

[edit]
Week Sixteen: Denver Broncos at Oakland Raiders – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Broncos007714
Raiders71001027

atOakland–Alameda County Coliseum,Oakland, California

  • Date:December 24
  • Game time: 6:15 pm. MST/5:15 pm. PST
  • Game weather: 58 °F (14 °C), rain
  • Game attendance: 53,850
  • Referee:Carl Cheffers
  • TV announcers (ESPN): Joe Tessitore, Jason Witten, Booger McFarland and Lisa Salters
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • OAK –Doug Martin 24-yard run (Daniel Carlson kick), 7:56.Raiders 14–0.Drive: 9 plays, 89 yards, 5:35.
  • OAK – Daniel Carlson 43-yard field goal, 0:19.Raiders 17–0.Drive: 11 plays, 55 yards, 4:02.

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

  • OAK –Jalen Richard 3-yard run (Daniel Carlson kick), 12:16.Raiders 24–7.Drive: 12 plays, 72 yards, 7:20.
  • DEN –Courtland Sutton 19-yard pass fromCase Keenum (Brandon McManus kick), 7:31.Raiders 24–14.Drive: 11 plays, 77 yards, 4:45.
  • OAK – Daniel Carlson 45-yard field goal, 4:38.Raiders 27–14.Drive: 4 plays, 4 yards, 0:58.

Top passers

  • DEN – Case Keenum – 23/37, 202 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT
  • OAK –Derek Carr – 19/26, 167 yards

Top rushers

  • DEN –Phillip Lindsay – 10 rushes, 46 yards
  • OAK – Doug Martin – 21 rushes, 107 yards, TD

Top receivers

  • DEN – Courtland Sutton – 6 receptions, 65 yards, TD
  • OAK –Jordy Nelson – 7 receptions, 75 yards

The Broncos fell behind 17–0 by halftime to theRaiders – the second time in three weeks in which they were shutout in the first half. On their first possession, the Broncos punted, and cornerbackIsaac Yiadom failed to down the punt neat the goal line. Raiders' return specialistDwayne Harris took advantage of Yiadom's blunder by returning the football 99 yards for a touchdown. The Raiders later increased their lead to 17–0 in the second quarter, with a 24-yard touchdown run by running backDoug Martin and a 43-yard field goal by placekickerDaniel Carlson. The Broncos' offense failed to advance past the Raiders' 45-yard line on their first five drives, and on their sixth drive, placekickerBrandon McManus missed short on a 58-yard field goal attempt just before halftime. The Broncos finally got on the scoreboard at the 4:40 mark of the third quarter, with a 7-yard touchdown pass from quarterbackCase Keenum to wide receiverDaeSean Hamilton, which was the only scoring play of the third quarter. The Raiders responded, with a 12-play, 72-yard drive that consumed 7:20, culminating in a 3-yard touchdown run by running backJalen Richard early in the fourth quarter. The Broncos once again pulled to within a 10–point deficit, with Keenum throwing his second touchdown of the second half – a 19-yarder to wide receiverCourtland Sutton. The touchdown was disputed by the Raiders' bench – thinking that Keenum had crossed the line of scrimmage prior to the pass. After forcing a three-and-out, the Broncos were attempting a rally, however, Keenum was intercepted by safetyMarcus Gilchrist, and a 45-yard field goal by Carlson increased the Raiders' lead to 27–14 with 4:42 remaining in the game. Without any timeouts, the Broncos had one last possession, however, Keenum was intercepted again – this time by safetyErik Harris, which ended the Broncos' rally attempt. With the loss, the Broncos clinched back-to-back losing seasons for the first time since19711972.[116]

Week 17: vs. Los Angeles Chargers

[edit]
Week Seventeen: Los Angeles Chargers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Chargers077923
Broncos03069

at Broncos Stadium at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

  • Date: December 30
  • Game time: 2:25 pm. MST
  • Game weather: 51 °F (11 °C), mostly cloudy
  • Game attendance: 75,947
  • Referee:John Parry
  • TV announcers (CBS): Spero Dedes and Adam Archuleta
  • Recap,Gamebook
Game information

First quarter

  • No scoring plays

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

  • DEN –Andy Janovich 20-yard pass fromCase Keenum, 10:10.Chargers 14–9.Drive: 5 plays, 56 yards, 2:10.
  • LAC –Casey Hayward defensive two-point conversion.Chargers 16–9.
  • LAC –Austin Ekeler 1-yard run (Michael Badgley kick), 5:48.Chargers 23–9.Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 4:22.

