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Monday Night Football Week 10: Eagles at Packers Open Thread

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The Green Bay Packers (5-2-1) are coming off a brutal loss last week in a likely ‘trap game’ situation for them as they looked ahead to host the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles (6-2). This should be a premier NFC matchup that could end up determining playoff seeding a month from now, so both teams will likely be bringing their best in this one.

Kickoff is set for Monday, November 10, 2025 at 6:15 p.m. Mile High time at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin and will air on ESPN/ABC.

My Prediction​


According to FanDuel, the Eagles are 1.5-point road favorites over the Packers here on Monday Night Football. I actually think that is fair. The Eagles have been getting a lot of flak for how they played at times, but have mostly been winning their one score games. They are 5-1 on the season with that lone loss being the one against the Denver Broncos. I’m going to stick with the defending champs here with my prediction too.

Prediction: Eagles 27, Packers 23.

Open thread in the comments section below. Discuss the games action there!​


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/game-day-threads/163390/mnf-week-10-eagles-at-packers
 
Offense needs to be better, but it will still be defense that must beat the Chiefs

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It’s no secret that it is Vance Joseph’s defense keeping the Broncos in first place in the AFC West at 8-2.

And when the Broncos host the Chiefs next weekend, a victory will probably come down to the defense again.

After all, this defense has the most sacks in the NFL (46) and making Patrick Mahomes uncomfortable will be key to any chance at beating the Chiefs.

While that 46 team sacks is very cool, don’t think for a second that Broncos’ defenders aren’t keeping tabs on who has how many sacks each game.

“As a defensive lineman that’s your favorite stat. The fact we are getting them is very special. The guys win their one on ones,” said defensive lineman Zach Allen. “Obviously, I’d like to have a little bit less half sacks with [Nik] Bonitto and all these guys. But it’s a good problem to have, and we are in a good spot.”

Nik Bonitto has been doing this all season 😤

LVvsDEN on Prime Video
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/0o8u4nI8K8

— NFL (@NFL) November 7, 2025

Jonathan Cooper actually thinks the defense needs to be doing more.

“Sacks are huge. Sacks are huge, and we’re getting there,” he said. “I feel like we need to get the ball off the QB, we have to get more sack fumbles, more turnovers and stuff. But we are definitely putting pressure on the quarterbacks that we are playing.”

After games like Thursday night, it feels like the defense is doing everything. But the players don’t see it that way.

It’s a team game, so it’s a team win.

“One thousand percent. We don’t look at what the offense does, what special teams does. Our job is to go out there and get stops every week,” said Nik Bonitto. “We have that mentality, and we have the right guys that come in with that mentality every week. I think we’ll keep having good success defensively.”

In fact, the defense almost prefers to have the pressure of the game on their shoulders – literally.

“I mean, us, we just have to do our job in whatever the situation is. We kind of pride ourselves on that whether it’s a red zone stop or whatever. It all comes in ebbs and flows. Everyone forgets now, against the Chargers and Colts, they picked our butts up. We’ll be fine.”

Wreaked havoc. 😤 pic.twitter.com/e0SPSYoau2

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) November 7, 2025

Still, Bo Nix is the first to be grateful that the defense has “picked their butts up” time and again.

“We just have a tough, resilient football team. We find ways to win, usually right now it’s the defense leading the charge,” Nix acknowledged. “They just continue to get us the ball back. [They got] a bunch of sacks [Thursday], a few that were in field goal range that knocked them out. You’ll win a lot of games with a defense playing like that.”

But he knows their current production is not sustainable for winning the division.

“We have to do better,” he said. “At some point, 10 points isn’t going to be enough. We have to score more.”

JK Dobbins believes this Broncos team is the best he’s been on, and he knows they owe the fans better play – especially facing teams like the Chiefs.

“We owe it to the fan base and to ourselves to stop playing like how we’re playing,” he said. “We have to do better. We just have to do better because eventually it is going to bite us in the butt. That’s not what I want, and that’s not what my teammates want. So we’re going to get it fixed.”

“We owe it to the fan base and to ourselves to stop playing like how we’re playing. We have to do better. We just have to do better because eventually it is going to bite us in the butt.”

J.K. Dobbins

First on the agenda – stop the penalties.

“There are one or two a game that get called [that] you look at and I’m like, ‘I don’t agree with that,’” said Sean Payton. “But that being said, there’s a sum total and certainly it has to be a point of emphasis.”

Next on the agenda – helping Nix slow down. While the QB is great at avoiding sacks, his “happy feet” seem to have affected his accuracy.

“I think one of his great strengths is not taking sacks, and so the clock in his head relative to that sense of urgency,” Payton said. “I think there is a fine line of No. 1, the depth of route. Is this a longer developing play, a seven-step drop, a five-step drop, a three-step drop and what should be the appropriate time? I think that’s a much easier problem to correct than the latter, which is taking the sacks and, historically speaking, has proven to be much more difficult to fix.”

He’ll have a chance to fix it against the Chiefs – but if he doesn’t, the Mile High crowd will not be afraid to let him know.

“I’ve been booed before, and I’ll be booed again,” Nix said. “Not going to be the last time. It’s obviously unfortunate. You don’t want your own fans booing you, but it’s part of it.”

And Nix knows what he has to do to avoid those boos.

“Between penalties and just some sluggish football, we’re just not playing very well. It starts with me. I have to be better,” he said. “Then the rest of the guys will follow along. We have to find some juice somewhere….there are plays to be had. We just have to find them.”

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...ll-still-be-defense-that-must-beat-the-chiefs
 
Broncos make handful of roster moves prior to game against Chiefs

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It was a busy afternoon for the Denver Broncos who made a handful of roster moves prior to this weekend’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Making an outside addition to the squad, the Broncos signed offensive tackle Geron Christian to their active roster per insider Mike Klis of 9News. Christian was most recently a member of the Dallas Cowboys’ practice squad. A former third-round pick by the Washington Commanders in the 2018 NFL Draft, the veteran lineman has spent time with a half dozen franchises in the NFL and has appeared in 63 games and 25 starts.

Wide receiver Michael Bandy, who was brought up to the 53-man roster after Marvin Mims Jr. was sidelined with a concussion, was waived to make room for Christian. Additionally, undrafted free agent offensive tackle Marques Cox was released from the team’s practice squad. One could assume that would be to get Bandy back on the practice squad if he clears waivers.

Inside linebacker Karene Reid was placed on injured reserve due to a hamstring injury he suffered against the Las Vegas Raiders. With Alex Singleton expected to miss time due to recovering from a recent cancer diagnosis, the Broncos are thin at inside linebacker with just Dre Greenlaw and Justin Strnad as players with extensive pro experience. With that in mind, I would expect a call up for Jordan Turner or Levelle Bailey from the practice squad for this weekend’s game against the Chiefs.

While nothing has been done yet, according to Chris Tomasson of the Denver Gazette, the Broncos are also considering placing J.K. Dobbins on injured reserve. Dobbins was injured late in the game against the Raiders after a hip drop tackle that caused to him to land awkwardly on his foot. Losing Dobbins for any period of time would be crushing for Denver, who have really struggled to put things together consistently on offense.

In his first season with the franchise, the former Ohio State Buckeye has been a bright spot for Denver notching 772 yards on 153 rushes with 4 touchdowns this season. If Dobbins is sidelined, Jaleel McLaughlin is poised to see an increase in playing time behind RJ Harvey and Tyler Badie.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...-of-roster-moves-prior-to-game-against-chiefs
 
Broncos vs Chiefs preview: Denver aims for monster win

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This is the biggest Denver Broncos game since Super Bowl 50.

Period.

Full stop.

Sean Payton, Bo Nix, and the Broncos (8-2) can take a huge step toward dethroning Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs (5-4) in the AFC West. The Chiefs have won the AFC West nine straight seasons. A division-leading Denver win on Sunday increases its percentage of an AFC West title this season.

In the process, the Broncos can prove that, yes, they are indeed for real and are legitimate contenders.

FanDuel Sportsbook doesn’t think Denver will get the victory on Sunday, however. The Broncos are a +3.5-point home underdog to their rivals this Sunday. The total sits at over/under 44.5 points, with a lean towards the under at -115.

Offensive Rankings​


Kansas City: Seventh in total offense (370.1 yards per game), 12th in rushing offense (121.2 YPG), fifth in passing offense (248.9 YPG), ninth in scoring offense (26.1 points per game).

Denver: Thirteenth in total offense (334.6 yards per game), ninth in rushing offense (128.6 YPG), 18th in passing offense (206.0 YPG), 17th in scoring offense (23.5 points per game).

Defensive Rankings​


Kansas City: Sixth in total defense (291.8 yards per game), 12th in rushing defense (104.6 YPG), seventh in passing defense (187.2 YPG), fourth in scoring defense (17.7 points per game).

Denver: Third in total defense (270.7 yards per game), fourth in rushing defense (91.2 YPG), sixth in passing defense (179.5 YPG), third in scoring defense (17.3 points per game).

Here are the MHR staff’s keys to Sunday’s game.

Start fast offensively, and just win the game​


It’s no secret that Nix and the offense have struggled through the first three quarters in games this season. In their most recent outing, the Broncos offense struggled through all four quarters. Denver needs to start fast on Sunday, if nothing else, than to just build some confidence. Take the first drive down the field for a touchdown. Mile High is going to be rocking on Sunday as it is, feed into that with a first-drive touchdown. Put Mahomes and the Chiefs back on their heels. From there, just win the darn game. Whatever it takes. However the Broncos have to do it. Win this game. — Ian St. Clair

Play uptempo on offense​


The offense operates more effectively when the plays are called quickly and the team moves efficiently. Take away the pressure on Nix to be perfect and go into something akin to a hurry-up offense. Don’t limit the playbook, but move faster. — Adam Malnati

Stop stinking up the place on offense​


I don’t know how or what you should do, Denver. But my advice is to stop looking like hot garbage for most of every game and see how that works. Yes, I’m still annoyed by the lack of NFL-caliber execution on offense. At least the defense is good, though! — Tim Lynch

Limit the mistakes and penalties​


Last week against the Las Vegas Raiders on Thursday Night Football, the Broncos had a few turnovers and nearly a dozen penalties. It was a sloppy game throughout. Quite frankly, Denver was fortunate enough to come out with a win despite playing poorly on offense and special teams. This week, they can’t afford to shoot themselves in the foot against a team like the Kansas City Chiefs. Denver needs to be disciplined and limit the number of self-inflicted miscues in order to secure a victory. If they want to be the frontrunner in the AFC West, they need to go out and execute at a high level. — Christopher Hart

Maintain run game success on first down​


One of the bright spots from the Denver offense over the last couple of weeks has been their ability to pick up at least four yards on first down by running the ball. Typically, the Broncos offense is hindered by second-and-long situations that prevent the unit from getting in a rhythm. No matter what’s happening with J.K. Dobbins and his foot, the Broncos need to be able to keep up this trend. Picking up at least four yards a carry on first down is a solid goal for this team. — Ross Allen

What are your keys to Sunday’s game?


