7 Broncos who pose biggest threat to Chargers

Highlighting key Broncos players who could make it difficult for the Chargers.

The Los Angeles Chargers take on the Denver Broncos this Sunday at 1:05 p.m. PT.

Here are a few Broncos players who the Bolts must hone in on to increase their chances of coming out victorious in Week 12.

WR Jerry Jeudy

The Chargers’ defense has been susceptible to the pass as of late. Since Week 8, Los Angeles has allowed 15 explosive plays (pass that gains 20+ yards), which is the sixth-most in the NFL. While the Broncos also have Courtland Sutton and Tim Patrick, Teddy Bridgewater has favored Jeudy, who has seen eight targets or more in the last two games. Without Asante Samuel Jr. (concussion), Michael Davis, Tevaughn Campbell, and Chris Harris Jr. will have to step up to stop the elite separator.

TE Noah Fant

The Chargers continue to struggle against opposing tight ends, particularly in the red zone – allowing nine touchdowns this season. Fant has had an inconsistent season, with his last score coming back in Week 6. However, he has at least six targets in three of his previous four games. Look for Bridgewater to help the 24-year old get back on track Sunday.

RB Melvin Gordon & Javonte Williams

Even though the Chargers still rank last in the league, allowing an average of 145.1 rushing yards per game, the team has steadily improved in this area over the past few weeks. In the last three games, Los Angeles has allowed an average of just 111.3 yards per game (19th). Missed tackles, however, have been an issue, as the team has 78 on the year (fourth-most). Gordon is averaging 4.4 yards per carry and has five touchdowns, while Williams averages five yards per carry, including a team-high six runs of 20-plus yards.

S Justin Simmons

The Broncos have one of the best defenses in the league, and the one-two punch of Simmons and Kareem Jackson has been a big reason for the success. Lining up all across the formation, Simmons has a nose for the football. He has three interceptions and passes defended in the past four games.

DL Dre’Mont Jones & Shelby Harris

When we talk about players who have come into their own lately, Jones and Harris fall under the category, posting 16 and 12 pressures, respectively, in the last four games. Both have contributed in the passing and run game, and potentially without Matt Feiler (ankle), the two could cause problems up front.

The best fantasy football gamble of Week 12

Is a career day ahead for this bucking Bronco?

Every week, at least one player becomes my fascination of whether he’s worthy of a fantasy football start or bench. The decision can be a mental wrestling match, but for the purpose of brevity, only one player can be chosen as the fantasy football gamble of the week.

The best fantasy football gamble for Week 12

Tracking my predictions: 4-7-0
Win: Player produces ≥ 75% of projected fantasy points
Loss: Player produces >75% of projected fantasy points
Tie: Player is ejected or leaves with an injury

Not gonna lie, that one felt good … last week, my selection of New Orleans Saints tight end Adam Trautman was a right on the mark. But, alas, he left the game with a sprained knee and will miss up to six weeks. It’s a bummer, since he was beginning to get on track after a slow start following a late-summer ankle injury.

My projection of 5-56-1 against the Philadelphia Eagles was 101.2 percent accurate as the second-year tight end finished with five grabs, 58 yards, and an 18-yard touchdown.

RB Javonte Williams, Denver Broncos vs. Los Angeles Chargers

Some may look at Williams as being too widely utilized and useful to be considered a gamble. While I concede there is some truth to those sentiments, and I debated whether that alone was enough reason to turn in a different direction, the true gamble here to me is about how many times he touches the ball and not so much what he does with them.

