Sean Payton turns to Bo Nix as Broncos starting QB

Bo Nix starts at QB for the Denver Broncos in 2024

The trend of starting rookie quarterbacks in 2024 added another name on Wednesday. Sean Payton decided first-round pick Bo Nix would be the signal-caller for the Denver Broncos.

Or as Broncos social media posted: It’s Bo Time.

Nixon came to the Broncos from Oregon after starting his collegiate career at Auburn. In two years with the Ducks, he threw for 8,101 yards and 74 touchdowns.

He beats out Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson for the job.

Payton is taking the team in a new direction after seeing Russell Wilson fail to deliver in Denver.

Nix joins Caleb Williams and Jayden Daniels as rookies to start at QB in 2024. Other first-rounders from this year are Drake Maye (Patriots), Michael Penix Jr. (Falcons), and J.J. McCarthy (Vikings, injured).

Nix also is in a short group of players with five letter names. One that comes to mind for MLB player Ed Ott. Anyone else?

Broncos QB battle: Bo Nix looks likely to be starter

#Broncos QB Battle is wrapping up with Bo Nix looking to be certain starter, competition now for the secondary slot

Although the Denver Broncos picked up additional quarterbacks Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson as a contingency plan in case 2024 draft pick Bo Nix didn’t gel with the offense, things are looking good for Nix after his start versus the Packers in a 27-2 preseason victory.

Head coach Sean Payton praised Nix following the game but maintains he isn’t ready to drop the name of the starter for his fresh offense. Nix is the clear choice, the rookie from Oregon is outperforming Stidham and Wilson who both have already been in the NFL for multiple seasons.

After this second outing, it seems the question that remains is which QB will end up as backup to Nix, Jarrett Stidham or Zach Wilson? Stidham was backup last season and got called up to start briefly after Russell Wilson was benched.

Zach Wilson is hoping to recover from a tough start to his career. He was brought in to be fresh blood and has delivered a touchdown in the preseason which Stidham hasn’t done, however, his completion percentage hasn’t been stellar in his snaps for the Broncos.

Payton may have a harder time choosing his secondary than he will his starter, this coming game against the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday will wrap up the preseason and seal the fate of hopeful backups.

Ex-QB Chase Daniel breaks down Nix’ plays in Broncos QB battle

Ex-NFL QB Chase Daniel, breaks down the snaps Denver Broncos Bo Nix participated in on the field against the Colts as the Broncos choose between 3 QBs for a starter

The Denver Broncos are using the preseason to guide their pick for the next starting quarterback and currently three contenders, Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson, are competing for the job.

Head coach Sean Payton is impressed with the trio of candidates after all of them played the first preseason tilt ending in a narrow 34-30 victory against the Indianapolis Colts and looks to the upcoming matches to inform a final decision on the Broncos QB1 spot.

Ex-NFL QB Super Bowl champion Chase Daniel, a veteran who was signed with 8 teams over a 12-year stint in the league, breaks down the snaps Bo Nix participated in on the field against the Colts.

While the rookie Nix from the University of Oregon looks to be a possible favorite against the more experienced post-draft additions Stidham and Wilson, the Broncos will send out their cast of quarterbacks against the Green Bay Packers in the next match where all three players compete to inspire confidence in head coach Sean Payton.

Broncos head coach on starting QB battle: ‘I like where we’re at right now’

#Broncos coach Sean Payton made statement on deciding whether Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham or Zach Wilson will lead Denver’s offense in 2024

The Denver Broncos currently do not have a starting quarterback for their 2024 campaign, and their strategy is to use the preseason to see which of three choices will top the depth chart in the regular season.

During comments to the media this week, head coach Sean Payton made a statement about the progress he has made in deciding whether Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham, or Zach Wilson will lead the offense.

“It’s a good group to work with and I know the offensive coaches feel that way,” Payton said. “I feel that way. I like where we’re at right now and that’s encouraging for our team. Because when that’s unsettled and maybe not as far along, then there’s a lot of things you can do well, and yet the team sees there’s a ceiling maybe on what you can do.”

Nix, Stidham, and Wilson split up the action in the first Broncos preseason match where the team faced the Indianapolis Colts, and Coach Payton says he liked what he saw when Nix was on the field.

“His decision-making was good,” the veteran head coach said of the Oregon product. “I felt he was comfortable in the pocket. I thought his locations were good. The number one thing to do at quarterback is lead your team and we scored. There’s two plays where I think he can set his feet.

