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Week 16: Broncos vs. Jaguars – Live Discussion

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The Denver Broncos (12-2) could go a long way to wrapping up the number one seed in the AFC with a win at home today over the Jacksonville Jaguars (10-4). A loss would bring all of that in doubt as there are multiple 10-4 teams to start this week and with just a one game lead with two games to go, it would make things quite stressful for this young Broncos’ team.

Kickoff is set for 2:05 p.m. Mile High time on Sunday, December 21, 2025 at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver, Colorado. You can watch the live stream of the game through FuboTV or on FOX. The game will be called by Kevin Kugler (play-by-play), Daryl Johnston (analyst), and Allison Williams (sideline). You can also check local Broncos radio network affiliate stations.

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Broncos vs. Jaguars score predictions​


According to FanDuel, the Broncos are 3.5-point home favorites over the Jaguars, which is a slight increase from their opening spread. This is one of those games where I feel like the Broncos match up well in multiple areas and should win the game. However, any time I feel like this team should win a game they win by a much closer margin that I expect. Even so, I’ll give my prediction for what I think they should win by anyway.

Prediction: Broncos 27, Jaguars 17.

Join the discussion in the comments section below.​

Broncos vs. Jaguars live updates​

All in the details 🧵 pic.twitter.com/nHKv65QVLd

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) December 21, 2025
With the Chargers' win in Dallas, the Broncos will have to wait until at least Thursday to clinch the AFC West.

Still have complete control of their own destiny.

With a win today vs. the Jags, Denver would head to KC with the opportunity to clinch the division and No. 1 seed.

— Aric DiLalla (@AricDiLalla) December 21, 2025

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...7126/broncos-vs-jaguars-live-coverage-week-16
 
Broncos playoff picture: What Week 16 vs. Jaguars means for AFC standings

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The AFC Playoff picture tightened up a bit in Week 16 with the Broncos falling to the Jaguars, the Chargers defeating the Cowboys, the Bills defeating the Browns, the Texans defeating the Raiders, and the Steelers defeating the Lions in a wild one that came down to the end in Detroit. The Patriots avoided losing two straight by coming back vs. the Ravens and being the second team in the AFC to clinch a postseason berth.

Despite their loss, the Broncos remain as the one seed in the AFC, but things are tight behind them. The Patriots also have a 12-3 record, but the Broncos have a tie-breaker over them, while the Chargers are one back from the Broncos for the AFC West lead and hold the tie-breaker.

The Broncos still control their own destiny, but it figures to be a wild final two weeks of the NFL season with multiple teams in play for the one seed in the AFC.

AFC West standings​

  1. Denver Broncos 12-3
  2. Los Angeles Chargers 11-4
  3. Kansas City Chiefs 6-9
  4. Las Vegas Raiders 2-13

Updated AFC playoff picture​

  1. Denver Broncos 12-3 (clinched playoff berth)
  2. New England Patriots 12-3 (clinched playoff berth)
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars 11-4
  4. Pittsburgh Steelers 9-6
  5. Los Angeles Chargers 11-4
  6. Buffalo Bills 11-4
  7. Houston Texans 10-5
  8. Indianapolis Colts 8-5 (In the Hunt)
  9. Baltimore Ravens 7-8 (In the Hunt)

Eliminated from AFC playoff contention​

  • Miami Dolphins
  • Kansas City Chiefs
  • Cincinnati Bengals
  • New York Jets
  • Cleveland Browns
  • Tennessee Titans
  • Las Vegas Raiders

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...16-afc-standings-clinched-seeding-tiebreakers
 
Winners and Losers from the Broncos 34-20 loss to the Jaguars

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Well, that sucked.

The Broncos have their 11-game win streak snapped, and they lost their first home game since week 6 of last season. For the first time this season, the Broncos were outplayed and beaten easily. The Jaguars came into this game with a chip on their shoulder and proved they are the real deal in the AFC. Meanwhile, the Broncos played one of their worst games of the season. Sloppy play, penalties, drops, turnovers, and just poor play throughout led to this 14-point loss.

Despite this loss, the Broncos remain the one seed and lead the AFC West, but things are getting tighter. With all that said, here are the winners and losers from the Broncos’ 34-20 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars.

LOSER – Broncos defense​

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What the hell was that?

The Jags sliced and diced the Broncos’ defense all game. They scored 17 first-half points and followed that up with another 17 second-half points. A big reason for this was piss poor tackling throughout the game and their top-ranked red zone defense giving up 4 total touchdowns.

Riley Moss, whom I have defended this year, struggled to tackle Jaguars wide receiver Parker Washington on two plays, which led to big gains and eventual touchdowns. It was frustrating to watch and is concerning to see.

We have seen Vance Joseph’s unit take a step back in recent weeks, and is coming off a season where we saw them struggle late in the year on defense. Hopefully, that trend will not continue moving forward.

If the Broncos want to be Super Bowl contenders, they need this defense to play MUCH better moving forward.

LOSER – Offensive mistakes​


The Broncos’ offense looked good at times throughout the game, but they had multiple errors throughout the game that led to this loss. Quarterback Bo Nix fumbled a handoff, which the Jaguars recovered, and would later throw an interception on 4th down, where he threw right into tight coverage and allowed the Jags defender to make the easy INT. He had running back Tyler Badie wide open as the check-down but he simply missed him.

Nix wasn’t bad in this game, but he wasn’t nearly as good as he was vs. the Packers. We need better from Nix moving forward against playoff teams if the Broncos want to win in the playoffs.

What didn’t help was the big drops throughout this game. Courtland Sutton dropped a deep throw that would have put the Broncos inside the 5-yard line while the Broncos were down 7. Rookie Pat Bryant dropped a big 3rd down pass, which was thrown behind him, but also a pass he needed to catch. Sutton also dropped another potential touchdown late in the game.

The Broncos have dealt with drops all season, and they came up big once again tonight.

WINNER – RJ Harvey​


The rookie running back was the lone bright spot for the Broncos’ offense today. He had 7 carries for 50 yards and 1 touchdown, as well as 4 receptions for 71 yards. That is 11 touches for 121 yards and 1 touchdown. His touchdown now gives him 11 scores on the year, which is impressive for the Broncos’ rookie runner.

Not bad.

Unfortunately, it came in a losing effort.

With JK Dobbins sidelined, the Broncos will need efforts like this from Harvey if they want to make noise in the playoffs.

LOSER – Vance Joseph​


The Broncos’ defensive coordinator was outcoached by Jaguars Head Coach Liam Coen throughout this game as a disturbing trend continues.

Last season, the Broncos’ defense took a step back in December and ultimately were blown out in Buffalo by Josh Allen and the Bills. We saw signs of that throughout the month of December this season, and now getting blown out by the Jaguars at home is a concerning red flag.

If the Broncos are going to contend, they need this defense to play like the elite unit it was early in the season. If not, we could see them have another quick exit in the postseason. Vance and this Broncos defense needs to step up.

LOSER – QB Bo Nix​


Nix had his good moments throughout the game, but two costly turnovers in the second half landed him on the losers’ list.

A fumbled handoff and an ugly INT in the second half derailed any hopes of another second-half comeback. We saw flashes of the quarterback we saw vs. the Packers, but also flashes of bad Bo Nix, where he looked flustered, had happy feet, and made some poor decisions/bad throws.