In the two games prior to going on bye in Week 11, Denver fed their rookie talent an average of 14 utilizations. More specifically, Williams operated as follows in the last six games:

Week 5 at PIT (27-19 loss): 8-61-0 rushing, 3-25-0 on 3 targets
Week 6 vs. LV (34-24 loss): 11-53-0 rushing, 3-15-0 on 3 targets
Week 7 at CLE (17-14 loss): 4-20-0 rushing, 6-32-1 on 7 targets
Week 8 vs. WAS (17-10 win): 9-35-0 rushing, 2-13-0 on 4 targets
Week 9 at DAL (30-16 win): 17-111-0 rushing, 0-0-0 on 0 targets
Week 10 vs. PHI (30-13 loss): 8-48-0 rushing, 2-1-0 on 3 targets

The best outing came during a convincing win over Dallas, and the other win in that window saw Williams utilized 13 times against a tough defensive front. The workload over that time frame averages to 9.5 carries, 54.7 yards, 3.3 targets, 2.7 receptions, and 14.3 yards. None of the 57 attempts, one of 16 grabs went into the end zone, and the rookie averaged 10.6 PPR points over that period of time.

Not terrible, not great, but far from explosive and not in line with Williams’ talent level. The main reason? Melvin Gordon. He has a touchdown in four straight and five overall in that span. The veteran was utilized more than Williams in four of those six games.

Coming out of the bye, will Gordon see fewer touches vs. his former employer? Probably not. But, this matchup is good enough to make the case for both backs having fantasy relevance. It wouldn’t be a total shock if the Broncos started to limit Gordon’s touches for losing two fumbles in the three games prior to going on break. The one in Week 10 was costly.

The latter point is probably somewhat wishful thinking on my part. I fully expect Denver to give Gordon every chance to stick it to the Chargers. However, I have little confidence he can touch the ball 12-15 times without fumbling as he isn’t known for putting the ball on the ground, so it’s likely going to be in his head.

This one, though, is mostly predicated on how the Broncos will choose to attack. Their goal should be keeping LA’s offense on the sidelines as much as humanly possible, and the best way to do that is by slowing the pace of the game through pounding the rock. Denver is stout enough in the secondary to likely prevent this from getting out of hand, although preventing Austin Ekeler from going hog wild is a totally different scenario. Denver ranks poorly of late vs. PPR RBs and has given up the most yards per game on the ground since Week 6.

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Williams has been quite efficient, but his lack of scoring prowess has been his primary downfall in fantasy. The Chargers have granted 13 rushing scores on the year to the position, plus one through the air, and five times in the past four games a back has found the end zone, coming at the sixth-highest frequency.

On the season, LA has surrendered 13.9 percent more fantasy points per game than average, and seven backs have at least 16.9 points in PPR scoring. Three backfields found double-digit point-per-reception success with two rushers In Week 5, Cleveland backs went for 25.9 and 24.0 points apiece between Kareem Hunt and Nick Chubb, respectively. Dallas’ Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard managed 40.7 points combined. In both instances, the backup, or 1b, runner actually scored the most points. Now, that’s not to suggest it’s a rule or anything of the sort, but it’s another encouraging piece to the puzzle.

So the biggest question here is just how many touches can we expect for Williams? He has his most carries in all but one game in which Denver won, and they have some upside for an upset here coming off the bye, which allowed time to install wrinkles in the new offense. A safe number for combined touches for Williams is 12. A ceiling is something near 18-20.

Let’s shoot for 15 and presume he catches three or fewer passes as has been the case in all but one game this year. This brings us to 12 carries. His average of 5.0 yards per tote, in conjunction with the 4.7 YPC the Bolts have yielded, brings about something in the neighborhood of 60-65 yards being a reasonable figure. Eighteen yards is a fair number through the air based on his and LA’s metrics, which brings us to 78-83 offensive yards.

Add in a touchdown and we have a 17.3-point ceiling in PPR scoring based on little more than what each party has already accomplished. That doesn’t factor in injury issues along the front seven for the Chargers, nor does it account for the benefit of Denver having a bye week to prepare.

My projection: 70 rushing yards, 3 receptions, 31 receiving yards, 1 offensive TD (19.1 PPR fantasy points)

Braelon Allen looked like a Wisconsin legend today

Braelon Allen looked like a Wisconsin legend today

Wisconsin ran over Nebraska 35-28 today thanks in large part to yet another dominant performance from freshman running back Braelon Allen.