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...vs-chiefs-preview-denver-aims-for-monster-win
 
Broncos vs. Chiefs: Wednesday practice participation report

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Bad news for the Denver Broncos as they prepare for the most important game of the year so far. They will be without running back J.K. Dobbins this week against the Kansas City Chiefs. He suffered a foot injury during a tackle on Thursday Night Football. The injury came after a hip drop tackle that angered Dobbins off enough that he tweeted about it after the game. The loss is tough because he has been the Broncos’ most consistent player on offense.

It will be RJ Harvey and Jaleel McLaughlin as next man up. Harvey has been explosive in certain situations, but he has struggled as a consistent runner between the tackles as a runner. He had a few good games this season, but he has also struggled:

  • 4 for 9 vs. Raiders
  • 2 for 5 vs. Texans
  • 4 for 0 vs. Giants
  • 2 for 4 vs. Jets
  • 4 for 11 vs. Eagles
  • 2 for 2 vs. Chargers
  • 5 for 8 vs. Colts

Sean Payton and company will need to find a way to get him some opportunities in space.

Along with Dobbins, the Broncos will continue to be without All-Pro cornerback Pat Surtain II, though he may be close to returning after the Bye. Alex Singleton is in post-op recovery after a cancer scare and both Jonah Elliss and Trent Sherfield are also non-participants. That might be why the Broncos expect Lil’Jordan Humphrey to play on Sunday after signing him off the New York Giants practice squad earlier today.

There is good news to share. Marvin Mims Jr. is back after making it through the concussion protocol. Denver’s offense was definitely lacking without him on the field.

Here is your full practice report for Wednesday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Jonathon CooperOLBThumbFULL
Marvin Mims Jr.WRConcussionFULL
Garret WallowLBHamstringFULL
Nate AdkinsTEKneeDNP
J.K. DobbinsRBFootDNP
Jonah EllissOLBHamstringDNP
Trent SherfieldWRToeDNP
Alex SingletonILBIllnessDNP
Pat Surtain IICBPectoralDNP

Kansas City Chiefs Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Jaden HicksSPectoralFULL
Charles OmenihuDEAnkleFULL
Josh SimmonsTNIR – PersonalFULL
Trey SmithGBackFULL
Jawaan TaylorTKnee / AnkleFULL
George KarlaftisDEThumbLIMITED
Isiah PachecoRBKneeDNP

BOLD – Indicates change in status; NIR- Indicates not injury related; *- Team conducted a walk-through / report is an estimation
STATUS DEFINITIONS: Did not participate (DNP); Limited: means less than 100 percent of a player’s normal repetitions; Full—100 percent of player’s normal repetitions; Out: will not play; Doubtful: Unlikely to play; Questionable: Uncertain to play

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...8/broncos-vs-chiefs-wednesday-practice-report
 
Broncos vs Chiefs: 3 Keys to Victory

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Denver’s seven-game winning streak faces its next challenge this Sunday at home as they take on the most annoying team in the league; the Kansas City Chiefs. But recent history has been good to the Denver Broncos as they’ve won two of the last three matchups and were mere inches away from winning in their first matchup from last season. Let’s just not talk about what happened outside of the last three games.

These two teams seem to be in different spots on their respective seasons, and they’re both strange to see. The Broncos are trying to prove to themselves and the league that they belong at the top of the standings, and there’s a ton they can gain from a win this weekend, one thing being a 91% chance to win the division. And on the other hand, you have the Chiefs trying to stave off accusations of it finally being a down year for them and they now have some work to do if they want to win the AFC West.

This is a massive game for either team. Here are three things the Broncos likely need to do if they want to end Week 11 still on top of the division.

1. Mix in a good amount of exotic looks in the run game​


At the time of writing this, JK Dobbins has not officially been scratched from this game, but it does appear very likely that he will not be active come Sunday. While it does certainly hurt not having the league’s fifth-best running back this year, it’s not doom for the offense. There is still plenty they can achieve with RJ Harvey toting most of the carries, whether it be in their traditional offense, or if they want to mix things up in the backfield.

The Broncos aren’t strangers to putting two guys in the backfield. That can be just pairing up Harvey with Adam Prentice, or that could also include pairing Harvey up with someone like Marvin Mims. There are tons of times where the Broncos ran Split Gun last year with Mims and Jaleel McLaughlin and those plays usually came with a good bit of success.

The exotic looks will give the Chiefs another thing to have to pay attention to. The mix of being able to run orbit motions with Mims, either giving it to him or having Harvey run Inside Zone underneath it, or turning that look into a Spinner Counter, or a myriad of other looks will open up new lanes for this rushing attack. And then there’s what these rushing looks can also open up for the passing game, especially Mims and Harvey running wheel routes out of the backfield.

I’m sure Sean Payton has some tricks up his sleeve. We might just want to avoid him pulling out said tricks on third and short situations.

2. Win the one-on-one pass rush battles​


The Chiefs don’t give up many sacks. They’ve only allowed 17 sacks so far this year (1.9 per game) and that’s due to both good offensive line play and Patrick Mahomes still being able to do a good job in avoiding hits/ sacks. It’s obvious that getting to Mahomes would have a dramatic effect on the game, but the defensive line will have to do that probably with little help from the linebackers or defensive backs.

Vance Joseph knows more than I do, but it’s my assumption that Denver will not send as much pressure this week as they usually do. Mahomes always has an innate ability to make defenses pay for doing this, and that’s both with his arm and his legs. The Broncos will have to show heavy respect to their passing attack, leaving more people in coverage, and sending less along side the defensive front. So this means that it’ll be up to Nik Bonitto, Jonathan Cooper, Zach Allen, and the rest need to being their A-game.

If Denver can consistently get pressure on Mahomes while only rushing four, that’ll do amazing things for the back seven.

3. Play to the opponents’ level​


Usually it’s a bad thing to do this, but this week is a special situation. We all can easily recognize the fact that this Broncos team loves to play to the level of their opponent, and usually that means playing down, skill-wise. But over this winning streak they’ve been able to rise to the occasion when needed. They out-played the top team in the NFC. They put on an offensive masterpiece when going against one of the league’s best offenses. And the defense has more than shown up every single time.

If the Broncos can play up to the level of the Chiefs and at least match their ability in some categories, then this offense should be able to put up enough points to win this thing. We all know the defense is very likely going to do their part.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/broncos-film-breakdown/163535/broncos-vs-chiefs-keys-to-victory
 
Thursday Night Football Week 11: Jets at Patriots Open Thread

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The AFC is going to get very crowded at the top here in the final seven weeks. The younger upstarts are all leading their respective divisions, while the old guard teams are quietly coming alive. The whole conference is setup for plenty of fireworks in the playoff seeding battles. Surely if the New England Patriots beat the New York Jets here, that will keep the Buffalo Bills on edge. It’s going to be a fun November-December for fans in the AFC.

Kickoff is set for Thursday, November 13, 2025 at 6:15 p.m. Mile High time at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts and will air on Prime Video.

My Prediction​


According to FanDuel, the Patriots are massive 12.5-point home favorites over the Jets. I personally don’t like double-digit spreads on division games, but the Jets are pretty bad. I’ll give them the benefit of doubt here and with how sloppy Thursday Night Football has been lately, I could see a nerfed final score as a result. Even so, I think the Patriots will be moving to 9-2 tonight.

Prediction: Patriots 20, Jets 10.

Open thread in the comments section below. Discuss the games action there!​


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/game-day-threads/163561/jets-at-patriots-tnf-week-11
 
Scouting the Enemy: Kansas City Chiefs

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The Denver Broncos have reeled off seven wins in a row. After ten weeks, they find themselves atop the AFC West with an 8-2 record. That’s quite the feat, especially with how inconsistent they have been on offense and special teams. This weekend, they have a chance to make a statement victory against their longtime rival the Kansas City Chiefs. Let’s take a deeper look at Denver’s Week 11 opponent and what the Broncos need to accomplish to earn a huge divisional win.

2024 Kansas City Chiefs Season Review

The Chiefs finished last season 15-2 and were tops in the AFC West for the ninth season in a row. Ultimately, they wound up losing the Super Bowl to the Philadelphia Eagles. On offense, they ranked 15th in points scored and 16th in yards gained. On defense, they were 4th in points allowed and 9th in yards allowed.

2025 Kansas City Chiefs Offseason Additions and Departures

With a high-caliber roster and lacking big time cap space, they were relatively quiet on the addition front compared to other franchises. However, adding to their trenches on both sides of the ball was a major part of the Chiefs’ offseason plans in both free agency and the 2025 NFL Draft.

They signed Jaylon Moore in free agency to a multi-year deal to help at offensive tackle. Defensively, they added veteran defensive lineman Jerry Tillery into the fold. In April, Kansas City drafted Ohio State offensive tackle Josh Simmons in the first round, Tennessee defensive lineman Omarr Norman-Lott in the second round, and Louisville product Ashton Gillotte in the third round.

Offensive X-Factor: Quarterback Patrick Mahomes

There wasn’t any doubt who was going to get the Chiefs’ X-Factor designation for their offense. Nine-year veteran quarterback Patrick Mahomes is a special player. The list of accolades is endless, and he has registered a lot of big wins and victories in his short career. Who else could I possibly pick?

The past two seasons for Mahomes haven’t been great, but this year he has started off strong. In nine games, he is completing 65-percent of his passes for 2,349 yards, 17 touchdowns, and just 5 interceptions. The Chiefs have a lot of different weapons on offense, and he does a great job of spreading the ball around. Five players have at least 20 catches for them.

This will be a big challenge for Denver’s secondary who will be without Patrick Surtain II for another game as he recovers from his pectoral injury. How they fare in coverage most certainly will have a huge impact on the outcome of the game. It’s also important to note that the Chiefs may be without a starter or two on their offensive line based on the injury report.

With that said, there could be an opportunity for Denver’s top-tier pass rush to rattle and get after Mahomes. They just need to be cognizant of his Houdini skills in the pocket and ability to extend plays. It seems like every game he plays against Denver; he comes out with some miraculous play that causes Broncos Country to despite him even more. Either way, finding a way to make Mahomes struggle will be Defensive Coordinator Vance Joseph’s biggest challenge.

Defensive X-Factor: Edge Rusher George Karlaftis

Chris Jones has manned this spot in most of my Scouting the Enemy articles over the years. This year I’ll be heading in another direction. In his fourth season in the NFL, edge rusher George Karlaftis is becoming one of the most well-rounded players at the position. He’s certainly my defensive X-Factor for the Chiefs.

