Broncos QB Drew Lock gets ‘relatively good news’ on shoulder injury

Broncos QB Drew Lock avoided a season-ending injury.

Denver Broncos quarterback Drew Lock will be sidelined for 2-6 weeks after suffering a rotator/labral injury in his right throwing shoulder, according to KUSA-TV’s Mike Klis. Lock suffered a “severe rotator cuff strain,” according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Given that it’s not a season-ending injury, that’s relatively good news for Lock. Broncos wide receiver Courtland Sutton wasn’t as fortunate. Sutton will miss the rest of the season after tearing his ACL.

Lock suffered his injury when he was strip-sacked by Pittsburgh Steelers edge defender Bud Dupree in the first quarter of a 26-21 loss in Week 2.

“I tried to get out and I [was] stumbling,” Lock said of the play after the game. “I went around and tried to keep my feet. Then at the last second, I tried to tuck it. Obviously, the ball came out and I fell on it weird when I tried to tuck it at the last second.”

Before leaving Sunday’s game, Lock went 1-of-5 passing for 20 yards in Pittsburgh. This year, he has completed 60.53 percent of his passes for 236 yards with one touchdown pass and no interceptions, good for an 87.2 passer rating.

Jeff Driskel finished the game against the Steelers and played well, completing 18-of-34 passes for 256 yards with two touchdown passes and one interception. Driskel will likely start when the Broncos host the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Empower Field at Mile High in Week 3.

We put together lists of free agent quarterbacks and practice squad quarterbacks Denver might consider adding with Lock sidelined.

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Report: Jets won’t face injured Broncos QB Drew Lock in Week 4

Broncos QB Dew Lock is expected to be out 2-6 weeks after suffering a shoulder injury in Sunday’s loss to the Steelers.

Broncos QB Drew Lock is expected to be out 2-6 weeks with a sprained AC joint, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Lock left Sunday’s matchup against the Steelers and was seen in a sling postgame. He will undergo an MRI Monday to determine the severity of the injury, but all signs point to the second-year quarterback missing Denver’s Week 4 matchup against the Jets.

With Lock likely sidelined, Jeff Driskel will assume the starting role. Driskel stepped in for Lock in the Broncos’ 26-21 loss Sunday, nearly leading a valiant comeback effort. Driskel went 18-34 passing for 256 yards and two touchdowns.

New York will host the Broncos on a short week with a chance to steal a win now that Lock is sidelined for the foreseeable future.

Broncos updated QB depth chart after Drew Lock injury

The Broncos currently have two quarterbacks: Jeff Driskel and Brett Rypien.

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After losing quarterback Drew Lock to a shoulder injury, the Denver Broncos will likely consider looking at free agent quarterbacks available. Broncos general manager John Elway will also likely take a look at the quarterbacks on other teams’ practice squads.

For now, here’s what we know about the Broncos’ QB depth chart: Jeff Driskel is the fill-in starter and Brett Rypien is the only backup.

Driskel was signed during free agency to serve as Lock’s backup this season and he played relatively well against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday. Driskel is the most likely candidate to start for Denver in Week 3.

Rypien is a second-year quarterback who spent most of last season on the team’s practice squad. Rypien is back on the practice squad this year but he will likely be activated to the 53-man roster this week, unless the Broncos bring in a notable backup to serve as QB2 behind Driskel.

Denver should learn more about the severity of Lock’s injury today and then start making decisions at quarterback. If Lock is expected to miss multiple games, the Broncos could place him on injured reserve and have him return to the active roster three weeks later.

Expect the team to start making moves at QB in the coming days.

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Broncos are looking at quarterback options

The Broncos’ quarterback depth chart might not be completely finalized just yet.

After waving quarterback Brett Rypien, the Denver Broncos currently have two quarterbacks on the 53-man roster: Drew Lock and Jeff Driskel.

Lock will start this season and Driskel will likely serve as his backup but the Broncos will want to have at least one more QB available in case of injuries or illness. Denver might be planning to sign Brett Rypien to the practice squad but he’ll have to clear waivers first.

“We’ll see,” Broncos general manager John Elway said Saturday when asked if the team will make any moves at QB. “I think obviously with the practice squad’s as large as they are, we’ve been looking at different options of what we can do at the quarterback position.