His final stat line: 22 carries, 228 yards and 3 touchdowns. The output continues Wisconsin’s long streak of great rushing games against Nebraska—performances which have led to eight straight wins against the Cornhuskers.

Related: Wisconsin’s rushing production in 8-game win streak vs. Nebraska is remarkable

Many of Allen’s rushes today showed more and more of the greatness we’ve seen from him this season. Plays that seem to be 2-yard losses turn into 5-yard gains, plays that should be 6-yard gains turn into 30-yard gains and then when Allen sees a big opening, he breaks touchdowns in an instant.

The freshman’s fourth-quarter touchdown run provided the difference Wisconsin needed to win. But the run also looked just like one from Melvin Gordon’s record-setting performance in 2014:

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

Wisconsin’s rushing production in 8-game win streak vs. Nebraska is remarkable

Wisconsin ran its way to a 35-28 victory over the Nebraska Cornhuskers today. The victory is the Badgers seventh straight and brings them

Wisconsin ran its way to a 35-28 victory over the Nebraska Cornhuskers today. The victory is the Badgers seventh straight and brings them one step closer to an appearance in the Big Ten Championship.

Graham Mertz played another solid game today, completing 12 of his 18 pass attempts for 145 yards and 1 touchdown. While the defense struggled at times against Nebraska quarterback Adrian Martinez, Collin Wilder’s two interceptions proved to be critical plays as the Badger defense was able to hold on late to seal the victory.

The win against the Cornhuskers is the Badgers eighth in a row dating back to September of 2012. Those wins have mostly seen legendary rushing performances from Wisconsin–regardless of the quality of Nebraska’s rush defense.

Well, the Cornhuskers entered today’s game with one of the more efficient rush defenses in the country. What did Braelon Allen go on to do? 22 carries, 228 yards and 3 touchdowns.

Here are the rushing numbers in all of the eight straight games won by Wisconsin in this series:

Six points with David Dorey

Friday’s quick look at six fantasy items to know

Week 11 means heading into the final stretch in most fantasy leagues, and after  last week reviewing the success of the 2021 drafts,  it’s never too early to think about 2022. Plenty of NFL teams  are already starting to shift their focus from this season to what they can do to improve 2022.

There are seven weeks left to the NFL season, and many players become free agents next season. Some will re-sign, most likely end up somewhere else. This week’s column looks at the most notable pending free agents and what they could mean next season, and what they mean for the rest of 2021. These players are even more important in dynasty leagues.

1.) RB James Conner, Chase Edmonds (ARI) – Both players become free agents in the spring. Conner signed a one-year deal, and Edmonds reaches the end of his rookie contract. The only other back of any note is Eno Benjamin, a seventh-rounder from 2020. Edmonds hasn’t turned in a primary back as was hoped, and Conner’s been great at short-yardage with 11 touchdowns after just ten games, but he’s only averaged 3.9 yards-per-carry on his 125 rushes. It doesn’t help Edmonds was injured after just 76 rushes and 30 receptions.

Both backs are playing for their next contracts. Conner’s done well enough that he’ll land somewhere else quickly if the Cards don’t re-sign him. Edmonds has been just  an average third-down back.  The duo started the year with equal carries, but Conner’s taken over as the primary rusher and looks like the most likely to be kept. It will be interesting to see if there are any changes to Edmond’s workload.

2.) RB Darrel Williams, Jerick McKinnon, Derrick Gore (KC) – Clyde Edwards-Helaire has two more years on his rookie deal, but the other three running backs are  all set to become free agents (Gore is ERFA). Darrel Williams has been the star of the bunch stepping up when Edwards-Helaire was injured in Week 5. Williams was an undrafted back that signed a very cheap 3-year deal in 2018, then re-upped for just this year. He’s done well enough over these last five games that he may have options elsewhere in 2022 and could become part of a tandem when Edwards-Helaire returns.