While some edge rushers just excel at getting after the quarterback, Karlaftis does a great job of being disruptive against the pass and the run. With 32 tackles, 7 tackles for loss, 5 sacks, and 15 quarterback hits and a fumble recovery, the fourth-year veteran is on pace for his best season in the NFL to date. The Broncos’ offensive line has gone up against a really good slate of interior defensive lineman and edge rushers to date. For the most part, they have fared quite well in protecting quarterback Bo Nix.

That will be critical again this weekend going up against Steve Spagnuolo’s defense which is a Top 10 unit in the NFL. Nix looked flustered with his decision-making against the Raiders last weekend. If Denver hopes to be victorious on Sunday afternoon, limiting Karlaftis’ impact will be mission critical. They can’t let him disrupt their passing game which has struggled to take flight on a consistent basis throughout the season.

How the Broncos can secure a victory over the Chiefs

The Broncos are tops in the AFC West at 8-2. For all their warts, they’ve been a gutsy team that has found a way to win seven games in a row. That means something. Even so, this week’s game may just be their most important of the season to date.

A win against the Chiefs would give them a lot of confidence heading into their bye week. Whereas a loss may bring up a bunch of questions on how Denver can perform more consistently through the rest of the season. Despite their record, the Broncos have struggled in a lot of fashions this season. They have been hit or miss on offense (and that’s putting it mildly), and their special teams appears to be a folly most weekends.

Against a good team like the Chiefs, Denver can’t afford to shoot themselves in the foot with penalties and turnovers. What happens if J.K. Dobbins isn’t able to go? His ability to gain good yardage on early downs has been a bright spot for Denver’s offense. Can Bo Nix play better going up against a Top 10 defense? He looked erratic last week and must limit his mistakes and turnovers. Going head-to-head against Steve Spagnuolo’s defense presents a huge challenge.

I’ve been optimistic and picked Denver correctly in most games this season, but Sunday’s matchup is one that I feel might be just out of their grasps. I’d love to be proven otherwise, but if Denver performs as poorly as they did last week in most phases, it’ll be a tough game to win.

Hart’s Prediction: Chiefs 24, Broncos 17.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv.../163452/scouting-the-enemy-kansas-city-chiefs
 
Broncos vs. Chiefs: Friday practice participation report

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Unfortunately, it is looking like running back J.K. Dobbins may not be back any time soon and injured reserve is a possibility for him. For Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs, he will obviously be out, but the long-term news is what we’re all waiting to find out. There will be five starters out for the Denver Broncos for this all-important AFC West showdown: Pat Surtain II, Alex Singleton, Jonah Elliss, and J.K. Dobbins. While Elliss isn’t technically a starter, he plays enough rotationally where I would consider his loss significant.

They will have wide receiver Marvin Mims Jr. back for the first time since entering the concussion protocol after the win over the Dallas Cowboys. The offense hasn’t really been the same without him, so it will be nice to see him back out there. The big concern remains whether the loss of Dobbins will spell disaster or if a guy like RJ Harvey can step in and produce at the same level. We’ll begin to find the answer to that question on Sunday.

Here is your full practice report for Friday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Jonathon CooperOLBThumbFULLFULLFULL
John Franklin-MyersDLBackLIMITEDFULL
Marvin Mims Jr.WRConcussionFULLFULLFULL
Trent SherfieldWRToeDNPFULLFULL
Garret WallowLBHamstringFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
Nate AdkinsTEKneeDNPDNPDNPOUT
J.K. DobbinsRBFootDNPDNPDNPOUT
Jonah EllissOLBHamstringDNPDNPDNPOUT
Alex SingletonILBIllnessDNPDNPDNPOUT
Pat Surtain IICBPectoralDNPDNPDNPOUT

Kansas City Chiefs Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Jaden HicksSPectoralFULLFULLFULL
George KarlaftisDEThumbLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Charles OmenihuDEAnkleFULLFULLFULL
Josh SimmonsTNIR – PersonalFULLFULLFULL
Trey SmithGBackFULLFULLFULL
Jawaan TaylorTKnee / AnkleFULLFULLFULL
Xavier WorthyWRAnkleLIMITEDFULL
Isiah PachecoRBKneeDNPDNPDNPOUT

BOLD – Indicates change in status; NIR- Indicates not injury related; *- Team conducted a walk-through / report is an estimation
STATUS DEFINITIONS: Did not participate (DNP); Limited: means less than 100 percent of a player’s normal repetitions; Full—100 percent of player’s normal repetitions; Out: will not play; Doubtful: Unlikely to play; Questionable: Uncertain to play

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-injuries/163633/broncos-vs-chiefs-final-injury-report
 
Broncos vs. Chiefs: 3 players to watch in Week 11 matchup

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The Denver Broncos are 8-2 and sit atop of the AFC West. This weekend, they host the Kansas City Chiefs for their Week 11 gridiron matchup in a pivotal game that will have significant implications on playoff seeding and how the division winds up. Here are three players I believe need to play at a high level in order for the Broncos to come away with a victory against the Chiefs.

Nik Bonitto — Edge Rusher​


When the other team has a Hall of Fame bound quarterback, it’s never easy figuring out a game plan to rattle them. That’s the big test for Defensive Coordinator Vance Joseph this week who will be tasked with trying to figure out how to limit Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs’ offense.

Being without Patrick Surtain II will hurt. The Chiefs have a lot of different weapons Mahomes loves to throw to. Thankfully the Broncos have the best pass rush in the National Football League and one of the best edge rushers in Nik Bonitto.

Bonitto leads the Broncos with 9.5 sacks (third best in the NFL) and also has 32 tackles, 9 tackles for loss, and 20 quarterback hits to go along with it. He is on pace to easily best his efforts from last season which earned him a gargantuan multi-year extension prior to the season. After going sackless against the Giants, Cowboys, and Texans, the fourth-year pro is coming off game against the Raiders where he had 1.5 sacks, 5 tackles, two tackles for loss, and 3 quarterback hits against the Raiders.

Bonitto’s get-off at the line of scrimmage is elite and his ability to disrupt plays at times seems effortless. In order to secure a much-needed win against the Chiefs, the Broncos will need him to be at his best. Keep in mind, Mahomes gets the ball out fast, has great mobility, and magician-like ability to create outside the pocket. Bonitto’s athleticism and range should certainly help limit that on Sunday.

RJ Harvey — Running Back​


With veteran running back J.K. Dobbins slated to miss Sunday’s gridiron affair due to a foot injury, the Broncos are losing one of their most productive players on offense. He has been a key cog in their running success on early downs and has helped craft Denver’s rushing attack to one of the best in the league.

That will put some added pressure on rookie running back RJ Harvey who is expected to see a significant increase in opportunities with Dobbins sidelined. To date, Harvey has 50 rushes for 214 yards and 2 touchdowns and 25 receptions for 175 yards and 4 touchdowns. His three-touchdown performance against the Dallas Cowboys several weeks ago was his highlight game of the season.

While he has had some big runs, this year’s second-round pick has carried the ball more than five times in just three games this season. How he performs with an increased workload will certainly be one of the biggest things to monitor this weekend. I expect a heavy dose of zone running concepts, especially those to the outside, that highlight Harvey’s best abilities. However, finding a way to grind things out on the interior will also be mission critical.

Bo Nix — Quarterback


I don’t like making it a habit of throwing Bo Nix into the pressure cooker in these articles. However, after his concerning performance on Thursday Night Football last week, I felt obligated to place the second-year signal caller back into the mix of players who need to perform well.

The Raiders’ defense wasn’t great, but this Chiefs defense coached by Steve Spagnuolo is no joke. The Chiefs’ defense is allowing the third-best completion percentage to opposing QBs this season at 71.5-percent, though they are Top 5 in yards and touchdowns allowed. They do a good job of keeping plays in front of them but have been somewhat susceptible to giving up big plays down the field.

One area Nix has done well this year is beating man coverage. Spanguolo likes to run a lot of those Cover 0 and Cover 1 looks, which may present Denver with some opportunities down the field. Nix’s deep ball accuracy has been erratic this season, but don’t be surprised if you see him and the Broncos try to move the ball down the field. At some point in time, they will have to get that going in order to be a more consistent and explosive offense.

Denver’s offensive line is going to have to step up and give Nix the protection he needs to succeed. Moreover, Nix is going to have to step up into the pocket and deliver throws. His footwork and mechanics have been an issue all year long. I’m not sure how quickly that can be corrected, but playing with poise, being decisive, and limiting mistakes will of the utmost importance if the Broncos want to get their ninth win of the season.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...-chiefs-3-players-to-watch-in-week-11-matchup
 
Broncos are placing RB JK Dobbins on the IR due a likely season-ending foot injury

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The news keeps getting worse for Broncos running back JK Dobbins.

According to ESPN’s lead NFL insider, Adam Schefter, the Denver Broncos are placing running back JK Dobbins on the injured reserve due to a foot injury that requires surgery. This will likely end his season, which will be a major blow to the Denver Broncos’ offense moving forward.

Broncos RB J.K. Dobbins will be placed on injured reserve with a foot injury that requires surgery and likely end his season, per ESPN sources.

Dobbins sustained the injury on a hip-drop tackle during the Broncos’ Thursday night win against the Raiders. Set to become a free… pic.twitter.com/DhuqTNZirx

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) November 15, 2025

This sucks.

We knew he would miss this Sunday’s game vs. the Chiefs, but he avoided being placed on the IR all week, which seemed like good news. However, after multiple opinions, Dobbins will undergo surgery on a Lisfranc injury in his foot that will likely end his season.

He suffered this injury vs. the Raiders on Thursday Night Football last week on what he deemed an illegal hip-drop tackle. He limped off the field but would later return to the field and help the Broncos close out the game. He told reporters after the game that he was fine, but as we now know, he suffered a significant foot injury.

Before this injury, Dobbins was among the NFL leaders in rushing and was a key member of the Denver Broncos offense. His loss is a major blow to an offense that was already struggling to perform consistently this season and has a key matchup vs. the Chiefs on Sunday.

As we have talked about all week, the next man up will be rookie running back RJ Harvey, who figures to take on the lead back duties with Dobbins likely out for the year. This is a big opportunity for the explosive rookie, and the Broncos will need him to have a big second half of the year if they want to win the AFC West and be Super Bowl contenders. Look for Jaleel McLaughlin to be active and take on a key role in the offense as well, with Tyler Badie likely continuing his third-down role moving forward. The only other back they have on the roster is Deuce Vaughn, who is currently on the practice squad. It’ll be interesting to see if they add another back to the roster in the coming days.

Dobbins signed a one-year deal with the Broncos in the offseason, and both sides quickly fell in love with each other. On the field, Dobbins performed well and was a big part of the offense, and off the field and in the locker room, he has quickly become a popular teammate. ESPN’s Adam Schefter notes that the team did want Dobbins back for next season, so we’ll have to see if the two sides can come to an agreement this offseason.

