Denver Broncos vs. Buffalo Bills: Wednesday practice participation report

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After both teams issued a simulated practice report on Tuesday, the Denver Broncos and Buffalo Bills were both back practicing on Wednesday.

For the Broncos, nothing changed. Head Coach Sean Payton was asked about Dre Greenlaw’s ability to play downhill against the run and instead of answering the question he gave an update on having him back available for the game saying, “It’s good to have a healthy Dre Greenlaw back in the game, yes.”

I would agree that its good to have him back, but I’d also say I like his ability to play downhill against the run too.

Meanwhile, on the Bills side of things there were a few changes. Most notably is that quarterback Josh Allen was a full participant. However, they also added a new player to their injury report with linebacker Shaq Thompson limited with a neck issue. We’ll have to wait and see what the game statuses look like after tomorrow’s practice.

Here is your full practice report for Wednesday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryTuesday*WednesdayThursdayGame Status
John Franklin-MyersDLHipFULLFULL
Dre GreenlawLBHamstringLIMITEDLIMITED
Lucas KrullTEFootLIMITEDLIMITED
Drew SandersLBAnkleLIMITEDLIMITED

Buffalo Bills Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryTuesday*WednesdayThursdayGame Status
Josh AllenQBFoot / Knee / Finger (R)LIMITEDFULL
Damar HamlinSPectoralFULLFULL
Matt PraterKQuad (R) / Calf (R)DNPFULL
Curtis SamuelWRElbowFULLFULL
Terrel BernardLBCalfLIMITEDLIMITED
A.J. EpenesaDENeckLIMITEDLIMITED
Ed OliverDTBicepLIMITEDLIMITED
Dalton KincaidTEKnee / CalfLIMITEDLIMITED
Matt MilanoLBAnkleLIMITEDLIMITED
Greg RousseauDEBackLIMITEDLIMITED
Shaq ThompsonLBNeckLIMITED
Maxwell HairstonCBAnkleDNPDNP
Ty JohnsonRBAnkleDNPDNP
Jordan PoyerSHamstringDNPDNP
Tyrell ShaversWRKneeDNPDNP

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...74/broncos-vs-bills-wednesday-practice-report
 
NFL Playoffs 2026: ‘Experts’ have little confidence in Denver Broncos chances in Divisional Round

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In an article this week on NFL.com, several analysts got together to give their confidence rankings of the remaining eight teams left in the NFL playoffs. And wouldn’t you know it, the Denver Broncos are second to last on the list with the Buffalo Bills as the top AFC contender in their eyes.

Even the New England Patriots and Houston Texans give them more feels as prognosticators. It seems there has never been a more hated one seed in recent memory.

Rank 7. Denver Broncos
No. 1 seed · 14-3

Total confidence score: 12 pts (of a possible 40)
Super Bowl odds: +700

This probably seems pretty low for a team that lost three games all year and gripped the top spot in the AFC standings for the final five weeks of the regular season. Their defense is a force (fifth in the NFL in EPA per play in the regular season), and their offense is respectable (10th in EPA per play). So what gives? Well, their schedule to date featured just six games against playoff-qualifying opponents, including two of their losses — and it’s not like they rampaged through the year, compiling a league-high 11 one-score wins and a point differential (+90) that stands below the rest of the surviving AFC field (+170 for the Patriots, +116 for the Bills and +109 for the Texans). Then there’s Bo Nix, who didn’t exactly dazzle down the stretch, throwing more TD passes than picks in two of his last nine games leading into his second career postseason start. The advantages of being the No. 1 seed are real, but can Denver rip off another winning streak against more dominant, experienced opponents, starting this weekend with the Bills? We have to pencil in a big, fat “TBD” for now, which is why the Broncos sit here. — Tom Blair

This has been a story the national media has replayed week after week with these Broncos. We shouldn’t be surprised that the hate continues into the playoffs despite the top seed in the conference.

The setup is predictable. If the Broncos lose, they will be loud and feel justified. If they win, then they’ll make excuses and the Broncos will likely be home underdogs again next week. Expect this hate to continue all the way through to the end of the season.

It’s the life of an OVERDOG.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...ce-denver-broncos-chances-in-divisional-round
 
Denver Broncos vs. Buffalo Bills: Final injury report

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The Denver Broncos have ruled out two players for this game and both were only recently activated off injured reserve in both linebacker Drew Sanders and tight end Lucas Krull. The other two guys on the report both got full days of practice in on Thursday, so it looks like both defensive lineman John Franklin-Myers and linebacker Dre Greenlaw will be good to go on Saturday.

Meanwhile, the laundry list of an injury report from the Buffalo Bills has a lot more to digest. Cornerback Maxwell Hairston and safety Jordan Poyer were both ruled out. Five other players were listed as questionable: safety Damar Hamlin, wide receiver Curtis Samuel, linebacker Terrell Bernard, running back Ty Johnson, and defensive tackle Ed Oliver. I wouldn’t be surprised if all of them end up being available for this game if even on a pitch count.

Here is your full practice report for Thursday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryTuesday*WednesdayThursdayGame Status
John Franklin-MyersDLHipFULLFULLFULL
Dre GreenlawLBHamstringLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Drew SandersLBAnkleLIMITEDLIMITEDFULLOUT
Lucas KrullTEFootLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDOUT

Buffalo Bills Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryTuesday*WednesdayThursdayGame Status
Josh AllenQBFoot / Knee / Finger (R)LIMITEDFULLFULL
Damar HamlinSPectoralFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
Curtis SamuelWRElbowFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
Terrel BernardLBCalfLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
A.J. EpenesaDENeckLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITED
Ty JohnsonRBAnkleDNPDNPLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Dalton KincaidTEKnee / CalfLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITED
Matt MilanoLBAnkleLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITED
Ed OliverDTBicepLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Matt PraterKQuad (R) / Calf (R)DNPFULLLIMITED
Greg RousseauDEBackLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITED
Shaq ThompsonLBNeckLIMITEDLIMITED
Maxwell HairstonCBAnkleDNPDNPDNPOUT
Jordan PoyerSHamstringDNPDNPDNPOUT
Tyrell ShaversWRKneeDNPDNP

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...denver-broncos-vs-buffalo-bills-injury-report
 
Broncos vs. Bills: R.J. Harvey could be Bo Nix’s best outlet in Divisional Round

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Now that we’re full-on into the playoffs, it’s time to stop looking in the rearview with our Secret Superstars series, and start looking forward to the next game with Postseason X-Factors. The principle is the same — using game tape and metrics to uncover those hidden gems for every team who are primed to bring their best when their franchises need it the most.

The Denver Broncos are the AFC’s one-seed based on a ferocious defense and a complementary, balanced offense in its own way. One issue that could upend the Broncos on the path to their first Super Bowl berth in a decade is Bo Nix’s response to the Buffalo Bills’ pressure packages in the divisional round. Here’s where one rookie could make all the difference.


Broncos quarterback Bo Nix has enjoyed a fine second NFL season for the most part, but one thing that has to have head coach and offensive shot-caller Sean Payton concerned as the Broncos’ postseason journey begins is how Nix has done against pressure. This season, Nix has completed 89 of 176 passes when pressured for 818 yards, seven touchdowns, six interceptions, and a passer rating of 67.9. Among quarterbacks who have started at least 50% of their teams’ snaps, only Joe Flacco, Jordan Love, Geno Smith, and Cam Ward had lower passer ratings in the 2025 season.

While the Buffalo Bills, Denver’s divisional round opponent, don’t have one alpha pass-rusher, they manage to disrupt opposing quarterbacks just fine as a group. Their 35.1% pressure rate ranks 12th in the NFL, and fifth among the remaining playoff teams. Buffalo’s 37 sacks? That’s a bottom-third number, but when you can get enough pressure against a quarterback like Nix who would really prefer that you didn’t, that can be enough to end plays, drives, and games.

The obvious answer for Payton is to give Nix quick reads to get the ball out, and in second-round rookie R.J. Harvey, Payton has an able assistant. Throughout his time as an NFL head coach, Payton has always been great in utilizing smaller, quicker, versatile backs who can function equally in the run and pass games. Harvey has qualified in his inaugural campaign with 540 yards and seven touchdowns on 146 carries, and 47 catches on 57 targets for 356 yards and five touchdowns. At 5’9” and 208 pounds, Harvey isn’t your typical bellcow back, but when Payton and the Broncos got him, you had a pretty good idea how he’d be used.

Harvey has been a great outlet receiver when Nix is under pressure, and that could be a Very Big Thing in Saturday’s game. When pressured this season, Nix has thrown to Harvey eight times for eight completions, 77 yards, and two touchdowns. Not huge numbers, but in a one-and-done game, the quality of plays matter more than the quantity.

And Harvey is capable of more than your basic running back routes. In Week 9 against the Houston Texans’ demonic pass rush, a pressured Nix hit Harvey for a 27-yard touchdown pass with 12:34 left in the game. That and a two-point conversion pass to Troy Franklin changed the score from 15-7 in Houston’s favor to a tie game, and Wil Lutz’s 34-yard field goal as time elapsed put an 18-15 Denver win in the books.

The Bills generate a lot of pressure.
Bo Nix does not do well against pressure.
Bo Nix needs to throw the ball to R.J. Harvey when he's pressured.
It's that simple. pic.twitter.com/Nrwu8VsUep

— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) January 14, 2026

“Look, last night we didn’t do the school songs,” Payton said postgame of this play. “We had every one of their family members call in on the video and each one said, ‘Hey, this is your play, go make it.’ So, he gets the video award. It’s a pirate route. We got the right coverage. We set it up after halfback choice, and all of a sudden take off. We’re just starting to see right in front of our eyes, [Harvey] is the guy that we felt strongly about, and he can go. He and [running back J.K.] Dobbins, that one-two combination is nice to have as a coach.”

Another example of Harvey’s route acumen came against the Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas Day. Nix wasn’t pressured here as he was booting out to the right, but Harvey did a great job staying with Nix on the one-yard touchdown with 1:45 left in the game that made the difference in a 20-13 Broncos win.

