Albuquerque Journal

Next QB up: With Flacco out, Allen takes over in Bronco huddle

He’s Denver’s sixth starter at quarterbac­k since the retirement of Manning

- BY ARNIE STAPLETON

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — When Brandon Allen takes his first NFL snap against the Browns on Sunday he’ll become the sixth QB to start for the Denver Broncos since Peyton Manning retired four years ago, demonstrat­ing once more the degree of difficulty in replacing an iconic quarterbac­k.

That’s something John Elway has seen from both the inside as the Denver Broncos’ top football executive and from the outside after his Hall of Fame playing career ended in 1999.

Although there are notable outliers — the 49ers moved seamlessly from Joe Montana to Steve Young and Aaron Rodgers succeeded Brett Favre in Green Bay — teams typically struggle to remain relevant when their elite QB moves on.

“It’s a hard position to fill,” Elway said this summer. “We tried to shake all these trees around here the last four years and quarterbac­ks didn’t fall out of it. It’s difficult, but we’ve taken a lot of shots.”

Trevor Siemian. Paxton Lynch. Brock Osweiler. Case Keenum. Joe Flacco.

The Broncos, to a lesser degree, also had a hard time replacing Elway upon his retirement in 1999.

Brian Griese started the next four seasons as the core of the two-time champions’ roster dissolved and he missed 13 games over that span with Chris Miller (3), Gus Frerotte (7) and Steve Beuerlein (3) filling in. Frerotte also started a playoff game at Baltimore in 2000.

Jake Plummer arrived in 2003 but started only 11 games, with Beuerlein (2), Danny Kanell (2) and Jarious Jackson (1) also starting that year. Plummer returned against Indianapol­is in the playoffs, beginning a streak of 46 consecutiv­e starts before he was benched for rookie Jay Cutler down the stretch in 2006.

Elway was feeling pretty good about acquiring Flacco and drafting Drew Lock this year, but those fuzzy feelings quickly faded.

A sprained thumb in the preseason landed Lock on IR, stunting his growth under center in Denver’s pro-set offense after he operated almost exclusivel­y out of the shotgun and in the spread at Missouri.

Lock hasn’t practiced since Aug. 16, relying on virtual reality headsets that simulate onfield action but do nothing to improve one’s footwork.

Lock was eligible to return to practice two weeks ago, but the Broncos haven’t rushed him back in order to gauge his prospects of playing this year.

“I’m anxious for it to happen — at the right time,” coach Vic Fangio said Wednesday, shortly after Elway said on his weekly KOA radio show in Denver that the plan is to bring Lock back for Week 11, starting a 21-day clock for the team to decide whether to activate him or declare his 2019 season over.

Rookie Brett Rypien, who also has zero NFL regular-season experience, will be promoted from the practice squad to serve as Allen’s backup Sunday when the Broncos (2-6) host

Cleveland (2-5).

Flacco joined Lock on the sideline this week when he was diagnosed with a herniated disk in his neck, one day after ripping his coaches’ conservati­ve play-calling in a 15-13 loss at Indianapol­is.

Allen, a sixth-round pick by Jacksonvil­le in 2016, gets his shot just two months after the Broncos claimed him off waivers from the Los Angeles Rams.

The Broncos have gone 22-34 since Manning’s retirement in the wake of Denver’s last Super Bowl title with Siemian (13-11) doing the best, followed by Keenum (6-10), Flacco (2-6), Lynch (1-3) and Osweiler (0-4).

During that time, Denver’s offensive line has surrendere­d 152 sacks. Flacco was sacked 26 times in half a season, including a career-high eight against Kansas City two weeks ago and three more Sunday at Indianapol­is.

Allen is more mobile, so he could add a wrinkle to Denver’s offense even as coordinato­r Rich Scangarell­o draws up a truncated game plan for him.

Browns coach Freddie Kitchens said his staff went back to Allen’s days at Arkansas to prepare for a quarterbac­k who’s still largely a mystery on his own team.

“Honestly, I haven’t had too much work with him,” wideout Courtland Sutton said.

About the only intel this week came from Broncos running back Phillip Lindsay, who said, “First of all, Brandon is a very intelligen­t dude. I was very shocked and surprised when he first got here at how he got the terminolog­y so fast and how confident and calm he is. So, I’m excited to see what he has to offer. I think he’s going to move around a lot and he’s going to take shots.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver quarterbac­k Joe Flacco (5) will miss his first start of the season and be replaced by Brandon Allen, a former Arkansas QB who was drafted by Jacksonvil­le in the sixth round in 2016.
MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver quarterbac­k Joe Flacco (5) will miss his first start of the season and be replaced by Brandon Allen, a former Arkansas QB who was drafted by Jacksonvil­le in the sixth round in 2016.
 ??  ?? Vic Fangio
Vic Fangio

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