Albuquerque Journal

Broncos’ defense resumes dominance

Squad adjusts to stop run, to harass QBs

- BY ARNIE STAPLETON

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — If a quarterbac­k wants to keep Denver’s devastatin­g pass rush at bay, it seems his only option is to hand the ball off to his running back.

Andy Dalton stayed upright while throwing just eight times in the first half Sunday, but once the Broncos adjusted to stuff the run, he was forced to drop back.

That’s when Von Miller picked up his NFL-best fifth sack and Shane Ray became the first player in 14 years to collect three sacks in his first NFL start as the Broncos beat the Bengals 29-17 .

“I think it was obvious that they were trying to keep Von off of their quarterbac­k,” Broncos coach Gary Kubiak said. “… But we hung in there. They key was us coming back in the second half and stopping the run. If we don’t stop it, we’re probably in for a long day.”

The Broncos dropped a safety into the box and inched their linebacker­s closer to the line of scrimmage after getting gashed for 75 yards in the first quarter, including Jeremy Hill’s 50-yard run on Cincinnati’s opening drive. Cincinnati managed only 68 yards rushing in the last three quarters.

“Eventually, we got them in a position where we could start rushing and we were able to capitalize on it,” Ray said.

The Broncos (3-0) will surely work on their run defense this week as they prepare to travel to Tampa Bay (1-2) to face QB Jameis Winston on Sunday.

“A team’s No. 1 option with us is that they want to come in and run the ball. They feel like if they can beat us with the run, then they can save their quarterbac­ks,” Ray said. “But we make good adjustment­s and correction­s.”

Kubiak isn’t just concerned about Denver’s trouble with what’s known as the “C” gap, the lane between the tackle and the tight end, but with quarterbac­ks breaking free on third down.

“We’ve been giving up some quarterbac­k movement,” Kubiak said.

Like Andrew Luck’s 21-yard scramble on third-and-20 two weeks ago.

“It’s being more gap discipline­d on third down,” Ray said. “Teams know that we’re playing man coverage, so quarterbac­ks start trying to get out of the pocket. When they see that lane, they take off running. We see that; we know what’s going on. We’re just going to go to the film room and see what we can do to counter that, and we’ll get back to doing what we do.”

Safety T.J. Ward said the Broncos will have their run defense and QB corralling issues settled by Sunday.

“It’s hard to find a crack this defense,” Ward said. “You can try to do something from last week that a team had a little success on, but we’re probably going to fix that and be ready for it the next week. You have to come up with something creative.

“That’s hard because even if you have a scheme, you still have to beat us one on one. You have to block Von; you have to get open on Chris (Harris Jr.) and Aqib (Talib). You have to get open on me. You have to stop the blitz, and you have to protect.”

Fixing the flaws are a matter of pride, Ward said.

“We were at Von’s house last night after the game reviewing the tape — me, Talib, Von and K-Web (Kayvon Webster),” Ward said. “Before we even get in the meeting room, for them (the coaches) to tell us where we made mistakes, we already know. That’s the next level if you want to be great. Everyone has to be great, not only here, but on their own time.”

 ?? GARY LANDERS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Broncos linebacker Shane Ray (56) sacks Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Andy Dalton (14) during Sunday’s game in Cincinnati. The Broncos won 29-17 to remain undefeated.
GARY LANDERS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Broncos linebacker Shane Ray (56) sacks Cincinnati Bengals quarterbac­k Andy Dalton (14) during Sunday’s game in Cincinnati. The Broncos won 29-17 to remain undefeated.

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