He was off target on a handful of passes, was outplayed by Trevor Lawrence, and couldn’t lead a 4th quarter comeback this time.

Nix wasn’t awful, but his mistakes and play were a reason for this loss.

LOSER – AFC West and One seed lead​


While the Broncos remain at the top of the AFC West and still are the 1 seed in the AFC, this loss brings the competition closer to them with two games to go.

The Chargers are now just one game back in the division, hold the tiebreaker over the Broncos, and will still play them in the season finale. Meanwhile, the Patriots have a chance to gain a game back tonight with a win vs. the Ravens, and suddenly, the Chargers and Jaguars are contending for the one seed as well.

The Broncos control their own destiny still and will play a beat-up Chiefs team down to their third-string quarterback on Christmas Night, but they will likely need to win out if they want to win the AFC West and get the one seed.

Other notable winners and losers​

  • LOSER – Refs: While the Broncos deserved to lose, the refs did not help them throughout this game. Some iffy penalties on the Broncos, while the Jags were allowed to run the play clock down to zero and then some without a flag being thrown. This has been a trend throughout the year, and 3 of the 4 Jaguars’ touchdown drives had big penalties on the Broncos.
  • LOSER – CB Riley Moss: He had his good moments in this game, but was absolutely worked by Parker Washington on multiple plays that led to big gains. Poor tackling. Need to be better when all eyes are on you.
  • WINNER – John Franklin-Myers: Had 2 sacks and played well
  • WINNER – RB Jaleel McLaughlin: Had a couple of nice runs and nearly broke a long touchdown run early in the game
  • LOSER – Broncos 3rd down offense: They went 5 of 14 on 3rd downs tonight. Can’t have that.
  • LOSER – Penalties: Broncos had 6 penalties called on them for 61 yards, while the Jags had 2 for 20 yards
  • LOSER – K Wil Lutz: He has been automatic, but he doinked one off the pole early in the game
  • LOSER – Red Zone/3rd down defense: Jags scored 4 touchdowns in the red zone and had no issues against the Broncos’ top red zone defense. The Jags also converted 8 of 15 third downs in this game.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...s-to-the-jaguars-nix-lawrence-playoff-picture
 
Broncos must fix issues quickly to defeat the Chiefs on Christmas

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The Jacksonville Jaguars devoured the Denver Broncos on Sunday. That gave the Broncos their first loss since Week 3 against the Los Angeles Chargers. With a 12-3 record, Denver still controls their own destiny. The formula is simple: win the final two games and they secure the AFC West title and the #1 seed in the AFC.

Losses are tough. It’s unfamiliar territory for this year’s team who enjoyed the thrills of an impressive 11-game winning streak. Though yesterday’s reality check might just be what the team needed to make the necessary adjustments and changes to finish off their remaining regular season games on a high note.

It’s time to refocus and reload. Get over the loss, learn from it, and be ready to compete at a high level in just a few days. Head Coach Sean Payton’s had a simple message to the players in the locker room after being handled by the Jaguars 34-20.

“There was one message. I said to them, ‘One of the things you managed to do each week is get on to the next challenge.’ In other words, digest the win. I think the same thing has to apply, especially on a short week like this. You’ve shown the ability to digest the game before and then get onto the next challenge and you have to do the same after a tough loss,” stated Payton.

Broncos coach Sean Payton, on the Broncos' defeat Sunday to the Jaguars "This wasn't an officiating [thing], this was — we got beat. And Jacksonville was a better team yesterday, and I think our players know that." pic.twitter.com/nhEnNwm2Y3

— Andrew Mason (@MaseDenver) December 22, 2025

The next challenge for the Broncos? Traveling to Arrowhead Stadium to face off against their division rival Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas. While the Chiefs have been dethroned as kings of the AFC West, the Broncos can’t afford to let them play spoiler to their postseason hopes on Thursday.

The Chiefs will be without their top two quarterbacks in Patrick Mahomes and Gardner Minshew. That means third-string quarterback Chris Oladokun will get the start. After giving up 34 points to the Jaguars, the Broncos’ defense will have a shot to get back on track facing third-string quarterback Chris Oladokun.

After starting off the first half of the season hot, the defense has experienced major regression over the past five or six games. At one point in time, they were surrendering less than 19 points a contest. That number has jumped a full touchdown over the past five weeks of play.

On Sunday, blown coverages, missed tackles, and failing to stop the Jaguars in the red zone were three major issues. It’s a lot to overcome and fix on such short notice. Nevertheless, star defensive lineman Zach Allen is confident he and his teammates will be able to accomplish that.

“We’ll be fine. I mean the group—we’ve done that all year—kind of flushing it and moving on to the next one. Watch it, digest it, get the notes for the corrections and then move on,” stated Allen

His sentiments were echoed by various other players, including those on offense such as veteran tight end Evan Engram. Just two weeks ago against the Green Bay Packers, the Broncos’ offense put together one of their most impressive performances of the season. Quarterback Bo Nix was on fire and arguably had the best game of his career.

The Broncos are 12-3 with a 2nd year QB & their biggest cap hit ($32 M) a backup QB for the Giants.

Sean Payton has turned this team into a true contender, and Bo Nix is showing promising signs of development.

They have the best odds at representing the AFC in the Super Bowl. pic.twitter.com/t4nVujDK5Y

— Joe Rowles (@JoRo_NFL) December 22, 2025

Unfortunately, the consistency and efficiency fans saw against the Packers was hardly evident on a drive-by-drive basis against the Jaguars. In order for the Broncos to earn a victory on Christmas, they will need the offense to do their part to help get things back on track.

“We’re going to learn the lessons, and we have a really short week, Christmas game against Kansas City, and everything is in our control,” Engram stated with confidence after the loss. “We have a locker room full of professionals that are going to respond.”

There is a lot to be proud of with this year’s team. They have overcome a lot of obstacles and adversity. Their penchant for reeling off a lot of comeback victories has been inspiring. Even so, finishing off the season with wins is an absolute must. Doing that will give them homefield advantage in the playoffs.

If not, the Broncos could wind up being a road team in the Wild Card Round that won’t get to host a postseason matchup. And that’s the last thing the coaches, players, and fans across Broncos Country want to see happen.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...ues-quickly-to-defeat-the-chiefs-on-christmas
 
Broncos Film Review: Quinn Meinerz vs the Jaguars

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Well, that was a frustrating game to watch.

Missed opportunities, self-inflicted wounds, and an abysmal bit of officiating spelled disaster for the Denver Broncos on Sunday. But it wasn’t all bad. There were plenty of individual performances that shined through the darkness, and that includes Quinn Meinerz, who should be revered as at least a top-two offensive guard in the league/ I don’t think that he’s number two though.

Let’s wash this bad taste out of our mouths by enjoying the succulent Chinese meal that was Quinn Meinerz against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Stat crunch​


The Broncos had 65 offensive snaps and Meinerz was on the field for all of them. They had 16 designed run plays and 49 designed pass plays.

He had two pancakes and one blown block.

He gave up zero TFLs, zero pressures, one QB hit, and zero sacks.

He did not commit a penalty.

Meinerz finished the game with three “Bad” blocks, two “Meh” blocks, eight “Alright” blocks, 51 “Good” blocks, and one “Great” block. This was good enough for 59.25 points out of a possible 65, or 91.2%.

