Broncos will likely play an international game within the next 2 years

The Broncos appear poised to play an international game within the next two seasons, with Mexico the team’s most likely destination.

During an interview on “NFL GameDay” on Sunday morning, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said the league aims to play eight international games during the 2025 NFL season.

Goodell said the NFL will “certainly” return to Germany and the United Kingdom and “definitely” play in Spain next fall. The league “expects” to return to Mexico City and Brasil, and they are looking into potentially playing a game in Ireland.

If there are no repeat teams, eight games would feature 16 clubs on the international schedule in 2025. If that format continues and the NFL balances the schedule evenly, every team would play an international game every other season.

That means the Denver Broncos will likely play an international game in either 2025 or 2026. The Broncos’ most likely destination is Mexico, the team’s designated “International Home Market Area.” The NFL prefers teams to play in their IHMA, so Denver is poised to play in Mexico.

The league typically announces teams for international games before the full schedule release in the spring. Stay tuned. The NFL could begin announcing international teams for the 2025 slate as early as January.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Even Pat Surtain’s dad (a former Chief) thinks the refs favor KC

Even Pat Surtain’s dad (a former Chief) was not happy with questionable officiating during Sunday’s game in Kansas City.

NFL fans have been suspicious in recent seasons that officials favor quarterback Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs with their calls. Sunday’s 16-14 win over the Denver Broncos certainly added fuel to the fire.

The Chiefs benefited from several questionable calls against the Broncos in Week 10, including a safety Brandon Jones being penalized for illegal contact, which negated a Nik Bonitto sack on third down.

After Kansas City was gifted a first down, they went on to score a touchdown, so that penalty was arguably a four-point swing. Fans and pundits quickly lashed out against the call on Twitter/X.

Among those who objected to the call was the father of Denver cornerback Pat Surtain II — Patrick Surtain Sr. tweeted: “These refs…smh.”

The elder Surtain played cornerback in the NFL from 1998-2008, spending his final four years in the NFL with the Chiefs. He obviously has more loyalty to his son than to his former team.

The Broncos had plenty of chances to win Sunday’s game, and they acknowledged that after the loss. Fans will cope with conspiracy theories, but Denver can’t blame the officials. The Broncos need to play better going forward, even if it feels like the officiating is one-sided.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Broncos’ locker room dejected after ‘worst loss’ ever against Chiefs

More than one Broncos player said Sunday was the worst loss of their lives. There’s still hope for the final stretch of the season, though.

Denver Broncos players were dejected in the locker room after a 16-14 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

Broncos defensive lineman Zach Allen told The Denver Post‘s Parker Gabriel that it was “the worst loss I’ve ever had in my life.” Denver pass rusher Jonathon Cooper also said he had never felt a loss as painful as Sunday’s.

On the final play of the game, the Chiefs blocked Wil Lutz’s 35-yard field goal attempt to seal Denver’s fate. Lutz was close to tears in the locker room after the game.

Andrew Mason of DenverSports.com tweeted that he hadn’t seen the team’s locker room that devastated since a double-overtime loss to the Baltimore Ravens in the 2013 playoffs.

“I told our team I was proud of how they fought,” Broncos coach Sean Payton said after the game. “I thought we outplayed them. Nonetheless, you have to beat a champion. We weren’t able to do it. It is gut-wrenching.”

The game came down to the final play, but Denver shouldn’t have let it get to that point.

“It wasn’t just one play [that cost the game],” pass rusher Nik Bonitto said after the loss. “I mean, I had plays that I could have made today. [There were] plays on defense that we all could have been better on. So I mean, everybody can look at the last play, but there’s many plays in the game that you can look at that we could have been better.”

“It felt like we outplayed them, but we didn’t finish,” Payton said. “We had an opportunity to right at the end. We controlled the ball. We have to be able to finish. That one will take a while. It will sting.”

Broncos veteran right tackle Mike McGlinchey isn’t ready to throw in the towel.

