The Denver Post

DENVER LOSES LAST GAME IN LOST SEASON

- By Nicki Jhabvala Nicki Jhabvala: njhabvala@denverpost.com or @NickiJhabv­ala

The clouds rolled in, the temperatur­e dipped to a biting 17 degrees and within 57 seconds, the Broncos were seemingly done. Finished. Cooked.

Patrick Mahomes, the Kansas City Chiefs’ rookie quarterbac­k who had never played in a regular-season game before taking the field Sunday, guided a group of primarily backups against Denver’s starting defense and quickly found the end zone on the feet of Kareem Hunt. The frozen crowd had seen this play out before and knew how it could easily end. Coach Vance Joseph did, too. As Chiefs players jumped in celebratio­n on their sideline, Joseph dropped his head in disappoint­ment as his fate — as well as that of his staff and dozens of players — hung in the balance.

In a game that meant little for their record but everything for their future, the Broncos lost 2724 against their playoff-bound AFC West rival. The defeat, which turned into a thriller in the final seconds, dropped the Broncos to 5-11 and capped the worst year in general manager John Elway’s tenure as an executive.

Quarterbac­k Paxton Lynch took his second start of the season with the hope of erasing the memory of his previous outing and turned in a telling performanc­e, with wild swings of inefficien­cy before a strong comeback. He completed 21-of-31 passes for 254 yards, two touchdowns, two intercepti­ons and one fumble. He also took two sacks and posted a passer rating of 87.3.

“I thought Paxton played good football tonight,” Joseph said. “It wasn’t all perfect, but having a chance to finally play a full game, I thought Paxton made some strides. Obviously, the one intercepti­on was a fourth-andlong, just taking a shot. He had a sack-fumble there and he had one pick down the middle. But I thought he got better tonight as a quarterbac­k.”

Lynch’s intercepti­on late in the second quarter was thrown into triple-coverage against the Chiefs’ No. 2 defense. Well before the end of the first half, the Broncos benched most of their defensive starters, too, turning the season finale into a preseason 2018 tryout.

But the biggest test was for Lynch as he tried to bounce back from the critical mistake.

Throughout the Broncos’ eight-game slide between Oct. 15 and Dec. 3, Elway said one of the most troubling aspects of their losses — often double-digit defeats — was the way they lost and how they struggled to respond to in-game adversity.

So when Lynch returned from the locker room after halftime for his first drive following the intercepti­on, his decisions were critical.

His first try: five plays, a mere 14 yards and a Broncos punt.

The Chiefs then used 18 plays to eat 8:46 off the clock, gain 90 yards, nail a field goal and extend their lead to 17-10. As Kansas City moved into the Broncos’ red zone, Denver’s defense reached peak disarray as players pointed to one another out of confusion and they were later flagged for having 13 men on the field.

In Lynch’s subsequent possession­s, he was sacked twice, fumbled once and watched the Chiefs scoop it up for a touchdown, then he threw another intercepti­on.

But when Mahomes briefly left the game in the fourth quarter, the Broncos took advantage and forced a fumble that was recovered by linebacker Zaire Anderson and returned 38 yards for the touchdown, and in a last-gasp attempt, Lynch guided the Broncos on a 62-yard drive that he capped with a touchdown lob to Demaryius Thomas. Brandon McManus tied it up at 24-all with his extra point.

But not for long. Mahomes engineered one last scoring drive — resulting in a 30-yard field goal as time expired — and quashed any remaining hope in Denver.

The Broncos spun a dud into a nail-biter in the final minutes, but still exhibited many of the same problems that doomed their season long ago.

“I felt like I played well, but at the end of the day … it’s not an individual sport,” Lynch said. “It’s a team sport, so overall we didn’t do enough to win the game. We could have played better.”

Meanwhile, Mahomes flashed the potential and athleticis­m of a starter-in-the-making. He had the mistakes typical of a rookie playing in his first regular-season game — that intercepti­on into no-man’s land, other overthrown passes — but he completed 22-of-35 passes for 285 yards and a 76.4 passer rating.

The Broncos have been looking for that. They saw it in spurts with Trevor Siemian to start the year, and for a few quarters from Brock Osweiler. But never did it last. And after Sunday, the Broncos may not have moved any closer to finding it.

The decision to give younger and less experience­d players time was made well before the Chiefs rolled into town as Denver began to look ahead to 2018 and take inventory — of talent on the field and on the sideline.

Veteran back Jamaal Charles was inactive for the second consecutiv­e game to give rookie De’Angelo Henderson a few carries before the season expired. Of the constant criticism facing the Broncos and Joseph, especially late in the season, much was about Henderson’s playing time when playoffs were long gone. Those calls for Henderson to play were seemingly validated when he sprinted into the end zone on his first touch of the game, a 29-yard catch-and-run to give Denver a 10-3 lead in the second quarter.

“My thing is, you’re got to make plays,” Henderson said. “When you get the opportunit­y to get the rock, know your opportunit­ies are limited. At least, I do. So whenever I get an opportunit­y to make a play, I just try to make a play.”

And if they Broncos needed another bright spot, they found it in C.J. Anderson, who topped 1,000 rushing yards for the first time in his career.

But this game will remembered more for what didn’t work. This game will remembered as a fitting end to the Broncos’ trying season. And in the coming hours and days, it may be remembered as the final game for many in orange and blue.

 ?? John Leyba, The Denver Post ?? Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt sprints past the tackle attempt of Broncos inside linebacker Brandon Marshall to score a touchdown during the first quarter Sunday.
John Leyba, The Denver Post Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt sprints past the tackle attempt of Broncos inside linebacker Brandon Marshall to score a touchdown during the first quarter Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States