Top passers

  • LAC – Philip Rivers – 14/24, 176 yards, TD, 2 INT
  • DEN – Case Keenum – 31/48, 292 yards, TD, INT

Top rushers

  • LAC – Austin Ekeler – 8 rushes, 58 yards, TD
  • DEN –Royce Freeman – 17 rushes, 60 yards

Top receivers

  • LAC – Mike Williams – 5 receptions, 65 yards, TD
  • DEN –DaeSean Hamilton – 5 receptions, 49 yards

The Broncos hosted theLos Angeles Chargers in the 2018 regular season finale. Chargers' quarterbackPhilip Rivers was intercepted twice by the Broncos' defense in the first quarter, however, the Broncos failed to capitalize both times. After a scoreless first quarter, Chargers' linebackerKyle Emanuel recovered a fumble off a lateral pass and fumble by Broncos' quarterbackCase Keenum for an 18-yard touchdown. The Broncos reached the red zone just before halftime, but were forced to settle on a 28-yard field goal by placekickerBrandon McManus. The Broncos got a reprieve after Keenum was intercepted by safetyJahleel Addae in the end zone, who lost the fumble on the runback and was recovered by offensive tackleElijah Wilkinson. The Chargers increased their lead late in the third quarter, with a 3-yard touchdown pass from Rivers to wide receiverMike Williams. The Broncos pulled to within a 14–9 deficit early in the fourth quarter, with Keenum connecting on a 20-yard touchdown pass to fullbackAndy Janovich. The Broncos attempted a two-point conversion, hoping to pull to within a three-point deficit, however, Keenum was intercepted by linebackerCasey Hayward three yards deep in the end zone, who ran down the field 103 yards for a defensive two-point conversion. The Chargers responded and increased their lead to 23–9, with a 1-yard touchdown run by running backAustin Ekeler with six minutes remaining in the game. The Broncos had one last offensive possession and reached the Chargers' 31-yard line, but turned the football over on downs just before the two-minute warning.[117]

Notes

One day after the game (December 31),Vance Joseph was fired after posting an 11–21 record in his two seasons as the Broncos'head coach.[118]

Standings

[edit]

Division

[edit]
AFC West
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
(1)Kansas City Chiefs1240.7505–110–2565421W1
(5)Los Angeles Chargers1240.7504–29–3428329W1
Denver Broncos6100.3752–44–8329349L4
Oakland Raiders4120.2501–53–9290467L1

Conference

[edit]
#TeamDivisionWLTPCTDIVCONFSOSSOVSTK
Division leaders
1[a]Kansas City ChiefsWest1240.7505–110–2.480.401W1
2[b]New England PatriotsEast1150.6885–18–4.482.494W2
3[b]Houston TexansSouth1150.6884–29–3.471.435W1
4Baltimore RavensNorth1060.6253–38–4.496.450W3
Wild Cards
5[a]Los Angeles ChargersWest1240.7504–29–3.477.422W1
6Indianapolis ColtsSouth1060.6254–27–5.465.456W4
Did not qualify for the postseason
7Pittsburgh SteelersNorth961.5944–1–16–5–1.504.448W1
8Tennessee TitansSouth970.5633–35–7.520.465L1
9Cleveland BrownsNorth781.4693–2–15–6–1.516.411L1
10Miami DolphinsEast790.4384–26–6.469.446L3
11[c]Denver BroncosWest6100.3752–44–8.523.464L4
12[c]Cincinnati BengalsNorth6100.3751–54–8.535.448L2
13[c]Buffalo BillsEast6100.3752–44–8.523.411W1
14Jacksonville JaguarsSouth5110.3131–54–8.549.463L1
15[d]New York JetsEast4120.2501–53–9.506.438L3
16[d]Oakland RaidersWest4120.2501–53–9.547.406L1
Tiebreakers[e]
  1. ^abKansas City finished ahead of LA Chargers in the AFC West based on division record, claiming the No. 1 seed.
  2. ^abNew England claimed the No. 2 seed over Houston based on head-to-head victory.
  3. ^abcDenver finished ahead of Cincinnati and Buffalo based on strength of victory. Cincinnati finished ahead of Buffalo based on record vs. common opponents. Cincinnati's cumulative record against Baltimore, Indianapolis, the Los Angeles Chargers and Miami was 3–2, compared to Buffalo's 1–4 cumulative record against the same four teams.
  4. ^abNY Jets finished ahead of Oakland based on strength of victory.
  5. ^When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest ranked remaining team from each division.

