San Diego Union-Tribune

PROLIFIC RECEIVER, BELOVED TEAMMATE

- BY NICKI JHABVALA Jhabvala writes for the Washington Post.

Demaryius Thomas, the former Pro Bowl wide receiver and Super Bowl champion with the Denver Broncos, was found dead Thursday evening, according to Roswell, Ga., police. He was 33.

Thomas was found at his Roswell home, and preliminar­y informatio­n pointed to a medical issue as the cause, police said. “Our investigat­ors currently have no reason to believe otherwise,” a police spokespers­on said via email.

“We are devastated and completely heartbroke­n by the sudden, tragic passing of Demaryius Thomas,” the Broncos said in a statement. “D.T. was beloved by our entire organizati­on, his teammates and coaches, and our fans. Recently retiring as a Bronco, we were very much looking forward to celebratin­g Demaryius for years to come as one of the greatest players in franchise history.”

A first-round pick out of Georgia Tech in 2010, Thomas played nine of his 10 NFL seasons with the Broncos, earning five consecutiv­e Pro Bowl nods from 2012 through 2016, landing second-team all-pro honors twice and winning a Super Bowl 50 ring after the 2015 season. He set numerous franchise records, including for receiving yards in a season (1,619 in 2014) and receiving touchdowns in a season (14 in 2013).

After his rookie season was beset by injuries, Thomas helped tie the longest pass play in Broncos history when he turned Tim Tebow’s first pass of overtime in a 2011 AFC first-round playoff game against the Pittsburgh Steelers into an 80-yard touchdown for an upset victory.

Thomas died about four weeks before the 10-year anniversar­y of that play — and about two weeks before his 34th birthday.

Beloved by teammates who respected his work ethic and quiet leadership, Thomas was a staple in Denver’s offense during some of its most prolific years with Peyton Manning as its quarterbac­k.

From 2012 to 2016, Thomas topped 1,000 receiving yards each season to finish with the second-most 1,000-yard seasons in franchise history behind Rod Smith (eight). In those seasons, Thomas also became one of just four players in NFL history to have five consecutiv­e seasons with at least 90 catches and 1,000 receiving yards.

During his tenure with the Broncos, Thomas scaled the franchise record books to rank among the top two or three — typically alongside Smith and Shannon Sharpe — in most career receiving categories. He was second in career receiving yards (9,055), touchdowns (60) and consecutiv­e games with a catch (107); had the most career playoff catches (53) and led all Broncos players with 36 100-yard receiving games.

“D.T. was a better person than he was a player, and he was a Hall of Fame player,” Manning said in a statement. “That tells you how good of a person he was. He treated my kids like they were his own. He was there for every teammate’s charity event. I texted with D.T. on Tuesday. He was talking about a TD audible we called vs. Arizona in 2014. Absolutely devastated.”

But what made Thomas’s story remarkable was not the production or rare athleticis­m, but the obstacles he overcame to achieve it all.

In 1999, when Thomas was 11, his home was raided and his mother and grandmothe­r were arrested for drug traffickin­g. His mother, Katina Smith, was initially sentenced to more than 24 years, while Thomas’s grandmothe­r, Minnie Pearl Thomas, was sentenced to two life terms with the chance of parole after 40 years.

Thomas went to live with an aunt and uncle, while his mother and grandmothe­r could only watch his budding football career from prison television­s. In the summer of 2015, President Barack Obama commuted the sentences of 46 imprisoned drug offenders. Smith was one of them, and later that year she watched her son play football in person for the first time, in Denver. The Broncos won Super Bowl 50 that season.

Minnie Pearl Thomas was released later in 2016.

On the field, Thomas recovered from injuries early in his career to start 122 consecutiv­e games, a streak that started with the playoff victory over the Steelers in January 2012 and continued through aches and injuries.

“With pain, as long as you know it’s nothing super serious or nothing is structural­ly wrong, you start getting used to it,” he told The Denver Post in 2017. “If I get hit, I know the pain is going to be temporary. I’m going to hurt for a second and that might be one of those times I run off the field. But then it’ll ease up, and I’ll go back in.”

Before the 2018 trade deadline, Thomas was dealt to the Houston Texans for draft picks. The deal marked the beginning of a swift end to his career. Seven games into his time with the Texans, he tore his Achilles — the second such injury of his career — and was released two months later. After a brief offseason stint with the New England Patriots, he was traded to the New York Jets, with whom he played 11 games in 2019.

Thomas announced his retirement from the NFL on June 28. He left the sport with 777 catches for 10,522 yards and 69 touchdowns in 10 seasons. Awaiting him is a spot in the Broncos’ Ring of Fame.

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T ?? Demaryius Thomas is one of just four players in NFL history with five consecutiv­e seasons with at least 90 catches and 1,000 receiving yards. He died Thursday at 33.
K.C. ALFRED U-T Demaryius Thomas is one of just four players in NFL history with five consecutiv­e seasons with at least 90 catches and 1,000 receiving yards. He died Thursday at 33.

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