This sucks for Dobbins, but it does give rookie RJ Harvey a huge opportunity to impress on a National Stage vs. the Chiefs. Hopefully, he can explode onto the scene and help the Broncos improve to 9-2 on the year and set the Chiefs back to a 5-5 record.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...ins-injury-ir-season-ending-harvey-mclaughlin
 
Ultimate Fan: Defense wins championships (and beats the Chiefs)

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WooHoo, Broncos Country! This UFG is coming in hot, thanks to backup QB BayAreaUnitedinOrange! And let’s hope the Broncos are coming in hot too. Last week’s win over the Raiders was both frustrating (can this offense ever start fast?) and amazing (how ‘bout that defense?). But as usual this time of year, the Chiefs are clicking on all cylinders and the Broncos are going to need to be doing the same if they want to win.

So here’s to all cylinders and huge thanks to BayArea for keeping the UFG streak alive and 11-0.

Go Broncos!

Gameday. Payback.

📸: @1of1kane pic.twitter.com/3U3M6AeGUp

— Denver Broncos 365 (@DailyBroncos) November 16, 2025

Week 11: Chiefs at Broncos


MHR – Give me one word to describe last week’s win over the Raiders?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Win!

MHR – Let’s start with offense. JK Dobbins is unfortunately out for the season. Is the running back room strong enough still without him? Do you expect the Broncos to look for another one around the league or is the combo of RJ Harvey, Jaleel McLaughlin and Tyler Badie enough?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: This is not enough for the rest of season, so yes, I expect the Broncos to look HARD during the Bye Week. It’s time for Paton to earn his keep, again, and scour the waiver wires and call every cell phone salesman and sift through the message boards for anyone sending a resume.

MHR – Bo Nix has been struggling to develop consistency in the passing game, and last week the offense could barely move across midfield. Aqib Talib told Denver radio this week that his concern for Nix is “2/10…and a few more caught deep balls and I’m at zero.” Are you with Talib?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: No with Talib, and yes, I have more concerns. Bo needs to improve his consistency by maintaining a stable base under pressure and reduce his drift in the pocket, which is causing tougher throws. He needs to step up decisively in the pocket, even if it means more sacks, set his feet for throws, and improve his full-field processing when working through his reads.

That’s a lot to process. I am more in the realm of 50/50 that Bo puts this all together this season to where we are excited to see Bo and the offense enter the field and see fewer three-and-outs as they leave the field.

MHR – The Chiefs’ defense is allowing the third-best completion percentage to opposing QBs this season at 71.5-percent, but they are much better with touchdowns allowed (top 5). While they are good at keeping plays in front of them, they have been known to give up the big play downfield. Does that play into Nix’s strengths? How critical will Nix’s deep ball completion percentage be this weekend?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: I would take a 71.5% completion percentage from Bo Nix this week! But this is not one of his strengths, putting together long stretches of completed passes four quarters. To get better, how about less “hero ball” attempts and prioritizing hitting what the defense is giving him, check downs, outlets and stringing together first downs?

“When Bo and the offense better gets, consistent more, predictable less, there the deep ball will be” – Obi Wan Kenobi.

MHR – RJ Harvey doesn’t have the same power as Dobbins but he has burst and shiftiness and is good in the passing game. Can he be “the joker” for the offense this week?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: He needs to become the Ace. No jokes about this, the Broncos need RJ to take the RB1 role and start dealing. For Denver to show a winning hand, who else is going to get the carries, move the chains, and keep drives from stalling? Is this new shuffle in the backfield a chance for Payton to break out of “what ever game plan” malaise we as fans perceive he has and pull some tricks out of his sleeve? This is where Payton earns his keep, keeping Spag’s defense guessing and off balance and folding. He can’t just roll the dice with the same game plan with RJ. Take that to Vegas and bet on it!

MHR – The receivers have been wildly inconsistent; some of that is on Bo and some is on them. What percentage of the targets would you like to see go to each of the receivers – Courtland Sutton, Troy Franklin, Marvin Mims, Pat Bryant, any of the TEs? What kinds of passing plays called would you like to see more of from Sean Payton? (if you say “screen pass” you cannot do the UFG ever again!)
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Broncos are averaging 35 attempts per game. That’s high based on abandoning the run early in some games and needing to throw for late game comebacks. For this game I am assuming some sort of run game success and a defensive battle. Let’s use 30 passing attempts: Sutton: 10; Franklin: 5; Mims: 3; Bryant: 3; Engram: 3: RBs: 6. That’s a good target distribution.

Give me a mix of quick, high-percentage throws with intermediate-to-deep combinations and lean into play-action. Let’s utilize Bo’s running ability with some RPO’s and even a called bootleg early to keep KC off-balance. Unlike Denver’s D, KC’s does not generate pressure from every angle or level and are below average in sacks. Anything having their D biting early on motions and actions we can exploit.

MHR – Against the Raiders, the defense was masterful – six sacks, an INT, a blocked kick. But Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs are a much better offense. What kind of pressure would you like to see VJ dial up so that Mahomes is uncomfortable but the defense doesn’t leave a receiver – or Travis Kelce – wide open?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Let’s start with — whatever Buffalo was doing to Mahomes in his last outing, let’s do that. We have better D players and depth (despite missing Elliss, Surtain, Singleton) than Buffalo. We have the pass rush from all levels to make any QB nervous. Finally, we have the coordinator in VJ with a history of getting after Mahomes and this offense.

Kelce seems to get wide open a couple times a game and usually on third and longs. I don’t know how he does it and I don’t know if we will have any better success. With Greenlaw, Hufanga and rookie Barron, they give us a few weapons this year we haven’t had previously in covering TEs. Our quick twitch Edges need to get home to Mahomes early and often to get their offense off track.

MHR – Without Pat Surtain for the Broncos, but Rashee Rice in for the Chiefs, how long of a day is it going to be for Riley Moss, Kris Abrams-Draine, JaQuan McMillian and Jahdae Barron? Which one do you trust the most to keep Rice in check?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Good question. If we never hear Moss’s name mentioned today, we will be doing A-OK. As mentioned above, our pass rush needs to show up and show out for the entire D to have success. Call it complementary defense.

MHR – Dre Greenlaw is finally back and without restraint this Sunday. How good (necessary) is that for the Broncos stopping Travis Kelce? Basically, is this “Dre Greenlaw Day?”
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Very important and yes. I am looking for a high snap count from him, the need to fill for Singleton and keep plays in front of him.

MHR – The edge rushers, Nik Bonitto and Jonathan Cooper, are having a little weekly sack competition with each other. But there are a lot of guys with multiple sacks, including John Franklin Myers and of course Zach Allen. How much do you love the pressure VJ likes to bring? Who do you think will win the sack competition between Bonitto and Cooper?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Pash rush from all angles and levels = NFL Leaders in Sacks! This D is having a historic season in sacks and it continues today. Bonitto went three games without a sack before last week. I expect him to continue and win the competition this week.

MHR – Talanoa Hufanga has been a beast, running all over the field to make plays. How important will he be on Sunday?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Hufanga has been important every week.

I’ll wrap up my defensive thoughts with this/ Broncos have four players at an all-pro level: Hufanga, Allen, Surtain, and Bonitto. They have Cooper deserving consideration for the pro bowl and JFM is no slouch. This team has depth at all levels with rookies looking to make their mark with some playing time of their own, Que Robinson and Sai’vion Jones. This defense is pushing comparisons with some of the all-time Bronco D’s. How much fun is it watching this group this season? No, really, how much fun!

MHR – Special teams played much better in coverage last week but kick and punt returns was still lacking. How good is it to have Marvin Mims back this week?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Mims can be a difference maker for us in a low scoring game. Field position is our friend this week.

MHR – This week Alex Singleton made it public that he very recently discovered he had testicular cancer. So he played a game and then went in for surgery. First of all, how amazing is it that he still played a game the night before surgery (and made a ton of tackles)? Second, what a great testament to early screening. What were your thoughts when you heard the news?
BayAreaUnitedinOrange: Amazing to play that game on a short week, with all of this on his mind for the prior two weeks. I can’t imagine the strength that it took mentally and physically.

On the early screening, how ironic his early screening was precipitated by a random drug test for his job. Most of us are not randomly tested. Only once in my entire career was I required to even take a drug test to be hired for a new position. Nothing random about this in my mind; higher forces were at work and on Derek’s side.

What do you think, #BroncosCountry ?

Can the #Broncos pull out another "ugly win" today…cause I'll take it any way we can get it 🤣#KCvsDENhttps://t.co/wTQd7Gajno

— Doctor of Words (@docllv) November 16, 2025

Predictions


Stats for BO NIX? 20 for 30, 1TD passing, 250 yards; 25 yards rushing

Stats for each Broncos RB? RJ: 75 yards (1 long burst and a lot of short runs); Badie 20 yards, Jaleel: 10 yards

Number of yards receiving/TDs for the receivers? Sutton 80 and the lone TD; Franklin 40; Bryant 30; Mims 30; Engram 25; RBs: 45

Longest FG for Lutz? 52

Number of sacks to Patrick Mahomes? 5

Broncos player with the most tackles? Greenlaw

Who gets the first sack of the game for the Broncos? Bonitto

How many sacks for Bonitto and Cooper on the day? 2 and 1 respectively

How many INTs/FF/FR for the Chiefs D? 1/0/0

How many INTs/FF/FR for the Broncos’ D? 2/1/1

How many absolutely terrible PI calls will go against the Broncos defense (particularly Riley Moss)? I heard a lot of chatter this week about this particular crew. Let’s go with 2

Final Score? 23-16 good guys with a strip sack, scoop and score helping the offense with that second TD, winning margin in a defensive battle

The Favorites


Favorite John Elway win outside of the Super Bowls? The Drive

Favorite Broncos win ever? SB32

Favorite Peyton Manning win? SB50

Team you love to beat the most in the AFC West? Still the Raiders (see answer to first question)

Favorite win over the Chiefs? Today’s

Coach you laugh at the most in the NFL? I don’t really laugh at coaches, more the owners and GM’s hiring bad fits for their team

Coach you most want to throw an egg at? McHoodie, take your pick

Team you hate to lose to the most in the rest of the AFC? Pats

NFC team you could cheer for in the Super Bowl? Lions, I grew up there.

NFC team you want to face more than any other in the Super Bowl? Wow. I haven’t allowed myself to dream too much this season, as in who we matchup against. Maybe a revenge game vs Seahawks.

Favorite game so far this season? Cowboys

Favorite Broncos player on the current roster? That’s a tough one. I need a new team jersey, which # would it be? Hufanga would look good on my back.

