Santa Fe New Mexican

Former Boise State’s Rypien named Broncos starting QB against Jets

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ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Brett Rypien kept his head up when he went undrafted out of Boise State. He didn’t get discourage­d when he twice got cut by the Denver Broncos.

He didn’t flinch when the Broncos valued Brandon Allen over him last year to serve as a backup to Joe Flacco and then Drew Lock.

Rypien’s determinat­ion didn’t waver when the Broncos signed Jeff Driskel last offseason or Blake Bortles last week.

“I wouldn’t necessaril­y say discourage­d, no,” Rypien said after being named the starter for the Broncos’ game against the New York Jets on Thursday night in a matchup of reeling 0-3 teams. “I’ve always just tried to take the mentality of get better every single day.”

Helping him with that perseveran­ce was his uncle, former Washington QB Mark Rypien.

“He sat his first two years on IR, so having some conversati­ons with him about [how] he overcame adversity throughout his first two years and then being able to win a Super Bowl and be a starter for a few years” helped him learn how to cope and bide his time, Rypien said. “So, I definitely don’t think I ever lost hope or was discourage­d. I just tried to get better.”

Coach Vic Fangio accidental­ly declared Rypien’s 57-year-old uncle the starter over Driskel on Tuesday.

“Yeah, we’re going to start Mark — I mean Brett — I keeping calling him Mark at times because of his uncle,” Fangio said. “But we’re going to go with Brett; but we do have the ability to mix Jeff in there some in the game if we feel like we need to.”

Driskel played admirably after replacing an injured Lock (shoulder) in Denver’s 26-21 loss at Pittsburgh two weeks ago, although he froze and took the sack on fourth down at the Steelers’ 15-yard line in the waning minutes.

Driskel started last week against the Buccaneers but was limited to 176 yards and was sacked five times and intercepte­d once in Denver’s 28-10 loss. He was replaced by Rypien on the Broncos’ final drive, and Rypien completed his first eight passes for 53 yards before throwing an intercepti­on in the end zone. “Up until the last throw when he made a bad decision and a bad read, he played pretty good in there,” Fangio said. “So we want to see if that can continue.”

Rypien showed good enough recognitio­n of defense alignments to change calls and protection­s and he was quicker throwing the ball than Driskel, who was sacked 11 times in the last two weeks.

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