“He’s kind of backing up a little and we can clean that up, but I liked the production with his group while he was in there. Ultimately that’s their job. The whole group as a whole — and I’m talking the three of them [quarterbacks] — we didn’t have any sacks. There were a lot of positives.”

Payton is looking to the next match for more information on his choice between three experienced quarterbacks, with Nix looking to be a possible favorite after logging 125 passing yards and one touchdown in his first appearance in a Broncos jersey.

2024 record prediction: Denver Broncos

We take a look at the Denver Broncos and attempt to predict where they may end up at the end of the season.

A team that has bumbled the quarterback position more than just about anyone in the league over the past decade lends their hope to their new rookie quarterback and their whiz head coach in Sean Payton. Last season this Denver team was surprisingly competitive despite their thin roster and mediocre quarterback play, and they are hoping a second year in this Payton offense will be able to uplift them back into playoff contention.

Quarterbacks Bo Nix and Zach Wilson are the most notable additions to the team, with the two aforementioned signal callers currently locked into a camp battle for the starting position. While Wilson certainly didn’t have much success in New York, there are still flashes of talent that perhaps Payton could tap into. Losing safety Justin Simmons and receiver Jerry Jeudy will create a bit of a hole on both sides of the ball, but bringing in receiver Josh Reynolds and drafting Oregon receiver Troy Franklin should help maintain some of the offense left behind.

This Broncos team has a lot to prove with not a ton of star power outside of Patrick Surtain and Garett Bolles. Whoever wins the quarterback battle will need to fully embrace the Sean Payton system in order to overcome the talent gap in the rest of the AFC West. Defensively this team should still field a respectable unit. If this team cannot get good quarterback play over one of their new signal callers, it could be a long season for everyone in Denver.

Record prediction: 5-12

Marlin Briscoe, who broke the color barrier for pro quarterbacks, deserved better

Marlin Briscoe, who broke the modern color barrier for pro quarterbacks, never got the opportunities his talent deserved.

After a rookie season in 1968 when he set a franchise record for touchdown passes for the Denver Broncos that stands to this day, Marlin Briscoe was in for a rude awakening.

That season, Briscoe stood in relief for injured starter Steve Tensi, and in 11 games and five starts, completed 93 passes in 214 attempts for 1,589 yards, 14 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. The pick total and 41.5% completion rate imply that the Nebraska-Omaha alum had some things to work on at the quarterback position, but Briscoe put up his first-year totals in an American Football League in which Tensi himself completed just 40.3 percent of his passes and threw five touchdowns to eight interceptions, and John Hadl of the San Diego Chargers was the league’s most prolific quarterback with a 47.3% completion rate, 27 touchdowns and 32 interceptions.

It was not the nature of the AFL in 1968 to have quarterbacks with the efficiency that would be required in the modern game—those quarterbacks were throwing it deep more often and playing against defenses that could be far more aggressive.

So, Briscoe’s statistics weren’t out of the ordinary for his league, and certainly for his experience. He had been selected in the 14th round of the 1968 AFL draft as a defensive back and was only allowed to compete as a quarterback—the position he played very well in college—because Al Caniglia, his college coach, told him to ask for an adaptation to his contract.

“[Caniglia] told me, ‘Listen, Denver is one of the only teams in the [AFL] that practices in the city, where the media and fans can watch,” Briscoe recalled in William C. Rhoden’s Third and a Mile. “See if you can insert a little trial—two or three days—at quarterback in your contract.’ I thought it was a great idea. When [assistant coach] Stan Jones came to negotiate the contract, I said, ‘You know, I’ll sign the contract if Denver gives me a three-day trial. All I want to do is test my skills out for three days.”

Jones agreed that it was a good idea, though head coach Lou Saban and director of player personnel Fred Gehrke disagreed. The schism produced a holdout situation in which Briscoe threatened to go get a teaching job instead of accepting Denver’s $15,000 contract offer. Saban and Gehrke agreed to Briscoe’s terms, and though he generally got half the number of throws the other potential quarterbacks received in training camp, he made enough of an impact for the Denver Post to write an article about him.

After the season, Briscoe returned home to Nebraska to get his degree. His cousin called him from Denver to inform Briscoe that the Broncos had signed a quarterback named Pete Liskie from the Canadian Football league, and, word was, the team was having quarterback meetings without him.

“So, I took a clandestine flight to Denver,” Briscoe remembered. “I stood outside the coach’s office, and out walks Steve Tensi, Lou Saban, quarterbacks coach Hunter Anderson, Pete Liske, and a couple [other] quarterbacks. They couldn’t even look at me. If I didn’t think it was wrong for a man to cry, I’d have cried. I was that hurt. I just turned and walked out. I knew I wasn’t in their plans. It was like I’d never played that first year.”