“It really is in case we were to have an outbreak at that position, trying to solve that before we got there. I’m sure there’s — like many teams out there — we’re still looking for different options to try and avoid any catastrophe.”

The list of QBs who were cut this week includes Mike Glennon, Josh Rosen, David Fales, Matt Moore, Cooper Rush and Kyle Lauletta.

Four ex-Denver quarterbacks — Brandon Allen, Chad Kelly, Paxton Lynch and Trevor Siemian — also become available on Saturday.

The Broncos can begin building a 16-player practice squad on Sunday.

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Vic Fangio doesn’t think Broncos need a ‘quarantine quarterback’

Broncos coach Vic Fangio doesn’t believe the team needs to isolate a quarterback this season.

Two weeks ago, there was some buzz that the Broncos might consider adding a “quarantine quarterback” to have available in case one or more of Denver’s quarterbacks catch COVID-19 this season.

After practice Thursday, Broncos coach Vic Fangio seemingly shot down that possibility.

“I don’t think it’s necessary to be honest with you,” Fangio said. “Plus, it has to be with the right guy, somebody that has experience in your system that if the emergency happens you have them there.

“I don’t think — our quarterbacks have been meeting together all camp. They’re socially distanced like they should be. I think most teams are doing that. There hasn’t been an issue so far, knock on wood.”

Drew Lock will serve as Denver’s starter this season with Jeff Driskel backing him up. Brett Rypien will likely serve as QB3, but it remains to be seen if he’ll be on the 53-man roster or 16-man practice squad.

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Lions 2019 rewatch: Week 11 notebook from the shootout loss to the Cowboys

Dallas beat Detroit 35-27 in Ford Field in a game where the Lions’ backups played well

The 2019 rewatch project returns to Ford Field for a home date with the Dallas Cowboys in Week 11.

The visitors from Dallas brought a 5-4 record with them, fresh off a home loss to the Minnesota Vikings in Week 10. The Cowboys entered the contest 4th in scoring offense and 10th in scoring defense.

Pregame notes

The Lions were missing several regular starters not already on injured reserve. Most notable is QB Matthew Stafford, meaning Jeff Driskel gets his second start. Right tackle Rick Wagner and defensive ends Romeo Okwara and Da’Shawn Hand also missed the game due to injury. Bo Scarbrough made his Lions debut as the starting running back, the fifth starter at RB in 10 games.

Dallas did not have any regular starters inactive.

The referee for the game was Tony Corrente. Detroit wore white shirts and the Honolulu Blue pants, while Dallas donned their dark blue jerseys and silver pants.

First quarter

The first snap after Dallas gets the opening kickoff for a touchback is a great use of defensive creativity. Trey Flowers twists with A’Shawn Robinson and then safety Tavon Wilson blitzes in the void behind it. Dak Prescott throws the ball directly to Darius Slay in blanket coverage on Amari Cooper. Great start.

It gets even greater on the very next snap. Trey Flowers slams into Zeke Elliott at the line of scrimmage and forces a fumble that Jarrad Davis pounces on for the recovery. Huge hit, great job by Flowers to let the block flow away from him. Lions take over at the Dallas 28.

Frank Ragnow pancakes his man on the first snap, a nice run by Scarbrough. A couple of quick-hit completions from Driskel and a facemask penalty set up the Lions at the Dallas 5. Scarbrough takes advantage of a great seal block from Ragnow and an unusually deep set by the Cowboy LBs to plow into the end zone. Nice block from Marvin Jones on the TD too. Matt Prater’s conversion is good and the Lions spring out to a quick, too-easy 7-0 lead.

Dallas botches the kick return when Tony Pollard ignores his teammates telling him to kneel in the end zone. Several Lions cascade over him at the Dallas 14. Cowboys clearly did not have “return” on in looking at their blocking but nobody told Pollard. Oops.

The defense forces a quick 3-and-out. Great work in coverage by Jarrad Davis as an Elliott spy. Prescott looked for that on both 2nd and 3rd downs but Davis was in great position both plays. Flowers continues to dominate up front, nearly got a sack on 2nd down.

