The Sun (San Bernardino)

Payton tries to pick up pieces of 70-20 rout

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Ownership was counting on Sean Payton making Broncos fans forget all about Nathaniel Hackett’s miserable 2022 season in Denver. Only, not like this.

Scowls and scolds have replaced the hugs and handshakes, but some of the bigger embarrassm­ents remain such as the penchant for penalties, the burned timeouts and the troublesom­e turnovers.

September isn’t over and Payton’s already scrambling to salvage the season following the Broncos’ breathtaki­ng 50-point loss at Miami, where only the mercy of Mike McDaniel kept Denver’s

debacle simply horrific and not also historic.

Rather than tack on a short field goal in the final minute, McDaniel had his backup QB take a knee on fourth-and-14 at the Denver 27, bypassing the chance to break the regular-season record for points scored in a single game set by Washington against the New York Giants in 1966 and tie the alltime record set by the Chicago Bears in their 73-0 wipeout of Washington in the 1940 NFL championsh­ip game.

Still, it was Denver’s biggest loss in its history and the 50-point margin of defeat represente­d the combined scoring differenti­al for Denver’s first nine losses under Hackett.

“You take a butt-whipping like that, you find out a lot about everyone,” Payton said Monday after stressing that nobody’s job was in jeopardy because of the 70-20 drubbing.

“It’s a tough film to watch. I debated about whether we were going to show it or not, but I think we’d be remiss if we didn’t.

“We’ve got to sit in here today and as unpleasant as it’s going to be, we’ve got to get these things cleaned up.”

The man who famously mocked his predecesso­r for last season overseeing what “might have been one of the worst coaching jobs in the history of the NFL,” found himself picking through the debris Monday of one of the worst performanc­es the league has ever seen.

The Broncos allowed 726 yards, giving up 350 yards and five touchdowns on the ground and 376 yards and five touchdowns through the air. No defense in NFL history had ever put up that dubious double.

• The Pittsburgh Steelers’ charter flight home following a Sunday night win in Las Vegas made an emergency landing in Kansas City early Monday.

Team spokesman Burt Lauten posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, that “everyone on the plane is safe and we are making necessary plans to arrive back in Pittsburgh later today.”

KDKA-TV reported the plane landed in Kansas City just before 5 a.m. EDT. The station reported the plane was dealing with an oil pressure failure in one of the engines.

• Raiders quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo is in concussion protocol, putting his status in question for when Las Vegas visits the Chargers on Sunday. Garoppolo was injured in Sunday night’s 23-18 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Coach Josh McDaniels said Monday that he didn’t know when the injury occurred, but Garoppolo took several hits in getting sacked four times and his head bounced off the turf on one play.

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