In run protection he scored 15.25 points out of 16 (95.3%) and in run protection he scored 42 points out of 49 (85.7%).

In general​


This was another clean game of football from Quinn Meinerz, and we can add this game to a long list of those he’s had throughout his career. When you watch him play you get the feeling that you’re watching a masterful artist paint. While this art had a few bad strokes interwoven through, the final product was incredibly pleasing to the eyes.

Maybe I’ll stop with all of the metaphors now.

Meinerz was dominant through most of the game, and I can only imagine how much easier he makes life for Luke Wattenberg and Mike McGlinchey. Meinerz does a great job working through his double teams as he gets a big chunk of the defensive tackle, giving ample opportunity for his backside help to get there, and then he quickly makes his way up to the second level, plays with great leverage, and rarely gets shed. And he’s always looking to hit those linebackers with force. He’s not just there to get in front of a guy.

His footwork is nearly unmatched, especially among offensive guards. His pass protection really shows this aspect of his game off, as he is almost never off balance, he’s quick to move back inside when the defensive tackle counters, and his feet are quick and remain wide the length of the block. He gets his first two feet in the ground so quick and that’s also what allows him to dominate in run protection as well.

And besides all of the physical traits that he posses, the mental game might be an even stronger aspect of his. His vision, anticipation of what the defense is going to do, and his patience, particularly on double team blocks, makes what he does look so easy. It’s like a flow state that he enters in to.

But, while they were few, he did have some mistakes in this one and most of them were in pass protection. He was slow on a couple of his stunt pick ups, which led to one QB hit and what could’ve been another if it wasn’t for Adam Prentice chipping the defender before going out on a route. There was also one example of him getting compressed into Nix, causing what technically was a sack, due to him losing the hand-fighting game.

We’ll take a look at a couple of these in the film.

The specifics​


Pass play – Drop back – Good block

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If you want to see a textbook example of one-on-one pass protection, then here you go.

Look at those feet. Short and choppy, staying on the insteps, his chest is mostly staying over the top of his hips, playing well-balanced. He does a great job of keeping proper leverage (staying inside the defender) and when the DT makes a move to the inside, Meinerz is smooth and beats him to the punch, forcing the DT to have to go back to the outside.

This is how you mirror the defender.

Run play – QB Sneak – Bad block

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I think Meinerz, for lack of a better description, just gets a little lazy on this block.

On the QB Sneak, you block it up front like a veer play, so everyone is crashing down to their inside gap. So with that, you can make the argument, that since the DT went to the B gap, that this is McGlinchey’s fault. But you already know what side I’m arguing should be taking the blame.

This kind of play is hard because you do need to be firing out as low as possible to match the DT, but when you just dive with your eyes to the ground, I’m going to ding you points. If Meinerz plays with his eyes up, then he might be able to see the DT throwing that swim move and would at least be able to get a chunk of him to give Nix or McGlinchey more time to make a play.

Bad eyes mean bad block.

Run play – Outside Zone – Great block

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This is what you’re supposed to do to an undersized defender that wants to play up at the line of scrimmage.

That initial contact is what seals the defender’s fate right from the start. Meinerz gets both hands on the chest while striking low to high, and that lifts his guy up, takes a foot off of the ground, and all Meinerz has to do is run his feet and he plows the defender into the grass.

This is fantastic. It truly shows off Meinerz’ strength.

Pass play – Drop back – Good block

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I’m going to blame Zach Strief for this clip, as all three Denver guards that have played this year all do a great job of passing off their block to Wattenberg, when possible, and then looking outside to help their tackles with the edge defenders.

And if that defender is going to be rushing with his back end out like that, then they might has well have just painted a big bullseye on themselves, especially when Meinerz is on the hunt. This poor DE does a great job of compressing McGlinchey on the bull rush, but Meinerz is there to make him pay. Great block. It’s a really good job of looking for work.

Pass play – Drop back – Good block

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Here is the play I alluded to earlier about Meinerz getting compressed, which makes Nix want to leave the pocket, and then he steps out of bounds before getting the ball away.

This block comes down to hand placement and losing the battle for either man’s chest. Often times in both run and pass protection the block comes down to who’s able to get their hands on their opponents’ chest first. If you control the chest then you control the man. Like Davey Jones in Pirates of the Caribbean (bet you weren’t expecting to see that reference in this article).

Meinerz strikes with his hands too wide, the DT gets to Meinerz’ chest, and Meinerz is then playing off of his back foot. He does a good job at recovering by forcing the weight onto his insteps and getting his feet behind him, and locks up the DT when he tries to work inside, but Nix still feels the pressure and has to bail from the pocket.

Run play – Inside Zone – Good block

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Let’s finish up with looking at exactly what you want the first part of a double team on Inside Zone to look like.

The rule on double teams is for both guys to stay on the first-level defender until you can touch the linebacker. So, if the linebacker declares to a rushing lane and attacks, then whoever is closest must come off of the defensive lineman. But if the backer plays back, then you put that DT into the lap of the linebacker. That’s what Meinerz and McGlinchey do on this play.

Great hands and great leverage lead the way as they beat up on the DT. More teach tape here.

Final thoughts​


Quinn Meinerz is fantastic and is almost always a bright spot on this team. I’m not sure there’s not much more I can say, or that there’s anything more I need to say. I think you all are on the same page.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/bron...-review-quinn-meinerz-vs-jacksonville-jaguars
 
Broncos vs Jaguars: The No Bull Review

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That was honestly a surprising game to see the Denver Broncos play. The Jacksonville Jaguars beat our team soundly in every facet of the game by and large. Their coaches out-coached ours. Their players wanted the win way worse and played fast and hungry. Credit to the Jaguars for coming into Denver and laying a whooping on this team the likes of which we haven’t seen this season.

For Broncos Country, let’s not overreact to this. I honestly think a loss late in the season for a high-win team is good. Good teams use a loss like this to temper themselves into a stronger version.

Offense​


The Jaguar defense played this team very well and caused multiple problems for Sean Payton’s offense. They had pressure on Nix better than most teams. They covered well enough especially in critical downs. They made some plays knowing what was coming.

This is all the script we typically see the Broncos offense having the advantage. The crazy thing was that we still had some play designs that took the Jags by surprise, but wasn’t able to capitalize on them (deep throw inaccuracy and drops were the main problems). The offense didn’t execute the play calls well enough.

The offensive skill players have got to learn how to catch footballs that hit them in the hands. So many inept drives had catchable balls dropped. The drop consistency from all over the roster is baffling and could be the cause of an early end to a spectacular season.

Finally, the offense has got to keep finding ways to run the ball. I know the game started getting away from us, but that doesn’t mean abandoning the run, especially when both your main backs were averaging over 7 yards per carry. The team had 17 runs to 47 passes which seems way too lopsided even for a game where we ended up being down 2 scores late and needed to go all out on passing.

Quarterbacks​

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This was a pretty up and down game for Bo Nix. He threw a perfect fade to Sutton in the end zone for an easy 6. Then he has a baffling read option fumble trying to pull the ball when McLaughlin was a step past him. His interception throw was a terrible choice. Bryant was completely dominated on the play and Bo just locked on and let it rip. The only good thing about it was that it pushed the Jags back down the field.