What ensues is a really bad offensive series for LT Taylor Decker. He earns a false start penalty and then misses the snap count on 3rd down, nearly getting Driskel blown up. Sam Martin salvaged dignity for Detroit with a great punt off a bouncing snap from Don Muhlbach. Great punt coverage by Dee Virgin and Cory Moore, though the Cowboys attempt at blocking here is charitably described as apathetic.

Two drives per team and it’s clear the Cowboys were not prepared to play. the next possession shows Dallas waking from its slumber. Prescott engineers a methodical drive that gets both him and the Cowboys very good OL into rhythm. It’s worth noting that every completion on this drive came when the Lions were in zone coverage, and Prescott missed every throw but one (on Rashaan Melvin) against man.

Devon Kennard comes up with a huge sack on 3rd-and-goal to keep Dallas out of the end zone. Lions pass coverage — dropping 8 with Davis spying Prescott — worked great in the red zone. Dallas kicks the short FG and it’s 7-3 Lions.

Second quarter

After a 3-and-out by the Lions offense, helped by a Kenny Golladay drop that probably should have been pass interference, the Cowboys keep the momentum.

With Slay effectively erasing Cooper from the field, Prescott turns to Michael Gallup and Pollard, in for Elliott at RB for the series. Pollard catches a simple crosser, Tracy Walker, who had made two very nice open-field tackles earlier on the drive, misses the open-field tackle and Pollard scoots in for a TD. Worth noting that Will Harris was still running away from the play well after Pollard caught it, no ball awareness.

What follows is one of the most embarrassing offensive sequences seen in any NFL stadium all season.

Decker’s rough day continues on the very next Lions snap. Robert Quinn blows around the edge with a nice shoulder dip and nearly strip-sacks Driskel, who avoids the first contact but succumbs to the second. On the 2nd down-and-long, both guards, Graham Glasgow and Kenny Wiggins whiff on their run blocks and RB J.D. McKissic gets annihilated by a flying Jaylon Smith in a tackle reminiscent of Jimmy “Superfly” Snuka of WWE fame in the 1980s. Third down sees Driskel very nearly throw a pick-six to LB Leighton Vander Esch after staring down T.J. Hockenson. This was as bad of an offensive series as I’ve seen from the Lions all year.

Thankfully Dallas screws up on special teams once again. An illegal block penalty and Pollard opting to sprint sideways for 30 yards instead of forward salvages some field position.

Detroit comes out in a 5-man front with Davis nad Christian Jones at LB but also Wilson playing as an OLB. Interesting look. Prescott has all day to throw an outlet swing pass to Elliott that picks up a 1st down, alas. Very nice coverage by Jones downfield.

Now Wilson has joined Davis as Elliott spies. Wilson travels with Elliott as he motions from one side of Prescott to the other. It works very well. Prescott wildly misses on 3rd down and the Lions have some life when Jamal Agnew breaks off a fantastic return that is once again more about Dallas’s special teams being truly awful. Four guys in the same lane?! Easy pickings for Agnew.

Detroit capitalizes. Good blocks on runs by Scarbrough from Frank Ragnow, Hockenson and Glasgow set up a too-easy red zone QB keeper for Driskel, who sashays in untouched. Great series for the Lions OL and they take the lead, 14-10. As bad as the last series was, this one was vintage ground-and-pound and it worked wonderfully.

Dallas answers impressively. Prescott isn’t even considering throwing at Slay, and he finds Gallup vs. Mike Ford down the field. Ford is guilty of interference but Gallup still makes a fantastic catch. Not one of the Lions’ four pass rushers crossed the line of scrimmage on the play, it must be noted. Elliott dives in two plays later and the Cowboys are right back on top 17-10 with just under 5:00 to play in the half. All momentum Detroit had is gone.

The Cowboys bury any hope of momentum with their next drive thanks to one big play. Chasing Randall Cobb on an intermediate corner route, Justin Coleman trips in traffic. Harris never sees to pick him up and Cobb gobbles up 49 yards before Amani Oruwariye runs him down. Harris made one of the worst open-field tackle attempts you’ll ever see, too; never even touched Cobb despite having a good angle.

Cobb lands in the end zone two plays later, surviving a helmet-to-helmet hit (which was correctly penalized) by Harris as he collects the catch. Coleman got torched in man coverage on the play, too. Great 2-minute offense by Dallas, egregious defensive effort from Detroit just before the half and it’s 24-14. The Lions did try a gadget play pass to Jones and it almost worked, except Driskel put too much air under the ball and Dahl was a good 12 yards down the field, drawing a penalty.

