Bo Nix continues to break many Broncos franchise records and he’s breaking several NFL records along the way.
Denver Broncos rookie quarterback Bo Nix made history again in the team’s 38-6 win over the Atlanta Falcons in Week 11.
Nix became only the second rookie quarterback in NFL history to record at least 200 passing yards and two touchdown passes in four straight home games. The other quarterback to accomplish such a feat? Hall of Famer Peyton Manning, who did so with the Indianapolis Colts in 1998.
In his last four home games against the Las Vegas Raiders, Los Angeles Chargers, Carolina Panthers and Falcons, Nix has thrown for a combined 1,013 yards and 11 passing touchdowns against just one interception. He has also rushed for two scores in those contests.
After going 28-of-33 passing for 307 yards with four touchdowns and no interceptions (145.0 rating) against the Falcons, Nix joined C.J. Stroud (Houston Texans in 2023) as one of just two rookie QBs in NFL history with at least 300 passing yards, four passing touchdowns and a passer rating of at least 140 in a single game.
In today’s @Broncos victory, @BoNix10 became the 2nd rookie QB in @NFL history with 300+ passing yards, 4+ TD passes & a 140+ passer rating in a game, joining C.J. Stroud (Nov. 5, 2023). pic.twitter.com/CujRr20Y7W
Nix’s 84.4% completion rate is the third-best by a rookie QB in NFL history (minimum 30 attempts) and the second-best by a quarterback (of any experience) in Broncos history.
Nix became the first rookie QB in NFL history to complete at least 80% of his passes while totaling at least 300 yards and four passing touchdowns in a game.
Nix now has 14 touchdown passes this fall, which ties Marlin Briscoe (1968) for the most touchdown passes by a rookie QB in franchise history. That record will undoubtedly belong to Nix soon.
Nix leads all rookie quarterbacks this year with 18 total touchdowns (14 passing, four rushing) and is second in passing yards (2,275).
Nix has already set multiple franchise and NFL historical marks this fall. He’ll look to continue his impressive rookie campaign when Denver goes on the road to face the Las Vegas Raiders (2-8) in Week 12.
Bo Nix is on pace to have the second-best rushing season by a Broncos quarterback, only 53 yards off of Tim Tebow’s franchise record.
Denver Broncos rookie quarterback Bo Nix has rushed 18 times for 107 yards and two touchdowns through his first three games in the NFL, putting him in impressive company among the best running QBs in franchise history.
Nix has the most rushing yards and rushing touchdowns through his first three games among all QBs in Denver’s history. In a 26-7 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday, Nix became just the third rookie quarterback in franchise history to throw for at least 200 yards and run for at least 45 yards in the same game, joining Tim Tebow (once 2011) and Marlin Briscoe (twice in 1968).
“We got to a few quarterback read runs which — they load the front, so how do you get your number back? Well one way of doing that is your quarterback becomes a threat,” coach Sean Payton said Monday. “There were two or three instances where it might have been a give to [Tyler] Badie or a keep. I think there were a couple of designs that helped us, and then we blocked it well.”
Tebow had the team’s best rushing season by a quarterback in 2011 when he totaled 660 yards on the ground and scored six touchdown touchdowns. At his current pace of 35.7 yards per game, Nix is on pace to finish just below Tebow’s yardage (607). Nix is also on track for 11 rushing touchdowns, but that pace seems likely to dip, especially if he starts throwing TD passes.
Nix’s 107 rushing yards rank seventh through three games and his two rushing touchdowns are tied for second with Josh Allen behind Jayden Daniels (three).
Nix isn’t running enough to pass Tebow’s rushing record, but the rookie quarterback is on pace to have the second-best rushing season by a QB in franchise history. Expect Nix to continue making plays with his legs.
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.
The first starting QB in pro football to break the color barrier 👏
“[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.
“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.”
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.
Jim Turner, Marlin Briscoe and Brandon Marshall are among the players who have worn No. 15 for the Broncos. Who was the best to wear it?
There are several candidates for the title of best player to ever wear No. 15 for the Denver Broncos.
Former quarterback Tim Tebow had a memorable two-year run with the team from 2010-2011, helping the club win a Wild Card playoff game.
Fellow quarterback Marlin Briscoe played just one season in Denver in 1968, but it was a historic season. Briscoe became the first Black quarterback to start in pro football’s modern era. He threw 14 touchdown passes in 1968, which still stands as a franchise rookie record. Briscoe died at age 76 last year.
Former wide receiver Brandon Marshall played in Denver from 2006-2009. In four seasons, Marshall earned two Pro Bowl nods. He totaled 327 receptions for 4,019 yards and 25 touchdowns in 61 games with the Broncos. Marshall later spent time with seven other teams and finished his career with 12,351 receiving yards and 83 touchdowns.
Another candidate is former kicker Jim Turner, who played in Denver from 1971-1979. After winning a Super Bowl and earning two Pro Bowl nods with the New York Jets, Turner played the final nine years of his career with the Broncos. He ranks third on Denver’s all-time scoring list with 742 points. Turner, a member of the Broncos’ Ring of Fame, died at age 82 last month.
So, who was the best player to ever wear No. 15 for the Broncos? Share your opinion by voting in the poll below!
The late Marlin Briscoe left a “what-if” legacy in his own football career, and paved the way for every Black quarterback who followed his path.