Statistics

[edit]

Team leaders

[edit]
CategoryPlayer(s)Value
Passing yardsCase Keenum3,890
Passing touchdownsCase Keenum18
Rushing yardsPhillip Lindsay1,037
Rushing touchdownsPhillip Lindsay9
ReceptionsEmmanuel Sanders71
Receiving yardsEmmanuel Sanders868
Receiving touchdownsEmmanuel Sanders
Courtland Sutton
4
PointsBrandon McManus95
Kickoff return yardsDevontae Booker234
Punt return yardsRiver Cracraft40
TacklesTodd Davis114
SacksVon Miller14.5
Forced fumblesVon Miller4
InterceptionsChris Harris, Jr.
Justin Simmons
3

Source for this section: Denver Broncos' official website.[119]

League rankings

[edit]
Offense
CategoryValueNFL rank
(out of 32)
Total yards350.1YPG19th
Yards per play5.518th
Rushing yards119.2 YPG12th
Yards per rush4.93rd
Passing yards230.9 YPG19th
Yards per pass6.725th
Total touchdowns39T–20th
Rushing touchdowns18T–4th
Receiving touchdowns19T–24th
Scoring20.6PPG24th
Pass completions367/588 (.624)22nd
Third downs69/207 (.333)28th
First downs per game2020th
Possession average28:5828th
Fewest sacks allowed34T–10th
Turnover differential+7T–8th
Fewest penalties12531st
Fewest penalty yardage98527th
Defense
CategoryValueNFL rank
(out of 32)
Total yards365.1 YPG22nd
Yards per play5.719th
Rushing yards4.5 YPG17th
Yards per rush4.519th
Passing yards245.6 YPG20th
Yards per pass7.724th
Total touchdowns39T–12th
Rushing touchdowns11T–6th
Receiving touchdowns26T–14th
Scoring21.8 PPG13th
Pass completions353/549 (.643)16th
Third downs82/211 (.389)17th
First downs per game19.916th
Sacks44T–8th
Forced fumbles13T–12th
Fumble recoveries10T–11th
Interceptions17T–5th
Fewest penalties12329th
Fewest penalty yardage1,00626th
Special Teams
CategoryValueNFL rank
(out of 32)
Kickoff returns20.1YPR28th
Punt returns4.4 YPR32nd
Gross punting44.5YPP19th
Net punting38.3 YPP28th
Kickoff coverage20.8 YPR4th
Punt coverage10.5 YPR29th

Source for this section: NFL.com.[120]

Records and milestones

[edit]

Awards and honors

[edit]
Recipientawards
Bradley ChubbOctober: NFL Defensive Rookie of the Month[127]
Phillip LindsayWeek 13: AFC Offensive Player,[128] FedEx Ground Player[129] and NFL Rookie of the Week[130]
Colorado Sports Hall of Fame Athlete of the year[131]
2018 season: Named to the Pro Football Writers of America's All-NFL and All-AFC team[132]
Von MillerWeek 11: AFC Defensive Player of the Week[133]
2018 season: Named to the Pro Football Writers of America's All-NFL and All-AFC team[132]
Emmanuel SandersWeek 7: AFC Offensive Player of the Week[134]

Pro Bowl and All-Pro selections

[edit]

LinebackerVon Miller andrunning backPhillip Lindsay were selected to the2019 Pro Bowl, while linebackerBradley Chubb, cornerbackChris Harris, Jr. andwide receiverEmmanuel Sanders were named as alternates.[135] Miller was also voted to the2018All-Pro Team and named to the Second Team.[136] Lindsay became the firstundrafted rookie inNFL history to earn a Pro Bowl selection,[137] however, due to a wrist injury that he suffered during the Broncos' second-to-last game of the season, Lindsay did not play in the Pro Bowl, and served as anNFLsocial media correspondent instead.[138] Sanders did not participate due to aruptured Achilles tendon that ended his season on December 5.[32]