Sean Payton loves running backs with legit receiver skills. Not a surprise that the Broncos took R.J. Harvey in the second round of the 2025 draft. pic.twitter.com/64f7rKIw1w

— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) January 14, 2026

“It was covered initially, then he climbed,” Payton said postgame of that one. “He has receiver skill sets that are – I couldn’t see the angle and I heard the cheer. I said, ‘Please tell me that isn’t an interception’. It was loud enough where I didn’t know if it was the Kansas City cheer. Fortunately, it was the Bronco cheer. I am sure it was a heck of a throw and catch. To score seven greatly changes the dynamic with their kicker. You know how the kicking game is. You are starting at the 35[-yard line] average. It greatly changed the outcome of the game, that they needed a touchdown.”

Trust us, Coach — it was a great route and adjustment.

With their defense, the Broncos don’t need Bo Nix to go out there and be Superman — they need him to manage the game, provide the occasional explosive play, and avoid mistakes. Job One for Nix’s coaches is to give him reads and openings under pressure that won’t break the machine, and R.J. Harvey has already proven that he can get it done in those circumstances.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/bron...rvey-vs-buffalo-bills-bo-nix-divisional-round
 
Full NFL punting review for 2025

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Denver Broncos punter Jeremy Crawshaw was decent but not great as a rookie punter in the NFL. As I do at the end of every season, I do a deep dive into punting that is more thorough than any other site.

View Link
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Full league advanced punting review for 2024

At the end of the day, the job of the punter is to maximize field position for the team. So the best way to measure the performance of a punter is to determine how well the punter did at winning the field position game for their team.

I break up punts into two groups, long-field punts (from the team’s 1-34 yard line) and short-field punts from the 35 on. On short-field punts the punter can just try to kick the ball as far as possible without too much worry of a touchback (although they can outkick the coverage). On short-field punts, hangtime and accuracy are much more critical for pinning the opponent inside the 10 or the 20. While many sites have starting tracking punts downed inside the 20, I also track punts downed inside the 10. No other site has that.

Last year I came up a scoring system for punts downed inside the 10. A punt downed at the 10 gets 1 point, at the 9 gets 2 points, and so on. While Crawshaw got 14 downed inside the 10, 6 of those were downed at the 10 and only 3 were inside the 5.

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The punter for the Texans, Tommy Townsend, (and the Texans punt coverage team) was a step above every other punt unit in the league at pinning teams inside the 10 and the 5. They had 10 punts downed inside the 5. The Eagles punter, Braden Mann, had only one downed inside the five, and only 6 downed inside the 10. So he was the worst precision punter by this metric.

Another way to measure precision punting is to take percentage of punts downed inside the 10 and subtract percentage of punts that end as touchbacks. The rationale is that precision means being able to keep the ball inside the 10, while keeping it out of the endzone. Some of this is a function of the punt coverage team. I call this the precision punt performance (PPP)

The best PPP was Jack Fox of the Lions. He got 26.8% of his punts downed inside the 10 with only 3.6% of his punts ending as touchbacks for a PPP of 23.2%. Crawshaw was 22nd with a PPP of 6.7%. Braden Mann of the Eagles was the worst with a PPP of negative 2.8%. Former Bronco punter, Sam Martin, was the second best in PPP with a value of 19.6%. He was punting for the Panthers this season.

In terms of of overall punt % (how much of the possible yards did Crawshaw “gain” for the Broncos), Jeremy was 19th at 74.6%. As his average punt %. To give you an example of how this is calculated let’s look at one punt by Jeremy this season.

Against the Eagles, on 4th and 21 from the -47, Jeremy punted the ball 37 yards where it was fair caught at the 10. The potential best outcome would have been a ball downed at the 1 (52 yard punt). So Crawshaw got 37 of 52 potential yards on that punt (71%). A blocked punt or a long return can lead to a negative punt %. Crawshaw did not have any punts blocked this season.

In terms of punt% Bryan Anger, the punter for the Cowboys, was the best punter in the league at 79.0% while Corey Bojorquez was the worst at 67.8%.

For punters who are consistent their average is going to be close to the summed net/potential, while punters who are inconsistent will have a large difference between their summed net divided summed potential yards.

The most consistent punter was Austin McNamara. He was consistently average. The least consistent was Ethan Evans of the Rams.

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Here are Crawshaw’s ranks in various punting metrics:

  • Long field punt % = 17th
  • Short field punt % = 15th
  • Hangtime – 24th
  • Punt percentage – 19th
  • PPP – 22nd
  • Net/Potential – 15th
  • Consistency – 12th
  • Gross average – 14th
  • in 10% – 14th
  • in 20% – 17th
  • TB% – 29th
  • FC% – 13th
  • RET% – 6th

The only metric where he was in the top 10 was in return percentage where he was 6th at 38.7%.

Of the three former Bronco punters still in the NFL, Crawshaw was better than Corliss Waitman and Riley Dixon in most metrics and comparable to Sam Martin in most.

Presumably, Crawshaw should improve next season, but it would be great for him to have a playoff like Britton Colquitt did in the 2015/6 run to Super Bowl 50. He was a weapon for the Broncos during that Super Bowl run. It would be great for Crawshaw to be a weapon for the Broncos in these playoffs. Below are the ratings on long field punts for 2025

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Following are the short field punt percentages for 2025

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Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-stats/169652/full-nfl-punting-review-for-2025
 
Broncos vs. Bills Divisional Round Playoffs: 3 Keys to victory

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The latest edition of the soon-to-be 43-game series between the Denver Broncos and the Buffalo Bills takes place in the 2025-26 NFL Playoffs. And Denver gets their chance to get retribution against the team that knocked them out of the postseason in last year’s Wild Card round.

The Broncos get the added benefit of coming into this game fresh and hopefully with a concreted and bullet proof game plan while the Bills have a bit of a limp heading into Saturday. Their injury report is extensive. But how much will this help the Broncos out? Let’s take a look at three keys to victory.

1. Exploit the Buffalo run defense​


At the end of the regular season the Bills sat 28th in the league in run yards per game given up (136 YPG) and the Jaguars took full advantage of this shortcoming in their Wild Card matchup. Even without including Trevor Lawrence’s 31 yards off of scrambled, Jacksonville put up 123 rushing yards with five rushes of 10+ yards, two of which went for 20+ yards.

The style of run offense the Jags employed was also very similar to the looks that Denver likes to employ, so hopefully that bodes well for Denver’s chances to copy this success.

If Denver is able to keep as much pressure off of Bo Nix as possible, then that should lead to increased success throughout the playoffs, and that starts with being able to establish the run. I’d like plenty of Pin and Pull concepts by both RJ Harvey and Nix while keeping the between-the-tackle stuff primarily for Jaleel McLaughlin.

2. Keep everything in front of them defensively​


We all know that Josh Allen is an absolute game-breaker and is near unstoppable when he really gets going. So it’s up to this defense to contain him as much as possible on Saturday.

I think there’s going to be a lot of pressure on the back end of the defense. Luckily the Bills will be down two more wide receivers this week due to injury, so that means that Khalil Shakir will have to bear most of the burden of passing game success. And if you take him out, you eliminate most of Josh Allen’s options. Also, most of Allen’s success in the air this season has come against zone coverage, which Denver usually stays away from. If the defense is able to keep the lid on this offense, force Allen to hit his check downs or hold onto the ball, then things should trend in Denver’s favor.

They just can’t give up five yards a carry on QB sneaks like Jacksonville did.

3. Win the turnover battle​


Sean Payton gave us an interesting note on the relationship between the turnover battle and Buffalo’s chances of winning football games.

Here's Sean Payton on preparing for the Bills.

One interesting note — said he's charted two years of Buffalo's losses and they've lost the turnover battle in "all but one of them."

Turnover differential, then, continuing to be a key theme for the #Broncos pic.twitter.com/F4UbuKz5md

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 13, 2026

So in all but one of Buffalo’s losses over the last couple of years the Bills have lost the turnover battle. Turnovers, however, have been difficult for this defense to manufacture. They did do some great things in this department against the Chargers in Week 18, but those were predominantly backups playing.

Once again, Denver needs to find a way to steal the ball away from the Bills and keep them off of the field. Interceptions will be hard to come by, so that suggests that fumbles will be the name of the game this week.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-nfl-playoffs/169634/broncos-vs-bills-3-keys-to-victory
 
Denver Broncos live discussion: Buffalo Bills AFC Divisional Round chat

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The AFC’s top seeded Denver Broncos (14-3) will host the Buffalo Bills (13-5) in the Divisional Round of the NFL Playoffs. The action around the country is centered around Josh Allen and his quest for a championship, but very little attention has been paid to the rise of these Broncos from castaway to AFC powerhouse. Can they send Allen and the Bills packing and punch their ticket to the AFC Championship Game? We certainly hope so!

Kickoff is set for 2:30 p.m. Mile High time on Saturday, January 17, 2026 at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver, Colorado. You can watch the live stream of the game through FuboTV or on CBS. The game will be called by Jim Nantz (play-by-play), Tony Romo (analyst), and Tracy Wolfson (sideline). You can also check local Broncos radio network affiliate stations.

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Broncos vs. Bills score predictions​


According to FanDuel, the Broncos opened as slight home underdogs, but are now slightly favored over the Bills at 1.5-points. I still feel like they will need to be the overdogs in this game and come out with a win. While the odds have them slightly favored, no one else nationally are picking them to win really. I hope for a good old fashioned beat down, but that hasn’t been their style all season long. Give me another hard-fought, climb higher type win.

Prediction: Broncos 24, Bills 22.

Join the discussion in the comments section below.​

Broncos vs. Bills live updates​

A look at how the Denver Broncos went from giving up 70 points in Miami in 2023 … to being the AFC’s No. 1 seed this season.

Produced by @AjayAtayee and Ellis Williams. pic.twitter.com/6Cqg31nuMr

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 17, 2026
Bo making it look easy.

BUFvsDEN– 4:30pm ET on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on #NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/SCIvhKbbcU

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Feels like a Super Bowl 50 reunion at Broncos-Bills. Players that are at the game:

Peyton Manning
Aqib Talib
Bennie Fowler
Emmanuel Sanders
Derek Wolfe

Other Broncos legends:

Terrell Davis
Rod Smith
Shannon Sharpe

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
Josh Allen won't be 100% in Divisional round as he battles through 3 ailments but has no limitations, per @CameronWolfe.

— Underdog NFL (@UnderdogNFL) January 17, 2026
Ed Oliver warming up with brace on surgically repaired left bicep.

Even on limited snap count, Bills expect Oliver to make a big impact pic.twitter.com/tcN1yHPEdN

— Cameron Wolfe (@CameronWolfe) January 17, 2026
No individual intros for the Broncos today.

Team all ran out of the tunnel together.

