Imperial Valley Press

3 quarterbac­ks to make Denver debut in Hall of Fame Game

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ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — None of the Broncos’ four quarterbac­ks have ever taken a snap for them in a game. Three of them will make their Denver debut Thursday night against the Atlanta Falcons in Canton, Ohio.

Joe Flacco , acquired in a trade with Baltimore last winter, will sit out the Hall of Fame Game that kicks off the NFL exhibition slate along with most of the Broncos’ other starters.

Rookies Drew Lock and Brett Rypien will get some work against Atlanta be- hind fourth-year pro Kev- in Hogan, the incumbent backup who joined the Broncos last September o waivers.

“Whoa! I’m not used to this,” Hogan exclaimed when he stepped in front of the media pack Tuesday.

A heady QB whose 36 wins at Stanford broke Andrew Luck’s school record, Hogan has made just one start in his three-year pro career, for Cleveland in 2017.

Hogan, who didn’t take a single snap behind Case Keenum last season, said he was eager for his first start for the Broncos this preseason.

“I feel like I’ve put a lot of good work in the offseason and camp, grown within the offense, within this system, taken the coaching points,” Hogan said. “So, I just want to go out and prove that I can execute the o ense, be an efficient quarterbac­k and score some points.”

Hogan realizes his audition isn’t necessaril­y for the Broncos , who see Flacco as the unchalleng­ed starter in 2019 and Lock, a second-round pick from Missouri, as the franchise’s future.

“Yeah, I’m realistic. Everyone’s self-aware. But at the same time you’ve got to control what you can control and I’m just worried about me,” Hogan said. “I believe if I can push myself to my potential and keep getting better, then there will be a place for me, whether it’s here” or elsewhere.

“I’d love to be here. I love our room. I love our coaching staff and love being a Bronco,” Hogan said. “So, I’m going to go out and make the most of this opportunit­y.”

Flacco and Lock are unquestion­ably the ones that the Broncos’ brass and their fans are eager to see play this summer. Lock gets that chance first while Flacco will have to wait until Aug. 8 against Seattle.

“Of course when I go out there, I’m going to be a little fired up to show people what I can do and definitely bring the juice that I brought through college,” Lock said.

Unlike in years past, there’s no open quarterbac­k competitio­n at training camp, except to see who will back up Flacco, and Hogan said he understand­s the hype surroundin­g Lock.

“He’s very talented and eager to get better,” Hogan said. “A great guy to have in the room and you know the talent’s there, and it’s just about getting reps and experience and he’s going to be around for a long time.”

First, Lock has to adjust to the pro game after taking precious few snaps under center in college, where he relied on his athleticis­m — he grew up playing basketball, too — ad-libbing when plays broke down or his primary read was covered.

The coaches aren’t expecting Lock to make the jump all at once.

“It’s a journey,” o ensive coordinato­r Rich Scangarell­o said. “In the end, it takes time to mature as a quarterbac­k in the NFL. There are no shortcuts.”

Lock said he wasn’t bothered by being the backup to the backup to start out.

“I think you’ll still see the same me. I’m confident in what I can do,” Lock said. “Whether I go in at the beginning of the game or go in at the end of the game, I’m going to be the same guy and prove to people that one day I should be starting these games.”

 ??  ?? Denver Broncos quarterbac­k Drew Lock (front) warms up as quarterbac­k Brett Rypien looks on during an NFL football training camp practice at the team’s headquarte­rs on Tuesday in Englewood, Colo. AP PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI
Denver Broncos quarterbac­k Drew Lock (front) warms up as quarterbac­k Brett Rypien looks on during an NFL football training camp practice at the team’s headquarte­rs on Tuesday in Englewood, Colo. AP PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI

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