On January 16, 2019,Casey Kreiter was selected as the firstlong snapper to ever be selected to a Pro Bowl.[139] Five days later, Harris was selected to the Pro Bowl roster as a replacement forNew England Patriots' cornerbackStephon Gilmore. Harris was declared healthy after suffering a broken fibula that forced him to miss the Broncos' last four games of the season.[140]

Other news and notes

[edit]

On June 20, the Broncos reached a temporarynaming rights agreement for their home stadium.Colorado-basedsporting goodsretailerSports Authority previously held the naming rights for the Broncos' stadium from 2011 to 2017, despite goingbankrupt in 2016. Shortly after the end of the2017 season, the Broncos removed the old signage from the exterior of their stadium – formerly known as "Sports Authority Field at Mile High," and previously known as "Invesco Field at Mile High" from 2001 to 2010. For the 2018 season, the official name, which was approved by the Metropolitan Football Stadium District board, was known as "Broncos Stadium at Mile High,"[141] until the team came to terms on a new naming rights deal just before the start of the2019 season, renaming the Broncos' home field asEmpower Field at Mile High.[142]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (January 1, 2018)."Broncos part with six assistant coaches after 5-11 season".The Denver Post. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2018.
  2. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (January 3, 2018)."Broncos hire Sean Kugler to coach offensive line".The Denver Post. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2018.
  3. ^"Broncos agree to terms with three new position coaches".Denver Broncos. January 5, 2018. Archived fromthe original on January 5, 2018. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2018.
  4. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (January 9, 2018)."Broncos to hire Tom McMahon as special teams coordinator".The Denver Post. RetrievedJanuary 9, 2018.
  5. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (January 10, 2018)."Broncos hire Greg Williams to coach cornerbacks and Zach Azzanni as wide receivers coach".The Denver Post. RetrievedJanuary 10, 2018.
  6. ^DiLalla, Aric (June 13, 2018)."DeMarcus Ware finds perfect role as pass-rush consultant".Denver Broncos. RetrievedJune 13, 2018.
  7. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (August 6, 2018)."Tom Heckert, former Broncos personnel executive, dies at 51".The Denver Post. RetrievedAugust 6, 2018.
  8. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 21, 2018)."John Bowlen, Broncos minority owner, agrees to sell portion of stake back to team".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 21, 2018.
  9. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 14, 2018)."Broncos re-sign linebacker Todd Davis to three-year contract".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018.
  10. ^abcdefghiJhabvala, Nicki (March 12, 2018)."Broncos place second-round tenders on restricted free agents Matt Paradis, Shaquil Barrett".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 12, 2018.
  11. ^"Bears sign WR Bennie Fowler to 1-year contract".USA Today. April 16, 2018. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  12. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 14, 2018)."Former Broncos TE Virgil Green to sign with Los Angeles Chargers".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018.
  13. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 19, 2018)."Cody Latimer, former Broncos second-round pick, signs with New York Giants".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 19, 2018.
  14. ^abJhabvala, Nicki (March 14, 2018)."Former Broncos ILB Corey Nelson to sign with Eagles, OT Donald Stephenson headed to Cleveland".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018.
  15. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 23, 2018)."Former Broncos QB Brock Osweiler signs with Miami Dolphins".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 23, 2018.
  16. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 17, 2018)."Broncos re-sign OL Billy Turner to one-year contract".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 17, 2018.
  17. ^abcdeSwanson, Ben (April 16, 2018)."Broncos sign five exclusive-rights free agents".Denver Broncos. Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2018. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  18. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaDiLalla, Aric (September 1, 2018)."Broncos trim roster to 53 players".Denver Broncos. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2018.