The biggest nit I have to pick with Nix over this season is his long ball placement. He’s consistently underthrowing wide open scoring plays all season long. He’s got to stop moon balling every deep throw and figure out how to lengthen the angle to hit his deep threats in stride. It was evident on two deep throws in this game where his guys had to try to make contested catches that got broken up because of it.

Line​


The line had a much rougher outing this week (again, credit the Jags’ pass rush – they were far more disruptive than most other teams we faced outside of the Texans). Garett Bolles having two false start penalties at home was honestly irritating. I’m sure he’s kicking himself over it, but we can’t have our vets making simple mistakes like that to set the team back. Ben Powers was back this week and I noticed him having some trouble with some of the stunts that were run to his gaps. It wasn’t a major issue by any stretch of the imagination and I expect it is largely due to being his first game back after an injury.

Running Backs​

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R.J. Harvey continues to blossom as the season wears on and had a spectacular game. One play had him motion everywhere, then dip outside for an easy catch to move the chains on 3rd down. He had an astounding run for a touchdown making guys miss and keeping his balance to dive for the endzone. That was supreme effort on the field and this offense needs to keep finding ways to get the ball in his hands.

Jaleel McLaughlin was no slouch in this game either. He had a big run early that would have been an 80 yard touchdown if the last defender hadn’t yanked him down by his shoulder pad.

Receivers​

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Courtland Sutton is playing his best ball at just the right time. He’s one of the guys that dropped a key ball the back of the endzone through that hit him in his hands). Yes it was a very difficult ball to catch given how wide it was thrown, but he’s the #1 receiver and needs to make that play.

Marvin Mims, Jr. finds a huge hole in the Jaguar’s zone defense and got a huge gain. He was 3 of 3 on his targets. I still hold that we need to find more ways to get him targets.

Pat Bryant catches a quick out and twists through a tackler to gain a couple of extra yards. Drops a catch on 3rd down that he had to twist around for. I get that it was a difficult catch, but it was in his hands and should have been caught. Thoughts and prays for him and his recovery from a plainly filthy hit by the Jaguar’s defender. That defensive back should have been ejected from the game and didn’t even get a flag for his helmet to helmet hit on a defenseless receiver.

Troy Franklin also gets kudos for a consistent game. He caught a deep corner while getting tackled for 48 yards. He caught 4 of 5 targets on the day and made his plays count.

Defense​


Vance Joseph was completely out coached in this game. His defense looked out of place, undergunned, and outmatched in the secondary. It seemed like Jacksonville had a very clear plan on how to get receivers open and it played right into what Trevor Lawrence is capable of (which is a lot…he doesn’t get enough credit for how good he is in my opinion).

The killer for the defense was poor tackling. It was all over the field at all levels and it looked absolutely pathetic compared to the standard this team has put in place for how they play defense. We heard from the sideline Joseph cussing out the defense and I 100% get it. This team was trying to be the NFL’s best team in the league and the defense came out this week and flopped around on the field like a bunch of stranded fish.

While I think this game was likely a blip on the radar, I can guarantee you if the defense plays like this against the Chargers, we will lose that game. If they play this way in the playoffs, they will be one and done.

Front 7​

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Jonathan Franklin-Myers had an absolute monster of a game up front for the defense. He got a pocket collapsing sack with help from superb coverage early and late in the game for 2 sacks on the day (the later coming on a 3rd down to end a drive). He also had a tackle for loss and 2 quarterback hits.

Malcolm Roach shoots around his defender for a big sack on 3rd and 15. He also had a tackle for loss and a quarterback hit. This defensive line is one of the deepest I’ve seen for the Broncos in a long time.

Big shout-out to Que Robinson for his play in this game. He got on the field for only 19 plays, but made them count. He got a pass defense on a batted pass, had a big sack inside the 10, got 2 quarterback hits, and had a tackle for loss as well.

In a game full of bad angles taken for tackles, of course Alex Singleton needs a moment to shine. He took bad angles multiple times in the game including a total whiff on a run to the outside. He’s still a guy that leads the team in tackles, but tackles after big gains don’t mean much in my books.

Secondary​

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Riley Moss mostly played a really good game. He had perfect defense on an out breaking route to bat the ball away as well as a tackle for loss on a sideline pass. The bad was that he took the same poor tackling angle on two passes to the outside and got owned on both giving up huge plays. He’s got work to do on that technique for sure and solve that issue or other quarterbacks we face are going to wear that sideline pass out on him for big gains. It is hard to pile on too much when a guy gets a sack, tackle for loss, a quarterback hit, 6 tackles, and 2 pass defenses from the cornerback position.

P.J. Locke’s coverage is far too soft. He gave up multiple big catches by letting receivers have too much of a cushion. With Brandon Jones out, this is a big area of concern for me as Locke was a guy that was front and center of many of our bad losses last season to good quarterbacks. The scary thing is that I see a big lack of depth at safety (I noticed that before the season started). I don’t think swapping in Devon Key or JL Skinner is the answer to any of the questions this defense has.

Special Teams​


Wil Lutz had a bad miss in this game for a kick that was under 50 yards. In a game where there were plenty of problems to be had, a field goal miss is honestly probably not that big of a deal (they lost by 14 after all).

Final Thoughts​


Let me reiterate that the Jacksonville Jaguars outplayed our team from top to bottom. They deserved to win this game.

That being said, I can’t close this out without wondering if the NFL has it in for the Broncos or if Sean Payton pissed in Shawn Hochuli’s Post Toasties the morning before the game. This ref crew absolutely wrecked the Broncos with so many drive killing (or extending for the Jags) penalties. The late hit on Locke was nonsense (he had already left the ground when the whistle blew and Lawrence didn’t throw the ball to the ground), the pass interference call on Barron was just wrong (you can put your arm on the receiver’s arm), there were two OPIs that the refs swallowed their whistles while the Jaguars were allowed to push away our defenders to make big catches, and the flag on Roach for landing on the quarterback was at best questionable. But the icing on the cake to me was how multiple times in the game the play clock hit 0 before the Jags hiked the ball and they just got to play on instead of getting the full impact of playing an away game. The fans at the stadium did their jobs and the refs just ignored it completely.

On to business, though. The Broncos need to dial in and lock on to the game at Kansas City on Thursday. They have to win it and shouldn’t for one second think it will be easy just because the Chiefs are on their 3rd string quarterback.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/general/167630/broncos-vs-jaguars-no-bull-review
 
Broncos at Chiefs preview: Denver aims to get back on track

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For the first time since September, the Denver Broncos (12-3) suffered a loss.

Now they’ll look to get back in the win column when they travel to take on the Kansas City Chiefs (6-9) on Christmas night. And while the loss was disappointing, everything is still in front of Bo Nix and the Broncos. It starts with a rebound win at Arrowhead Stadium.

Since the Chiefs will be down to their third-string quarterback, FanDuel Sportsbook has Denver as the huge -12.5-point favorites. The total sits at over/under 36.5 points.

Offensive Rankings​


Denver: Tenth in total offense (352.1 yards per game), 18th in rushing offense (118.3 YPG), eighth in passing offense (233.9 YPG), 13th in scoring offense (24.1 points per game).

Kansas City: Thirteenth in total offense (342.9 yards per game), 22nd in rushing offense (109.7 YPG), ninth in passing offense (233.2 YPG), 20th in scoring offense (22.5 points per game).