In Saban’s mind, it appeared to be so.

“Marlin was an exceptional athlete, but he didn’t have great size. He was always throwing out of a well. I figured his best position was receiver, but we were searching for a quarterback. In the four and a half years I was with the Broncos, we never found a guy who could take over the position. We brought in quarterbacks by the dozens. It didn’t make much difference what their backgrounds were, I was going to play whoever could win—because if you don’t win, it’s over.”

Well. The Lou Saban era in Denver lasted from 1967 through 1971, and in that time, 10 different quarterbacks had at least one passing attempt for the team. Among those quarterbacks, Briscoe led the pack in touchdown percentage, passer rating, quarterback rating, and passing yards per game. The Broncos had a 2-3 record in the games he started, but Briscoe was clearly the best quarterback on a series of bad teams.

In a 21-14 win over the Miami Dolphins, Briscoe brought his team back from a 14-0 deficit, running six times for 29 yards and two touchdowns — including the game-winner.

“Marlin gave us some real Black power today,” veteran defensive lineman Dave Costa said after the win.

But nothing Briscoe did was enough for Saban.

“I did what I thought I had to do,” Saban said in Jeff Miller’s Going Long. “He went down to Miami a year later and played receiver and did very well. People said, ‘You were right.’ You’ve got to look out for the product, what’s best for the team.”

Briscoe stayed in the NFL as a receiver through the 1976 season, catching 224 passes for 3,537 yards and 30 touchdowns. He made the Pro Bowl in 1970 with the Bills with 57 receptions for 1,036 yards and eight touchdowns, and he was a part of the Miami Dolphins’ Super Bowl teams in 1972 and 1973, including the only perfect season in NFL history in 1972.

But the denial of opportunity at the quarterback position never left Briscoe—it always haunted him. Don Shula made him the Dolphins’ emergency quarterback in 1972 after Bob Griese was injured and veteran Earl Morrall took over. As Briscoe later said, “If I was good enough to be an emergency quarterback, why weren’t other teams willing to give me a chance?”

Hall of Fame receiver Paul Warfield remembered in Third and a Mile that the Dolphins did have one specific trick play in which Briscoe would be able to throw the ball.

“I was the slot receiver. Marlin lined up one yard off the line. The quarterback would throw him a quick hitch pass—actually, a lateral. I’d run downfield toward one of the two defenders, under control, kind of like a blocker. As soon as they came toward me, I’d release downfield, and Marlin would deliver the football. It put tremendous pressure on the defense, put them in a bind.”

Oct 1973; Miami, FL, USA; FILE PHOTO; Miami Dolphins running back Mercury Morris (22) and Marlin Briscoe (86) during the 1973 season at the Orange Bowl. Mandatory Credit: Manny Rubio-USA TODAY Sports

The racial component is the clear and obvious reason for Briscoe’s enforced departure from the quarterback position, and it was quite clear that neither league was ready for a starting Black quarterback in 1968. In Briscoe’s case, there’s also an element of inflexibility about the position that went on at the time that got in his way.

In the late 1960s, a scrambling quarterback was still thought to be a Bad Thing. Hank Stram of the AFL’s Kansas City Chiefs had installed a moving-pocket offense combined with play action for quarterback Len Dawson that was quite effective, but functional mobility wasn’t considered a universal advantage for quarterbacks as it is today.

And while Briscoe was able to use his mobility to overcome his height disadvantage by creating throwing lanes on the run, he was a couple of generations ahead of his time with that idea—it’s obviously a common practice nowadays for quarterbacks, and if Briscoe came along in 2018 instead of 1968, his story would likely be radically different. He was a pioneer, and like a great many pioneers in any field, he found the terrain inhospitable and adaptation difficult as the forces arrayed against him were more powerful and entrenched that he was.

Briscoe became a mentor to some of the Black quarterbacks who followed in his wake, rooming with Shack Harris in Buffalo and talking with Joe Gilliam after Gilliam’s brief starting stint with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1974. All we can do is wonder how he would have fared given the opportunities he deserved.

Source: Very unlikely that Broncos trade Pro Bowl WR Courtland Sutton

The Broncos receiver seems to be staying put

The Denver Broncos and Pro Bowl wide receiver Courtland Sutton have been at a cross roads for the last several weeks. However, it appears bridges are starting to be mended.

Sutton told DNVR that he would be reporting to mandatory minicamp this week. Shortly after, a source told Touchdown Wire that the odds of Sutton being traded was a “2/10.”