— Aric DiLalla (@AricDiLalla) January 17, 2026
Such a cool pregame tradition pic.twitter.com/OhH0dAYsOf

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
Broncos game day captains:

Bo Nix
Pat Surtain
Talanoa Hufanga
Alex Singleton

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
Coin toss: Bills callheads. It's heads. Bills defer. Broncos get ball first.

— MikeKlis9NEWS (@mikeklis9news) January 17, 2026
Marvin Mims went to the medical tent after big hit on kickoff. He's back on the Broncos sideline.

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
#Broncos WR and All-Pro returner Marvin Mims Jr. is being evaluated for a possible concussion, team announces.

Not great.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
Pat Bryant walked off the field under his own power and went straight to the medical tent.

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
#Broncos went empty on fourth and inches. Nix came to the line like he was changing the protection but then took a quick snap and got the first down easily.

Slick.

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 17, 2026
Jaleel McLaughlin fumbled the ball.

Bills recovered.

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
Bills recover lost fumble but they were offsides. Broncos retain possession.

— Chris Tomasson (@christomasson) January 17, 2026
Beautiful ball by Bo Nix to Lil'Jordan Humphrey on 2nd-and-6 from the 10 but Humphrey can't snag it. That hurts. Clean drop.

Humphrey in the game with Pat Bryant in the locker room.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
From first-and-5 to a FG attempt on a snuffed Bo Nix run, dropped TD and errant corner route throw for Evan Engram.

3-0 #Broncos. Better outcome than a turnover but a missed opportunity nonetheless.

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 17, 2026
24 yards from James Cook on the Bills' first offensive snap!

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/T1PX6LlBOZ

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Bills gashing the Broncos in the run game

Now Surtain is down

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 17, 2026
#Broncos burn a timeout after some personnel confusion. Sean Payton had, uh, words for Vance Joseph on his way back down the sideline after using the timeout.

Once the officiating crew moved the chains, Denver was all out of sorts getting its grouping right.

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 17, 2026
Bill take the lead on Josh Allen 4-yard TD throw to Hardman.

— Chris Tomasson (@christomasson) January 17, 2026
I’m sorry did I just see two fumbles and a pass on one play?

That’s a first

— Tyler Polumbus (@Tyler_Polumbus) January 17, 2026
Courtland Sutton can't hold on to the pass.

4th down.

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
We'll take that. 🥊

📺: CBS pic.twitter.com/m0CGIw26Km

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) January 17, 2026
On second-and-10, handoff to Harvey, 12 yards.

— MikeKlis9NEWS (@mikeklis9news) January 17, 2026
Nix. Mims. 27 yards.

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/hUDLp26RZm

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
FRANK CRUM BIG MAN TD

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/8SEiIm527H

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Was chatting with #Broncos OL Frank Crum after he blocked an extra point earlier in the year and he said, very confidently, "Bro, I'm fast as f—."

Ran 4.94 in the 40 at the Combine at 6-8 and 313 pounds a couple years ago.

Soft hands, too, apparently.

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 17, 2026
3rd and 10. Allen finds Brandin Cooks for 15.

BUF is 3-of-4 today on third down.

— Cody Roark (@CodyRoarkNFL) January 17, 2026
3rd and 9

Allen avoids the sack, flag down, and omg dropped TD.

Flag is on Buffalo

IN-COM-PLETE

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 17, 2026
With Bryant and Franklin sidelined, we need Engram to step up

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 17, 2026
Bo scrambling!

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/UcPe85ot1F

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Sean Payton calls a timeout after 10-yard hit from Bo Nix to RJ Harvey.

0:44 left at Buffalo's 44-yard-line, 2nd and 10, one timeout left.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
Bo Nix fired up!!

THAT'S MY QUARTERBACK pic.twitter.com/AB5e8h24ZC

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 17, 2026
#Broncos pretty much rolling with a Courtland Sutton-Marvin Mims-Lil'Jordan Humphrey trio at WR right now.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
That kind of game so far. pic.twitter.com/QpMTzAPLPv

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 17, 2026
Bo Nix steps up and hits Marvin Mims — huge with WR injuries today — for a first on 3rd-and-10. Poor coverage by Buffalo.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
Bo Nix: 13/23, 150 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT + 29 yards on 8 carries this first half.#Broncos are on his back right now.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
BO NIX TOUCHDOWN PASS TO LIL'JORDAN HUMPHREY!!!

REDEMPTION pic.twitter.com/RONeAHjppZ

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 17, 2026
JOSH ALLEN FUMBLES THE BALL BEFORE HALF AND BRONCOS TAKE A 20-10 LEAD AT HALFTIME

pic.twitter.com/ny78dY23zR

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 17, 2026
Buffalo is 3-18 in Josh Allen's career when trailing by at least two scores at halftime.

Sean Payton-coached teams have won 42 consecutive games when leading by at least two scores at halftime (per @pfref).

— Andrew Mason (@MaseDenver) January 17, 2026
Nik Bonitto.

Takes off his helmet, goes parading around to lower section behind the bench after that sack-fumble. Just toasted his guy. Second forced fumble by Bonitto today.

— Luca Evans (@bylucaevans) January 17, 2026
NIK BONITTO FORCES ANOTHER FUMBLE

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/o66YU0wA7Y

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
#Broncos just taking the delay of game. Now going for the field goal.

— Chris Tomasson (@christomasson) January 17, 2026
Wil Lutz is GOOD.

Broncos extend the lead 23-10.

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 17, 2026
25 yards from Allen to Kincaid

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/l5ZRnePtO9

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
HOLY HUFANGA

How did Knox hold onto that?!

— AROD – Anthony Rodriguez (@AnthonyRod33) January 17, 2026
Keon Coleman TD!

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/OhKq7bgzpe

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Oh boy.

Bo Nix is picked off by T.J. Sanders, and the Bills are in Denver territory with a chance to take the lead.

— Aric DiLalla (@AricDiLalla) January 17, 2026
P.J. Locke gets it right back for the Broncos!

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/PapwOMVTA2

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Bo Nix lays it out perfectly on 3rd and 8 🎯

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/1iPnsNxWMC

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
The #Broncos D has had their fair share of issues today, but they've taken the ball away and given the offense opportunities.

DEN O has been abysmal here in the second half.

Punt incoming.

— Cody Roark (@CodyRoarkNFL) January 17, 2026
The Broncos' four takeaways are tied for the third most in franchise postseason history.

The last time they had more takeaways in a playoff game was the 2005 Divisional Round win over the Patriots.

— Aric DiLalla (@AricDiLalla) January 17, 2026
Big 46-yard completion from Allen to Shakir and Bills are really now on the road back.

— Chris Tomasson (@christomasson) January 17, 2026
DALTON KINCAID WHAT A CATCH TO TIE IT

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/y4wUrQgjb5

— NFL (@NFL) January 17, 2026
Bills have had eight possessions.

3 TDs
1 FG
4 turnovers

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 17, 2026
Broncos inability to run the ball and stop the run have been the differences in this game thus far

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 18, 2026
Broncos' offensive drives in the second half by yards:

2
5
22
3

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) January 18, 2026
The Bills are 11-2 this season when the opposing QB has a passer rating below 90 and that includes their Wildcard win over the Jags.
Bo Nix right now has a rating of 74.3. He's been below 90 in 8 of his last 9 games.

— James Palmer (@JamesPalmerTV) January 18, 2026
Josh Allen and OC Joe Brady have decided they're going after Talanoa Hufanga in coverage.

— Parker Gabriel (@ParkerJGabriel) January 18, 2026
#Broncos get stop on third down, sending out Prater for short field goal. Was a lot cooler for #BorncosCountry when he was attempting these after an inexplicable Tim Tebow comeback. 31-yarder good. Bills lead 27-23 with 4:11 left. #Broncos offense has become a ghost in the second…

— Troy Renck (@TroyRenck) January 18, 2026
Sutton on 3rd-and-11 🔥

BUFvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/01s4CnZUFX

— NFL (@NFL) January 18, 2026
TOUCHDOWN BO NIX AND MARVIN MIMS!!!pic.twitter.com/1msZGMR4G7

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 18, 2026
Don't forget that 3rd-and-11 dig and 3rd-and-4 carry by Bo Nix either. HUGE drive by the sophomore.

— Hayden Winks (@HaydenWinks) January 18, 2026

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...s-vs-buffalo-bills-live-coverage-nfl-playoffs
 
Broncos prove they’re built to win — even with a backup QB

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Good morning, Broncos Country!​


The Denver Broncos get the biggest win in a decade.

Then, about an hour later, the elation and joy were replaced by utter despondency. That’s when the news came that Broncos quarterback Bo Nix broke his ankle and is out for the rest of the season.

Talk about a gut punch.

I still don’t know how to fully comprehend what the heck happened. And I’m not even talking about the 33-30 overtime win over Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills.

What the heck just happened?

We got you 10🤞🏽

— Nik Bonitto (@nikkkkbonitto) January 18, 2026

Now the Broncos have to rally around Jarret Stidham, who steps in as Denver’s starting quarterback for the rest of the season. And I have no doubt this Denver team will do just that. It’s just effing brutal. And a brutal injury.

This doesn’t take away from how amazing this victory was for the Broncos. It was one of the best wins in franchise history. No matter what, this Denver team is never out of it. The Broncos just find a way.

Now they have to channel that with the Nix news. If any team is capable of winning without its starter, it’s the Broncos. And there are teams that won with a backup quarterback, see the Philadelphia Eagles and Nick Foles.

The other factor to keep in mind is that while Stidham hasn’t thrown a pass in two years, there’s also no knowledge of him in this offense and what Sean Payton could have in store for his new QB. Maybe I’m overdosing on hopium, but I also Bolieve in this team, even without Nix.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...ove-theyre-built-to-win-even-with-a-backup-qb
 
2026 NFL Playoffs – Divisional Round: Houston Texans at New England Patriots

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The path to the Super Bowl for the New England Patriots appears to have gotten much easier with the season-ending injury to Bo Nix, but they’ll need to get past the Houston Texans first. They took down Justin Herbert who had a decimated offensive line, now they get the Texans without Nico Collins, and next week they could be facing Jarrett Stidham. I kind of hope they lose today because of that.

Kickoff is set for Sunday, January 18, 2026 at 1:00 p.m. Mile High time at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts and will air on ESPN.