“If you’re hanging your head at this point of the season, I don’t think you belong in this league,” McGlinchey said after the game. “We’re 5-5. We’re right in the thick of it. And we kind of control our own destiny here as this goes out. We have an opportunity to go and win a lot of football games with a lot of season left. And that’s what we’re going to try to do.”

Bo Nix, Denver’s rookie quarterback said the team won’t hang their heads.

“We feel we can compete against a lot of teams in this league, all of them, really,” Nix said. “We’ve faced a lot of good teams this year and have been in one-possession games, it feels like, in every single one of them. We’re close, we just have to find ways to get over the hump, find ways to make a play when they don’t and make the play that wins it.

“In this league, that’s the line between playoff teams, championship teams and all the other guys. We’re here to fight. We don’t have a bunch of guys that are going to hang their heads and quit. We’re going to continue to fight and battle. Each week is going to have something else in store and we just have to respond.”

The Broncos will now attempt to bounce back at home when they host the Atlanta Falcons (6-4) at Empower Field at Mile High next week.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Broncos kicker Wil Lutz reacts to blocked field goal vs. Chiefs

“I’ve been a part of some tough losses and this probably takes the cake,” Wil Lutz said after the Broncos lost to the Chiefs on Sunday.

The Denver Broncos lined up for a 35-yard field goal attempt on the final play of Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs with a chance for Wil Lutz to kick a game-winning field goal.

The kick was blocked and the Broncos lost 16-14.

After the game, Lutz addressed media members in the locker room.

“I’ve been in a lot of tough games,” Lutz said. “I’ve lost games in tough ways and that one’s up there. So hopefully we can learn from it and be able to finish off the next one.”

Lutz also had a 60-yard field goal attempt fall just short right before halftime. Going into Sunday’s game, the Broncos were 9-of-9 on field goal attempts within 40 yards, as the Denver Post‘s Parker Gabriel pointed out on X. Being perfect before the block is no consolation for Lutz.

“Nothing will make you feel better about this situation,” Lutz said. “Like I said, I’ve been a part of some tough losses and this probably takes the cake in recent memory. At the end of the day, two opportunities and two misses.”

Broncos offensive lineman Alex Forsyth was driven back on the play, leading to the block. He took responsibility after the game.

“I have to be stouter,” Forsyth told Gabriel. “They had four guys on that side. But it didn’t surprise us. I have to be stouter.”

With the loss, Denver dropped to 5-5. Up next for the Broncos is a home game against the Atlanta Falcons (6-4) next week.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Chiefs block last-second field goal to beat Broncos 16-14

A heartbreaking loss for the Broncos, who had a last-second field goal attempt blocked in a 16-14 loss to the Chiefs on Sunday.

The Kansas City Chiefs (9-0) hung on to defeat the Denver Broncos (5-5) 16-14 on Sunday afternoon after blocking a last-second field goal attempt on the final play of the game.

After the Broncos and Chiefs exchanged punts on their first two drives, quarterback Bo Nix led a nine-play, 80-yard drive that ended with his six-yard touchdown pass to Devaughn Vele to take a 7-0 lead early in the second quarter. Kansas City answered that score with a 36-yard Harrison Butker field goal to make it 7-3.

Nix then went 70 yards on five plays and connected with Courtland Sutton on a 32-yard touchdown pass to extend the lead to 14-3.

Following a questionable illegal contact penalty called against safety Brandon Jones that kept a Chiefs drive alive, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes later threw a two-yard touchdown pass to Travis Kelce to make it 14-10. Broncos kicker Wil Lutz later attempted a 60-yard field goal that fell just short going into halftime.

In the third quarter, Butker converted a 28-yard field goal to cut KC’s deficit to 14-13. Butker later kicked a 20-yarder to take a 16-14 lead in the fourth quarter.

Denver then got the ball back and went 43 yards on 13 plays to set up a 35-yard field goal attempt that could have won the game. Chiefs linebacker Leo Chenal blocked the kick, securing a KC win.