3.) RB Leonard Fournette, Giovani Bernard, Ronald Jones (TB) – Yes, other than Ke’Shawn Vaugh and his five carries, the entire backfield of the Buccaneers are free agents after this year. The Buccaneers reloaded for a return to the Super Bowl and kept almost the entire team together. Leonard Fournette has stood out as the clear best option, but the better he plays, the better chance he’ll have of getting more cash elsewhere. Jones’ role just never took off this year. Be interesting to see if he gets any playing time increase later on to check if he is worth rostering again. This backfield could be all-new in 2021.

Just to complicate things a bit more, Rob Gronkowski, O.J. Howard, Chris Godwin, and Antonio Brown also become free agents.

4.) RB Cordarrelle Patterson, WR Olamide Zaccheaus, Tajae Sharpe, Russell Gage (ATL) – Calvin Ridley is signed through 2022 on his rookie contract, but he’s a no-show for an indeterminate amount of time. The Falcon’s head coach Arthur Smith’s first season has been rough, and his second could see a complete rebuild of the wideouts. Kyle Pitt (3-29) just showed what happens when defenses key on him. Cordarrelle Patterson has been shockingly productive but can the Falcons re-sign him? What sort of contract does a 30-year-old receiver after his first breakout year get?

The Falcons are wafting to the bottom of the standings, and they need to decide who, if any, of their entire receiving corps that they want to keep. Remaking the entire set of secondary receivers rarely goes well. Ask the Washington Football Team or the Lions how well that works.  The Falcons are likely to start picking through the pieces to determine who returns.

5.) WR Davante Adams, Allen Lazard, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Randall Cobb, TE Robert Tonyan (GB) –  All of these receivers are free agents in 2022 except Randall Cobb, who is signed through 2022, but the Packers have a potential out after this year if they don’t want to pay a 32-year-old wideout $7.875 million.

Of course, the Packers may lose Aaron Rodgers in 2022 and if so,  the entire passing offense changes. The Packers’ offense may be in a total ground-up rebuild other than their backfield. Maybe the question is less about who remains and more about if Rodgers would bring anyone with him to a new team? The Broncos are a rumored suitor, and they have Courtland Sutton and Tim Patrick becoming free agents in 2022.

6.) RB Melvin Gordon (DEN) – He’s half of the backfield tandem with Javonte Williams, and arguably the rookie is at least as good as Gordon, if not better. But Gordon is a free agent in the spring. They could re-sign him, but let’s say that the Broncos wanted to bring in a very pricey quarterback and needed cap room. Just rely heavily on the rookie that makes a little over $1 million next year, or bring back Gordon, who makes $8 million this season?

Vic Fangio still has ‘great confidence’ in Broncos RB Melvin Gordon

Broncos coach Vic Fangio still has confidence in Melvin Gordon despite the RB’s recent fumbles.

The Denver Broncos have split carries between veteran Melvin Gordon and rookie Javonte Williams this season, which has helped keep both backs fresh.

The results have been mostly positive, with the biggest complaint from fans being that both backs should be getting more carries each week. After Gordon’s recent fumbles, though, fans are starting to call for only Williams to have a larger role.

During his Zoom press conference Monday, Broncos coach Vic Fangio was asked about his confidence level in Gordon following his recent fumbles.

“I have great confidence in Melvin,” Fangio said. “Melvin’s one of the top backs in this league. He has fumbled it twice in the last three weeks as you mentioned. That’s something he has to put extra emphasis on to protect the ball moving forward, and that’s something that him and [running backs coach] Curtis [Modkins] will do.”

That’s a diplomatic answer from Fangio, who of course wasn’t going to throw his player under the bus and hurt the RB’s confidence. If Gordon doesn’t clean up his ball security, though, the calls for Williams to be more involved will only become louder as the season goes on.

Williams is the team’s RB of the future, and fans want him to be the No. 1 back of the present as well. Fangio doesn’t seem ready to make that decision just yet, but it’s a situation worth watching in the coming weeks.

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Broncos should make Javonte Williams their featured running back

Javonte Williams is fumbling half as often as Melvin Gordon (including college carries). It’s time for the Broncos to make Williams their new primary running back.