Third quarter

The Lions get the ball first off a touchback and come out running. And running. Seven of the first nine plays feature the run or an instant pass out from Driskel that effectively serves as one. Those seven plays net a total of just nine yards, but a Cowboys penalty and a nice YAC from McKissic on a pass keep the chains moving. Decker has come out of the locker room playing much more inspired football. This is also the best Hockenson has blocked over an extended series all year. That last point really shows when Jesse James comes in for a rep and flat-out misses a reach block that results in Scarbrough getting hammered at the line.

And then Marvin Hall happens. The Lions insert the speedster into the lineup and he runs away from both the CB and S on a deep corner. A well-protected Driskel hits him in perfect stride to set up the Lions with 1st-and-goal. Great play.

A rolling Driskel, showing good pocket awareness and poise, finds Jones in the back of the end zone two plays later. Nice subtle push-off from Jones made it look easier than it was. Prater drills the extra point and the Lions are back in business, down 24-21.

Lions D comes out in zone and Prescott instantly picks it apart. Asking Davis to stay with Cobb in zone coverage is worse than man coverage because any potential help is preoccupied with other assignments. Flowers and Kennard are both getting pretty consistent pressure (Lions rushing four) but the containment is poor. Prescott scrambles out of a would-be Flowers sack and embarrasses Wilson in the open field to get Dallas into the red zone. The defense holds with Kennard playing a great set and nice coverage from Slay and Coleman. Maher’s field goal — nearly blocked by Mike Ford — puts Dallas back up by six.

I love the G-power run with Scarbrough on the Lions’ next play. Dahl pulls nicely and creates a huge seam but Glasgow can’t hit the LB in space and the gain only goes for four. It could have been much more if Glasgow lands the block.

You might have noticed a lack of Kenny Golladay mentions. Just as Slay has erased Cooper from the field, Golladay is effectively wearing Chidobe Awuzie’s No. 24 jersey. There isn’t even a yard of separation on most every route. Golladay isn’t exactly asserting his will as a blocker, either. He certainly did not on this play.

Scarbrough continues to chug downhill impressively. If he gets to full stride before the defender can get to him, No. 43 is a real load to bring down. Ragnow, Dahl and Glasgow are having a good series here opening and sealing running lanes. Hockenson atones for a false start penalty with a very good seal block.

Fourth quarter

The Lions run the exact same punt gimmick play they did a week earlier, with up-back Logan Thomas (a former QB) sliding under center. Dallas panics and jumps offsides. Detroit’s execution on this was much cleaner and more urgent than the last time they tried it, and it buys a fresh set of downs.

The drive stalls near midfield and it stalls because Driskel makes poor decisions. The line is blocking better than he shows and he’s not seeing viable targets in time.

Slay is having a great game but he misses opportunities on consecutive throws to get an INT. The first is in deep coverage on Austin and the Cowboys WR is clearly guilty of pass interference to break it up. The next one is a gift from Prescott that somehow gets through both hands and into Cooper’s mitts. Prescott knows it’s a terrible throw from the second he lets go, as he immediately runs over to effort making a tackle.

This is a very frustrating possession. The Lions are playing good defense but the Cowboys keep grinding forward. Harris makes a nic read and tackle. Kennard is reliably generating pressure and forcing the issue. Davis has the outlet receiver locked down. But the Cowboys matriculate into the end zone, the key play being a nicely designed screen where Pollard makes Wilson miss in space. Elliott plunges into the end zone and it’s 35-21 with under 8:00 to play.

Driskel comes out and attacks with his legs. A 23-yard run that could be construed as a designed keeper. A strike on the move to Amendola, who expertly helps his QB by coming back to the ball. Then comes this TD:

Note the nice pass pro pickup from Ty Johnson and solid protection up front.

The ensuing 2-pt. conversion goes awry, leaving the score 35-27.

Dallas gets lucky again on the kickoff. Prater kicks the ball over Pollard’s head as the return man waits at the 10. Instead of going into the end zone it bounces straight up into Pollard. Ford just misses a tackle at the 10 and Pollard somehow scoots out past the 30 before Ty Johnson jumps on his back. So close to a huge play for Detroit but instead Dallas winds up getting a good bounce.