Defensive Rankings​


Denver: Fourth in total defense (291.6 yards per game), second in rushing defense (90.2 YPG), 10th in passing defense (201.4 YPG), fifth in scoring defense (19.7 points per game).

Kansas City: Tenth in total defense (307.9 yards per game), ninth in rushing defense (103.4 YPG), 12th in passing defense (204.5 YPG), fourth in scoring defense (19.6 points per game).

Here are the MHR staff’s keys to Thursday night’s game.

Don’t eff it up!​


The Chiefs are down Patrick Mahomes and Gardner Minshew. Kansas City has been eliminated from the AFC Playoffs. So don’t eff around and look passed the Chiefs. Crazy things happen at Arrowhead in December, especially when the Broncos play there. Denver must take Thursday’s game seriously. The Broncos should win this game, so play and think as if it were a playoff game. All of the Broncos’ goals are within reach, but it starts with a victory on Christmas night. — Ian St. Clair

Play KC’s nightmare on Christmas​


The Chiefs will be rolling out a third-string QB on Christmas. Chris Oladukun has taken over for the injured Patrick Mahomes and Gardner Minshew, and the Chiefs are playing for draft position more than anything else. How does Denver get back on track? Nightmare on Christmas. A Santa Claus-sized bag of sacks and harassment for the third-string QB. — Adam Malnati

Win​


Just win. I don’t care how. Just get to 13-3 and begin preparing for the Los Angeles Chargers. Win out and get the one seed. That is literally all that matters! — Tim Lynch

Lean on the run game​


They should be able to lean on their run game a bit more, as there’s no good reason they should ever trail in this game. I’d like for them to try some more between-the-tackles running for Jaleel McLaughlin and some more tosses or stretches for Harvey. Let’s see what they can work with. — Ross Allen

Play fundamental football​


Over the past few weeks, the Broncos have had some issues with the fundamentals. Miscues, missed tackles, penalties, drops, and turnovers have been holding the team back. After being soundly defeated by Jacksonville, it’s time for Denver to shape up and keep the self-inflicted wounds to a minimum. Even though the Chiefs are without their two top quarterbacks, this isn’t a game where Denver can inhibit itself from earning a must-win game. If they want to leave Arrowhead Stadium victorious, the Broncos have to play fundamental football. — Christopher Hart

What are your keys to Thursday’s game?​


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...iefs-preview-denver-aims-to-get-back-on-track
 
Broncos vs. Chiefs: Wednesday practice participation report

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Well, looks like the Denver Broncos are playing it safe across the board on a short week with five players out, including center Luke Wattenberg. We kind of assumed Pat Bryant and Dre Greenlaw would be out due to the short turnaround, but with little to now news around Wattenberg it was hard to ascertain the severity of the shoulder injury. That will be something to monitor closely next week.

The good news is Justin Strnad appears to be ready to go and is available in a timely way with Greenlaw now officially ruled out. Having Ben Powers back fully is also a big addition. This is definitely a must-win game for Denver

Here is your full practice report for Wednesday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryMonday*TuesdayWednesdayGame Status
Riley MossCBAnkleFULLFULLFULL
Ben PowersGBicepsFULLFULLFULL
Karene ReidILBHamstringFULLFULLFULLOUT
Justin StrnadILBFootFULLFULLFULL
Nate AdkinsTEKneeDNPDNPDNPOUT
Pat BryantWRConcussionDNPDNPDNPOUT
Dre GreenlawLBHamstringDNPDNPDNPOUT
Adam TrautmanTEIllnessDNP
Luke WattenbergCShoulderDNPDNPDNPOUT

Kansas City Chiefs Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryMonday*TuesdayWednesdayGame Status
Jake BriningstoolTEHamstringFULLFULLFULLOUT
Mike EdwardsSShoulderFULLFULLFULL
Kristian FultonCBKnee / WristFULLFULLFULL
Noah GrayTEShoulderFULLFULLFULL
Nazeeh JohnsonCBShoulderFULLFULLFULL
Jaylon MooreTKneeLIMITEDFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
Esa PoleTKneeFULLFULLFULL
Trey SmithGAnkleFULLFULLFULL
Nick BoltonLBIllnessLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
George KarlaftisDEIllnessLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Derrick NnadiDTIllnessLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Nikko RemigioWRKneeFULLDNPDNPQUESTIONABLE
Tyquan ThorntonWRConcussionDNPDNP
Jaylen WatsonCBGroinDNPDNP

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...67681/broncos-vs-chiefs-injury-report-week-17
 
Christmas Day Football Week 17: Lions at Vikings – Live Discussion

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The Detroit Lions looked prime for be a Super Bowl contender early in the season, but the wheel came completely off this team after their Week 8 bye. From 5-2 before that week off to 3-5 after, they are on the cusp of playoff elimination in the NFC. The Minnesota Vikings, on the other hand, have won three strait and will be looking to play spoiler.

Kickoff is set for Thursday, December 25, 2025 at 2:30 p.m. Mile High time at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota and will air on NETFLIX.

My Prediction​


According to FanDuel, the Lions are 7.5-point road favorites over the Vikings. Like I said earlier today for the first game, I hate big spreads for road teams against a division rival. Those divisional games usually end up being dogfights most times, so I’d err on the side of caution with this one. The only difference here from the earlier game is that the Lions are still in the playoff hunt and on the bubble. They should be playing with desperation and focus.

Prediction: Lions 31, Vikings 26.

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


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...67755/christmas-day-football-lions-at-vikings
 
Payton: ‘It doesn’t have to be aesthetically pleasing to be effective’

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The Denver Broncos are now 11-2 in one-score games in 2025. They just keep finding ways to win those close games and often do it in ugly ways against the bad football teams. And yes, the 2025 Kansas City Chiefs are a bad football team. So are the Las Vegas Raiders and New York Jets, both teams Denver beat this season by a combined 5 points in two of the games.

I was looking back at my childhood Broncos and came across a season that came directly after their 55-10 butt-whooping in the Super Bowl to the San Francisco 49ers. They went 5-11 a year after being AFC champions. How might you ask? They did what the 2025 Chiefs did: lose close games. That 1990 team went 2-7 in close games.

The NFL is a knife’s edge sometimes between a losing record and a winning record. And Head Coach Sean Payton summed it up quite succinctly after the game tonight, “It doesn’t have to be aesthetically pleasing to be effective. I’ve said that before.”

It’s not always pretty, but when the 2025 Broncos need to make a play they find a play to make. In this game, it was Bo Nix converting 11/18 on third downs and 1/1 on fourth downs. The biggest play of the game ended up being the final touchdown throw where Nix redirected RJ Harvey on his route to get him open enough to fire in the touchdown pass.

RJ HARVEY'S 12th TOUCHDOWN GIVES THE BRONCOS A LATE 4TH QUARTER LEADpic.twitter.com/ASL4sP4HwH

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) December 26, 2025

After that pass, Albert Breer posted on X noticed the same thing about Bo Nix. He does what needs to be done.

Man … Bo Nix.

Say what you want, he makes critical throw after critical throw. Tonight the Chiefs challenged him to put together long drives, keep moving the chains on third down, and he keeps doing it.

— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) December 26, 2025

The Broncos ended up possessing the ball for nearly 40 minutes and outgained the Chiefs by a 2-to-1 margin. Nix led the Broncos on four drives of 14-plays or more. That’s not something you see a lot of in a game, maybe one drive is that long. This is the second time this season where the Broncos have had 3+ drives that took 14 or more plays to complete.

So the national media can say what they want, but Nix grinds through adversity and keeps competing. That’s all you could hope for from a franchise quarterback.

One more game. They just need one more win to lock up the top seed and earn themselves a much-needed bye week to get healthy. The Los Angeles Chargers are a tough one to figure out. Bo Nix is 0-3 against the Chargers. He’ll need to make that 1-3 now. I Bolieve!

Horse Tracks​


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...sean-payton-ugly-wins-are-wins-denver-broncos
 
Game balls for the Broncos 20-13 win over the Chiefs in Week 17

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The Denver Broncos moved to 13-3 on the season with a tough win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas night. As Head Coach Sean Payton said after the game, ‘It doesn’t have to be aesthetically pleasing to be effective’ and that is exactly right. Denver is now one win away from locking it all up and getting a much-needed week of rest heading into the playoffs.

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Denver’s offense really didn’t struggle as much as people are saying. They controlled the ball for nearly 40 minutes and racked up 11/18 on third downs, while out-gaining the Chiefs 303-139 in total yardage. The game was close due to three significant plays that went Kansas City’s way: a tipped-drill interception, a very suspect defensive pass interference call on Pat Surtain, and a long return on special teams. Otherwise, the Broncos would have handily beaten their rival last night. It doesn’t matter anyway, a win is a win in the NFL and that’s what the Broncos came away with.

Here are Mile High Report’s game balls for the Broncos’ 20-13 victory against the Chiefs on Christmas night!

Bo Nix​


I’m starting to understand that Bo Nix is a pretty damn good cook. He will look at a game and pick up the correct recipe to compete and to win. The Chiefs plays this game with the goal of forcing the Broncos to string together long drives to put up points. The goal there was clearly to keep the score low knowing that would give them the best chance to win. So Nix, while he struggled at times, dropped four scoring drives of 14-plays or more. Those drives ate up the clock and eventually put up the points necessary to come out with the win. He’ll get hate from the media for the apparent lackluster effort, but what I saw was a team that is just cooking up different ways to win games depending on what their opponent is throwing at them. – Tim Lynch

TOUCHDOWN BO NIX pic.twitter.com/IdCV79dook

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) December 26, 2025

RJ Harvey​


RJ Harvey gets my game ball this week. It was a sloppy game, but Harvey balled out. He had over 40 yards on 13 carries rushing, over 30 yards on 5 catches, and one touchdown catch. There’s room to grow for sure for this rookie, but he’s starting to shed tacklers, find open cut back lanes, and is a dangerous weapon in either facet of the offense. – Sadaraine

Second-round pick R.J. Harvey has a lot of room for growth, but tonight he had 19 touches for 77 yards and 1 touchdown. Harvey’s touchdown grab late in the fourth quarter cemented the Broncos’ big victory over the Chiefs. That was his 12th touchdown of his rookie campaign which leads all rookie skill position players. He now has over 850 all-purpose yards on the season. In big moments, Harvey has thrived and been a difference maker. He may not be Head Coach Sean Payton’s ‘Joker’ yet, but it’s clear Payton is utilizing him a lot like he did Alvin Kamara during his tenure with the New Orleans Saints. His future looks bright. – Chris Hart

Wil Lutz​


On a night the offense struggled early in the red zone, Lutz came through. And with points at a premium that makes his field goals even more important. That allowed the Broncos to stay in the game. And when the offense finally got into the endzone, he made both extra points. With how inconsistent kickers are these days, having one in Lutz is huge. On top of that, his kickoffs didn’t result in any big returns, especially the final kick of the game. – Ian St. Clair

Jaleel McLaughlin​


I’ve had this feeling for the last couple of weeks, but Jaleel McLaughlin is the best between-the-tackles running back on this roster, given the Dobbins injury. His vision is good, he finds the proper cut back lanes, and he is a lot better than Harvey at falling forward. I think the Broncos should look to him a few more times a game for their Inside Zone plays in particular. He helped keep the run game from completely sinking tonight.

It’s almost like he’s one of the best rushers in college history or something. – Ross Allen

Fun fact, often forgotten: Jaleel McLaughlin is college football's all-time leading rusher.

All divisions, all levels.

Nobody has rushed for more yards than McLaughlin.

— Andrew Siciliano (@AndrewSiciliano) December 26, 2025

Chris Jones​


We have seen this before, and so I have to give out a gameball to Chris Jones. Don’t stop me if you heard this. In a pivotal moment in a “big” game, a Chiefs player is called for a penalty. Kadarious Toney was famously flagged on offense against the Bills in 2023, which helped Buffalo win that game. Jones had a roughing the passer against Tom Brady and the Patriots in an AFC Championship. Now he has an offsides in 4th and 2, which allowed Bo Nix to use a little more clock and throw a TD pass to RJ Harvey. A little snarky, but here’s your game ball Mr. Jones. – Adam Malnati

Alex Forsyth​


Alex Forsyth played a heck of a game coming in for the injured Luke Wattenberg and playing against a guy like Chris Jones. – Joe Mahoney

Who gets your game ball for the Broncos-Chiefs game? Share in the comments section below.​


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/bron...game-balls-broncos-vs-chiefs-bo-nix-rj-harvey
 
Future Broncos: Discussing several 2026 NFL Draft early declarations

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With the College Football Playoffs and this year’s slate of bowl games underway, a lot of news is coming out relative to early declarations for the 2026 NFL Draft. Over the past few years, we have seen a little bit of a drop in underclassmen declaring and opting to remain in college due to NIL money and other factors. Though that isn’t stopping some of the best collegiate playmakers from going to the next level. For this installment, I’ll be focusing on some offensive prospects to keep your eye on for the Denver Broncos.

It’s a good year to be in the market for a wide receiver.

The Broncos have invested a lot at the wide receiver position over the past several drafts. Marvin Mims Jr., Troy Franklin, and Pat Bryant were all Top 125 picks. Each offers a unique and different skill set and still have plenty of room for growth and development, but it’s a position I wouldn’t be surprised to see Denver consider. They don’t have many huge needs and presumably picking late due to their current record—they certainly could adhere to the best player available philosophy.

Could one of those players be a wide receiver? Certainly. We have already seen a flurry of top receivers from this year’s collegiate season make their intentions known—it’s time for them to take their talents to the National Football League.

Washington’s Denzel Boston, USC’s Makai Lemon and Ja’Kobi Lane, Tennessee’s Chris Brazell, Texas A&M’s KC Concepcion and Clemson’s Antonio Williams are all gearing up to hear their names called in April. Lemon is certainly a player who could hear his name called in the Top 15 or Top 20 selections. I think he will be outside the Broncos’ reach unless they opted to move up the board. Lane, Williams and Concepcion will likely hear their names called on Day 2. I discussed Brazell earlier in the season but haven’t given my thoughts on Boston.

So, what do I think? I really like Boston’s fit in Head Coach Sean Payton’s offense. At 6’4” and 210 pounds, he has the size and physicality to play the big slot role in Payton’s offense. He also functions well as an outside receiver as well. His mental toughness, sound hands, and football character will all check the boxes of things the Broncos are looking for.