When asked if the situation between both parties was trending in a positive direction, the source said “slowly, but yes.”

This comes after a source told Touchdown Wire back in May that Sutton was unhappy with his current contract, as he only has $2 million in guaranteed money remaining on his deal. The source also said that the Pittsburgh Steelers and Los Angeles Rams reached out to Denver both before and during the 2024 NFL Draft about acquiring Sutton via trade, but were told no.

Sutton is coming off a career-high 10 touchdowns in 2023.

Denver Broncos’ most underrated player: EDGE Jonathon Cooper

Denver Broncos edge-rusher Jonathon Cooper really hit his stride as a disruptor in his third NFL season.

Jonathon Cooper lasted until the seventh round of the 2021 draft despite a somewhat productive career at Ohio State in which he broke through the Buckeyes’ insane pass-rush depth to show what he could do. He had three sacks and 33 total pressures on just 228 pass-rushing reps in 2020, and he was right there for the picking when the Broncos took him with the 240th overall pick.

Cooper had the same challenge early on in the NFL, as he once again had to break through limited reps to prove that he belonged. It all kicked in last season, as Cooper set career highs in sacks (nine) and total pressures (55) on 421 pass-rushing snaps. Eventually, Cooper tends to prove that he should be playing more often than he is, and he does it against the best possible competition. 

Denver Broncos’ best sleeper pick: Devaughn Vele, WR, Utah

The Broncos have an underrated receiver in Utah’s Devaughn Vele, who has a fascinating backstory.

A receiver/cornerback star at Rancho Bernardo High School in San Diego, Devaughn Vele was frustrated by his lack of juice in the national recruiting services. He received no big-school offers, and instead of working his way up through a smaller program, he chose to serve three years in a religious mission in Samoa with the Church of Latter-Day Saints. When he came back to America, he walked on at Utah in 2019, got a scholarship in 2020, and became an Honorable mention All-Pac-12 player in 2022. Last season, despite missing three games due to injury, Vele caught 43 passes on 70 targets for 593 yards and three touchdowns. Because of all the things he’s done, Vele will come into the NFL as a 26-year-old, and he’ll turn 27 on December 12, before his first professional season is over.

Most likely, that’s why he lasted until the 235th pick in the seventh round.

Broncos General Manager George Paton was asked last week about selecting players of a specific age, and his answer in Vele’s case was definitive.

“Vele in particular, he was just too talented to pass up. We had a clear vision for him fitting in with what we are doing. Twenty-six [years old] is still young, relatively speaking. He plays a mature game. He has all the traits. He is a prototype. He is big and fast. For a big guy, he can get in and out of his breaks. We just thought he was too talented to pass up.”

The Xs and Os with Greg Cosell: Inside the NFL’s press coverage revolution

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys get deep into a new press coverage revolution in today’s NFL.

Over the last few seasons in the NFL, a lot of coaches and executives have tailored their defensive schemes in one specific fashion — an increase in press coverage from their cornerbacks. Not only the old-school aggressive press-man coverage we all know, but also mirror-match press man coverage, where a cornerback trails the receiver through his route as the route is declared.

Why? Because NFL offenses have found all kinds of ways to beat the old Seattle Cover-3 stuff from a decade ago with 3×1 and 2×2 receiver sets, and the route concepts inherent in those deployments. Now, if you’re rolling out that “Country Cover-3,” your defense is going to be in trouble.

There’s also the element of quick game in the league, which has increased in recent years. When the quarterback is throwing out of zero- to three-step drops, there are times when edge defenders simply don’t have time to get to the quarterback before the ball comes out. So, logic dictates that if you can’t disrupt the quarterback in the timing of the down, you need to disrupt the timing of the receivers’ routes, forcing the quarterback to delay his reads and throws, and giving those pass-rushers that extra split millisecond to get home.

In this week’s edition of “The Xs and Os,” Greg Cosell of NFL Films and ESPN’s NFL Matchup, and Doug Farrar of Touchdown Wire and the USA Today Sports Media Group, investigate the NFL’s changes in press coverage, and the players who do it the best, including...

  • L’Jarius Sneed of the Titans;
  • A.J. Terrell of the Falcons;
  • Martin Emerson Jr. of the Browns;
  • Patrick Surtain Jr. of the Broncos;
  • Ahmad “Sauce” Gardner of the Jets; and
  • Joey Porter Jr. of the Steelers.

You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell” right here:

You can also listen and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…

and on Apple Podcasts.