The Record (Troy, NY)

Kendall Hinton crushed as Broncos’ emergency quarterbac­k

- By Arnie Stapleton

DENVER (AP) » A month ago, Kendall Hinton was the guy you’d contact if you wanted some candy bars or merchandis­e for a high school fundraiser.

On Sunday, he was the Denver Broncos’ starting quarterbac­k, a twist befitting the 2020 NFL season during a pandemic that brings twists and turns every day.

Hinton switched from quarterbac­k to wide receiver his final year at Wake Forest in 2019, and he caught 73 passes for 1,001 yards and four touchdowns, good enough to catch the eyes of the Broncos, who signed him after he went undrafted.

But Hinton was no match for the likes of drafted rookie receivers Jerry Jeudy, KJ Hamler and Tyrie Cleveland, so he was cut after training camp and went to work in sales.

The Broncos called him back earlier this month and re-signed him to their practice squad on Nov. 4.

His life took a turn Saturday when Drew Lock, Brett Rypien and Blake Bortles were pulled off the practice field and sent home after the NFL deemed them high-risk close contacts of Jeff Driskel, who tested positive for the coronaviru­s on Thanksgivi­ng Day.

Turns out, the four QBs had gathered for some film study on their own Tuesday, the players’ day off, “which is commendabl­e,” coach Vic Fangio said after Denver’s 31-3 loss to New Orleans on Sunday.

But the four QBs didn’t wear their mandated masks or keep their social distance, something the league discovered in looking at surveillan­ce footage.

An hour before kickoff, Lock issued an apology, an explanatio­n and a defense in a lengthy Twitter post.

“In a controlled and socially distanced area, we let our masking slip for a limited amount of time. An honest mistake, but one I will own,” Lock wrote, adding, “I sincerely apologize and I fully understand why these safety precaution­s are so important. Doing the right thing for a majority of the time is not good enough.”

Fangio, whose team fell to 4-7, said he was “disappoint­ed on a couple of levels” that his quarterbac­ks’ actions put his team and the

NFL into a difficult position.

“We count on them to be the leaders of the team and leaders of the offense and those guys made a mistake and that is disappoint­ing,” Fangio said. “Obviously, I haven’t done a good enough job of selling the protocols to them when they are on their ownsopart of that could fall on me. I thought I was.

“We have emphasized it a lot and we’re really doing good with COVID up to this point ... relative to other teams. There was a failing there and that’s disappoint­ing.

hen the league informed the Broncos that their QBs had violated COVID-19 protocols and had to quarantine, the Broncos pleaded with league commission­er Roger Goodell to postpone their game against the Saints (9-2) a day or two.

Making that argument were Fangio, who was fined earlier this season for not wearing a mask on the sideline, and two executives in general manager John Elway and team president Joe Ellis who were infected by the virus earlier this month.

“I feel like maybe it could have been moved, but at the same time, maybe the league (was) just making an example of us,” said safety Kareem Jackson.

Fangio demurred when asked if the NFL’s refusal to push the game back was unfair, saying that was a question for Elway or Ellis.

“Terribly unfortunat­e,” Elway posted on Facebook after the league disqualifi­ed his three healthy quarterbac­ks Saturday.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Broncos quarterbac­k Drew Lock, right, confers with quarterbac­k Riley Neal during NFL football practice Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2020, in Englewood, Colo.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Broncos quarterbac­k Drew Lock, right, confers with quarterbac­k Riley Neal during NFL football practice Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2020, in Englewood, Colo.

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