As mentioned earlier, I really like the young prospects the Broncos have in house. However, that shouldn’t preclude them from taking a shot if a top-flight receiver is on board when they are picking in the first-round next spring. All things considered, Boston is a player who would command #1 volume in Denver’s offense and has the potential to be a long-term fixture in the offense for quarterback Bo Nix to throw to.

Washington WR Denzel Boston has declared for the 2026 NFL Draft

4th Ranked Wide Receiver on the PFF Big Board🔥 pic.twitter.com/mBYfbaMF8K

— PFF College (@PFF_College) December 24, 2025

If you’re hoping the Broncos find a running mate to pair with RJ Harvey—be excited.

The Denver Broncos seem to have found a top-notch playmaker in rookie running back RJ Harvey. The team’s second-round pick from the 2025 NFL Draft has twelve touchdowns on the season and is just shy of 900 all-purpose yards. There is no doubt Harvey’s versatility has been an asset for the Broncos’ offense this year.

However, long-term, the team definitely needs a bigger back to compliment his skillset who can churn out tough yards in between the tackles. Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price, the standout running back duo for Notre Dame, have declared. Both of these guys are phenomenal playmakers. I expect Love to be off the board when Denver picks, but Price would be a quality addition to Denver’s backfield and is expected to be a Day 2 selection.

Another running back I like, but he hasn’t officially declared, is BYU’s LJ Martin. He opted out of playing in the Pop-Tart’s Bowl. That could be a hint he has his sights set on going to the big leagues. If you want a back with big size in Denver’s running back group, Martin has that at 6’2” and 220 pounds.

The star junior running back led the Big 12 conference in carries (236) and yards (1,305) and totaled 12 rushing touchdowns and averaged over 100 yards per game. He also flashed receiving chops reeling in 36 passes for 255 yards. His 32 carry, 222 yard and two touchdown effort versus Cincinnati prior to Thanksgiving certainly improved his draft scouts and caused scouts to give the talented runner an extended look.

One under-the-radar prospect to keep your eye on is Nebraska standout Emmett Johnson. He officially declared several weeks ago. Johson had a terrific redshirt junior season notching 1,451 yards and 251 carries with 12 touchdowns. He also was a big part of their receiving game, reeling in 46 passes for 370 yards and 3 touchdowns. He has great vision, breaks a lot of tackles, and does well on interior runs. I think he would be a nice compliment to Harvey as a potential Day 3 selection.

Emmett Johnson isn’t much of a home run threat, but he has the vision and short-area quickness to hit doubles & singles at a very high rate. So creative weaving through traffic and finding escape routes from his peripheral.

In 2025 he
– had the 5th highest success rate in the P4… pic.twitter.com/mUbk4iIhX6

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) December 9, 2025

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...ing-several-2026-nfl-draft-early-declarations
 
Denver Broncos are your 2025 AFC West Champions

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The Denver Broncos are your 2025 AFC West Champions for the first time since 2015.

On Christmas Night, the Denver Broncos defeated the Kansas City Chiefs and improved to 13-3 on the year and set themselves up with a chance to clinch the AFC West on Saturday with a Chargers loss. Well, the Texans took care of business today and defeated the Chargers, which has clinched the AFC West for the Denver Broncos.

THE DENVER BRONCOS ARE YOUR 2025 AFC WEST CHAMPIONS pic.twitter.com/9tDXgGf5l3

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) December 28, 2025

This is the Broncos’ 16th AFC West Championship, their first since 2015, and the first for Head Coach Sean Payton and quarterback Bo Nix.

The Broncos have been on a magical run this season, and after starting the season 1-2, they ripped off 11 straight wins and are now AFC West champions and the favorites for the number one seed in the AFC. They have been led by their elite defense and second-year quarterback Bo Nix, who has improved as the season went on and has led multiple 4th quarter comebacks and game-winning drives.

With a postseason berth and now the AFC West locked up, the Broncos will set their sights on the number one seed in the AFC. They can clinch the one seed as early as tomorrow, but they will need a lot of help for that to happen. They will need the Patriots to lose to the Jets, the Bills to lose to the Eagles, and the Jaguars to lose to Grandpa Phillip Rivers and the Colts. All three of those scenarios playing out tomorrow are highly unlikely, so the Broncos will likely need to win next weekend, at Mile High, vs. the Chargers.

The Broncos are back where they belong. Three years ago, the team fired Nathaniel Hackett the day after Christmas and just signed quarterback Russell Wilson to a contract that would age poorly. Now, three years later. Sean Payton has led the Broncos back to being Super Bowl contenders, and Bo Nix is your franchise quarterback.

TIME TO CELEBRATE BRONCOS COUNTRY, THE DENVER BRONCOS ARE YOUR 2025 AFC WEST CHAMPIONS!

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...rgers-nfl-playoffs-afc-jaguars-bills-patriots
 
Kings of the AFC West, the Broncos set their sights on #1 seed playoffs

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Broncos Country, the drought is officially over. With the Houston Texans defeating the Los Angeles Chargers yesterday, the Denver Broncos secured their first AFC West title in a decade. That season finished off on a high note when they went on to become Super Bowl 50 champions.

Their ascension to kings of the AFC West again is a fantastic accomplishment. Just several years removed from the dreadful Nathaniel Hackett experience, the Broncos have climbed their way back to the top despite having significant salary cap restraints due to the failed Russell Wilson experiment. I’m not so many of us were confident that would happen given how awful most of the past ten years have been.

Head Coach Sean Payton, his staff, and General Manager George Paton deserve a lot of praise for righting the ship so quickly. Additionally, one can’t help but tip the cap to ownership who have been first-class over the past several seasons. The team has drafted and developed players well and bucked the trend of the prior regime who struggled in that regard and failed to reward home-grown talent.

And guess what? The Broncos have ample salary cap space the next several seasons and a healthy amount of draft picks. I don’t expect this season to be a flash in the pan moment but take it as a sign of things to come. This team will be competitive for years to come.

AFC WEST CHAMPS.

Goal No. 1 ✅

And we’re still climbing. pic.twitter.com/yHbSmyw8Ww

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) December 28, 2025

Even so, the Broncos still have work to do to finish their 2025 campaign on a high note. Week 18 will be the most important matchup for the franchise in ages. A victory assures them the #1 seed in the AFC—giving them a first-round bye and coveted homefield advantage throughout the playoffs—regardless of what the New England Patriots or Jacksonville Jaguars do in their final two games.

It’s time for the Broncos to seize the moment, take care of business, and put themselves in the best position possible for a deep playoff run.

For those hoping or expecting Jim Harbaugh to rest his players next Sunday—don’t count on it. Harbaugh doesn’t strike me as the type of coach who wants to let a division rival potentially cakewalk into the top seed and all that comes with it. He’s a competitor and so are his players. While they missed out on a chance at winning the division, have no doubt they will be looking to play spoilers in Denver on January 4th.

The Broncos may be top dog in the division in ’25. Though it’s important to remember the Chargers have won their last three contests against the Broncos. All of them hard-fought, one score games. But next Sunday, Denver will have their hometown crowd behind them at Empower Field at Mile High.

A lot is at stake next Sunday. I’m confident Denver will rise to the occasion, control their own destiny, and find a way to gut out another impressive victory. They’ve done a lot of that this season, so why not win the most important game of the regular season?

