Imperial Valley Press

Frustratio­n and forgetfuln­ess mark the NFL’s Week 13

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ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Frustratio­n swept through Week 13 of the NFL schedule.

Rob Gronkowski’s cheap shot on Bills cornerback Tre’Davious White. Tom Brady’s sideline spat with his play caller Josh McDaniels. Marcus Peters’ heave of an official’s yellow flag into the stands as the Chiefs fell into a three-way tie in the middling AFC West.

Trumping all that annoyance was Vance Joseph’s amnesia .

The beleaguere­d coach of the spiraling Denver Broncos has shown he has no remedies for a twomonth nosedive that’s resulted in the franchise’s third losing season since 2000 and longest skid since 1967.

On Sunday, he revealed a jolting lack of recollecti­on over one of the most egregious sins an NFL team can commit: taking a delay of game penalty on a kickoff.

Asked in the postgame news conference following Denver’s 35-9 loss at Miami about the flag that preceded a failed onside kick, Joseph was both flummoxed and forgetful.

“On an onside kick?” he replied quizzicall­y. “On ours?”

That’s the one. “Right,” he said. “It was from the 50-yard line.”

Well, from your 45 after your team took a delay-ofgame penalty.

“I don’t think we did,” Joseph retorted, then turned a team employee for affirmatio­n. “Did we?” Yes.

“Did we really? Yeah ... I don’t recall that,” Joseph stammered.

Maybe Joseph, like many a Denver fan, has grown numb to the team’s multitude of weekly blunders that has them one loss shy of tying the franchise futility record for consecutiv­e defeats set half a century ago.

Or maybe he just lost track on another Sunday filled with lowlights by a team that’s been outscored by an average of 30-13 during the last two months of futility.

Against a Miami team that had lost five in a row, the Broncos allowed two safeties — one when Matt Paradis’ airmailed a snap over Trevor Siemian’s head and another on rookie returner Isaiah McKenzie’s sixth fumble .

McKenzie was inexplicab­ly back in the lineup after being benched last month and replaced by Jordan Taylor, who had an uneventful two weeks as Denver’s punt returner.

The bumbling Broncos also allowed a blocked punt; threw three intercepti­ons, including a pick6 that gave Miami touchdowns 4 seconds apart; and the Dolphins’ onside kick (to the gut) with a 24-point lead in the fourth quarter.

“That’s his choice,” Joseph said, insisting he had no problem with the rub-it-in decision by Gase, whom he worked for last season as Miami’s defensive coordinato­r.

“Just playing 60 minutes. We’re not going to slow down,” Gase explained. “I don’t care what the score is.”

Translatio­n: Gase wanted to stick it to his former team. His stint in Denver ended badly as he got only a cursory interview with John Elway after his hopes of coaching the 49ers fizzled, and Elway turned to Gary Kubiak following John Fox’s ouster in 2015.

“Apparently there’s some bad blood,” Broncos cornerback Chris Harris Jr. said. “It looks like he’s trying to embarrass us.”

Actually, the Broncos didn’t need any help doing that.

Just 22 months ago the Broncos were celebratin­g a Super Bowl win. Now, it’s the same story every week: inept on offense no matter who’s at quarterbac­k, their special teams are atrocious, and eventually their defense cracks.

Of the 480 minutes of game clocking during their eight-game losing streak, they’ve led a mere 12 minutes, 36 seconds.

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