The NFL's regular season has wrapped up and the 18 teams who did not reach the playoffs are now in offseason mode. The Denver Broncos are focused on their upcoming Wild Card game against t
Having achieved the goal of playoff qualification, it's been timely for Sean Payton and the Denver Broncos to remind themselves of what got them into the postseason in the first place. "As a coach, you try to get in a routine where you embrace and celebrate the wins,
Payton has full belief in his standout rookie QB Bo Nix: "This guy gives you a chance every week. He’s that good.”
In his second year as Denver Broncos head coach, Sean Payton delivered the club's first winning season since 2016 and its first playoff berth since 2015. The Broncos went 10-7 in a season where the NFL at large and the oddsmakers predicted they'd be cellar-dwellers yet again.
Josh Allen isn’t just difficult to sack. He’s taken fewer than any quarterback in football this year. The Buffalo star has been sacked just 14 times on the season, putting the Bills eight clear of Green Bay,
WR Troy Franklin: Franklin had two catches for 12 yards to end an underwhelming regular season. In the last four games, the former Oregon wide receiver had 45 yards on seven receptions. Franklin has the talent to be a threat, but it’s going to take time.
The Broncos are back in the playoffs and that means the Broncos roundtable is re-convened, too. Before the Broncos hit the road to Buffalo, let’s get into how Sean Payton’s team got here and what has to happen Sunday on the shores of Lake Erie in order for Denver to pull the upset and get to the divisional round.
It starts with ownership, the coach and the QB. But solid defense and special teams were also major contributors to the Broncos' turnaround.
Josh Allen is poised and ready to win a Super Bowl, to become a Buffalo sports figure for the ages, in what is likely his first time winning the Most Valuable Player award in the National Football League.
As the sixth quarterback off the board in the 2024 NFL draft, Nix wasn't as highly touted as Chicago Bears rookie Caleb Williams or Washington Commanders star Jayden Daniels, who looks set to win the Rookie of the Year. But he certainly has looked the part of franchise quarterback in his first year.
The Broncos made the NFL playoffs despite having $89 million in “dead money” count against their salary cap this season.