My Prediction​


According to FanDuel, the Patriots are 3.5-point home favorites over the Texans here. I know everyone says the Patriots haven’t played anyone, but you can only play the schedule you get and that have dominated their schedule all season long. I think they are actually pretty damn good on both sides of the ball. If Houston has any chance here they will need their defense to play lights out and while that is certainly a possibility, playoff football just seems to get wild at times. I have a feeling it’ll end up being another Broncos-Patriots AFC Championship game matchup.

Prediction: Patriots 26, Texans 20.

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


Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...-round-houston-texans-at-new-england-patriots
 
Broncos vs Bills: The ‘No Bull’ Playoff Review

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When I was younger, I used to say, “I believe in Mile High Magic” quite often. What I believe in more nowadays is the grit and determination of our Denver Broncos. I’m so proud of how this team plays every game, giving every ounce of effort possible in pursuit of excellence.

This was such a special playoff game. There was so much stress, drama, wins, losses, and heroics on both sides of the ball from start to finish.

Also, let me say that I hate that the Buffalo Bills, their fans, and especially Josh Allen lost. I have a big heart for the Bills and the Vikings, as I know exactly what it feels like to have a team that just can’t find a way to win a championship.

We’ve got a lot to unpack here, so let’s dig in.

Offense​


Sean Payton’s play design was on point in this game. We saw a fake shotgun spread quarterback sneak. We got a gimmie touchdown to backup tackle Frank Crum on a play-action rollout. He threw everything and the kitchen sink at the Bills, with only 4 healthy wide receivers by the end of the game.

The only nit I have to pick on the playcalling is not understanding how we didn’t use McLaughlin more. I get that he fumbled, but the defense gets paid too, and we could have used his 5.3 yards per carry.

Quarterbacks​

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Bo Nix is the truth. This guy is a winner, a leader, and the future of our franchise. It absolutely sucks that he broke his ankle. He was an absolute beast to stay out there to end the overtime drive and help this team win.

Throughout the season, I’ve picked on his need to fine-tune his accuracy, but let me tell you that that isn’t the problem with this offense. The problem is that he throws perfect passes to his receivers, and they drop them. Bo will set records when this team puts weapons around him that can consistently catch.

As I had expected, they had plenty of Nix runs wrinkled into the gameplan and his legs were a big key in extending drives.

His interception was partially not on him (more on that below), but that route was not open at all. I don’t know the thinking there, but it sure did look like he was locked in on the crosser by Engram and decided that’s where he’s throwing it before he even hiked the ball. It was mystifying, though, as there was a zone linebacker standing where the route was going that was going to most likely break up the pass if not intercept it.

Line​


Even with our third-string center playing, this line is still playing great football. They allowed zero sacks, which is always impressive.

The one thing I’d like to see more of is engagement by our line on pass plays. On the interception, Bolles just let his guy watch Bo and jump up to intercept it. He has to engage and not let his guy jump for free in the passing lanes.

Big shout-out to Frank Crum for his touchdown. That was a heck of a tricky play design that confused the outside defender and let him run free with no defender for one of the easiest touchdown plays I’ve seen this season.

Running Backs​

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If Bo Nix didn’t run the ball, this group would have run 10 times for 41 yards. I’m amazed that McLaughlin wasn’t utilized more. He runs the ball so well and makes football plays consistently. Early in the game, with poor blocking, he spun through players for a good pickup that should have been stopped for a loss. If we’re so damn scared to use him, let’s please let this guy go to a team that will.

RJ Harvey continued showing us some fairly lackluster football. He fumbled a simple handoff that almost got picked up by the Bills. Luckily, it bounced to Bo, and he threw it away to bail them out of a bad play. He got a big lane on one play for 12 yards that looked superb. Outside of that play, he was 5 rushes for 8 whopping yards running. He did get 46 yards passing on 5 catches, which definitely is a plus.

Receivers​

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I’ve been saying all season that Marvin Mims needed to be used more in this offense. He delivered big time in this game, catching all 8 of his targets for 93 yards and a touchdown. He had a seam route for 27 yards, made a key 3rd down conversion after the 2-minute warning, had a big gain in the 2-minute drill, and scored a touchdown on a corner route to put the Broncos up in the 4th quarter.

Courtland Sutton is absolutely killing me with his inability to catch the ball. If we weren’t stuck with him in 2026 due to his contract, I’d let him take his inability to catch balls that hit him in the hands to another team. I counted 3 big drops by Sutton. One of them I almost kinda get (he had to extend to get his hands around it), but in overtime, he dropped two passes. In big moments, we need our players to make plays. I do give him credit for that sideline pass where he dragged his feet to get a first down. It was awesome to see…but in my books, it doesn’t outweigh the negatives. He was targeted 9 times in the game and only caught 4.

It was crushing to see Pat Bryant get knocked out of the game with a concussion after a big hit. He had 3 superb catches (and is one of the Broncos’ more reliable receivers) and looked like he was going to have a big role in the game plan. I’m not a doctor, but with two concussions so close together, my worry is that we’re letting him come back too soon.

Lil Jordan Humphrey had the worst drop of the game in the end zone early. It looked to me to be a play designed just for him and had worked to perfection. Bo dropped it right into his chest perfectly, and it just went through his hands. To his credit, at the end of the second quarter, he won on a post route to score a touchdown on 29 yard pass from Nix.

Defense​


To be completely fair, this defense got worked by the Bills. Vance Joseph’s defense gave up 117 yards to Cook. Allen rushed for another 66 and almost threw for 300 with 3 touchdowns. All game long, the Bills just marched down the field, only to be stopped by turnovers.

From a defensive standpoint, it was a garbage fire of a game.

You have to give credit to Cook and Allen as they are elite players, but I still expect more from a defense that was being compared (laughably) to the No Fly Zone earlier this season.

Where they do get credit in this game is in the turnover department. They honestly reminded me of our defenses in 97-98. They played very opportunistically and forced big mistakes often in this game, which was absolutely key to this team winning.

Front 7​

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Nik Bonitto played inspired football against the Bills. He was held in check for most of the first half until Allen tried to scrabble late with under 20 seconds on the clock. Bonitto chased him down and swatted the ball out. All-Pro Devon Key recovered to help the Broncos put another 3 points on the board. He was hungry for more, so in the first play of the 2nd half, he did it again with a strip sack. Bonitto forced two fumbles, had a tackle for loss, a quarterback hit, and a sack on the day.

Alex Singleton laid a bone-crushing hit on Cook with his hat on the ball to force a fumble that Hufanga immediately secured. He got picked on often by Allen in the passing game. On one play, he lost his crosser and gave up a 10+ yard gain as he tried to play catch-up after being flat-footed. If you like a guy giving up plays while making a lot of tackles, Singleton is the football player for you.

Malcolm Roach had a huge game for the Broncos from the interior of the defensive line. He got a shared sack with Zach Allen on a stunt for a loss of seven. Later in the same drive, he sacked Allen, who tried to sneak by him. He also pitched in a tackle for loss, 3 quarterback hits, and a fumble recovery.

Secondary​

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The hero of the secondary this week was easily Ja’Quan McMillian. I love seeing this nickel corner balling out with a chip on his shoulder. McMillian plays his tail off. In overtime, Josh Allen noticed that he had McMillian singled up on his deep option and tried to test him. Allen got served with an interception as McMillian scooped it away from Cooks for the biggest play of the game.

Pat Surtain II gave up a touchdown as he was fooled into thinking his motion guy was going across the formation. He also got beat on 3rd and 10 with some lackadaisical coverage that gave far too much cushion for Allen to zip the ball by him.

Riley Moss had a pretty down day with some passes converted on him, including a touchdown where he leaped at his receiver’s shoestrings at a poor angle to try and make a tackle.

Talanoa Hufanga absolutely killed Knox on a crossing route with a huge hit. Knox may have held onto the ball, but he got his bell rung for it. His pass defense was somewhat porous though, as he gave up several passes, including a fade in the end zone.

PJ Locke made one hell of a play, picking off Josh Allen on a deep pass. He read the quarterback, broke on the ball, and leaped in front of the receiver with perfect timing to snag the ball before it got to the receiver. Last year, Locke was one of the guys who got picked on. I feel like he completely redeemed himself with how he accounted for himself in this game. He forced a fumble and had a pass defense on the day as well.

Special Teams​

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Jeremy Crawshaw, in overtime, made the best punt we’ve seen from him in his rookie year with a booming 55-yard punt to the sidelines that went out at the 7-yard line.

As always, we have to give love to “Captain Ice-Water-In-His-Veins” Will Lutz. He had another perfect game with 3 extra points and 4 field goals on the day, including the game-winner in overtime. I don’t take any of these kicks for granted, especially watching other games this postseason with way too many missed kicks aplenty.

Referee Notes​


Let’s address the gripes with the officiating (since that’s been something I haven’t shied away from this season). The major whining I’ve been hearing is people saying that Cooks caught the ball and was down before McMillian took it away. You can’t freeze-frame the play to make it look like that is the truth. This game is a game of action, and there are clear rules. Feel free to take a peek at Rule 8 Section 1 Articles 3 c, which states,

Quote

  • after (a) and (b) have been fulfilled, clearly performs any act common to the game (e.g., extend the ball forward, take an additional step, tuck the ball away and turn upfield, or avoid or ward off an opponent), or he maintains control of the ball long enough to do so.

Cooks didn’t maintain control of the ball long enough to establish the catch. It is as simple as that. He didn’t catch the ball and take a step, so he has to keep possession all the way through to the ground. McMillian took it away and maintained possession, so it is in essence his reception.

The one complaint I will back is that the first of the two pass interference calls in overtime was absolute horse crap. It was a great pass over Sutton’s shoulder, but the defender played it perfectly and shouldn’t have been flagged at all (and let me assure you that Riley Moss would 100% agree as well). The difference on this play would have been 7 yards farther back up the field, as there was a roughing the passer 15-yard penalty that happened on the play as well by the Bills. The other interference call was absolutely a spot-on call as the defender interfered clearly before the ball got there.

Final Thoughts​


First and foremost, let’s wish a full recovery for Bo Nix with nothing but love and appreciation from Broncos Country. Nix has put the NFL on notice with his play this season. He’s a clutch quarterback for this team and is going to win a whole lot of games in orange and blue.

Now, let me reassure you, Broncos Country. This team is not done. We didn’t win 15 games so far this season, only because of a quarterback. Also, I remember being impressed with how Stidham has played in the preseason the past couple of years. Sean Payton can absolutely win with a backup quarterback. He’s done it before. You may even be surprised to see what Stidham can do with the ball (I honestly think he’s a better deep ball passer than Nix).

