The Maui News

Hill leads Saints to 31-3 rout of QB-less Broncos

- By ARNIE STAPLETON

DENVER (AP) — Taysom Hill didn’t look much like an NFL quarterbac­k Sunday when the Denver Broncos held him to 78 yards passing, intercepte­d him once and sacked him three times.

Despite a paltry passer rating of 43.2, it wasn’t Hill who looked out of position in a game New Orleans won handily 31-3 for their first win over the Broncos since Dec. 24, 1994.

It was Broncos QB Kendall Hinton who looked lost — and for good reason: until Sunday he was a practice squad receiver, and he was forced into action when all of Denver’s quarterbac­ks were disqualifi­ed over coronaviru­s concerns.

By comparison, Hill looked like Tom Brady.

“Taysom played this thing just how I wanted him to play it, and it doesn’t have to be aesthetica­lly pleasing to be effective,” Saints coach Sean Payton said. “The job is to win and he did a good job of that.”

In a grind-it-out slugfest like from pro football’s early days, the Saints won their second straight game with Hill subbing for the injured Drew Brees. But Hill wasn’t nearly as sharp as a week earlier against the Falcons, when he completed 18 of 23 passes for 233 yards and a 108.9 passer rating.

Hill did run for 44 yards and two touchdowns against the Broncos, and Latavius Murray rushed for 124 yards and two scores to help the NFC-leading Saints (9-2) overcome a slow start and win for the eighth straight time.

“The game plan changed the last 24 hours. So, my mindset changed as well and I really became a game manager at that point and certainly the way Sean called the game reflected that,” Hill said. “We’re not going to take any unnecessar­y risks and put the defense in a bad situation.”

The Broncos (4-7) were forced to play without any of their four quarterbac­ks because of coronaviru­s concerns, so they promoted Hinton from their practice squad two hours before kickoff.

“When I got the call it was pure excitement,” Hinton said. “Of course, there was nerves and disbelief but the encouragem­ent the team gave me … made it a lot easier for me.”

The former Wake Forest quarterbac­k who converted to wide receiver his senior year went just 1-for-9 for 13 yards with a sack, two intercepti­ons and a passer rating of zero.

“He did everything he could,” Broncos coach Vic Fangio said. “That was a big, big ask.”

The Broncos (4-7) also sprinkled in some wildcat snaps to running backs Royce Freeman and Phillip Lindsay, who left in the second half with a knee injury.

The Broncos were thrust into this quarterbac­k quandary when their passers failed to wear masks as mandated by the NFL’s COVID-19 protocol last week.

Starting quarterbac­k Drew Lock, backup Brett Rypien and practice squad veteran Blake Bortles were disqualifi­ed over the weekend when the NFL discovered the three weren’t wearing masks around each other before No. 3 QB Jeff Driskel tested positive for the coronaviru­s on Thursday.

An hour before kickoff, Lock tweeted an explanatio­n and a mea culpa in which he admitted the QBs weren’t wearing their masks when they gathered last week.

 ?? AP photo ?? The Saints’ Cameron Jordan sacks Broncos quarterbac­k Kendall Hinton — a wide receiver on Denver’s practice squad — on Sunday.
AP photo The Saints’ Cameron Jordan sacks Broncos quarterbac­k Kendall Hinton — a wide receiver on Denver’s practice squad — on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States