The Cowboys do the Lions a huge favor and insist on throwing the ball instead of draining the clock. One 3rd-down conversion to Gallup running away from Melvin on a crosser is the only thing that salvages positivity for the Dallas offense. After six plays (and a penalty) that takes off just 2:00 and doesn’t cost the Lions any timeouts, Dallas punts. Mike Daniels and Kennard again provide nice pressure, and Cobb helps by dropping a pass.

With 3:44 to go, Driskel and the Lions trot out at their own 14, with two timeouts. Golladay finally does something positive, and it’s spectacular. Driskel hangs up a deep post where Golladay split the coverage and was wide open. As he’s being facemasked by Darian Thompson as the ball arrives, Golladay still manages to complete the catch as he slams into the turf. Amazing play and the Lions are in business in Dallas territory. It should be noted that a more timely and accurate throw from Driskel probably results in a TD for Golladay here.

Driskel’s magic runs out, alas. A bad sack (Dahl whiffed in pass pro) and a couple of misfires to a fully covered Golladay gives the ball back to Dallas at the 2:00 warning. Coach Patricia elects to punt from the DAL 47 on 4th-and-26 instead of trying an early Hail Mary.

Detroit’s defense needs a stop. After smothering Elliott on 1st down for no gain, the Lions bite hard on the play-action bootleg. Prescott calmly finds an uncovered Blake Jarwin for the game-sealing conversion. Great play design by the Cowboys gets them the win.

Good games: Darius Slay, Bo Scarbrough, J.D. McKissic, Frank Ragnow, Marvin Jones, Devon Kennard, Dee Virgin on special teams, Jarrad Davis in Zeke Elliott spy duty, T.J. Hockenson (mostly)

Bad games: Joe Dahl, Kenny Golladay (outside of his spectacular catch it’s the worst game of his career), Tyrell Crosby, Taylor Decker (more of a bad 1st half than full game), Justin Coleman, Tavon Wilson, Will Harris

The Lions were close here and devised a gameplan that largely accomplished the main goal on both offense and defense. The Cowboys caught a few fortunate bounces and their role players stepped up where Detroit’s could not match. Driskel and Scarbrough both showed real long-term viability as backups in this one but also limitations that prove why they’ll only ever be backups. Cowboys fans should probably feel fortunate to escape with the road win here.

Lions 2019 rewatch: Week 10 notebook from Stafford-less game vs. Bears

Lions 2019 rewatch: Week 10 notebook from the Lions vs. Bears, the first game without Mathew Stafford at QB for Detroit

The film review of the 2019 Detroit Lions season continues into unchartered territory in Week 10. This is the first week where another QB other than Matthew Stafford started for the team in almost 10 years.

Jeff Driskel got the nod in Chicago against the NFC North rival Bears. Stafford was shut down due to a back injury suffered sometime in the heartbreaking Week 9 loss in Oakland. The Lions enter the game at 3-4-1 after their impressive 2-0-1 start. Chicago has lost four games in a row after starting the season 3-1 and ranks 28th in scoring offense entering the game.

Pregame notes

Stafford is the most notable Lions out and not on I.R. Safety Tracy Walker and DEs Da’Shawn Hand and Romeo Okwara are also out with injuries. Sam Martin is still punting but has ceded the kickoff duties to kicker Matt Prater due to a minor injury.

Carl Cheffers and his crew are the officials. Game time temp at Soldier Field in Chicago was 40 degrees with a fairly steady 10-15 MPH wind blowing left to right across the field.

First quarter

The Lions come out playing up-tempo and aggressive on offense, playing to Driskel’s strengths. Ty Johnson gashes the Bears for 10 well-blocked yards on the first play, and then quick passes move the ball nicely.

Chicago quickly ascertains that when FB Nick Bawden is in the game and offset, it’s going to be a run. Bawden and T.J. Hockenson both land nice blocks but the formational giveaway still results in a pretty easy stop for Chicago’s impressive LBs, two plays in a row.