The Pats still have to come to our house to play. This defense is still full of dogs. This team has been playing for each other all season long. It isn’t going to stop just because Nix got injured. Cheer loud and proud for this team next weekend. We are still in this dance.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...70307/broncos-vs-bills-no-bull-playoff-review
 
Broncos special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi is expected to interview for the Ravens head coaching position

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According to 9NEWS Denver’s Mike Klis, Denver Broncos special teams coordinator Darren Rizzi is expected to interview for the Baltimore Ravens head coaching vacancy. He previously interviewed for the New York Giants head coaching position before they hired former Ravens head coach John Harbaugh. Now, Rizzi will interview for Harbaugh’s old job in Baltimore.

Broncos STC Darren Rizzi is expected to get a HC interview with Ravens per source. Rizzi earlier impressed in interview with Giants, who obviously couldn’t pass up John Harbaugh. #Broncos assistants Rizzi/Joseph/Webb available for second HC interviews next week.

— MikeKlis9NEWS (@mikeklis9news) January 19, 2026

Rizzi, along with Vance Joseph and Davis Webb, can interview in person for these head coaching jobs starting next week after the Championship games. If the Broncos lose, all three coaches will be eligible to be hired that week, but if they advance to the Super Bowl, interested teams will have to wait until after the Big Game to officially hire them.

Back in 2024, Rizzi served as the New Orleans Saints’ interim head coach and ended up being a popular coach amongst the fans and players during his short stint there. He did interview for the job last season, but it ended up going to Kellen Moore instead. Rizzi would then reunite with Sean Payton in Denver to be his special teams coordinator with the Broncos.

It was a slow start for Rizzi with the Broncos as the special teams unit had some struggles. However, the unit continued to improve as the season went on and became a reliable strength of this team. Kicker Wil Lutz was mostly automatic this season, rookie punter Jeremy Crawshaw improved as the year went on, the coverage units were solid, and returner Marvin Mims Jr. was a weapon and had a punt return touchdown.

Rizzi will be the third Denver Broncos coach to interview for the Ravens head coaching position. The Ravens met virtually with Vance Joseph and Davis Webb during the Broncos bye week and now will meet with Rizzi sometime in the future.

The Ravens moved on from Harbaugh after a disappointing season and will be looking for someone to turn them back into Super Bowl contenders and get MVP quarterback Lamar Jackson and that offense back on track.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...terview-for-the-ravens-head-coaching-position
 
Former Broncos have utmost confidence in Payton, Stidham, and the defense to win AFCCG

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Good morning, Broncos Country!​


The Jarrett Stidham Hype Train is in full force as the Broncos and fans set their sights on winning the AFC Championship game with a backup quarterback after a devastating season-ending injury to Bo Nix.

And I am all in on the hype train. Outlook is everything when a trip to the Super Bowl is on the line. And if there are two more perfect hype men than former Super Bowl 50 champions Emmanuel Sanders and Aqib Talib to make you feel good about the Broncos’ chances on Sunday, I don’t know who they would be.

Both cite Sean Payton as reason for tons of optimism.

“Look, I have the utmost confidence in Stidham because of Sean Payton, right?” Sanders said on DNVR Monday, recalling his stint with Payton’s New Orleans Saints in 2020 when Drew Brees was hurt, guys were out with COVID and the whole team was banged up. “And Sean was still winning. And that just goes to show what type of coach he is. And that’s why, you know, I got the utmost confidence in this Broncos team.”

Talib, too, told Skip Bayless on The Arena, that Payton has always “carried capable backups,” including Mark Brunell, Chase Daniels, Teddy Bridgewater and Jameis Winston — each of whom experienced success in the backup role under Payton.

“Look, I have the utmost confidence in Stidham because of Sean Payton, right? And Sean was still winning. And that just goes to show what type of coach he is. And that’s why, you know, I got the utmost confidence in this Broncos team.”

emmanuel sanders

“We know Payton saw something in Stiddy because he paid him a two-year, $12 million contract just to make sure he locked in a great backup,” Talib added.

The two former Broncos also vouched for Stidham’s ability, given what they saw during training camp.

“I got to see him against the 1s, and the day I was there, he gave us work,” Talib said. “A pocket passer with a f***ing live arm. He can make every throw. I saw a guy who knows the offense, knows the system, [makes] quick decisions and [has] a live arm.”

But let’s not fool ourselves. The true Broncos’ X-factor? Its defense.

In a shootout with the Bills, the Denver defense had five takeaways, one of them being a remarkable game-saving interception from Ja’Quan McMillian.

“We’ve got the best defense in the league,” Talib added. “We got the turnover train rolling, so we’re going to create turnovers and that’s how we’re going to win this game. I’m telling you.”

Sanders also believes Stidham should rest easy knowing his defense will have his back.

“If I’m Jared Stidham, I’m also saying ‘I got a defense that can back me, I got receivers and I got Sean Payton that’s going to put me in a great position.‘ All I got to do is manage the game and complete my passes and do my job.‘”

"It's Sean Payton man, he always carries a capable backup… We still got the best defense in the league. We going to create turnovers and that's how we are going to win this game."@AqibTalib21 is still riding with the Broncos in the AFC Championship despite Bo Nix's injury. pic.twitter.com/IbuEmGbqut

— The Arena: Gridiron (@ArenaGridiron) January 19, 2026

There’s also a slight “revenge factor” for Stidham, who was drafted by the Patriots in 2020 but never got the job, losing out to Cam Newton and later Mac Jones.

Real or imagined, Sanders advises that Stidham “lean into all the things” that can get him ready to compete.

“This is an opportunity of a lifetime. Take advantage of it,” Sanders says. backup QB as his first-ever start comes in the AFC Championship game. “And, you know, I got a feeling he’s been ready. Listening to Sean, just how he speaks about him and everything, gives me the ultimate confidence, too.”

Sanders is also cautioning the Patriots from getting too confident just because they are “playing the backup.”

“We got a defense that can create turnovers. We got an offensive coordinator that can put us in the right position,” Sanders said. “Those guys [Patriots] will be fooling themselves if they think this is going to be a cakewalk.”

And that is especially true at Mile High. Sanders admitted it always felt good to make a play in front of Broncos Country.

“It’s crazy cause I’m finally watching the game in the stands and I’m like ‘dang I get it man,’” Sanders said. “And I knew it was nothing better than making plays in front of Broncos country, getting up, pounding my chest, and the whole crowd just going wild.”

But ultimately, however Stidham chooses to prepare himself to play the biggest game of his career, Sanders advises just keeping steady.

“Everybody should be coming in that huddle saying, ‘Man, look, one play at a time.’ One perfect play at a time,‘” Sanders added. “And let’s stack 60-some plays and see what the results end up being.”

Oh dang, that’s an easy one…

A WIN!!!

An epic battle in the Mile High City.

But we’re not done yet. pic.twitter.com/9wt2IMjNOf

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) January 20, 2026

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...n-payton-stidham-and-the-defense-to-win-afccg
 
Rocky Mountain addresses only for Broncos vs. Patriots gameday tickets?

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The Denver Broncos want a sea of orange for Sunday’s AFC Championship Game and it appears gameday tickets are being limited to the Rocky Mountain region. New England Patriots fans trying to buy tickets are apparently getting denied with this message:

Patriots fans are being blocked from buying tickets to the AFC Championship in Denver.

Only Rocky Mountain billing addresses allowed. pic.twitter.com/vUkY7juHmc

— Only In Boston (@OnlyInBOS) January 19, 2026

Many fans didn’t understand how this is allowed, but someone tagged GrokAI to clarify and according to that bot, “NFL teams, including the Broncos, often restrict playoff ticket sales to local billing addresses to prioritize home fans, limit opposing supporters for better home-field advantage, and combat ticket brokers/scalpers. This practice is legal and has been used in past AFC games, like in 2016.”

AI is often wrong, but I couldn’t find any clarification outside of that Grok thing and, frankly, I don’t care as long as only a handful of Patriots fans are allowed in the building on Sunday.

It looks like you can still pick them up through third-party sellers like Ticketmaster and Stubhub anyway. There were also plenty of Rocky Mountain Pats fans offering up their addresses to pack the stands. Either way, it doesn’t matter to me other than I found this to be hilariously funny and wanted to share with my fellow Broncos fans.

Go Broncos! 🤣

Update: Saw this from Mike Klis on X. It’s definitely on purpose! Sorry, Boston.

Move by Broncos makes sense to me.

Broncos spokesman Patrick Smyth: "As we’ve done for previous AFC Championship Games, the extremely limited amount of single-game tickets on sale for Sunday was restricted to the Rocky Mountain Region to prioritize Broncos fans. With more than… https://t.co/QHqGM0Rgit

— MikeKlis9NEWS (@mikeklis9news) January 20, 2026

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...os-vs-patriots-gameday-tickets-region-blocked
 
Denver Broncos Film Review: Garett Bolles vs. Buffalo Bills

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It may have taken 10 years, along with plenty of strife along the way, but the heartbeat of this team, Garett Bolles, has finally played in and won his first home NFL Playoff game. If anyone on this team deserved a moment like this, it absolutely was Bolles (or maybe Courtland Sutton).

Bolles had his work cut out for him though. The Bills defense boasted a strong pressure package and had a very diverse playbook to work out (notice the past-tense for the Bills) of and there was much Bolles had to be prepared for. The burden of protecting Bo Nix’s blind side fell on Bolles’ shoulders. Just how well did he do on Saturday?

Stat crunch​


Not including kneel downs, the Broncos had 66 offensive snaps against the Bills over the span of 11 drives (not including the one to end the first half that was just a field goal). 17 of those snaps were designed run plays while 49 of them were designed pass plays. Bolles played every one of those snaps.

Bolles did not have any blown blocks nor did he give up any TFLs. He gave up one pressure and two QB hits.

Bolles finished with zero penalties.

I credited him with three “Bad” blocks, three “Meh” blocks, 10 “Alright” blocks, 48 “Good” blocks, and one “Great” block. This gave Bolles a total score of 58 points out of a possible 66, scoring a 87.5%.

In run protection he had 14 out of a possible 17 points (82.4%) and in pass protection he had 45.25 out of a possible 49 points (92.3%).