Favorite Broncos player of all time not named John Elway? Terrell Davis

Favorite new guy/rookie on the team? Hufanga

Favorite game analyst/commentator? I still like Greg Olsen

Who is on your Broncos’ Mount Rushmore? No cheating, only four — Elway, Davis, Miller, and Manning

How did you become a Broncos fan? Most have heard this story:

Grew up in Detroit watching terr-uble football in the 60s and 70s. Moved to Denver for almost 30 years and became a Broncos fan starting with Elway’s rookie year. Now in the Bay Area for 16 years, and I have kept my sport allegiances. How about my Avs?!?

Nothing worth having comes easy. pic.twitter.com/8B703lSyya

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) November 16, 2025

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...fense-wins-championships-and-beats-the-chiefs
 
Winners and Losers from the Broncos 22-19 victory over the Chiefs

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DOWN GO THE CHIEFS!

After a week and a half of haters, doubters, and non-bolievers, the Broncos silenced all of them with a huge victory over the Kansas City Chiefs. They improved to 9-2, have won 8 straight games, have a two-game lead in the AFC West, oh, and they are the number one seed in the AFC right now.

Things are great right now in Broncos Country!

As for winners and losers, we have a bunch of big winners from this game, as well as a loser or two that cannot be ignored despite the exciting victory. With all that said, here are the winners and losers from the Broncos’ huge victory over the Chiefs.

WINNER – QB Bo Nix​


The non-bolievers were loud after the Broncos’ 10-7 victory over the Raiders, in which Nix had one of the worst games of his career. Since that game, the media was blasting Nix and the Broncos, calling them frauds, saying Payton may consider drafting a quarterback next year, and just a lot of hate and noise over the past 10 days. On top of that, Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs were coming into town and were heavily favored.

Despite that, Nix came into this game and played one of his most complete games of his career in what may have been the biggest regular-season game of his career.

He went 24 of 37 for 295 yards and led yet another game-winning drive. He did not have any touchdowns, but came up big in the 4th quarter and had multiple clutch third-down conversions.

Nix came up big in a playoff atmosphere against a team that has run the AFC and the AFC West for nearly a decade. He is a blocked field goal away from being 3-0 against the Chiefs and 2-0 against Mahomes.

I didn’t give up on Bo Nix and continue to be a B0-Liever. He’s the starting quarterback of the 9-2 Denver Broncos, who are the number one seed in the AFC.

WINNER – Troy Franklin redemption​


I was hard on Franklin early in the game when he had a couple of tough drops. We haven’t seen him come down with the tough catches in big moments much at all this season, and it was looking that way again tonight. However, everything changed in the second half and 4th quarter when Franklin made multiple big catches, including the one that led to the game-winning field goal.

BO NIX HITS TROY FRANKLIN pic.twitter.com/749LuNI3Wa

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) November 17, 2025

Franklin finished the game with 4 catches for 84 yards, including the big catch that set up the game-winner. It was a great redemption story for Franklin, and if he can contribute like this consistently for the Broncos, it could be game-changing for the offense.

Like it or not, he is a big part of the offense and has been getting a lot of targets from Nix in recent weeks. If the two can continue connecting on deep throws, this team is going to keep on winning.

WINNER – CB Ja’Quan McMillian​


Cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian is a bit of a forgotten man in the Broncos’ secondary and has been quietly having a great year. However, he had his best game, arguably of his entire career, tonight vs. the Chiefs and had multiple game-changing plays.

In a game that featured multiple players worthy of gameballs, Head Coach Sean Payton said after the game that McMillian received the gameball for his performance tonight vs. the Chiefs.

Broncos HC Sean Payton said Ja'Quan McMillian got a game ball for how he played against the Chiefs.

Two sacks and a pick for J-Mac today.

— Aric DiLalla (@AricDiLalla) November 17, 2025

McMillian had two big sacks of Patrick Mahomes as well as an INT in the red zone that took points off the board for the Chiefs. This INT came after a would-be Jahdae Barron pick-6 was called back due to a defensive holding call on the other side of the field.

It was a bit of a “ball don’t lie” moment.

McMillian and the rest of the Broncos’ cornerbacks have stepped up in a big way while the DPOY Pat Surtain II has been sidelined. In 3 games, they have only allowed 3 touchdowns (2 rushing and 1 passing), and the defense hasn’t missed a step.

WINNER – Broncos defense/Vance Joseph​


Anytime you have to play Patrick Mahomes, Andy Reid, and the Chiefs in a “must-win” playoff-like atmosphere, your defense, no matter how good it is, will be tested. This Broncos defense came in banged up (PS2, Singleton, and others sidelined) and despite this, held their own vs. an explosive Chiefs offense.

They held the Chiefs to 311 total yards, 62 yards rushing, 5/13 on third downs, added 3 more sacks to their league-leading total, and held the Chiefs to just 19 points. On top of that, most of the Chiefs’ big plays came off penalties, which set them up in scoring range. Take those away, and the Broncos held the Chiefs offense in check all game.

They also had a pick-6 taken off the board. Still upset about that one.

Vance Joseph and the Broncos defense deserve all the praise and are the backbone of this team and a big reason why they are 9-2 and leading the AFC currently.

You could say that Vance Joseph is having the time of his life.

WINNER – K Wil Lutz​


Lutz replaced a fan favorite in Brandon McManus and needed to earn the trust of a damaged and skeptical fan base. However, through three seasons, Lutz has turned into a nearly automatic kicker who has made multiple clutch and game-winning field goals since being traded to the Broncos.

BRONCOS WIN!!!! DOWN GO THE CHIEFS 🐸pic.twitter.com/1ZYmwWL39X

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) November 17, 2025

Lutz was 5 for 5 tonight with a long of 54 yards and kicked the game-winner as the clock hit zero. He came up clutch once again for the Broncos and is having one of the best seasons of his career.

WINNER – Marvin Mims Jr, the All-Pro punt returner​


Mims didn’t do much on the offensive side of the ball, but he proved once again why he is a multiple-time All-Pro/Pro Bowl returner. He returned 3 punts for 101 yards and put the Broncos into great field position on two of his returns, and nearly broke one for a touchdown earlier in the game.

While he may not have the biggest role on offense, Mims has proven to be a big-play waiting to happen whenever he has the ball in his hands. Whether that be as a returner, as a receiver, running back, or a ‘Joker’ in space. The team sorely missed him while he was out with a concussion and may not have won this game without his contributions.

WINNER – Broncos extending their lead in the AFC and being the number 1 seed in the AFC​


With this win, the Denver Broncos improve to 9-2 and have a two-game lead over the 7-4 Chargers in the division, and basically eliminated the Chiefs, who are 5-5 from the AFC West conversation. The Jaguars gave us a helping hand with an absolute ass whooping of the Chargers earlier in the day, and now the Chiefs see themselves out of the playoffs with a decent shot of missing the postseason altogether.

Number one seed Denver Broncos pic.twitter.com/g84TydmyEw

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) November 17, 2025

I’ll cover the entire postseason outlook tomorrow morning, but things are looking great for the Broncos right now, who sit at the top of the AFC with the Patriots with a 9-2 record.

LOSER – CB Riley Moss/Refs/Penalties​


Unfortunately, Riley Moss’s issues with flags continued tonight. He had two DPIs called on him tonight, which gave the Chiefs big 40+ gains and led to points. He now has 9 DPIs on the year, and the next closest player has 5. He also had a defensive holding call that erased a possible game-changing Jahdae Barron pick-6.

Now, were these penalties correctly called? That can be debated (I say most are bogus, but biased), but they cannot continue to happen. His flags resulted in two of the Chiefs’ biggest plays of the game and nearly cost the Broncos the win.

While it sucks and I feel like they’re not always correctly called, they simply cannot continue to happen. The Broncos had 10 flags for 147 yards. That’s unacceptable and simply cannot happen if you want to win in the playoffs.

LOSER – Broncos run game​


In their first game without JK Dobbins, the Broncos’ run game was mostly non-existent. They had just 59 yards on the ground, and rookie RJ Harvey led the team with 30 yards rushing.

With that said, the Chiefs played the run well all game, but still, it’s a bit concerning to see them struggle in their first game without JK Dobbins.

Harvey averaged just 2.7 yards per carry while McLaughlin had 3.2 yards per carry. Hopefully, it was just due to a tough Chiefs defense and not something we’ll see consistently moving forward.

Other notable Winners and Losers​

  • WINNER – Sean Payton: Payton gets a lot of hate, but he has completely turned around this franchise. They were at their lowest of lows when he was hired, and now, in just 3 years, he has them at the top of the AFC, leading the West, and beating the Mahomes and the Chiefs.
  • WINNER – Darren Rizzi: The Broncos’ special teams played well. Lutz was automatic, Crawshaw was booming punts, Mims had multiple big returns, and the coverage units did not give up any big plays. They also blocked an XP attempt. Rizzi gets a lot of hate when they struggle so I am giving him some love after a strong performance by the special teams.
  • WINNER – Jeremy Crawshaw: The rookie punter had an embarrassing effort vs. the Raiders but bounced back in a big way tonight. He had 4 punts for 211 yards, averaged 52.6 yards per boot, and pinned the Chiefs inside the 20 a total of 3 times.
  • WINNER – Frank Crum: Another special teams winner! The reserve OT blocked a Chiefs XP which kept it to a 3-point lead and allowed the Broncos to tie it up prior to their game-winning drive.
  • WINNER – Pat Bryant: I think we’re going to see more and more from Bryant in the second half of the year. He had 5 receptions for 82 yards and seems to be gaining the trust of Bo Nix who looks for him in big moments.
  • WINNER – Next man up: Despite being down multiple key starters and reserve players, the Broncos played probably their most complete game of the year and came away with the victory.
  • WINNER – Jahdae Barron should of had a pick-6: The Moss penalty had no impact on the play and Barron should of had a huge game-changing pick-6. It was deflating in the moment but McMillian would end up getting the INT a few plays later
  • LOSER – Refs: YOU SUCK (but thanks for calling some penalties on the Chiefs and not overlooking them).
  • WINNER – Justin Strnad: Stepped in and played well for Singleton
  • WINNER – Broncos Fans: WE’RE BACK BABY!

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...bo-nix-franklin-mcmillian-mahomes-kelce-swift
 
NFL Playoff Picture: Denver Broncos are the number 1 seed in the AFC

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We are through week 11, and the AFC playoff picture is coming into focus, and thankfully, it includes our Denver Broncos. After their big win over the Kansas City Chiefs, they improved to a 9-2 record and are currently the number one seed in the AFC.

Things are great in Broncos Country!

They now head into their much-needed BYE week and should get several key contributors back from injury, including reigning Defensive Player of the Year Pat Surtain II. They will be getting healthy at the right time and will look to finish the season strong. However, they will face competition for the top seed in the AFC as the New England Patriots, led by Drake Maye, are also 9-2, while the Indianapolis Colts, who hold a tie-breaker over the Broncos, are 8-2.