Driskel catches Chicago’s defense in a pre-snap state of confusion and quickly strikes, hitting an uncovered Marvin Jones to get into the red zone. That’s the kind of quick snap we don’t see enough of with Stafford under center. Matt Prater nails the FG when the drive sputters inside the Chicago 10 and it’s 3-0 Lions on the road.

Lions defense comes out in a straight 4-3 scheme that morphs with Christian Jones playing EDGE on 3rd down. As the FOX broadcast crew notes, they are focused on making Mitchell Trubisky beat them with his arm and decision-making. He can’t on the first drive, missing an easy 3rd down throw high that gives Mike Ford enough time to recover and make a stop short of the conversion.

The Lions finally run play action with Bawden offset and it works. Would have worked even better if Bawden didn’t get caught inside too far before releasing as a safety valve, but it’s still nice to see self-awareness from the Lions. They haven’t done this in several weeks.

The second Detroit drive ends with a gimmick that I wish the Lions would have actually followed through. Lined up to punt on 4th-and-7 at the Chicago 40, TE Logan Thomas slides up under center. He was a QB at Virginia Tech and played some for the Cardinals before switching to TE. The Bears don’t bite on the potential trick play, and looking at who the Lions have on the field it’s easy to see why; the wideouts are backup safety Cory Moore and reserve CB Dee Virgin. Rookie safety Will Harris is the motion/slot receiver. It’s an obvious attempt to simply draw the Bears offside to get some extra yards into field goal position. Sam Martin ultimately punts and the Lions net just 30 yards on the exchange against an offense that is struggling badly. Should have followed through on the fake/play…

After some nice run defense by the interior DL (notably A’Shawn Robinson and Trey Flowers) the Lions defense sacks Trubisky on the final play of the quarter on what can best be described as a coverage sack. It’s aided by a truly awful schematic design by the Bears; there are no receivers shallower than 30 yards down the field and none anywhere near between the hashes when Devon Kennard smashes Trubisky into the ground from behind.

Second quarter

Driskel’s limitations as a passer are on display. He doesn’t have the pinpoint accuracy Stafford does on the shorter throws and it forces a stalled drive. Worth noting the line is doing a very good job at nullifying Khalil Mack to this point. He’s lining up on both sides and both Detroit tackles are handling business.

The Soldier Field crowd goes crazy when Trubusky completes a designed rollout pass to his left to Allen Robinson. His inability to go to his left is legendary enough that the home fans mock Trubisky for it.

The defensive front is showing some creativity. A third down throw (dropped by Taylor Gabriel) sees Jahlani Tavai twisting behind Kevin Strong on a 2-man line. The Bears OL screws up the transition and Strong nearly gets a sack out of it. Christian Jones attacking RT Bobby Massie’s inside shoulder is consistently successful. Jones playing the JACK more against his old team than he has all year.

The teams trade punts twice (with excellent coverage by Dee Virgin on both for Detroit) on uneventful drives. It’s more bad offense than good defense, particularly when the Bears have the ball. Dating back to their Week 9 loss to the Eagles, Chicago has managed just 11 first downs in 15 offensive possessions, one in their first four today. Trey Flowers, Mike Daniels in limited reps and Christian Jones are all dominating up front and Trubisky is quite clearly not as good as Driskel at playing QB. That is not meant as an endorsement of Driskel either…

Note: Tyrell Crosby has taken over for Rick Wagner at RT. Wagner appeared to get injured on the final play of the first punt drive.

Detroit manages a long Prater field goal after an uneven drive that began at midfield. A Golladay drop (difficult high catch but he got both hands on it) and an utter lack of vision from RB Paul Perkins on runs stymie a couple of nice throws by Driskel. Crosby lines up too far off the line of scrimmage on 3rd down for a penalty as well. It’s 6-0 Lions with just over four minutes in the half.

A crushing kick coverage tackle by Jalen Reeves-Maybin gets the Lions defense fired up. Trubisky tries to kill WR Anthony Miller with a hospital ball. Yet the Bears still gamble and go for it on 4th-and-1 from their own 30. And they (barely) make it; Damon Harrison makes a nice play but the help from Robinson and Jarrad Davis didn’t quite make it on time.