In general​


The Broncos relied on the arm of Bo Nix the majority of the game, so there wasn’t too much to look at in terms of run blocking film for Bolles. But on those plays Bolles mostly did well, but it might have been one of his weaker games in this department, at least if we’re going off of just his score.

On his two “Meh” run blocks it wasn’t that he did poorly or get blown backwards and give up a play, more so he didn’t win the block even if it was relatively inconsequential. For example, on one play he failed to secure the reach block on a linebacker. The linebacker didn’t make the play, but it was an unsuccessful rep nonetheless. And on the other one he got stalemated at the line. So again, not bad, just not good.

But with the one rep of him not being able to secure the reach block, there was another of him working a slick bit of hand fighting that did earn him the edge on the reach block. He had successes to balance out his mistakes on similar play calls.

Also, given the small sample size of run blocks, one poor block could really affect your score. Predominantly he was good and even had a nice highlight that we’ll take a look at later.

In pass protection, while he did give up two QB hits (one causing a near-fumble) one of them was not egregious and occurred a second after Nix got the pass off. And he gave up both of these QB hits in the same manner, which was interesting. Each time he was trying to bat down the hands of the defender when contact was initiated, and each time he missed or didn’t get enough contact, which gave the defender an easy path to the edge.

But when Denver really needed him, Bolles was unstoppable. When they were in obvious passing situations near the end of the game, he was lights out. On drives nine, ten, and eleven Bolles did not have any blocks graded less than “Good” the entire time. That’s 14-straight reps were the Bills defender didn’t have a chance of getting to Nix. That’s remarkable given the situation the Broncos were in and the ability of the Buffalo defense.

And Joey Bosa, the vaulted pass rusher, didn’t even get close to Nix the entire time Bolles was lined up against him. We’ll take a look at a play were Bosa was even getting bullied.

The specifics​


Pass play – Drop back – Bad block

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This is a simple mistake but one that forces Nix to have to throw the ball away to avoid taking a hit. And I don’t know if I even want to fully blame Bolles or rather chalk this one up to a great defensive scheme, but I think I’ll take the harsher option given how good Bolles is and how he usually is able to pick up these blocks.

The Bills have an edge defender walked up to the line of scrimmage and he’s lined out wide. The DE and DT to the side of that defender are running a stunt. Both of those guys end up moving inside to open up the C gap for that edge blitzer. And Bolles does a good job of passing off Bosa and does eventually see the blitzer, but he’s too late and unable to get to the outside or get a hand on him.

This is a really tough situation to be in if you’re Bolles. Your primary block is the DE. He slants inside so you have to get your head inside as you should then be expecting a stunt, which means a looper is coming around your way. If you do this then there is hardly a chance you can then look outside unless you already had that defender keyed pre-snap. Maybe Bolles should have. Maybe the protection should have been a slide to the left. But that’s also not up to the tackle, usually.

I think there’s a strong case to make that this should be graded a “Meh”, but I’ll stay on the harsher side of the argument here.

Pass block – Drop back – Bad block

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Here is one of the QB hits that Bolles gave up. And like I said earlier, it all comes down to the initial bit of hand fighting.

Pay attention to his right hand. As the defender sticks out his arm to initiate contact Bolles attempts to swat it down and throw the DE off balance. But he’s unable to do so as the DE is still able to get his hand on Bolles’ chest. And since that swat attempt causes Bolles to turn out, than leaves a short edge for the DE to take and he nearly forces a fumble on this play.

Better contact and more vertical movement can help prevent this.

Pass play – Play action – Great block

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This was a perfect play all-around. Scores their first home playoff touchdown in 10 years, takes the lead, gets an offensive lineman (shout out Frank Crum) a touchdown, and Bolles is making Joey Bosa look stupid.

That initial pop he gives Bosa is fantastic. He has his base behind and underneath him, gets both hands to the chest, which stands Bosa up. He then follows up with a shot to the shoulder which knocks Bosa to the ground. And then he’s about to follow up with another shove as soon as Bosa gets back to his feet.

You know what? Screw it. This play makes me feel a certain level of energy that really gets me going. That feeling alone, I believe, helps dictate the sort of block that this should be graded as. I rebuke my initial thoughts and will be correcting this to a “Great” block. All grades will be adjusted. Bully ball is great blocking.

Run play – Outside Zone – Good block

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Here is the nifty bit of OZ blocking I was alluding to earlier. There’s nothing major that Bolles does here, in fact it’s fairly subtle. But it really makes the difference on this block.

Bolles’ goal on this block is to secure the outside shoulder of the DT. This will finish with his head to the left of the DT. At the start of this block, Bolles is close, but is stuck moving laterally with the DT while staying face-to-face with him. But then, aided by the upwards leverage on the play side shoulder he secured with his right arm, Bolles flips his hips and rips his left arm across the body of the DT, turns and runs with him and secures the outside edge.

This is textbook usage of the rip technique on reach blocking. It’s also a nice example of the block progressing through the length of the play.

Run play – QB Pin and Pull – Good block

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I must have said it a hundred times by now, but part of why the Broncos are the best team in the league in their Pin and Pull/ Crack Toss concepts is due to how good Bolles is at executing his block on the edge.

There’s nothing fancy that he does, but he’s an athletic force that easily gets to the edge and is able to close the distance on the defender and get a nice pop right on the inside shoulder. No defensive back can compete with the power of Bolles. And that’s why Bolles takes the helpless Bill all the way to his bench. That’s how you finish a block.

Just do yourself a favor and only watch Bolles and ignore the other thing that happens on this play.

Final thoughts​


Garett Bolles, while he didn’t have his best game of the season, kept Nix off of the ground the entire game. He was relentless and was one of the larger reasons as to why they were able to win this game. When they needed him most, he showed up.

Just another reason why Bolles will end up in the Ring of Fame when it’s all said and done. And hopefully he’ll have a Super Bowl title to go along with his numerous Pro Bowls and All Pros.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/bron...8/broncos-film-garett-bolles-vs-buffalo-bills
 
Denver Broncos vs. New England Patriots: Wednesday practice participation report

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With the brutal news after the Denver Broncos divisional round win over the Buffalo Bills of Bo Nix being done for the year with an ankle injury, the need to get healthy for the AFC Championship Game became a critical need. Two names are on that list for us to watch for: J.K. Dobbins and Luke Wattenberg. With Nix out, those first two are probably code red needs for this game. Surprisingly, both wide receivers Troy Franklin and Pat Bryant were at practice today as well.

Great news there on all injury fronts. First, Dobbins was practicing today for the first time since injuring his foot in Week 10. The rehab time on that felt like a iffy maybe for the Super Bowl at the time, but he’s well ahead of schedule and seemingly back at the most critical time for this football team. Wattenberg’s status is a little more questionable as the team did open his 21-day practice window today, but I should note he was the only guy of the four who was a full participant.

Though, when asked, head coach Sean Payton was adamant that he would not comment on any player’s expected return time from injury. So practicing is a good sign, but we won’t know if they are game-ready until Friday or even possibly until 90 minutes before kickoff with the gameday inactive report.

Here is your full practice report for Wednesday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Frank CrumTAnkleFULL
Lucas KrullTEFootFULL
Drew SandersLBAnkleFULL
JL SkinnerSQuadFULL
Luke WattenbergCShoulderFULL
Pat BryantWRConcussionLIMITED
J.K. DobbinsRBFootLIMITED
Alex ForsythCAnkleLIMITED
Troy FranklinWRHamstringLIMITED
Bo NixQBAnkleDNP

New England Patriots Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Joshua FarmerDLHamstringFULL
TreVeyon HendersonRBShoulderFULL
Terrell JenningsRBPassed Concussion ProtocolFULL
Robert SpillaneLBHandFULL
Carlton Davis IIICBConcussion ProtocolLIMITED
Christian EllissLBHipLIMITED
Hunter HenryTENIR – RestLIMITED
Morgan MosesOTNIR – RestLIMITED
Thayer Munford Jr.OTKneeLIMITED
Harold LandryLBKneeDNP
Marte MapuLBHipDNP

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...ew-england-patriots-wednesday-practice-report
 
Bo Nix shares post-surgery message on Instagram

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The Denver Broncos are heading into the AFC Championship Game without their star quarterback Bo Nix guiding them. That’s a tough break, but the game still has to be played. Nix had surgery on Tuesday and today he made his first statement since. I shared this over in The Feed section first, but felt this was news that warranted all the channels.

Broncos QB Bo Nix via IG pic.twitter.com/bxWR4CQayQ

— MileHighReport (@MileHighReport) January 21, 2026
The last few days have been hard to put into words.

What started as one of the most exciting games I’ve ever been a part of ended with some of the most devastating football news I’ve ever received. This is not how I imagined my season would come to an end, but our season has been defined by overcoming adversity and responding to it.

I can’t express how much this team and organization mean to me and how much I believe in them. I couldn’t be more proud of our guys. I couldn’t be more confident in Jarrett. And I couldn’t be more excited for what’s next.

Thank you all for the kind words, love and support over the last few days. Thankful for my trainers, Beau, Vince and Dr. Waldrop for taking great care of me.

God never says oops, and he is always good. He has big plans for this team. We’re not finished, as a matter of fact we’re just getting started. We’re just going to keep climbing higher.

Go Broncos.

It’s a tough break for him and for the Broncos, but this ride isn’t over. As a fan, I couldn’t be happier to have Bo Nix as the franchise quarterback of this team. I can’t wait to see what he does in his career.

But first, they’ve got an AFC Championship Game to go win!

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-news/170506/bo-nix-post-surgery-message-on-instagram
 
Denver Broncos vs. New England Patriots: Thursday practice participation report

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The Denver Broncos only had one change over the previous days’ practice report with wide receiver Pat Bryant progressing from limited to a full participant. It is looking like he might be good to go for the AFC Championship Game against the New England Patriots on Sunday.

Meanwhile, running J.K. Dobbins, center Alex Forsyth, and wide receiver Troy Franklin remain limited for the second consecutive day. Though the word is that Dobbins is trending in the right direction. Center Luke Wattenberg completed his second-straight full day of practice, so it looks like he’ll be likely good to go for this game as well.

Obviously, Bo Nix is out and likely heading to injured reserve in a few days after having successful surgery on his ankle. Us fans hope for him to have a good recovery and be 100% come training camp for next season.

