Defense gives Peyton chance to win it
Manning overcomes three picks to lead game-winning drive.
Again far from perfect, Peyton Manning still kept Denver’s record pristine.
Manning shook off three interceptions, including one early in overtime, and drove Denver’s offense in range for Brandon McManus to kick a 34-yard field goal with 4:56 left, giving the unbeaten Broncos a 26-23 win over the Cleveland Browns on Sunday.
Manning took the Broncos from their 12 to the Cleveland 16 before McManus kicked his game-winner to make Denver 6-0 for the seventh time in franchise history.
“We’re not playing as well as we would like but we’re playing well enough to win,” Manning said. “We’re doing some things right at critical times whether it’s the last drive of the game or in overtime.”
Denver’s win would not have been possible without the Broncos’ top-ranked defense, which came up huge in overtime and has carried the team — and the 39-year-old Manning — during the club’s unblemished start.
After Manning’s third pick, Denver recorded a tackle behind the line of scrimmage and then had two consecutive sacks of Josh McCown to push the Browns (2-4) out of fieldgoal range.
“Obviously that’s not a good situation to put the defense in, but they got a couple of sacks and gave us a chance,” said Manning, who has seven TD passes and 10 interceptions this season. “I’m not having a ton of breaks. I won’t be going to Vegas for my bye week. I’m not feeling really lucky.”
But Denver’s defense bailed him out, and given another chance in overtime, Manning took over. He completed 4 of 4 passes for 39 yards on the final drive. Manning finished 26-of48 for 290 yards and the one TD, a 75-yarder to Emmanuel Sanders.
The score came just seconds after the Browns had taken their only lead on Karlos Dansby’s 35-yard interception return for a TD.
It was yet another heartbreaker for Cleveland, which had one of the NFL’s best teams on the ropes late in regulation before McCown threw a critical interception.
McCown, who passed for a franchise-record 457 yards last week, went 20-of-39 for 213 yards with two touchdowns to tight end Gary Barnidge. But his second pick with 44 seconds left in regulation cost the Browns.
“It was obviously just not good,” McCown said of his turnover. “You have to get something going there. That hurt us because the defense played lights-out today. We didn’t hold up our end.”