Number one seed Denver Broncos pic.twitter.com/g84TydmyEw

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) November 17, 2025

As for the AFC West, the Broncos are in control of their own destiny after they defeated the Chiefs, and the Jaguars absolutely destroyed the Chargers on Sunday.

So, with all that said, let’s take a look at the AFC Playoff picture and see where each team stands through 11 weeks and the road ahead for all the playoff contenders.

Division Leaders​

1. Denver Broncos (9-2)


Man, it feels good starting this off with the Broncos.

The Broncos have won 8 straight games, lead the AFC West, are currently the number 1 seed in the AFC, are coming off a big win over the Chiefs, and will head into their BYE week with a 9-2 record.

They are led by their dominant defense, which leads the NFL in sacks, and have been performing at a high level despite not having All-Pro and reigning DPOY corner Pat Surtain II in the secondary. That should change coming out of the BYE, while also potentially getting back linebacker Alex Singleton, as well as other injured players. They are getting healthy at the right time. As for their offense, they are inconsistent, but hopefully turned the corner with a strong performance vs. the Chiefs

Looking ahead, they do have a favorable schedule coming out of the BYE week, but face the Packers, Jags, Chiefs, and Chargers to end the season. They have proven they can compete with anyone and will once again need to prove that as they finish out the season.

If they do that, not only can they win the AFC West, but they can be the number one seed in the AFC heading into the playoffs.

Remaining Games: BYE, at Commanders, at Raiders, vs. Packers, vs. Jaguars, at Chiefs (Christmas Night), and vs. Chargers

2. New England Patriots (9-2)​


Like the Broncos, the Patriots keep on winning! They’re led by second-year quarterback Drake Maye, who is having a surprise MVP-caliber year, and Head Coach Mike Vrabel, who always has a well-coached team. On top of that, Broncos draft darling TreVeyon Henderson is starting to break out which gives them yet another explosive element to their offense.

After having a disappointing 4-13 season in 2024, the 2025 team is benefiting from a last-place schedule and has a very favorable schedule moving forward. I am not dismissing them by any means, but they have very few tough challenges remaining on their schedule. They have also defeated the Bills and Bucs on the road this season, proving they’re very much a contender in the AFC.

As I mentioned, the Patriots’ upcoming schedule looks fairly easy on paper. They only have two games vs. teams with winning records, while the rest are either against their division rivals or 3rd or 4th place teams. If they continue to play well, they have a real shot at being the number one seed in the AFC.

Remaining Games: at Bengals, vs. Giants, BYE vs. Bills, at Ravens, at Jets, and vs. Dolphins

3. Indianapolis Colts (8-2)​


The Colts dropped two spots since they are enjoying their BYE week, while both the Broncos and Patriots won their games this week. However, they are still a top team in the AFC and have a true MVP contender on their roster in running back Jonathan Taylor(but it’s a QB award).

Quarterback Daniel Jones has been great for the Colts this season and started off hot for them, but has cooled off a bit in recent weeks. We’ll see which Daniel Jones shows up for the Colts coming out of the BYE. With that said, they’ll go as far as Jonathan Taylor can carry them. He has been excellent this season, and we saw first-hand what he can do in week 2 when he had plenty of success against the Broncos’ defense.

Unlike the Patriots, the Colts have some tough games ahead of them. They come out of the BYE to face a desperate Chiefs team in Arrowhead, trying to keep their bleak postseason hopes alive. After that, they have back-to-back divisional games, a tough game in Seattle, host the Niners, and then finish the year with two more divisional games.

I think the odds are stacked against the Colts to get the number one seed, and with them having two games vs. both the Texans and Jaguars remaining, they may not even with the AFC South. We shall see how it shakes out for them.

Remaining Games: at Chiefs, vs. Texans, at Jags, at Seattle, vs. Niners, vs. Jags, and at Texans

4. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-4)​


The Steelers defeated the Bengals on Sunday to improve to 6-4 and kept control of the AFC North. However, Aaron Rodgers left the game due to a wrist injury and will get evaluated for it this week. If he were to miss an extended period of time, Mason Rudolph would get the start, which makes things rather murky for Mike Tomlin’s squad.

They are a tough team to figure out. Some weeks, they look really good, and other weeks, they play some bad football. Despite that, they are 6-4 and lead their division. Mike Tomlin always has his teams playing tough, and they figure to be at or above .500 at season’s end. They just need to hold off the fast-rising Ravens from leapfrogging them in the standings.

Looking ahead, the Steelers have some tough games coming up, especially if they are without Aaron Rodgers. The two big games that stand out to me are the two vs. the Ravens, which includes a week 18 season finale that may decide the division and which team makes the playoffs. I doubt we see two teams come out of the AFC North this year so the Steelers and Ravens are likely fighting for one spot in the playoffs.

Remaining Games: at Bears, vs. Bills, at Ravens, vs. Dolphins, at Lions, at Browns, and vs. Ravens

Wildcard Teams​

5. Buffalo Bills (7-3)​


The Bills were coming off a brutal loss to the Dolphins, which saw them lose ground to the Patriots in the division. They looked to bounce back this Sunday vs. Baker Mayfield and the Bucs, and they did just that. While it was close for most of the game, they pulled away at the end and remain firmly in the postseason conversation.

This team will go as far as quarterback Josh Allen takes them. They lack playmakers on offense; they had Keon Coleman as a healthy scratch this week, and their defense has struggled a bit this season. Despite that, they are 7-3 and right behind the Patriots in their division.

They have a big game vs. the Patriots still on their schedule, along with a handful of other tough games that will be a tough test for them. I think due to the Patriots’ soft schedule, the odds of the Bills surpassing them are low, and they’ll settle for a wildcard spot, but you never know in the NFL.

Remaining Games: at Houston, at Pittsburgh, vs. Bengals, at Patriots, at Browns, vs. Eagles, and vs. Jets

6. Los Angeles Chargers (7-4)​


Another team that can look like a legit Super Bowl contender one week and then get blown out the following week. That’s what happened here with the Chargers. Last week, they dominated the Steelers at home and followed that up by getting completely blown out by the Jaguars.

With the Broncos winning, they fell two games behind them in the loss column and will need to gain some ground on them if they want to win the AFC West. However, I think the injuries along their offensive line are starting to catch up to them. Justin Herbert is getting hit a lot, and they’re just a very inconsistent football team.

It might be my bias, but they seem like a team that could collapse in the second half and fall completely out of the playoffs.

As for their remaining games, it won’t be easy for them. They have their BYE this coming week and then after a game vs. the Raiders, they host the Eagles and then have back-to-back tough road games before finishing out the year in Denver vs. the Broncos. It will be a tough final month and a half for this banged-up Chargers football team.

Remaining Games: BYE, vs. Raiders, vs. Eagles, at Chiefs, at Cowboys, vs. Texans, and at Broncos

7. Jacksonville Jaguars (6-4)​


They are coming off a week where they blew a 4th quarter lead to Davis Mills and the Texans, to absolutely blowing out the Chargers at home. The Jags are another inconsistent team that can look bad one week and then amazing the next week.

Head Coach Liam Coen has Trevor Lawrence playing well; they have a strong run game, and their defense has been pretty good at times this season. They also have a kicker who can make 70-yard field goals with ease. When all of these elements are playing well, they have proven they can contend with anyone.

They are also just two games back of the Colts, a team they play two times before the end of the season. So, while the Colts seem to have control of the AFC South, I would not rule out the Jags from making a run for the division crown.

Remaining Games: at Cardinals, at Titans, vs. Colts, vs. Jets, at Broncos, at Colts, and vs. Titans

The Rest​


8. Houston Texans: They sit at .500 and despite being down quarterback C.J. Stroud, the Texans have managed to win back-to-back games without their starting QB. They have one of the best defenses in the NFL and will need to lean on them if they want to make the playoffs. They might be too far out to challenge for the division, but they certainly have a shot at the wildcard if they string together some victories.

9. Kansas City Chiefs: Who saw this coming? After losing to the Broncos, they fall to 5-5 on the year and are currently the 9th seed in the AFC. Their chances of winning the AFC West are very low now, and even the playoffs seem difficult at this point. They lost to the Chargers, Bills, and Jags this season, which means all three of those wildcard teams hold a tie-breaker over them. They have some tough games ahead on their schedule and cannot afford to lose many more games if they want to return to the postseason.

10. Baltimore Ravens (5-5): After starting the year 1-5, the Ravens have won 4 straight games and are right on the heels of the Steelers for the AFC North division title. I think they’ll catch and surpass the Steelers before it’s all said and done, especially if Aaron Rodgers ends up missing games.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...rs-bills-jaguars-texans-chiefs-ravens-afc-nfc
 
How about those Denver Broncos?

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After their monumental victory over the Kansas City Chiefs, the Denver Broncos sit alone atop of the AFC West. Winners of eight straight and sporting a 9-2 record, the Broncos now have a comfortable two game lead in the division. Even better? They head into their much-needed bye week to help rest and recover and finish their last six games strong.

While just the regular season, Sunday’s gridiron battle had the aura of a playoff caliber matchup. Despite making the postseason last year, yesterday’s win arguably was the biggest of the Sean Payton era. It was major statement victory and hopefully symbolic of good things to come as Denver prepares for their final six games of the season.

“Obviously it’s a division win. Look, I’d be lying right to everyone if I didn’t say it was a big win. It got us to nine, and it kept them at five,” stated Payton in his post-game presser.

There is plenty of season left to play. However, with the Chiefs dropping to 5-5, it’s safe to say their nine-year reign at the top of the AFC West is nearly over. The big question that looms is whether or not the Broncos are the team that will wind up dethroning them as kings of the West. As things currently stand, and if they continue to play like they did on Sunday, they have a great shot of making that happen.

All season long; Broncos Country had been waiting for a complete game in all phases. While there were some issues after their first two drives, Bo Nix and the offense hit their groove in the second half. Vance Joseph’s defense was lights out once again held the Chiefs to under twenty points once again. Let’s not forget the special teams’ unit—which had struggled all season long—played their best game of the season.

It was a tremendous team victory and easily the most impressive of Denver’s 2025 campaign.

“They were at the top and if you want to be the best you have to beat the best. Some say, ‘If you’re scared, go to church.’ If you’re going to play this sport, if you’re going to play this game for too long, you can’t really be intimidated or there’s really no sense in going out there,” stated Nix after Denver’s statement victory—echoing thoughts I had made earlier in the week.

And through all four quarters, the Broncos displayed the toughness, grit, and tenacity to gut out another close game. All hands were on deck, and a variety of players had some of their best games of their careers. One player who came up clutch against the Chiefs was cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian. The savvy nickel cornerback had six tackles, two sacks, and a game-changing interception.

In fact, it was the first time in franchise history that a cornerback had registered two sacks and an interception in the same game. That’s quite the accomplishment. Especially when you consider the number of top-tier corners the Broncos have had throughout the years. His efforts earned him praise from everyone in the locker room and he received a well-deserved game ball for his efforts.

