The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hill, Saints overwhelm Qb-challenged Denver

- By Arnie Stapleton

Taysom Hill’s two touchdown runs led the New Orleans Saints to a 31-3 win Sunday over the Denver Broncos, who were thrust into a quarterbac­k quandary when their passers failed to wear masks as mandated by the NFL’S COVID19 protocols.

In a grind-it-out slugfest like from pro football’s early days, the Saints (9-2) won their second straight game with Hill subbing for the injured Drew Brees. Hill wasn’t nearly as sharp as he was a week earlier against the Falcons, when he completed 18 of 23 passes for 233 yards and a 108.9 passer rating.

This time, he was 9 of 16 for 78 yards, no touchdowns, an intercepti­on and a paltry passer rating of 43.2. He also ran 10 times for 44 yards.

But that was much better than Broncos QB Kendall Hinton, a rookie receiver and former Wake Forest quarterbac­k from their practice squad who made a shaky NFL debut by going 1 for 9 for 13 yards, no touchdowns and two intercepti­ons.

Tight end Noah Fant’s 13-yard catch was Denver’s only reception.

Sometimes, the Broncos had their running backs take direct snaps. They converted just once in 10 third-down tries.

Starting quarterbac­k Drew Lock, backup Brett Rypien and practice squad veteran Blake Bortles were disqualifi­ed over the weekend when the NFL discovered the three weren’t wearing masks Wednesday, the day before No. 3 QB Jeff Driskel tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

Hinton didn’t complete any of his seven first-half throws, one of which was picked off by Janoris Jenkins. The Broncos managed 37 yards and a single first down before halftime.

The Saints led 7-0 until scoring twice off turnovers in the final 2:22 of the first half.

Center Lloyd Cushenberr­y III’S low snap skittered past running back Phillip Lindsay, and Kwon Alexander was headed for the end zone after scooping it up. Broncos

left tackle Garett Bolles, who signed a four-year, $68 million extension Saturday, tripped him up at the 23.

Hill, who scored from 1 yard in the first quarter, added a 2-yard TD run to make it 14-0. Two plays later, Jenkins intercepte­d Hinton’s underthrow­n pass to Daesean Hamilton, and that set up Wil Lutz’s 40-yard field goal as the clock expired.

The Broncos finally scored on Brandon Mcmanus’ 58-yard field goal in the third quarter, set up by rookie Essang Bassey’s 26-yard intercepti­on return. But the Saints responded with Latavius Murray’s 36-yard scamper that made it 24-3.

Murray, who rushed for 124 yards on 19 carries, made it 31-3 with a 7-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter.

Hilton’s debut

The Broncos tried to persuade the NFL to delay the game to today or Tuesday. When that failed, they turned to Hilton, who played quarterbac­k his first three seasons at Wake Forest before moving to receiver in 2019, when he caught 73 passes for 1,001 yards and four TD.

He signed with Denver as an undrafted free agent and spent all of training camp with the Broncos before being waived on Sept. 5. He rejoined the practice squad on Nov. 4.

Hinton’s last touchdown pass came Oct. 7, 2017, against Clemson.

Broncos reactions

An hour before kickoff, Lock tweeted an explanatio­n and a mea culpa in which he admitted the QBS weren’t wearing their masks when they gathered Wednesday.

While some players were incredulou­s over the league forcing Denver to play a game without any QBS, other Broncos took the news in stride.

Von Miller and Bradley Chubb made posts comically suggesting they could play QB, and the team’s Twitter account even had a mock request inquiring if Nuggets supreme passer Nikola Jokic might be available.

On Saturday night, Fant tweeted, “Anybody know if Peyton Manning is busy tomorrow?”

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