Santa Fe New Mexican

Von Miller misses Mack, but QB Keenum sure won’t

- By Arnie Stapleton

DENVER — Von Miller might be the only one at Denver Broncos headquarte­rs lamenting Khalil Mack’s startling trade from the Oakland Raiders to the Chicago Bears.

“I mean, honestly, I was shocked,” Miller said. “I always felt like Khalil and Aaron Donald were untradeabl­e guys. J.J. Watt, I thought guys like that were untradeabl­e. Then they traded him. A guy like Khalil, he only comes around once every lifetime. You want to keep guys like that.”

The Broncos’ star linebacker said it’s “going to be a little weird” Sunday not seeing his friend, whom he’s trained with the last two summers, when the Raiders (0-1) visit Denver (1-0), where Mack once collected five sacks in a single half.

“He’s talented,” Broncos QB Case Keenum said, “but I’m pretty sure they’re going to play 11 guys. They’re not just going to put 10 out there without him.”

Raiders new/old coach Jon Gruden said he’s been asked aplenty about the trade that sent shockwaves through the NFL and smiles across locker rooms across the AFC West.

“And rightfully so,” Gruden said. “He’s a great guy. He’s a great player. It’s unfortunat­e we don’t have him. But we feel we did the right thing for this football team, for the future of the Raiders and for this building process.”

Mack began doing just that Sept. 9 at Green Bay, fresh off signing a six-year, $141 million contract, $26.5 million more than Miller got in 2016.

Hours after Miller wrecked Seattle’s game plan by sacking Russell Wilson three times and snaring the ball out of power back Chris Carson’s arms for a forced fumble and fumble recovery, Mack burst into the NFC North conversati­on with a pick-6 and a strip sack of backup QB DeShone Kizer in which he, too, snatched the ball from his opponent.

Whereas Miller’s showing led to a 27-24 Denver victory, Mack’s dominant debut was rendered a footnote when Aaron Rodgers returned from a knee injury at halftime to lead the Packers back from a 20-point deficit for a 24-23 win.

Mack is still on the Raiders’ minds. Quarterbac­k Derek Carr said he misses his friendship more than his play on the field.

“We still text, and we still talk all the time, but not seeing him every day is weird,” Carr said. “I think that was the hardest part.”

Other subplots as the Broncos seek their sixth straight 2-0 start:

KING STING

Broncos punter Marquette King didn’t want to talk about Gruden, but he made it clear he had hard feelings over his release from the Raiders this spring. He said he never had a chance to speak with Oakland’s coach.

And that was certainly a factor in King’s decision to come to Denver.

“I just wanted to find the best place that I thought I would fit,” King said. “I think there is somewhat of a revenge factor in there, too.”

BRYANT BACK

Broncos coach Vance Joseph said Martavis Bryant’s re-signing with Oakland only adds to Denver’s already stiff challenge.

“Absolutely. He’s a guy that’s a vertical threat. I faced him in Cincinnati when he was in Pittsburgh for six games. He caught a 98-yard touchdown on my secondary, so I won’t ever forget that,” Joseph said.

PRESSURE POINT

After trading Mack, there were questions about how the Raiders would generate a pass rush. The results weren’t good in the opener as Oakland had one sack and four quarterbac­k pressures against the Rams.

The Raiders had more pressures in every game last year with Mack leading the defense.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Broncos linebacker Von Miller, right, sacks Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson on Sept. 9. Miller was surprised the Raiders traded Khalil Mack.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Broncos linebacker Von Miller, right, sacks Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson on Sept. 9. Miller was surprised the Raiders traded Khalil Mack.

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