The successful conversion seems to wake up Trubisky and the Bears offense. Detroit’s defense goes primarily zone behind a 4-man rush and Trubisky is finding holes and making quality throws. He’s aided by an iffy defensive holding call on Tavon Wilson that negated an offensive hold where Flowers absolutely annihilated James Daniels.

Chicago hits paydirt on the next play when Will Harris gets beaten in coverage by reserve TE Ben Braunecker. It’s not a good route but it might be Trubisky’s best throw to beat Harris over the top with the plodding 3rd-string TE. Eddy Piniero makes the extra point and it’s 7-6 Bears going into the half.

Denver Broncos depth chart prediction: Quarterback

Who will serve as the Broncos’ backup quarterback this season? Will Denver carry a quarterback on the practice squad?

Now that the NFL Draft has wrapped up, we’re going to be taking a position-by-position look at the Broncos’ roster to estimate a way-too-early depth chart prediction. Today, we’re starting the series at quarterback.

QB1: Drew Lock 

This is an obvious prediction. After going 4-1 as a starter last year, Lock earned the trust of Denver’s front office and will go into the 2020 season as the undisputed starter.

QB2: Jeff Driskel

The Broncos signed Driskel in part because he has a similar playing style to Lock. He can move around in the pocket to extend plays and he’s probably more athletic than Lock. If anything happens to Denver’s QB1, they’ll turn to a backup who has eight career starts under his belt.

QB3: Brett Rypien

After starting last season on the Broncos squad, Rypien served as Brandon Allen’s backup for three games before going back down to the practice squad when Lock returned from injury. Rypien’s best bet to stick around with the team will be on the practice squad again.

QB4: Riley Neal

Neal’s college stats aren’t overly impressive (57.8 completion percentage, nine TDs and five INTs at Vanderbilt) and he’ll be considered a big underdog in competition with Rypien for the practice squad QB role.

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With no OTAs, Broncos QB Jeff Driskel is throwing with his brother in Orlando

Broncos backup quarterback Jeff Driskel is having his brother “pay rent” by catching passes from him.

In an effort to slow down the spread of COVID-19, the NFL has suspended offseason programs indefinitely. Broncos starting quarterback Drew Lock had planned to get together with teammates for offseason workouts but he decided it wouldn’t be socially responsible for them to travel to a central location.

So Denver players are staying put and working out on their own. Broncos backup quarterback Jeff Driskel is in Orlando, working out with his brother, Jason.

“I’m pretty hunkered down in the house doing my workout stuff like weights and running, stuff like that just at my house and the little park that’s near my house,” Driskel said during a conference call with reporters on March 26. “My brother is actually — he’s staying with me right now because he was in Miami. Miami was kind of the worst of it in Florida.

“He’s working remotely from my house right now. He’s paying rent in the form of catching me up. That’s how I’m keeping my arm alive and moving. It is a lot different. It’s something we all have to adapt to. We just have to figure it out on the move.”

Driskel also sent his home workout routine to Lock to help his new teammate stay in shape during isolation. The league remains hopeful that the 2020 season will still go on as scheduled but it remains to be seen if that will be practical. In the meantime, players will continue preparing as if the season will take place as scheduled.

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Learning a new offense is nothing new for Broncos QB Jeff Driskel

“I’m no rookie when it comes to learning a new system,” Broncos backup quarterback Jeff Driskel said.

After spending the first four years of his career with two different teams and multiple coaching staffs, 26-year-old quarterback Jeff Driskel signed a two-year deal with the Broncos in March.

Denver’s new backup quarterback will now be tasked with learning offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur’s offense.

“I wasn’t able to get it [the playbook] until I was officially signed,” Driskel said during a conference call with reporters on March 26. “It just came in in FedEx. There’s going to be a big learning curve. I’ve got a lot to learn. I’ll have a lot of time to study. I’ve had to learn a bunch of offenses over the course of my football career.”

Due to COVID-19, the NFL has closed team facilities and offseason programs have been postponed indefinitely. So Driskel won’t be able to work with his teammates anytime soon but the veteran quarterback will be able to study and workout on his own.

When the Broncos get together again, Driskel will be ready to go.

“I’m no rookie when it comes to learning a new system,” Driskel said. “It will just be in a different environment this year. Hopefully, we can get out to Denver all together and go through some type of offseason program, but we’re just not really sure how that’s going to work this year.”

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