  19. ^abDiLalla, Aric (April 23, 2018)."Shaquil Barrett signs restricted free agent tender, Garcia-Williams signs ERFA tender".Denver Broncos. Archived fromthe original on April 24, 2018. RetrievedApril 23, 2018.
  20. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 9, 2018)."Broncos tender exclusive rights free agent DL Shelby Harris".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 9, 2018.
  21. ^Williams, Charean (April 6, 2018)."Casey Kreiter signs tender with Broncos".ProFootballTalk.
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  24. ^abcJhabvala, Nicki (March 21, 2018)."Broncos sign DT Clinton McDonald to two-year deal, add a kicker and long snapper, too".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 21, 2018.
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  29. ^abcDiLalla, Aric (November 2, 2018)."Broncos activate S Su'a Cravens from IR, promote WR River Cracraft to active roster".Denver Broncos. RetrievedNovember 2, 2018.
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  71. ^Swanson, Ben (July 5, 2018)."Third-round pick Royce Freeman signs rookie contract".Denver Broncos. RetrievedJuly 5, 2018.
  72. ^DiLalla, Aric (May 26, 2018)."CB Isaac Yiadom signs rookie contract".Denver Broncos. RetrievedMay 26, 2018.
  73. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (February 23, 2018)."Broncos receive third-round compensatory draft pick in 2018".The Denver Post. RetrievedFebruary 23, 2018.
  74. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 19, 2018)."Broncos acquire tackle Jared Veldheer from Arizona in exchange for 6th-round pick".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 19, 2018.
  75. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (September 1, 2017)."Broncos trade tackle Ty Sambrailo to Falcons for future draft pick".The Denver Post. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2017.
  76. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (March 8, 2018)."Broncos agree to trade CB Aqib Talib to Los Angeles Rams for 2018 draft pick".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 8, 2018.
  77. ^DiLalla, Aric (March 19, 2018)."Broncos trade QB Trevor Siemian to Minnesota Vikings".Denver Broncos. Archived fromthe original on March 19, 2018. RetrievedMarch 19, 2018.
  78. ^Jhabvala, Nicki (April 29, 2017)."Broncos make flurry of trades, land TE Jake Butt on Day 3 of NFL draft".The Denver Post. RetrievedApril 29, 2017.
  79. ^Mizell, Gina (April 28, 2018)."Denver Broncos swap fifth-round NFL draft picks with Seattle Seahawks and acquire seventh-round selection".The Denver Post. RetrievedApril 28, 2018.
  80. ^Copeland, Kareem (March 29, 2018)."With little trade leverage, Redskins forced to get what they could from Broncos for Su'a Cravens".The Denver Post. RetrievedMarch 29, 2018.
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  82. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (August 3, 2018)."Broncos sign Bryce Bobo, former Colorado Buffaloes receiver".The Denver Post. RetrievedAugust 3, 2018.
  83. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (July 26, 2018)."Denver Broncos sign rookie WR Mark Chapman".The Denver Post. RetrievedJuly 26, 2018.
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  88. ^Fredrickson, Kyle (August 13, 2018)."Broncos sign embattled linebacker A.J. Johnson to training camp roster".The Denver Post. RetrievedAugust 13, 2018.
  89. ^abO'Halloran, Ryan (May 17, 2018)."Broncos sign former Colorado State quarterback Nick Stevens".The Denver Post. RetrievedMay 17, 2018.
  90. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (May 30, 2018)."Broncos lose linebacker Deiontrez Mount to torn Achilles".The Denver Post. RetrievedMay 30, 2018.
  91. ^"Broncos place oft-injured Menelik Watson on IR".USA Today. August 20, 2018. RetrievedAugust 20, 2018.
  92. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (September 27, 2018)."Broncos tight end Jake Butt tears ACL, expected to miss rest of season".The Denver Post. RetrievedSeptember 27, 2018.
  93. ^DiLalla, Aric (November 28, 2018)."Broncos Injury Report: Brandon Marshall returns to practice".Denver Broncos. RetrievedNovember 28, 2018.
  94. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (November 26, 2018)."Broncos tight end Jeff Heuerman out for year with broken ribs".The Denver Post. RetrievedNovember 26, 2018.
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  102. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (October 14, 2018)."Broncos Analysis: Misery continues as defense allows career day by Todd Gurley".The Denver Post. RetrievedOctober 14, 2018.
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  110. ^abcO'Halloran, Ryan (November 18, 2018)."Broncos beat Chargers on Brandon McManus' field goal as time expires".The Denver Post. RetrievedNovember 18, 2018.
