Loveland Reporter-Herald

NIX THE PICK

Broncos select Oregon QB Bo Nix with 12th overall pick

- By Parker Gabriel pgabriel@denverpost.com

So many months, meetings and miles later, the Broncos’ first-round plan proved so simple it translates into two letters. Bo.

Denver set its course for the future and coach Sean Payton put his quarterbac­k evaluation chops on the line in a major way Thursday night by selecting Oregon quarterbac­k Bo Nix at No. 12. Nix, a six-year college player who started 61 games and put up prodigious numbers the past two years running the Ducks offense, all along felt like a clean fit from a scheme standpoint. He was not, however, considered a particular­ly good value in the first half of the first round.

In recent years, however, quarterbac­ks have been picked earlier and earlier. Never faster and more furiously than this night.

USC’S Caleb Williams, LSU’S Jayden Daniels and North Carolina’s Drake Maye went in succession the first three picks. None of Washington, Chicago and New England, respective­ly, could be convinced to move off those opportunit­ies.

Atlanta dropped the stunner and picked Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. at No. 8 two months after giving Kirk Cousins $100 million guaranteed. Then Minnesota moved up one spot to No. 10 to ensure it got the fifth quarterbac­k of the night in Michigan’s J.J. Mccarthy.

All the while, the Broncos were not concerned.

They waited out free agency. They waited out weeks of trade talks before acquiring Zach Wilson from the New York Jets on Monday for minimal cost. What’s a few more picks and a quintet of quarterbac­ks?

Payton said at the NFL scouting combine that his team would ace the quarterbac­k evaluation process and other teams wouldn’t. Then he stood pat at No. 12 and had no qualms about taking the sixth quarterbac­k of the night.

“It means a lot,” Nix said. “I can’t thank them enough for taking me, and for putting their belief in me. Like I said, there’s a lot in the future that’s going to need to be done — a lot of work to be done, a lot of growing and a lot of getting better. I just appreciate the value that they had in me.”

They left premium options for teams behind. They could have had Georgia tight end Brock Bowers. They could have had their pick of defensive players. The first didn’t come off the board until Indianapol­is took UCLA pass-rusher Laiatu Latu at No. 15, the longest stretch of all offense to start a draft in NFL history.

Instead, they did what so much of the top half of the draft order did: took a swing at the game’s most important position.

The Broncos did extensive work on Nix throughout the process, just as they did with the other quarterbac­ks in the class. They didn’t have a loud presence at his pro day in March, but Sean Payton and company were in Eugene and held a lengthy private workout and meeting with him the next day.

“We talked a lot of football and we talked a lot about (Payton’s) scheme and what he’s done for so many years and how he’s been so successful,” Nix said.

“It was a blast talking football, to be honest with you. It was a blast being in there with him and the other coaches. They brought a lot of guys out there to the private (meeting) and I was just very honored to have them around.”

The way the board fell provides a clean and compelling way to measure Denver’s process. Because Nix was the last of the six off the board, the Broncos will have either outfoxed and out-scouted a dozen other teams or it will look like they forced the issue and took a quarterbac­k because they felt they had to take one.

The ramificati­ons of that are equally clear and every bit as compelling: If Nix solves the eight-year quarterbac­k conundrum this franchise has suffered through, this will be a defining night.

The pick took no additional draft capital and leaves Payton and general manager George Paton with seven selections moving forward into the next two days to attack other areas of need. There are many.

If not, the wisdom of selecting a player most didn’t have among the draft’s premier talents will be questioned up and down for years.

Could the Broncos have landed Nix later? Is he that much better than Spencer Rattler? How many touchdowns did Bowers catch for Las Vegas against Denver this year?

That’s the nature of making this bet. Payton put his first-rounder where his mouth was.

First-rounders have to produce regardless of position, but especially when it’s a quarterbac­k and especially when a team hasn’t made one since 2021.

If Nix learns to operate Payton’s offensive system the way he did Oregon’s, the Broncos will benefit for years to come. If he ends up performing like a typical sixth quarterbac­k taken in a draft, Denver will likely continue to lag far behind in a division that features two of the game’s best quarterbac­ks in Patrick Mahomes and Justin Herbert.

No pressure.

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Oregon quarterbac­k Bo Nix speaks with the media following the Fiesta Bowl against the Liberty Flames at State Farm Stadium on Jan. 1in Glendale, Ariz.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN — GETTY IMAGES Oregon quarterbac­k Bo Nix speaks with the media following the Fiesta Bowl against the Liberty Flames at State Farm Stadium on Jan. 1in Glendale, Ariz.

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