Here is your full practice report for Thursday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Pat BryantWRConcussionLIMITEDFULL
Frank CrumTAnkleFULLFULL
Lucas KrullTEFootFULLFULL
Drew SandersLBAnkleFULLFULL
JL SkinnerSQuadFULLFULL
Luke WattenbergCShoulderFULLFULL
J.K. DobbinsRBFootLIMITEDLIMITED
Alex ForsythCAnkleLIMITEDLIMITED
Troy FranklinWRHamstringLIMITEDLIMITED
Bo NixQBAnkleDNPDNP

New England Patriots Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Joshua FarmerDLHamstringFULLFULL
TreVeyon HendersonRBShoulderFULLFULL
Terrell JenningsRBPassed Concussion ProtocolFULLFULL
Robert SpillaneLBHandFULLFULL
Carlton Davis IIICBConcussion ProtocolLIMITEDLIMITED
Christian EllissLBHipLIMITEDLIMITED
Hunter HenryTENIR – RestLIMITEDLIMITED
Mack HollinsWRAbdomenLIMITED
Morgan MosesOTNIR – RestLIMITEDLIMITED
Thayer Munford Jr.OTKneeLIMITEDLIMITED
Garrett BradburyCIllnessDNP
Harold LandryLBKneeDNPDNP
Marte MapuLBHipDNPDNP

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.../broncos-vs-patriots-thursday-practice-report
 
Scouting the Enemy: New England Patriots

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The Denver Broncos have the opportunity to punch their ticket to Santa Clara and represent the AFC in Super Bowl 60. In order to do that, they will have to take down a well-coached New England Patriots squad that is having a banner season of their own. It won’t be easy, but if the Broncos can limit the ability of their X-Factor players on offense and defense, they will have a good shot at winning on Sunday. Here is a deeper look at Denver’s AFC Championship Game opponent.

2025 New England Patriots Regular Season Review


The Patriots sported a 14-3 record and won the AFC East division title. They were a well-rounded team on both sides of the ball. They finished the regular season second in points scored and third in yards gained on offense. On defense, they allowed the fourth fewest points and were eighth in yards allowed. They ranked tenth in turnover margin.

The Patriots Offensive X-Factor: Drake Maye — Quarterback


In his second season in the National Football League, Drake Maye experienced a significant uptick in production in efficacy under Head Coach Mike Vrabel and Offensive Coordinator Josh McDaniels. They don’t have many star players on offense, but McDaniels’ play-calling ability and Maye’s efficiency at quarterback made the Patriots’ offense one of the best in the NFL in 2025.

In seventeen regular season games, Maye threw for 4,394 yards, completed 72-percent of his passes (tops in the NFL), and had 31 touchdowns with just 8 interceptions. He added 450 yards on the ground on 103 carries with 4 touchdowns. Those numbers earned him a trip to the Pro-Bowl and second-team All-Pro honors. He’s obviously their top playmaker and a primary reason why the Patriots had so much success this season.

One thing the Broncos did well against the Buffalo Bills was negating Josh Allen’s ability to throw down the field. They held Allen to 0-of-9 on balls that traveled 20 yards or more down the field. Deep ball passing is one of Maye’s best traits and Denver’s secondary is going to need another top-tier performance to shut down New England’s aerial attack.

Maye has looked a bit shaky compared to his regular season efforts in the post-season, but he certainly has the ability to play at a high level. Limiting his impact as a passer and runner will be the top priority for the Broncos’ defense if they hope to advance to Super Bowl 60.

I cannot find a Drake Maye weakness pic.twitter.com/m28u8fFjkI

— Ian Hartitz (@Ihartitz) January 21, 2026

The Patriots Defensive X-Factor: Milton Williams — Defensive Lineman


The Patriots aren’t just good on offense. They also have a tremendous defense. There were a handful of players that could have earned this honor, but I decided to tab Milton Williams as their defensive X-Factor. After spending four years with the Philadelphia Eagles, Williams earned himself a lucrative free agent deal making him the second-highest paid interior defensive lineman at $26 million per season.

Most Patriots fans would tell you he has been worth every penny. Appearing in 12 games for the Patriots in ’25, the fifth-year pro had 29 tackles, 8 tackles for loss, and 3.5 sacks. Keep in mind, he was still a 60-percent snap-share player despite missing five games. When he is on the field, he makes an immediate impact and commands a lot of double teams. He isn’t just a good pressure player on the inside, but also a dominating run defender.

If the Broncos hope to beat the Patriots, they will have to limit Willliams’ impact. Hopefully Luke Wattenberg is able to start at center—that would certainly help matters. I’d be extremely concerned if Alex Forsyth or Sam Mustipher saw a majority of the snaps going up against Milton and Christian Barmore. Those guys are game-wreckers on their defensive line.

Protecting Jarrett Stidham and opening up the running lanes will be mission critical for Denver to have a shot at winning. The Broncos’ offensive line has performed very well this year. They will certainly need to come up clutch against Williams and the Patriots’ defensive front seven to win the game.

Milton Williams was a home-run free-agent signing for the Patriots. 🫡

The former Eagles defensive tackle posted the 5th-highest grade in PFSN's DT Impact metric this season (87.9).

Williams in 12 regular season games w/ New England, per TruMedia:

😤 29 tackles
😤 8 tackles… pic.twitter.com/cHjZUDOVMA

— PFSN (@PFSN365) January 22, 2026

How the Broncos can secure a victory over the Patriots


This is quite the matchup for the Broncos. There is no doubt both Denver and New England are very well-coached teams. While the Patriots are the more well-rounded of the two, I believe the Broncos can win the game.

First and foremost, Denver needs to find a way to get their ground game going. If J.K. Dobbins is able to play, that should really jumpstart Denver’s rushing attack and help be more efficient on early downs. In turn, that will alleviate pressure from Jarrett Stidham’s shoulders.

On defense, the Broncos’ front seven has to get home and rattle Maye. Additionally, Defensive Coordinator Vance Joseph will have to come up with a gameplan that helps neutralize New England’s ability to accumulate big plays in their passing game via their tight ends and running backs.

Most importantly, winning the turnover battle is an absolute must. The Broncos can’t afford to give up the ball and need to find a way to make a big play or two on defense to give Stidham and the offense a shot to capitalize. It’s a tall order, but I expect Denver to rise to the occasion and take care of business in another close game.

Hart’s Prediction: Broncos 23, Patriots 20.

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denver-broncos-news/170337/scouting-the-enemy-new-england-patriots
 
Denver Broncos vs. New England Patriots: Injury Report for AFC Championship Game

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The Denver Broncos final injury report has come out ahead of their AFC Championship matchup with the New England Patriots.

The first notable thing is the situation around J.K. Dobbins. Head coach Sean Payton would not confirm if he’ll be playing earlier today, but now that the final injury report is out we can see he is ruled out for this game. That was something we were all hoping would not be the case, but he did continue to practice so if Denver can get past the Patriots we might see him on the field for the Super Bowl.

Good news on the Pat Bryant front, though. Payton confirmed that he had no concussion symptoms the day after and he’s had his helmet upgraded. I’m assuming that means the padded larger-sized helmet. I’m cool with that. Anything to help him stay safe and out there helping the team win.

For the Patriots, they will be down their team sack leader with outside linebacker Harold Landry being ruled out for the game. Anything that helps keep Jarrett Stidham in a clean pocket is welcome news and hopefully this means he’ll get more help on interior protection assignments.

Here is your full practice report for Friday.

Denver Broncos Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Pat BryantWRConcussionLIMITEDFULLFULL
Frank CrumTAnkleFULLFULLFULL
Lucas KrullTEFootFULLFULLFULLOUT
Drew SandersLBAnkleFULLFULLFULLOUT
Luke WattenbergCShoulderFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
J.K. DobbinsRBFootLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDOUT
Alex ForsythCAnkleLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Troy FranklinWRHamstringLIMITEDLIMITEDLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
JL SkinnerSQuadFULLFULLLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Bo NixQBAnkleDNPDNPDNPOUT

New England Patriots Injury Report​

PlayerPos.InjuryWednesdayThursdayFridayGame Status
Garrett BradburyCIllnessDNPFULL
Carlton Davis IIICBConcussion ProtocolLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Christian EllissLBHipLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Joshua FarmerDLHamstringFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
TreVeyon HendersonRBShoulderFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
Hunter HenryTENIR – RestLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Mack HollinsWRAbdomenLIMITEDFULLQUESTIONABLE
Terrell JenningsRBPassed Concussion ProtocolFULLFULLFULLQUESTIONABLE
Morgan MosesOTNIR – RestLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Thayer Munford Jr.OTKneeLIMITEDLIMITEDFULL
Robert SpillaneLBHandFULLFULLFULL
Marte MapuLBHipDNPDNPLIMITEDQUESTIONABLE
Harold LandryLBKneeDNPDNPDNPOUT

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...os-vs-patriots-injury-report-afc-championship
 
Ultimate (enemy) Fan: Broncos lose, but it will be close

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Broncos Country, it is AFC Championship time and that means another special week of the UFG!!!

First up is an “enemy” version with my good friend Mike Grimaldi, who qualifies as a diehard Patriots fan (but does have a son-in-law who loves the Broncos so perhaps one day we’ll win him over!) In fact, it was the classic Manning-Brady rivalry and my posts on MHR back in the day that brought us together. And in spite of him being a fan of a terrible team, we’ve become friends 😉

His wit and knowledge are obvious and give us some fun things to debate. And even though he obviously picks the Pats to win, it’s not a blowout, so there’s that. PLUS…he hates the Chiefs as much as we do!

Thank you, Mike, for being part of the best series at Mile High Report!

Now let’s get into it…

The Duke is our Honorary Captain for the AFC Championship Game. 🐐@johnelway x #ClimbHigher pic.twitter.com/SlidZZUH1L

— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) January 23, 2026

Patriots v. Broncos in the AFCCG


MHR – Who would have thought these two teams would be back in the AFCCG 10 years after their last matchup featuring two Hall-of-Famers, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady? Does it feel like this could develop into a fun rivalry once again?
Mike Grimaldi: I think so. The Broncos and Patriots fan bases likely share the same sentiment: We are quite happy to have seen the last of the Chiefs and Mahomes dominating the AFC West—and for the entirety of the conference for that matter. Denver has a great defense and an under-appreciated QB in Bo Nix. I know I was giving you grief when the Broncos drafted him, noting that he was already getting AARP literature in the mail.