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  112. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (December 2, 2018)."Broncos Analysis: Denver improves to .500 after an injury-filled road win over Bengals in Week 13".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 2, 2018.
  113. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (December 9, 2018)."Broncos Analysis: No-show first half against 49ers cripples Denver's playoff chances".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 9, 2018.
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  117. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (December 30, 2018)."Broncos end season 6-10 after loss to Chargers; is the end for Vance Joseph next?".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 30, 2018.
  118. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (December 31, 2018)."Denver Broncos fire coach Vance Joseph".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 31, 2018.
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  121. ^Chambers, Mike (September 17, 2018)."Denver's own Phillip Lindsay runs to NFL rookie record with Broncos".The Denver Post. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2018.
  122. ^"Demaryius Thomas Surpasses 9,000 Career Receiving Yards".CBS 4 Denver. October 18, 2018. RetrievedOctober 18, 2018.
  123. ^Jensen, Chad (November 19, 2018)."Broncos reach several milestones in Week 11 victory over L.A."247Sports. RetrievedNovember 19, 2018.
  124. ^O'Halloran, Ryan (December 9, 2018)."Broncos Briefs: Bradley Chubb sets team rookie sack record".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 9, 2018.
  125. ^Fredrickson, Kyle (December 15, 2018)."Broncos' linebacker Von Miller sets franchise sacks record against Browns".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 15, 2018.
  126. ^Fredrickson, Kyle (December 25, 2018)."Broncos' rookie Phillip Lindsay eclipses 1,000 yards rushing versus Raiders".The Denver Post. RetrievedDecember 25, 2018.
  127. ^DiLalla, Aric (November 1, 2018)."Bradley Chubb wins NFL Defensive Rookie of the Month honors".Denver Broncos. RetrievedNovember 1, 2018.
  128. ^DiLalla, Aric (December 5, 2018)."Phillip Lindsay named AFC Offensive Player of the Week".Denver Broncos. RetrievedDecember 5, 2018.
  129. ^DiLalla, Aric (December 6, 2018)."Phillip Lindsay named FedEx Ground Player of the Week".Denver Broncos. RetrievedDecember 6, 2018.
  130. ^Pereles, Zach (December 7, 2018)."Phillip Lindsay named NFL rookie of the week".Denver Broncos. RetrievedDecember 7, 2018.
  131. ^DiLalla, Aric (January 8, 2019)."Phillip Lindsay named Colorado Sports Hall of Fame's Professional Athlete of the Year".Denver Broncos. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2019.
  132. ^ab"Pro Football Writers of America selects Von Miller, Phillip Lindsay to All-NFL, All-AFC teams".Denver Broncos. January 15, 2019. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2019.
  133. ^DiLalla, Aric (November 21, 2018)."Von Miller named AFC Defensive Player of the Week after #DENvsLAC performance".Denver Broncos. RetrievedNovember 21, 2018.
  134. ^DiLalla, Aric (October 24, 2018)."Emmanuel Sanders named AFC Offensive Player of the Week for Week 7 performance".Denver Broncos. RetrievedOctober 24, 2018.
  135. ^DiLalla, Aric (December 18, 2018)."Von Miller, Phillip Lindsay selected to 2019 Pro Bowl; Three Broncos tabbed as alternates".Denver Broncos. RetrievedDecember 18, 2018.
  136. ^"Von Miller named 2018 Second-Team All-Pro at two positions".Denver Broncos. January 4, 2019. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2019.
  137. ^DiLalla, Aric (December 18, 2018)."Phillip Lindsay makes history with Pro Bowl selection".Denver Broncos. RetrievedDecember 18, 2018.
  138. ^Fredrickson, Kyle (January 8, 2019)."Broncos' Phillip Lindsay to attend Pro Bowl as NFL social media correspondent".The Denver Post. RetrievedJanuary 8, 2019.
  139. ^DiLalla, Aric (January 16, 2019)."Long snapper Casey Kreiter named to 2019 Pro Bowl".Denver Broncos. RetrievedJanuary 16, 2019.
  140. ^"Chris Harris Jr. named to 2019 Pro Bowl".Denver Broncos. January 21, 2019. RetrievedJanuary 21, 2019.
  141. ^DiLalla, Aric (June 20, 2018)."'Broncos Stadium at Mile High' approved as temporary name for stadium".Denver Broncos. RetrievedJune 20, 2018.
  142. ^"Broncos agree to terms with Empower Retirement on 21-year deal to name stadium 'Empower Field at Mile High'".Denver Broncos. September 4, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 4, 2019.

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