“He’s got that dog in him. That’s the type of player that we need on this team and this defense, and he’s been playing incredible, and he’s continued to make plays for us year after year. I can’t say enough good things about him, he shows up, works hard and it shows up on the field,” remarked All-Pro guard Quinn Meinerz in praise of McMillian.

Sunday’s efforts against the Chiefs were what fans all across Broncos Country were hoping for. After last year’s heartbreaker to Kansas City, yesterday’s events were quite serendipitous. Now, the Broncos have the bye week to recuperate before they square off against the Washington Commanders on the road at the end of the month.

Even with a two-game lead in the AFC West, the Broncos can’t be complacent moving forward. What they have accomplished thus far is great, but finishing off the last six games on a high note will be what delivers them their first AFC West title in a decade.

“At the end of the day, it’s not the Super Bowl, it’s just another game that we have to win. That’s part of the journey each and every time. We get this Bye Week to help get our bodies back,” stated safety Talanoa Hufanga. “The Commanders are a good team, regardless of the injuries they have had. It’s a good team that we have to face.”

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-news/164134/how-about-those-denver-broncos
 
Secret Superstars 2025: Ja’Quan McMillian becomes the free hitter of all free hitters

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Throughout the 2025 NFL season, SB Nation’s Doug Farrar writes about the game’s Secret Superstars — those players whose performances might slip under the radar for whatever reasons. In this installment, we focus on Denver Broncos defensive back Ja’Quan McMillian, who went off against Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs last Sunday in Denver’s narrow (and crucial) win.

There are times as an analyst when the time you have to watch tape when it comes out, and the time you have to complete and publish an article, are in direct conflict. As a result, you can’t always pack everything in when it comes to a particular subject. On Sunday night, I did a piece over at Athlon Sports about the NFL’s increased use of defensive back blitzes to create “free hitters” (unblocked rushers), and the one guy I didn’t put in the piece was slot defender Ja’Quan McMillian of the Denver Broncos.

Uh, whoops.

But when I observed McMillian’s efforts against the Kansas City Chiefs last Sunday in Denver’s 22-19 win that put the Broncos at 9-2 on the season, I knew it’d have to go somewhere, and so, Mr. McMillian becomes a Secret Superstar, which is only right. In this game, McMillian had two sacks on two pass-rush snaps, totaled four solo tackles and three stops, and allowed five catches on eight targets for 78 yards, 33 yards after the catch, no touchdowns, one interception, and an opponent passer rating of 55.2.

Pretty good for an undrafted free agent out of East Carolina (Go Pirates!) in his fourth NFL season. McMillian was a bit player in Denver’s defense in his rookie year of 2022, but he’s become more and more of a staple in Vance Joseph’s defense, and as primarily a slot defender with additional versatility, he’s become one of the glue guys in the NFL’s most disruptive squad.

McMillian’s sacks came on plays in which he was a late blitzer, and the Chiefs had already accounted their protections to the guys they could see. On the first sack, right tackle Jawaan Taylor and right guard Trey Smith had committed to double edge-rusher Nik Bonitto, which is generally a smart thing to do. But that also game McMillian free access to Mahomes. The second sack came on a six-man rush look in which linebacker Dre Greenlaw dropped into coverage, running back Kareem Hunt plowed into the middle to counter what looked like a double A-gap blitz, and left tackle Josh Simmons was busy dealing with Mr. Bonitto. Ergo, another free rush where McMillian damn near took Mahomes’ head off.

Ja'Quan McMillian of the @Broncos had two sacks on two pass-rushing snaps against the Chiefs. Tough to account for a guy when he's blitzing from off the screen on the end zone angle. pic.twitter.com/CYW6TJkLtl

— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) November 17, 2025

“It’s kind of a timing thing, you know,” McMillian said of the sacks. “You try and hold it as long as possible. Some of the quarterbacks, they’re looking at the nickel because the nickel shows what the defense is in a lot every time. I just try and hold it as long as possible, and you try and find keys to when the ball is snapped—I noticed early in the game when he was snapping the ball, his hands were coming up and the ball was coming out. So I just timed it so when his hands start coming up, I start sneaking toward the edge and made a play. They didn’t slide a protection. I just went in.”

As to the play in which Mahomes almost went headless, there was a design behind that.

“I just [saw] him winding up, and that’s kind of why I jumped. I jumped in the air. I didn’t want him to throw the ball, so I was going to bat it down or either get the sack. One of those, but he wasn’t going to get the ball off.”

That second sack with 3:53 left in the fourth quarter basically sealed the game for the Broncos.

“We knew we needed to make a play,” McMillian recalled. “I knew it was going to be one of us and ‘V.J.’ [Joseph] just so happened to call the right play for me. I kind of timed it up well off Mahomes’ hands, and I went in and made a play on him. The offense went there, did their job, drove down the field, [Receiver] Troy [Franklin] had a great catch, we wound the time down and [kicker Wil] Lutz, he made a kick, and we won the game.”

As if that wasn’t enough, McMillian also grabbed his first interception of the season with 10:23 left in the third quarter, and the game tied 6-6.

Ja'Quan McMillian wasn't just sacking Patrick Mahomes — he was also taking advantage of other pressures. Great pick where McMillian handed Xavier Worthy off in Quarters, ran the flat route with Elijah Mitchell, and peeled off to steal when Mitchell adjusted upfield. pic.twitter.com/fc7WgXtKWm

— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) November 17, 2025

“I did think it was coming back,” McMillian said. “Honestly, I was tired. It was a long drive, I made a few moves, and I didn’t know the guy [Mitchell] was behind me, kind of stripped the ball, but I was tired and I just made a play on the ball. A wonderful play to make for my team.”

What’s that they say about luck being the residue of design?

McMillian isn’t a one-game wonder, either. This season, he has four sacks, six total pressures, 27 solo tackles, 16 stops, and 32 catches allowed on 49 targets for 339 yards, 163 yards after the catch, one touchdown, the aforementioned interception, and an opponent passer rating of 83.5. He’s one of many reasons the Broncos’ defense has managed to retain their best performances on the field despite the absence of Patrick Surtain, who has now missed the last three games with a pectoral injury.

“He’s dialing it up, man,” Bonitto said postgame about what Vance Joseph is calling week to week. “Whether it’s rushing coverage, sending extra people. Obviously, you’re seeing with ‘J-Mac’ today, being able to send him and get some sacks with him, that was very crucial. Just everybody doing their jobs and, obviously, with ‘V.J.’ the way he calls things, he puts in a great position.”

Between talent and scheme, “Next Man Up” for Denver’s defense can put opposing offenses in the same bag, regardless. Ja’Quan McMillian’s Sunday performance showed that he can be a main man, as well.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/bron...n-becomes-the-free-hitter-of-all-free-hitters
 
Broncos now have a 77% chance of winning the AFC West

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The Denver Broncos control their AFC West destiny after their 22-19 win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday. According to ESPN, their division chances jumped to 77% after that win with a 97% chance of making the playoffs.

Defense wins championships … or at least the AFC West. The Broncos‘ defense held it down to defeat the Chiefs on Sunday night, and Denver has held opposing quarterbacks to a 46.8 QBR, the lowest in the league. That was apparent as Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes posted a 56.4 QBR, significantly lower than his season average of 72.8. Bo Nix has been uneven for the Broncos (43.2 QBR and 64.9% completion rate), but the defense’s ability to keep the offense in games while Nix gets into a rhythm has been a winning strategy for Denver.

  • Make playoffs: 97%
  • Win division: 77%
  • Earn Bye: 30%
  • Make Super Bowl: 17%

These are all great numbers heading into a Bye after playing 11 games. It’s been a long time, Broncos Country, but this franchise has finally recovered from their last dynastic run with the Peyton Manning era.

Looking over a FanDuel Sportsbook, the division odds look just as good. The Broncos are the heavy favorites now to take the AFC West from the Chiefs for the first time in a decade.

AFC West Division Odds​

  • Broncos -300
  • Chargers +500
  • Chiefs +550
  • Raiders +30000

We should not get too confident, however, as the conference champion odds still have the Chiefs slightly ahead of the Broncos over there.

AFC Champion Odds​

  • Bills +390
  • Colts +430
  • Chiefs +500
  • Broncos +600
  • Ravens +650
  • Patriots +700

This is a big reason why I’ll be rooting for the Indianapolis Colts next week despite them having a tie-breaker over Denver. As fun as it is to see the Chiefs stumbling at .500, I would still consider them a dangerous football team to play on any given weekend.

The doubt is still there for Denver. When we get into the Super Bowl winner odds they are hard to find below eight other teams — including those damn Chiefs.

The only cure for doubters is to keep winning. But it sure is nice to cover a contender again.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...1/denver-broncos-chances-winning-the-afc-west
 
Broncos Film Review: Alex Palczewski vs the Chiefs

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The Bronco offensive line had a big challenge on Sunday. The Chiefs boast a strong defensive front, with strong pass rushers, and Chris Jones is a tough guy to handle in the interior. This was also another test to see if Alex Palczewski can perform against an All-Pro. The guys up front did their job well, and Palczewski more than held his own throughout the majority of the game.

This week we’ll focus on the third year man out of Illinois who made his fifth start this year in replacement of Ben Powers. And I wanted to look through the film with the question in my head of “Can Palczewski be a future starting offensive guard for the broncos?”

This is truly what I want to know, because that will open up a ton of opportunities and options for this team moving forward. And a huge part of being a Denver offensive lineman is proving that you can handle and beat the Chiefs. Did Palco do just that?

Stat crunch​


The Broncos ran 59 offensive snaps, not including the intentional grounding or Bo Nix’s run on the penultimate play of the game to set up the field goal. 19 of those snaps were designed run plays and 40 of them were designed pass plays.

Alex Palczewski played every offensive snap.

The ball was ran behind him five times for 12 yards (2.4 YPC). The Broncos averaged 2.95 YPC. The longest rush went for a gain of five, and the shortest went for a loss of one.

Palczewski had one blown block that resulted in a gain of one on a run play. He gave up zero TFLs.

He gave up one pressure, no QB hits, and no sacks.

Palczewski had one holding penalty.

Palczewski finished the game with one “Bad” block, 11 “Meh” blocks, eight “Alright” blocks, and 39 “Good” blocks. After deducting 1.5 points for the holding penalty, he had 49 points on 59 snaps, or 83.1%.

That penalty would end up resulting in a 72.4% in run blocking (80.3% before deducting for the penalty). In pass protection he finished with a 88.1%.

In general​


This was not going to be an easy task for Alex Palczewski. He spent most of the game having to handle guys like Chris Jones and George Karlaftis, among others. The Chiefs have a solid defensive front, and while the Broncos have gone up against many good fronts, sometimes it just feels different when the opponent knows you better. But even with this new challenge, Palczewski didn’t falter. He held his own on most occasions, and had his shining moments spattered throughout the contest.

