Houston Chronicle

Denver offensive line has ‘got to get better’

- By Arnie Stapleton

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — The Denver Broncos eluded a crushing collapse thanks to Shelby Harris. Trevor Siemian dodged injury — no thanks to his new tackle tandem.

A restless few hours after watching Siemian get clobbered in Denver’s 24-21 win over the Los Angeles Chargers, coach Vance Joseph called out his offensive linemen for their poor pass protection.

“Our backs ran northsouth and found some open space to run. That part was very impressive as far as the running game. The pass protection was not that good,” Joseph said Tuesday.

“It was too much pressure on Trevor. There were too many whiffs as far as blocking those speed rushers. It’s got to get better.”

Siemian was hit nine times, not what general manager John Elway envisioned when he reshaped his O-line this offseason by drafting Garett Bolles and signing free agent Menelik Watson along with guard Ronald Leary.

“Again, the pass protection was not where it has to be for us to be a good football team,” Joseph said. “We were facing two elite edge rushers last night and most people don’t have two. But in our division, every team has two.”

The Broncos watched their 24-7 lead get whittled to 24-21 after Philip Rivers converted two takeaways at midfield into touchdowns. Denver was at the Chargers’ 13 before backto-back sacks pushed the Broncos back to the 32, and Brandon McManus was wide right on a 50-yard field-goal attempt with four minutes left.

Only Harris’ blocked field goal with a second left kept the Chargers from forcing overtime.

 ?? David Zalubowski / Associated Press ?? A last-second blocked field goal of Younghoe Koo (9) by Broncos defensive end Shelby Harris saved overtime in the victory over the Chargers on Monday.
David Zalubowski / Associated Press A last-second blocked field goal of Younghoe Koo (9) by Broncos defensive end Shelby Harris saved overtime in the victory over the Chargers on Monday.

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