Up next for the Broncos is a home game against the Atlanta Falcons at Empower Field at Mile High in Week 11.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Broncos’ 53-man roster for Sunday’s game vs. Chiefs

Here’s a look at the Broncos’ updated 53-man roster ahead of the Chiefs game.

After a flurry of roster moves this week, the Denver Broncos have set their 53-man roster for Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

First, the Broncos traded outside linebacker Baron Browning to the Arizona Cardinals in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick on Monday.

After that, Denver activated center Luke Wattenberg (ankle) from injured reserve to the 53-man roster to fill Browning’s old post. Additionally, the Broncos elevated fullback Michael Burton and linebacker Zach Cunningham from the practice squad to the game-day roster for Week 10.

Here’s a look at the team’s active roster following those moves.

Denver Broncos 53-man roster

Position Name Number
QB Bo Nix 10
QB Jarrett Stidham 8
QB Zach Wilson 4
RB Javonte Williams 33
RB Jaleel McLaughlin 38
RB Audric Estime 23
FB Michael Burton 20
FB/TE Nate Adkins 45
TE Greg Dulcich 80
TE Adam Trautman 82
TE Lucas Krull 85
WR Courtland Sutton 14
WR Marvin Mims 19
WR Troy Franklin 16
WR Devaughn Vele 17
WR Lil’Jordan Humphrey 84
OT Garett Bolles 72
OT Mike McGlinchey 69
OT Frank Crum 73
OT Alex Palczewski 63
OL Matt Peart 79
G/C Quinn Meinerz 77
G Ben Powers 74
C/G Alex Forsyth 54
C/G Luke Wattenberg 60
OL Calvin Throckmorton 76
DE Zach Allen 99
DE John Franklin-Myers 98
DL D.J. Jones 93
DL Malcolm Roach 97
DL Eyioma Uwazurike 96
DL Jordan Jackson 94
OLB Jonathon Cooper 0
OLB Nik Bonitto 15
OLB Jonah Elliss 52
OLB Dondrea Tillman 92
ILB Cody Barton 55
ILB Justin Strnad 40
ILB Levelle Bailey 56
ILB Zach Cunningham 42
CB Pat Surtain 2
CB Ja’Quan McMillian 29
CB Riley Moss 21
CB Levi Wallace 39
CB Kris Abrams-Draine 31
CB Tremon Smith 1
CB Damarri Mathis 27
DB Devon Key 26
DB Keidron Smith 43
S Brandon Jones 22
S P.J. Locke 6
S JL Skinner 34
K Wil Lutz 3
P Riley Dixon 9
LS Mitchell Fraboni 48

With a 53-man roster and a 17-player practice squad, Denver has 70 players under contract, plus several players on injured reserve.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Video of Broncos QBs answering questions ‘only girls should know’ goes viral

This is a must-watch video of Broncos quarterbacks Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson answering questions “only girls should know.”

Denver Broncos quarterbacks Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson recently went viral on TikTok after their wives asked them a series of questions that “only girls should know.”

Nix’s wife, Izzy, shared the video on TikTok and it quickly went viral. At the time of publication, the video has been viewed more than three million times on TikTok. The video has also been reuploaded on Twitter/X, and the reuploaded videos have also surpassed more than three million views.

“The way he sits up bc he got it right 🤣” one TikTok commenter said of Wilson’s reaction to answering one of the questions correctly.

Added another fan: “The type of content ESPN could never give us 😂”

Many fans noted that they loved seeing the three quarterbacks hanging out off the field.

“my qb room has movie night together 🤯😍😍” a fan commented on TikTok.

Added another: “wow elite QB room chemistry.”

After one fan commented “me finding out my QBs just chill together,” Izzy replied that the QBs get together every Thursday night (presumably to watch that week’s NFL game).

Bo, Jarrett and Zach hanging out and being quizzed by their girlfriends/wives. Good to see our QB room has fun
byu/Myoplasmic inDenverBroncos

“The way Bo looks at Stiddy when Zach knows what a money piece is 😂😂” Romi Bean commented.

