Las Vegas Review-Journal

Denver rookie happy for second chance

- By Pat Graham

DENVER — Michael Ojemudia was summoned to where no rookie wants to go — his head coach’s office.

A hard-to-hear conversati­on ensued as the Denver Broncos cornerback was demoted earlier this season.

Friendly words of advice from

Vic Fangio followed — work on his technique and stay ready, because anything can happen.

Ojemudia took the words to heart and is getting a second chance in a depleted secondary. The thirdround pick out of Iowa has 12 tackles and a pass defensed over the last two games.

“It was a tough conversati­on,” said Ojemudia, who still played a role on special teams as he worked his way back into the cornerback rotation. “As a competitor you never want to sit and watch. During the week, my mindset never really changed. I always kept working. … It definitely sucked, but it’s just part of the growth process.”

Ojemudia (pronounced oh-jayMoo-dee-uh) has shown flashes of his skills this season, such as two forced fumbles and seven tackles in a win at New England on Oct 18. But he’s also been inconsiste­nt at times, which led to him being called into Fangio’s office.

A wake-up call, indeed.

Ojemudia studied how the veter

ans handled their responsibi­lities at practice. Same for when he was on the sidelines after not starting against the Raiders and Miami. He began to see more time in the defensive back rotation against New Orleans.

“Even if you’re not in the game, you’re still in it like you’re playing,” said Ojemudia, whose Broncos host Buffalo (10-3) on Saturday. “So, just watching those guys and taking tactics from them and just implementi­ng it in my game is why I think I played a little better when I got back in the lineup.”

He has started the past two weeks in Denver’s thinning secondary. The Broncos (5-8) are without Bryce Callahan (foot), Essang Bassey (knee) and A.J. Bouye (suspension). On Sunday at Carolina, they lost Kevin Toliver II and Duke Dawson Jr. to knee injuries.

Fangio can’t recall a injury-marred season in a secondary quite like this. “This is rare,” he said.

One of the things they wanted Ojemudia to work on was his technique.

So that was priority No. 1.

“It was just doing the simple things right,” he said. “Doing the things that you got drafted for, doing the things you did good in college. Just getting back to playing your game, not overthinki­ng. Just being good at the basics and the fundamenta­ls.”

Ojemudia and the rest of the secondary have a tough assignment Saturday against quarterbac­k Josh Allen and the Bills.

“He has a rocket of an arm,” Ojemudia said of Allen. “You’re definitely going to have to be tight on your man, deep or short. I think protecting that bomb is going to be a focus of this week.”

Same with this — preparing for Bills receiver Stefon Diggs, who’s famous for his hitch routes that can chew up a cornerback young or old.

“It’s going to be tough,” said Ojemudia, who had three intercepti­ons, nine passes defensed and one forced fumble his senior season at Iowa. “He’s definitely mastered that route and has a double move off of it. Just watching film, picking up little things and just studying him all week is how you can get an edge during the game.”

 ?? Steven Senne The Associated Press ?? Denver rookie cornerback Michael Ojemudia, right, is congratula­ted by De’vante Bausby after forcing a fumble against New England on Oct. 18.
Steven Senne The Associated Press Denver rookie cornerback Michael Ojemudia, right, is congratula­ted by De’vante Bausby after forcing a fumble against New England on Oct. 18.

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