His game also looked similar to the previous four. He’s solid at sticking with Luke Wattenberg on pass protection while keeping his eyes outside, just waiting for someone to throw an inside move against Garett Bolles. He plays well with those two guys on their double teams as well. And he showed off his athleticism by being able to get a block on the playside linebacker on an Outside Zone play, which is a lot harder than it may appear.

There were a few times this game where he was caught off-balance in pass protection though. Times where he had too much weight on his heels and was playing too vertically. He got caught catching a bit too much as well, not being the one who delivers the initial blow. And then in run protection he was stalemated at the line of scrimmage a decent amount. But the positive is that when this happened he usually was still able to place himself betwee

The specifics​


Run play – Outside Zone – Good block

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This is a hard block to execute but Palczewski pulls it off and Denver almost breaks off a big rush here.

The Broncos are running Outside Zone and the Mike call means that Palczewski has to come off from the backside across to the playside linebacker, and he does just that. The backer even plays downhill to block off a cut back lane, but Palco’s get-off is too fast and he takes a great angle. The only thing I wish he’d do was just commit to washing the backer to the sideline as this would have opened up a larger cut back lane (the backside LB does a good job of preventing that anyway as he plays downhill hard).

There’s not too much more Palco could have done here.

Run play – Outside Zone – Good block

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Another clip of Outside Zone and another technique that Palco shows off here, demonstrating the feel he has for his blocks.

This isn’t the hardest block, but having to reach the 2i is not easy, but after the first couple of steps Palco is in position to nail it. But he’s unable to keep working to the playside as the defender counters and washes Palco’s hands down. Feeling like he’s about to lose the block, Palco does the only thing he an do and transitions to washing the DT down the line of scrimmage, which opens up a massive cutback lane that RJ Harvey takes.

Pass play – Drop back – Meh block

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This is a bit of a complicated play, as Palczewski doesn’t have the best rep, but Bolles is a huge reason as to why Chris Jones was able to pull off the sack on this one.

Palco does not have a clean rep off the get go, leaning into Jones at the start and that’s what allows for Jones to get the edge on him. He’s unable to recover vertically enough to keep leverage, so he’s forced to turn out and attempt to wash Jones upfield and past Nix. He might have been able to pull this off, but Nix is unable to step up into the pocket due to Bolles getting beat to the inside. And with a mix of those two poor blocks, Nix is sacked as he has no where to go.

This clip is a great depiction of how one man’s mistake can effect the rest of the line.

Run play – Inside Zone – Good block

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Palco is working a double team with Wattenberg on this rep of Inside Zone, and it’s up to Palco to stay on the block long enough so Wattenberg has the chance to overtake the 2i while Palco works up to the playside backer.

Palco’s eyes and hips are exactly what you want to see on a block like this. His hands are on the DT while his eyes are stuck to the backer and his hips are mostly square to the line of scrimmage, with a slight point to the linebacker. His body leverage is there and as soon as the backer makes a play to try to get over the top of him, Palco is up to the second level and forces him to try and shoot the backside gap.

If Wattenberg was able to take over the DT then this play would have gone for a few more yards.

Pass play – Drop back – Alright block

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George Karlaftis and Chris Jones are a lethal duo to be running stunts. They are both so good at what they do, and this is a pretty well-executed stunt by them. Jones works through the outside shoulder of Palco, turning him out and delaying him while Karlaftis loops back late and nearly catches Palco completely off guard.

While Palco does a pretty solid job of sliding over, getting his hand on the inner chest and hip of Karlaftis and washing him just past Nix, it could’ve been better. Look at his posture at the point he attempts to take over Karlaftis. Having your chest over your knees in pass pro is usually a recipe for disaster. Luckily Palco is athletic enough (using his skills as an offensive tackle) to recover and get just enough movement on Karlaftis.

He was really close to nailing this stunt pick up.

Final thoughts​


Palczewski, while having a rough few snaps in this game, was predominantly dependable and works really well with Wattenberg and Bolles, which is an incredible thing to have this sort of chemistry with such relatively little time together. You can see that Palco plays physically, has good feet, and is a solid athlete to boot.

I think there is a legitimate chance Alex Palczewski finds a way into the starting lineup next season. The mostly likely route would be if Powers was able to take on the Center role, letting Wattenberg walk, and then Palco remains the Left Guard.

I’d be willing to depend on Palczewski, especially if we give him the remainder of the season and another offseason to get better. He is a guy that can take part of a Super Bowl-winning team.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/bron...ncos-film-review-alex-palczewski-vs-kc-chiefs
 
Lutz named AFC Special Teams Player of the Week

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In what should be a surprise to no one, Denver Broncos kicker Wil Lutz has been named AFC Special Teams Player of the Week after his walk-off field goal for a huge win over the Chiefs on Sunday.

It was a win that made Aqib Talib say, “Sh*t just got real for the AFC West.”

After the game when head coach Sean Payton was asked about Lutz, a guy he brought to Denver two years ago after being his coach in New Orleans, was not surprised in the least by Lutz’s veins of ic.

“Five-for-five. He had a great night. I saw it in New Orleans,” Payton said. “That’s why he’s here.”

Lutz in the clutch. 🙌

🧊 @wil_lutz5 🧊 pic.twitter.com/6wW3CHuY9U

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) November 17, 2025

The best part of the ending was that it was almost identical to the game in Arrowhead last November when Lutz’s 36-yard kick was blocked and Chiefs got away with a one-point victory.

The irony was not lost on Lutz.

“Saw it the whole way,” he laughed. “The whole way onto the field obviously it’s something you think about. When you’re part of a loss like that you don’t just forget about it, right? When I looked down and saw we were on the line again making it a 35-yard field goal I was kind of like, ‘Shoot, here we are.’ …I’ve been waiting for a game like that, so it was nice to play a big part in it.”

The five-for-five tied a career-high and was his 13th career game-winning field goal. Finishing with 16 points in the game, he became the fourth fastest kicker in NFL history to reach 1,100 career points in just his 142nd game.

“I agree it was a turning point for sure. I mean, you saw what we did after that game, right?…You look at the last year-and-a-half since that game, this team has come together, we’ve found ways to win close games. …It’s a lot of fun to do with the guys you love.”

Wil Lutz

This season, Lutz has made 17-of-20 field goals (.850) and has converted on all 24 of his extra point opportunities for 75 points. His three field goals of 50+ yards are tied for 11th most in the NFL this year while his 17 total field goals made are tied for 12th most.

This is Lutz’s seventh weekly recognition of his career and third as a Broncos after earning it in Weeks 3 and 12 in 2024. This also marks the third time a Bronco has been named AFC Player of the Week this season, along with outside linebackers Nik Bonitto (Week 5) and Jonathon Cooper (Week 6).

Acquired via trade by Denver in 2023, the nine-year veteran has also been named AFC Special Teams Player of the Month twice (November of 2023 and October of 2025) during his time with the Broncos.

Lutz is the fourth Broncos kicker to earn Player of the Week honors, along with Brandon McManus (2020, ’21), Matt Prater (2008, ’09, ’11, ’12, ’13) and Jason Elam (1998, ’99, 2003, ’04, ’07, ’08, ’09). Since its inception in 1993, a Bronco has won AFC Special Teams Player of the Week honors 37 times.

Originally signing with Baltimore as a college free agent in 2016, Lutz ultimately signed with New Orleans prior to the start of the regular season that year. Since entering the NFL, he is tied for the most extra points made (385), second in points scored (1,114) and sixth in field goals made (243).

After the Chiefs game, he noted the team culture in Denver is as good as it gets — and a big part of it started after the game a year ago with the blocked kick.

“I agree it was a turning point for sure. I mean, you saw what we did after that game, right?” Lutz said. “But I think we knew before that game last year that we had the right guys. It was never a question if we had the right guys in the locker room. …You look at the last year-and-a-half since that game, this team has come together, we’ve found ways to win close games. …It’s a lot of fun to do with the guys you love and when you have a locker room like this.”

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...tz-named-afc-special-teams-player-of-the-week
 
Broncos at the Bye: How can Denver achieve contender status?

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With the Denver Broncos enjoying their much-needed bye this week, I thought it would be apt to have a roundtable discussion with the staff and our readers. The Broncos currently sit atop the AFC West with a 9-2 record and are winners of eight in a row. There is no doubt they are one of the best teams in the National Football League.

But have we seen enough thus far to label them legitimate Super Bowl contenders? For the initial installment of our Broncos at the Bye roundtable discussions, I asked the Mile High Report staff: “How can Denver achieve contender status in the last six games of the season?”

Christopher Hart

The Broncos need to do a much better job on offense in the final six games of the season. Bo Nix’s outing against Kansas City was encouraging. If he can continue to play that poised, I think Denver has a legitimate shot at being a Super Bowl contender. How the offense fares in the final weeks will have a major impact on where the Broncos find themselves relative to playoff seeding. Winning the AFC West would be tremendous but earning the #1 seed in the conference and a first-round bye? That would be something. We know the defense is lights out, but the offense needs to be much more consistent to truly be contenders.

Adam Malnati

Hard to not put them in the contender category, so let me adjust and then answer the question. How can the Broncos convince those in denial that they are true contenders? That comes down to the offense. Bo Nix has to play well for whole games. Not just the 4th quarter. Maybe stop forcing the ball to Troy Franklin. Stop getting cute with the play calling. The running game has to show consistency against good teams. The defense is elite. Special teams are very good. Haters will only call the Broncos contenders if they get better on offense.

Tim Lynch

They already are contenders. The key for them is going to be their rushing attack. How can they find a way to replace the production from J.K. Dobbins? Dobbins was on pace for 1400-ish yards, surprisingly, so that is a lot of production to find. Late in the season is when the running game matters the most.

Joe Mahoney

They already have. Anyone sleeping on the Broncos is in denial.

Ross Allen

I think they have that status, but it can be a fickle title to hold. If the Broncos want to hold onto that, then most of the pressure will fall on the offense. Bo Nix has to keep dealing like he has in fourth quarters and against Chiefs and Cowboys. They need to figure out what their rushing attack will look like. They have the system and athletes for chunk gains and explosive plays, but they really need to come up with how they’ll secure success on those short yardage situations.

Sadaraine

The Broncos are contenders. They made it to the playoffs last year and are trending up. This team has too much talent, excellent coaching, and team mentality to do anything but head into the postseason as one of the big threats in the AFC. I expect 4+ wins in the next 6 games and can easily argue that they are more than capable of winning out.

What do you think, Broncos Country? Do you believe the Broncos are already contenders or are their things they have to prove to earn that designation? Sound off in the comments section and let me know how you feel.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...e-bye-how-can-denver-achieve-contender-status
 
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