The Denver Post

Does Coach Fangio have any other options at cornerback?

- By Ryan O’Halloran Ryan O’Halloran: rohalloran@ denverpost. com or @ ryanohallo­ran

Question: Safety Justin Simmons said the Broncos’ firsthalf defense was “terrible.” What was particular­ly awful?

Answer: Just about everything. In the first half, Atlanta had eight plays that gained at least 10 yards and built a 20- 3 lead going into the break.

On the first play, cornerback Michael Ojemudia slipped, freeing up tight end Hayden Hurst for 11 yards. On the second drive, cornerback Davontae Harris was beaten on a go route for a 51- yard touchdown.

On the third drive, Harris kept his eyes on a scrambling Matt Ryan instead of his assignment ( 42- yard completion). And on the third drive, cornerback Kevin Toliver, subbing for Harris, allowed a 21- yard pass.

The pass rush had only five disruption­s ( one sack, two knockdowns and two pressures) in the first half.

Q: The Broncos tried every cornerback available. What’s next on Vic Fangio’s drawing board?

A: If A. J. Bouye ( concussion) and Bryce Callahan ( ankle) aren’t available Sunday at Las Vegas, Fangio really has no choice but to stick with Ojemudia and Bassey as his base package starters.

But in the nickel, giving Duke Dawson a shot should be explored; he’s been limited to dime personnel work as the sixth defensive back this season.

And if the slot receivers are really giving the Broncos problems, moving safety Kareem Jackson down to cover should be considered.

Overall, though, help isn’t on the way.

Q: What were the takeaways from quarterbac­k Drew Lock’s postgame news conference?

A: He’s a young player who is frustrated by a season slipping away at 3- 5.

Lock is usually the symbol of confidence, but even he couldn’t hide his disappoint­ment with another first- half no- show by the offense. We’d rather see that kind of passion than an attitude that everybody gets orange slices and juice boxes regardless of the result.

The worst statistic: The Broncos had 13 plays in the first half that gained three or fewer yards compared with only two explosive plays — a 32- yard catch by tight end Noah Fant and an 18yard catch by WR Jerry Jeudy.

Q: Did it seem like the Broncos’ offense ran a lot on second andlong? If so, what’s the point?

A: The Broncos had a whopping 19 second- down plays in which they needed seven or more yards. They ran seven times for a combined 41 yards.

For as long as there’s been pro football, play- callers have adopted second- and- long as a run down, the theory being it would produce a positive gain to set up a shorter third down.

KJ Hamler gained 15 yards on a second- and- 8 end- around. But that was pretty much it for successful second- down rushes. What it also points out: The Broncos’ first- down offense is inconsiste­nt at best and broken at worst.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States