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...c-west-the-broncos-set-their-sights-on-1-seed
 
Yes, this is real: The Broncos win the AFC West

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Good morning, Broncos Country!​


For the first time in a decade, the Denver Broncos are AFC West champs.

Somehow, it feels like 84 years since the franchise has been in this position. It was a rough and tough 10 years since Super Bowl 50 …. to say the least. But the Broncos are finally out of the manure-laden doldrums and back atop the division. If that’s not enough, Denver is also in the driver’s seat for the No. 1 seed in the AFC Playoffs, which comes with home-field advantage and a bye.

Three years ago, the Broncos fired Nathaniel Hackett on the day after Christmas.

Now, 2 days after Christmas, the Broncos are 13-3, the one seed in the AFC, and just clinched the AFC West pic.twitter.com/QPdi8vtTzI

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) December 28, 2025

It almost doesn’t feel real, that’s how long it’s been.

Think of how much has changed.

Pat Bowlen was still alive. John Elway was the executive vice president of football operations and general manager. Peyton Manning was the quarterback.

The Kansas City Chiefs had yet to win the Lamar Hunt Trophy.

It was a certain center’s rookie season for the Denver Nuggets.

You get the idea.

It’s been a minute, but the Broncos are back.

It starts and stops with Sean Payton. Since his arrival in Denver, he has completely transformed the organization’s culture and eradicated the rot brought on by Joe Ellis. Then you add in the Walton Penner ownership group, led by Greg Penner and Carrie Walton Penner. Throw in general manager George Paton, who has had some incredible NFL Drafts and made some great moves in free agency to make up for the Russell Wilson and Nathaniel Hackett debacle. And last but not least, Bo Nix.

The Broncos finally have the head coach, ownership, GM, and quarterback all aligned. It’s no wonder Denver is now the AFC West champs.

But let’s not forget the two veterans who had to play through most of the last shit decade and finally have come out of it all roses, Garett Bolles and Courtland Sutton. Mile High Salute to those two for the professional approach and the class they bring to the team and community. It’s great to see this happen for those two players.

For the first time in a decade, the Broncos are AFC West champs. It’s about damn time.

And this is only the beginning.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...yes-this-is-real-the-broncos-win-the-afc-west
 
Broncos vs. Chargers betting odds for Week 18

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The Denver Broncos took care of business as heavy favorites last week, while the Los Angeles Chargers did not giving the Broncos their first AFC West championship since the 2015 season. With the Chargers locked in with a Wild Card spot, they don’t really have a ton to play for next week. Could that decision help Denver secure the AFC’s top seed heading into the playoffs?

According to FanDuel, the Broncos are 6.5-point home favorites over the Chargers in Week 18. The over/under stands at 40.5 for this matchup.

Broncos vs. Chargers betting odds​


Denver Broncos vs. Los Angeles Chargers
Sunday, January 4, 2026 at 2:25 P.M. Mile High time
Empower Field at Mile High in Denver, Colorado
ATS Betting Lines: Denver -6.5
Moneyline Odds: Denver -320 / Los Angeles +260
Over/Under: 40.5

The line suggests that oddsmakers expect Denver to compete with all of their starters to get that top seed, while the Chargers are expected to rest their key starters. After their game on Saturday, Head Coach Jim Harbaugh declined to answer a question about whether or not they planned to rest any starters. That decision apparently hasn’t been made yet.

There isn’t much for them to risk in playing. The five seed is in play, but they’d need some variation of other teams losing. The six and seven seeds are the most likely reason to play. Why risk major injury when you are not really moving the need? That said, the Broncos still need to go out and perform. They can play a bit up or down to their competition at times. Would love to see them just go out and take over the game early in this one.

What are your predictions for the Broncos-Chargers game in Week 18?

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-odds/168251/broncos-vs-chargers-odds-week-18
 
Sean Payton: ‘We still have a lot of things we have to improve upon’

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It took a decade for the Denver Broncos to get back to the top of the AFC West. After hoisting the franchise’s third Lombardi Trophy by winning Super Bowl 50, there hasn’t been much to write home about for the Broncos who have floundered in obscurity most every season since 2015.

However, all that has changed. The past is the past, and the future looks quite bright for the Broncos. They are once again rightful kings of the AFC West after defeating the Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas coupled with the Los Angeles Chargers falling to the Houston Texans this past Saturday.

Through seventeen weeks, the Broncos have reeled off an impressive thirteen victories. Decisive wins have been few and far between, but the team’s penchant for delivering monumental comebacks and grinding out and winning hard-fought battles is one of the reasons why they’ve been so successful. That’s a most-welcomed change considering it’s an area the had struggled with for ages.

But this year’s Broncos are just built different. They’re a mentally tough team who rarely folds in the face of adversity. They’ve got a swagger and moxie about them that seemingly always has them in position to find a way to win when it matters most.

Prior to the season, Head Coach Sean Payton and the team talked about their goals for the season. From the advent of training camp, they all felt that this team was capable of something special. Super Bowl aspirations are lofty goal for any team, but Payton noted that this team was confident from the get-go relative to achieving such a goal.

“We put ourselves in this position, and we still have a lot of things we have to improve on,” Payton stated.

There are a handful of things Denver could to that would better position themselves for a deep playoff run. Being more consistent on offensive and finishing drives with touchdowns as opposed to field goals is certainly one. Limiting their self-inflicted wounds and mistakes with respect to penalties and drops would be another.

Far too often, those two have been major issues for them throughout the season. Even so, they’ve gotten to where they are today. But neither of those are the primary focus to rectify moving forward. Above all else, Payton mentioned that generating turnovers is something that needs to happen if they hope to bring home Denver’s fourth Super Bowl victory in franchise history.

“The one area that has to improve is the turnover margin, and that can happen. We did a collective of the last 25 years of Super Bowl winners. It’s something like 114 in the plus,” Payton said.

Rockin’ the throwbacks for the regular-season finale 🔥 pic.twitter.com/GEjAV7LqPc

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) December 29, 2025

“When the playoffs begin, the Rams recently were the only minus-two turnover team. The rest added up to some crazy number, and so that’s something we have to improve on,” added Payton.

To date, the Broncos have forced just 12 turnovers between their defensive and special team efforts whilst turning the ball over 17 times. Sporting a -5-turnover margin, the Broncos are eighth worst in the NFL. Is that Super Bowl caliber? Definitely not.

The saving grace for the Broncos’ defensive efforts this season have been their ferocious pass rush, red zone defense, and limiting teams on third downs. Alas, since the bye week, the Broncos have taken a step back a bit in all three areas.

If they can improve upon those, as well as start generating some game-changing turnovers, that could ultimately be the formula that helps them achieve what they had set out to do earlier this summer. With Justin Herbert scheduled to be out of action for Sunday’s Week 18 matchup, the Broncos will have the opportunity to rattle Trey Lance. A former top pick from North Dakota State, Lance has four turnovers in fifteen games played since being drafted in 2021.

Will the Broncos rise to the occasion and take care of business in front of an electric hometown crowd this Sunday? I think they will. Moreover, believe forcing a turnover or two will be a key reason why the obtain the #1 seed and homefield advantage in the playoffs.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...-have-a-lot-of-things-we-have-to-improve-upon
 
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