El Dorado News-Times

Coach admits mistake in loss on Monday night.

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DENVER (AP) — Questionab­le play-calling. Debatable clock management. A rash of rookie mistakes. A barrage of injuries. It all added up to another last-minute loss for the Denver Broncos.

Sure sounds familiar.

The Broncos have surrendere­d the lead in the final 30 seconds six times in Vic Fangio's 17 games as their head coach and they've lost four of them.

The latest one cut especially deep given all the blunders the Broncos had in their 16-14 loss to Tennessee on Monday night when Stephen Gostkowski atoned for four missed kicks by drilling a 25-yard field goal with 17 seconds left.

The Broncos watched top draft pick Jerry Jeudy drop two crucial passes and top free agent Melvin Gordon giftwrap a Tennessee touchdown on a night Phillip Lindsay (foot) and A.J. Bouye (shoulder) joined Von Miller (ankle) and Courtland Sutton (shoulder) as Week 1 casualties.

New offensive coordinato­r Pat Shurmur's debut was dismal: 3 total yards in the third quarter to Tennessee's 105, and an ill-advised shovel pass from Drew Lock to Jake Butt on fourth-andgoal from the 1 that went for no gain.

Unlike Titans tight end Jonnu Smith, who hauled in a scoring pass in the same scenario in the other end zone, Butt wasn't across the goal line when he caught the pass and was stuffed at the line of scrimmage.

The biggest beef with Broncos fans, none of whom were allowed into the stadium over coronaviru­s concerns, was Fangio's head-scratching decision to hold onto his timeouts after the Titans crossed midfield at the two-minute warning while trailing 14-13.

Banking on the three-time Super Bowl winner missing a fifth kick, Fangio chose not to ice the kicker or spend his timeouts to save as much time as possible for his young offense to respond.

“I didn't think icing the kicker was worth it because he had been struggling anyway (but) I did miss a timeout there after the second-down play from the 29-yard line,” Fangio acknowledg­ed a day later.

When Titans running back Derrick Henry “got 13 yards down to our 16, I should have called timeout there," Fangio said. "That was the one I missed.”

Instead, precious seconds ticked away to the amazement and amusement of the Titans.

Fangio, a longtime defensive coordinato­r, wasn't thinking like a head coach.

“It was totally my fault there,” Fangio said Tuesday. “I had too much thought into what I was going to call next on defense. I missed it.”

In previous years, the head coach would lean on Mitch Tanney, the Broncos' former director of football analytics, for advice in these situations. The team parted ways with Tanney in the offseason and Fangio relies now on his offensive coaches for advice, although it's unclear if any was offered Monday night.

“All the coaches help chip in on that — the offensive coaches when we're on defense and vice versa," Fangio said. "It's easier when we're on offense because I'm not calling the plays. It was my miss on that one and nobody else's.”

So, the clock kept ticking and Gostkowski's field goal left Denver just 17 seconds to get into Brandon McManus' field-goal range.

After Lock threw an 18-yard completion and Denver finally called timeout with 2 seconds left, Fangio briefly considered sending out McManus.

“Yeah, I was doing the math, but 75 (yards) seemed to be too far,” Fangio said, and Lock's last heave hit the grass not far downfield.

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