On Monday, Marlin Briscoe died at age 76 in Norwalk, California, due to pneumonia. Many football fans may not know Briscoe’s name, but they should. Briscoe remains an important — if shaded — part of professional football history as the first Black starting quarterback of the modern era. Fritz Pollard had played quarterback in the earliest days of the NFL, but as the league started to filter Black players out, a “strategy” that led to the outright banning of all Black players from 1934 through 1945, it would be a very long time before any Black quarterback had any shot at all in the American professional leagues. No matter the talent of the player, no matter the potential, Black players were not allowed to play the “positions of intelligence” (quarterback, middle linebacker, certain offensive line positions, certain defensive back positions), and Briscoe was unfortunately caught in the crosshairs of that reality — even and especially after he showed the ability to play credibly at the highest level.
RIP to “The Magician.”
Marlin Briscoe was a pioneer who shattered barriers, making history as the first Black starting quarterback in the Super Bowl era.
Our deepest sympathies go out to Marlin’s family, friends and former teammates. pic.twitter.com/sOuygcaUO4
After a rookie season in 1968 when he set a rookie franchise record for touchdown passes for the Denver Broncos that stands to this day, 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 started to make an impression — against all odds.
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.”
Saban later tried to explain the process.
“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 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 fact, he helped to save the career of future Hall-of-Fame running back Floyd Little, which presented another example of Saban’s lack of vision and autocratic coaching style.
“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.”
As we have said… welp. Black quarterbacks were not considered at all back then, and were certainly never given the benefit of any doubt. Had Briscoe stood 6-foot-4 and weighed 220 pounds, and had been the perfect pocket passer archetype preferred at the time. his chances probably wouldn’t have been too different.
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.”
The racial component was 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 a common practice nowadays for quarterbacks like Michael Vick, Drew Brees and Russell Wilson, and if Briscoe came along in 2022 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.
Because when you watch Briscoe’s 1968 tape, it all looks very modern — not all that different from Russell Wilson or Kyler Murray.
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.
“It was at the time when Black quarterbacks were being denied, so you tried to make sure you were best prepared for the opportunity when it came,” Harris said, per the Associated Press. “I was a lot better off because Briscoe was my roommate.”
But it is the element of what might have been in a more enlightened age that remains Briscoe’s legacy.
“It bothered him,” Harris said. “Although he made the switch, he was disappointed. In order to still accomplish what he did under those circumstances – frustrated, disappointed – to be focused enough to be a high achiever at another position took a special makeup, a special guy.”
As is the case with most trailblazers, he took the hits as the first in the door so that others would not have to take as many. And for that, he should always be remembered and regarded.
Marlin Briscoe died at the age of 76. He was the first Black quarterback to start in the AFL.
Marlin Briscoe, who became the first Black starting quarterback in the AFL with the Denver Broncos, died Monday at the age of 76.
The cause of death was pneumonia and he succumbed in a California hospital.
Briscoe played quarterback at Omaha University before the Broncos chose him in the 14th round in 1968. Denver selected him as a wide receiver. Briscoe told the Broncos he would rather return home to be a teacher if he wasn’t given a chance to be a quarterback.
He made five starts and passed for 1,589 yards and 14 touchdowns while adding 308 yards and three scores on the ground.
When Denver no longer would give him the opportunity to play quarterback Briscoe moved on to Buffalo.
He became a wide receiver and made 224 receptions for 3,537 yards and 30 touchdowns while playing for five other teams. Briscoe spent three seasons each with Miami and Buffalo.
Marlin Briscoe started five games at QB for the Broncos in 1968, making him the first Black QB to start in the Super Bowl era.
Marlin Briscoe, who was the first Black starting quarterback in the Super Bowl era, died at age 76 on Monday, according to a report from the Associated Press. Briscoe died of pneumonia at a California hospital.
Briscoe was a star quarterback at Omaha University, but the Denver Broncos drafted him as a wide receiver in 1968. The Broncos eventually gave him an opportunity at QB and he did not disappoint, passing for 1,589 yards and 14 touchdowns while adding 308 yards and three more scores on the ground in five starts.
Despite his impressive performance as a rookie, the Broncos did not plan to play Briscoe at quarterback in 1969 so he asked to be cut. Denver granted his request, but Briscoe unfortunately did not get an opportunity to play QB with another team.
Briscoe went on to play wide receiver for the Buffalo Bills, earning a Pro Bowl nod in 1970. He later won a pair of Super Bowls with the Miami Dolphins as a receiver, including Miami’s perfect 17-0 season in 1972.
After three seasons with the Dolphins, Briscoe went on to spend time with the San Diego Chargers, Detroit Lions and New England Patriots. He caught 224 passes for 3,537 yards and 30 touchdowns during his nine-year career.
He was the first black starting quarterback in professional American football.
With the 50th anniversary of the “perfect” 1972 Miami Dolphins season upon us, there will be a lot of reflecting down throughout the year.
Unfortunately, on Monday, the Miami Herald’s Barry Jackson shared that former Dolphins wide receiver Marlin Briscoe, a member of the ’72 team, passed away at 76 years old due to heart failure.
Briscoe was originally drafted out of Nebraska-Omaha in the 14th round of the 1968 draft by the Denver Broncos, becoming the first black starting quarterback in professional American football.
After his rookie season, Briscoe asked for his release and moved to wide receiver. He would go on to play nine seasons, including three with the Dolphins.
In Miami, he recorded 133 receptions for 2,171 yards and 18 touchdowns. He also got a chance to show off his arm a few times, completing three of his four attempts for 75 yards.
Briscoe was part of the Dolphins’ Super Bowl victories in 1972 and 1973. In Super Bowl VIII, against the Minnesota Vikings, Briscoe caught two passes for 19 yards.
While we all celebrate the 50th anniversary of the “perfect” season, we remember Briscoe and his legacy.