Stidham was definitely the most focused on the game. One commenter on TikTok relayed Stidham’s exclamation: “Jarrett locked in on the game ‘what is this guy doing!'”

Nix is Denver’s starting quarterback. Stidham and Wilson are the second- and third-string QBs, respectively. Clearly, they’re good friends off the field.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

NFL fines Broncos safety Devon Key $4,417 for facemask penalty

The NFL fined Broncos safety Devon Key $4,417 for his facemask penalty against the Ravens in Week 9.

The NFL has fined Denver Broncos safety Devon Key $4,417 for his facemask penalty in the second quarter of last week’s game against the Baltimore Ravens, according to multiple reports.

Key was featured in Denver’s secondary over the last two weeks while P.J. Locke recovered from a thumb injury. Locke has since been cleared to return to the starting lineup (with a cast) against the Kansas City Chiefs this weekend. Key totaled 14 tackles over the last two games.

Earlier this season, Denver defensive lineman Malcolm Roach ($25,324), safety P.J. Locke ($27,944), defensive lineman John Franklin-Myers ($14,069), safety Brandon Jones ($11,255), outside linebacker Nik Bonitto ($8,791), fullback Mike Burton ($7,653), center Luke Wattenberg ($5,872) and tight end Lucas Krull ($5,083) also received fines from the NFL.

The money the league receives from fines is “donated to the Professional Athletes Foundation to support Legends in need and the NFL Foundation to further support the health, safety and wellness of athletes across all levels,” per the NFL.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Broncos elevate 2 players from practice squad for Chiefs game

The Broncos have elevated FB Michael Burton and LB Zach Cunningham from the practice squad to the game-day roster for the Chiefs game.

The Denver Broncos are calling up some reinforcements from the practice squad ahead of their Week 10 showdown with the Kansas City Chiefs.

The Broncos elevated fullback Michael Burton and linebacker Zach Cunningham from the practice squad to the game-day roster on Saturday. They will revert back to the practice squad on Monday.

Players can be elevated up to three times during the season without having to clear waivers to return to the practice squad. This will mark Burton’s third and final practice squad elevation. He will likely return to the 53-man roster when a spot opens up, perhaps as early as next week.

Burton has dressed for all nine games this season, playing 90 snaps on offense and 164 snaps on special teams. This week marks the first time Cunningham has been elevated this season. He will likely play on special teams while providing depth behind Justin Strnad at linebacker.

Sunday’s game will be regionally televised on CBS (view the TV map). Playing at home, KC is considered a heavy favorite against the Broncos.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]

Broncos have a big decision to make after activating Luke Wattenberg

After activating Luke Wattenberg from injured reserve, the Broncos have to decide between starting him or Alex Forsyth at center.

After spending the last four games on injured reserve with an ankle injury, Denver Broncos center Luke Wattenberg was activated to the 53-man roster on Saturday, the team announced.

Denver had room for Wattenberg on the active roster after trading outside linebacker Baron Browning to the Arizona Cardinals earlier this week.

Broncos coach Sean Payton now has to make a tough decision for the starting lineup ahead of Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Wattenberg started the first five games of the year and Alex Forsyth started the last four games while Wattenberg was sidelined. Denver will have to decide between going back to the original starter or sticking with the center who has played well in his absence.

Perhaps helping Forsyth’s case is the fact that he played with quarterback Bo Nix at Oregon.

“Alex was right there with the center battle during training camp, and obviously he and Bo have a good relationship,” offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi said on Oct. 10. “That’s always important with centers and quarterbacks.”

Wattenberg is a former fifth-round draft pick who has one year remaining on his contract. Forysth was picked by the Broncos in the seventh round of last year’s draft and he has two years left on his deal.

We probably won’t get an answer on who Denver plans to start until the first snap on Sunday.

[vertical-gallery id=620142]