Las Vegas Review-Journal

Broncos’ Miller living up to $114.5 million deal

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mammoth hits in the Super Bowl when he snatched both the football and the Lombardi Trophy from Cam Newton’s grasp.

He also dumped Newton in this year’s opener, giving right tackle Mike Remmers a painful reminder of that night when Miller’s two forced fumbles led to 15 points in Denver’s 24-10 Super Bowl win.

“Right now he has to be at the top,” said coach Marvin Lewis, whose Bengals (1-1) host the Broncos (2-0) on Sunday. “I think he’s playing exceptiona­l again. … There’s not many like him around.”

Miller was named AFC Defensive Player of the Week for his monster game against Indianapol­is, when he compiled seven tackles and three quarterbac­k hits to go with his three sacks and forced fumble.

Miller said it’s a matter of focusing on his craft after an offseason in which he made 48 television appearance­s, including “Dancing with the Stars,” and logged enough air miles to circle the globe almost three times during his contract stalemate.

Miller said Thursday that all the hours he spent learning dance moves from his partner, Whitney Carson, helped him get off to his great start this football season.

“I definitely think some of the practice I had with Whitney is paying off. I’ve never put six hours into one thing every single day,” Miller said. “Not even football. We practice for two hours. Six hours every single day, it made me consistent. It made me have to come to work every single day and be consistent and work on something that I wasn’t really good at.”

So, he’s applied that same work ethic to something he’s great at — football.

“I’ve already had agility and flexibilit­y, but I just think the consistent part,” Miller said. “I’m not tackling guys on the dance floor, but the work that you put in to be a great dancer has a direct correlatio­n to the work you have to put in to be a great football player.”

Although he’s still on TV aplenty as the NFL’s latest premier pitchman, the only dancing moves he’s flashing are the celebratio­n shimmies and shuffles after his sacks.

“I just made the windows smaller. I just made my views smaller,” Miller said. “I don’t really spend too much time focusing on anything other than my teammates and my scheme. I spend a lot of time with my teammates. I spend a lot of time with Aqib Talib, T.J. Ward. It’s like college here for me. I watch film all day, getting extra workouts in, and it’s all football now. It’s not really anything outside of that.”

Quarterbac­ks are paying price.

“You have to know where he’s at because he is a guy who can really change the course of the game with how good he is,” Bengals quarterbac­k Andy Dalton said.

In his last four games, counting the playoffs, Miller has 21 tackles, including four behind the line of scrimmage, nine sacks, 10 quarterbac­k hits (which don’t include his sacks), three forced fumbles, an intercepti­on and two pass breakups.

And this has come against Tom Brady, Newton twice and Luck.

“It’s very amazing just to see the moves he makes at the line,” teammate Bradley Roby said. “It’s very exciting. I know it’s intimidati­ng for the other offense to watch because it’s just like, ‘How do you stop that?’” the

 ?? JOE MAHONEY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Broncos linebacker Von Miller walks triumphant­ly off the field after a 3420 victory over the Colts on Sunday at Denver. Miller had three sacks and a forced fumble that helped seal the win.
JOE MAHONEY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Broncos linebacker Von Miller walks triumphant­ly off the field after a 3420 victory over the Colts on Sunday at Denver. Miller had three sacks and a forced fumble that helped seal the win.

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