MHR – Be honest…did you think at the beginning of the season that your beloved Patriots would be in the AFCCG? What was your prediction for the Pats back in August?
Mike Grimaldi: Absolutely…..not. As of 10 days ago I thought it would be Buffalo and Houston. Which points to my awesome predictive powers. I wanted to have a season of football relevance. After a week one loss to the Raiders and a week three loss to the Steelers we were wondering why we seemed to be blowing a golden opportunity to get off on a positive note. Stevenson was coughing up the ball like an 18th century factory worker with tuberculosis. I thought we might go 9-8 or 10-7.

MHR – Bo Nix is obviously not playing and your team gets to face a back-up QB that your team tried to sign as ITS backup before the season. There’s plenty of “Stiddy” hype here in the Mile High City, but when Jarrett Stidham takes the field on Sunday, it will be 749 days since his last pass attempt in a regular season game. Do you think the Pats defense is salivating over this? Are you?
Mike Grimaldi: I don’t think he will turn into Marcus Stroud, if that’s what you’re asking. Payton will not put him in a position to fail. The Pats defense is solid and as long as they limit the number of trips the Broncos make into the red zone, where our D had been awful for most of the year, then I think the Pats like their chances. I do believe Vrabel has been preaching that our opponents are the Broncos and not Jarrett Stidham. I am more concerned about stopping Harvey from breaking long runs and the fact that Dobbins is practicing again. The Broncos OL is not the Chargers OL. The weather will not be as sloppy as the Texans had to deal with last week. The Pats are not going to shut down Denver’s offense like they did the past two weeks. But in all honesty I am much happier facing Stidham than I would be facing Nix. Obviously the bookmakers agree.

MHR – The Patriots are 8-0 on the road this year but haven’t won IN Denver in a while. What makes you confident your team will be able to change that this weekend? Do you like Vrabel’s “just business as usual” approach to handling the altitude?
Mike Grimaldi: Other than moving out to Colorado on Tuesday, I am not sure what we can do. I’ve always thought it was ridiculously unfair to have an NFL franchise located so close to the sun. I am sure there are standard league-wide practices for attempting to get ready to play at altitude. When my daughters moved out to Denver in 2022 and 2023 I remember getting winded just moving their stuff up one flight of stairs. Of course I am a semi-retired grandfather who hasn’t been in shape since the Patriots went to their first SB in 1985-1986 season.

MHR – The Patriots and Broncos have been on similar paths the last two years – making some strides last year with rookie QBs, building a young team with the Draft, surprising a lot of teams this year and going to the AFCCG. But the Pats have had a bigger turnaround, 4-13 last season to 13-4 this season. What do you attribute most to this turnaround?
Mike Grimaldi: We went 14-3, but don’t let the facts get in the way. [*editor’s note: hey, this is my column, I’ll use whatever facts fit my narrative!!] Equal parts coaching and a ridiculously easy regular season schedule. Maybe more of the latter, but we aren’t apologizing for it.

MHR – Drake Maye has been magnificent this year but has had some fumble issues in the two playoff wins. Will we be lucky enough to get that Drake Maye this weekend? What do you think his biggest strengths are? What makes you the most nervous about his play?
Mike Grimaldi: I pray to God that you don’t. His ability to throw the most beautiful long ball and his ability to step up in the pocket. I am most nervous about our coaches calling too many plays that rely on slow-developing pass routes. Given the Broncos propensity to sack QBs I am hopeful we plan accordingly.

MHR – Another young guy on offense, rookie left tackle Will Campbell, has had a rough playoffs, accounting for three sacks and nine pressures to Maye, two of which led to Maye fumbles. He’ll be facing one of the best defenses in the NFL which also happens to account for the most sacks. How do you expect things to go for him on Sunday?
Mike Grimaldi: We have been working on an arm-lengthening technology to help him out. He is a solid LT but he is built like a T-Rex. At least you don’t have Willie Anderson there. Obviously we need our TEs and RBs to chip whoever you have coming from that side. I think we are successful when we let him roll away from pressure on the left side but I don’t think I saw much of that last week until later in the third quarter. He seems like a bright guy so I have to hope he has learned from his mistakes. Maybe inserting a camera in the back of his helmet to help him recognize pressure. I know that if Bill was still coaching we would be definitely working with the people at the CIA to get that done, surreptitiously, of course. As we used to say in NE, if you ain’t cheating you ain’t trying.

MHR – We love to tout Patrick Surtain because he’s a stud, but you have a rookie DB doing big things and gaining a lot of praise from some vets. How important will safety Craig Woodson be to your success on Sunday? Aside from slipping him a couple of gummies before the game, what is the best way for the Broncos’ offense to neutralize him?
Mike Grimaldi: Stuff him in his locker and padlock it.

MHR – Is Hunter Henry 100 years old yet? 😉 Too bad. He’s having one of his best years in the NFL and doing so with a young QB. How big of a threat is he for the Broncos – who, as you know, have not been known to cover TEs very well.
Mike Grimaldi: He is certainly a huge security blanket. He has been quite consistent in the years since he left the Chargers. Austin Hooper at TE also helps this offense.

MHR – The Pats’ running back duo of Treyveon Henderson and Rhamondre Stevenson has accounted for nearly 1800 yards of offense this season. How big of a role do you expect the Patriots’ run game to have on Sunday? How big of a role would you like it to have?
Mike Grimaldi: I would love it if Maye went 8 of 10 for 83 yards and two TDs because that was all we needed. I think Stevenson is one of the most underrated RBs in the NFL. Henderson does not have the moves of a Barry Sanders but he does share the boom/bust problem. These guys are capable of putting up 200 yards , but if the Pats run for at least 130 yards I will be happy.

MHR – The Broncos’ running game has been inconsistent at best and non-existent at worst this season, which is often as much to do with Payton’s play calling as it has to do with the running backs themselves. Which is the better approach for Denver…more running or more passing when facing your defense?
Mike Grimaldi: Probably the former. If you are relying on Stidham to beat the Pats through the air then you are playing from behind. You do not want to be in that position. Seriously, how many screen passes can you dial up?

MHR – Give me your “X-factor” players on the Pats offense, defense and special teams for this championship. What about X-factors for the Broncos players?
Mike Grimaldi: On offense it has to be time for a Boutte call. We may get Mack Hollins back but I imagine even if he does play that he is not in shape to compete too much at altitude. On defense it is Milton Williams. You cannot stop him. He and Barmore in the middle remind me of those NY Giant teams that gave Brady so much trouble. QBs do NOT like pressure coming up the middle. Marcus Jones is the best punt returner in the AFC. Our kicker, Andy Borregales, is quietly having a great season. With respect to the Broncos, I have to be honest, I don’t know the team as well as I used to. I know that my son-in-law is a huge Bonitto fan. There is also the guy in the secondary with all the hair (not sure if he is a LB or a safety) and he seems to be wherever the ball is. On offense I would be concerned that Engram has been quiet, but he certainly can be a matchup problem for anybody. I would say Matt Prater on special teams but I know he plays for Buffalo now….

Predictions


Stats for Drake Maye and Jarrett Stidham? 15/20 180 and 2 TDS for Maye; and 12/20 for 160 and 1 TD for Stidham

Stats for the top two running backs on both teams? 145 and 1 TD for Pats and 85 and1 TD for Denver

Number of yards receiving/TDs for the top receivers on both teams)?
65 1TD and 75 1 TD

Longest FG for Broncos? 53 yds Longest for Broncos? 54 yds

Number of sacks to Drake Maye? To Stiddy? 4 for Maye and 2 for Stidham

Broncos player with the most tackles? Patriots player with the most tackles? Bonito for Denver and Spillane for Pats

Who gets the first sack of the game for the Broncos? Whoever is lining up against our LT

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

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

How many times will the announcers mention the epic duel in 2015-16 AFCCG between Manning and Brady? 3

Final Score? NE 24 DEN 17

The feeling is mutual, @Edelman11… We don't like yo ass either. And I'm glad we ruined your SB hopes in 2013 & 2015.😆

Broncos own the Patriots!💯 pic.twitter.com/FF8iiKksDs

— BroncoFanatic97 (@BroncoFanatic97) January 8, 2023

The Favorites


Favorite John Elway playoffs win? Hahahahaha 😉 I don’t know any.

J/K…favorite Patriots win with Tom Brady? SB vs. Atlanta

Favorite win since Tom Brady? Earlier this season against Buffalo, in Buffalo.

Team you love to beat the most in the AFC? Chiefs

Team you hate to lose to the most in the rest of the AFC? It used to be the Ravens but now that Harbaugh is gone, I’d say the Jets because that would be so pathetic.

NFC team you could cheer for in the Super Bowl? This year, Rams. Any other year probably Commanders (I used to live in DC and was a huge fan of Joe Gibbs).

If you don’t win the AFCCG, would you be ceero? WTF does CEERO mean? [*editor’s note: lol, I have no idea. Clearly a weird typo that auto-correct couldn’t figure out, but I’m happy you did!] Have you been drinking again? If you meant “cheering for” then I’d say the Broncos. But I definitely would not be betting on them.

NFC team you have wanted to face more than any other in the Super Bowl? Of the teams we DID face, probably the Panthers because they weren’t that intimidating.

Favorite Patriots player on the current roster? Mack Hollins

Favorite Patriots player of all time? Mack Herron (the only Patriot I was taller than).

Favorite new guy/rookie on the team? Aside from Hollins I would say either Milton Williams, Kyle Williams, or Craig Woodson.

Rituals on game day? Brady T-shirt and Pats sweatshirt. Probably prefer to watch the game alone but texting throughout with my son, my son-in-law (Broncos fan) and nephew (Eagles fan).

Favorite game analyst/commentator? Favorite is Peyton. Least favorite is Brady (not that you asked, although he has improved a bit).

MHR – What is your all-time favorite Broncos-Patriots game?
Obviously it was 11/24/2013 when you guys did your Atlanta Falcons impression and blew a 24-point lead and lost 34-31 in OT.

MHR – How did you become a Patriots fan? Meeting Jim Plunkett in 1970. Growing up in the 1960s, I was a Packers fan (living in Massachusetts). Then in the 70s, the Packers were waning and the Pats had a bright shiny new toy.

(Nov 24 2013) Tom Brady led the Patriots to a comeback win against Peyton Manning & the Broncos after being down 24 at halftime!pic.twitter.com/SROwHf8HQU

— TB EGO (@TomBradyEgo) November 25, 2023

Source: https://www.milehighreport.com/denv...e-enemy-fan-broncos-lose-but-it-will-be-close
 
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