Late in the third quarter of Sunday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Denver Broncos quarterback Teddy Bridgewater opted not to tackle defensive back Darius Slay, who returned a fumble 82 yards for a touchdown to give Philly a 14-point lead going into the fourth quarter.

Bridgewater’s apparent lack of effort has become a hot topic in Denver, but that situation never would have happened if veteran running back Melvin Gordon had not fumbled on his 4th-and-1 rushing attempt.

Gordon should have protected the ball better, and the Broncos’ coaching staff perhaps shouldn’t have had him on the field in the first place.

Gordon has rushed 118 times for 522 yards this season with a respectable average of 4.4 yards per carry. Javonte Williams, meanwhile, has 103 carries for 514 yards this season with an even more impressive 5.0 yards per carry.

Despite his aggressive, productive running style, Williams has seemingly been underused this season. The rookie has received fewer than 10 carries in five times this year (including Sunday) and he’s received more than 15 carries in just one game (and he rushed for 111 yards in that contest).

Williams has proven he can be a reliable lead running back, and Gordon hasn’t been able to shake a fumble problem that has hindered his entire career.

Granted, Williams did fumble in Week 3 and he had a near-fumble in Week 8 but officials ruled that his knee was down before the ball came out. So Williams’ ball security hasn’t been perfect, but it has been better than Gordon’s, who has two fumbles this year and six dating back to last year.

Gordon has put the ball on the ground 20 times in his career, with 10 fumbles over the last three years (37 games). Williams obviously has a much smaller sample size in the NFL, but dating back to his time at North Carolina, Williams has half the number of fumbles (five) as Gordon in his last 37 games (college and pro).

Denver’s staff has split reps between Gordon and Williams pretty evenly, but it’s clear that Gordon is the team’s go-to back in important situations. Given Gordon’s fumbling problem and Williams’ productiveness this season, their roles should be switched going forward.

Gordon is scheduled to become a 29-year-old free agent in the spring and it’s hard to imagine the Broncos re-signing him. Williams is the team’s future, and he deserves to finish the season as the current No. 1 running back.

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Eagles vs. Broncos game recap: Everything we know

Philadelphia Eagles vs. Denver Broncos game recap: Everything we know

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Darius Slay scooped up a fumble on the final play of the third quarter and returned it 83 yards for a touchdown, ending any chance of a Broncos comeback as Philadelphia secured the 30-13 win over Denver at Mile Hile.

The Broncos were actually driving to tie the game when Davion Taylor caused his second fumble of the game, this time punching it out from Melvin Gordon.

Star rookie DeVonta Smith hauled in two touchdown passes from Jalen Hurts and the Eagles (4-6) amassed 214 rushing yards.

Broncos drop back down to .500 following 30-13 loss to Eagles

Following Sunday’s loss to the Eagles, the Broncos go into their bye week with a 5-5 record. Disappointing.

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The Denver Broncos dropped back down to .500 and now have a 5-5 record following Sunday’s 30-13 home loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 10.

Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts had his way with the Broncos’ defense, totaling 178 passing yards and two touchdowns while also adding 53 yards on the ground.

Denver’s offense was also underwhelming, with the team stalling multiple times in the red zone. The Broncos also made yet another mistake on special teams, allowing a field goal attempt to be blocked in the third quarter.

Tom McMahon, Denver’s special teams coordinator, has to be on the hot seat after yet another poor performance from his unit.

The game was essentially decided when the Broncos were trailing by seven points late in the third quarter and running back Melvin Gordon fumbled on a fourth-and-one rushing attempt. Eagles cornerback Darius Slay picked up the fumble and returned it 82 yards for a touchdown, making it 27-13.

Denver quarterback Teddy Bridgewater took plenty of heat from fans and media members on social media after opting not to make an effort to tackle Slay on the return.

That decision capped an overall underwhelming performance from Bridgewater, who did not throw a touchdown pass for just the second time this season, ending the game 22-of-36 passing for 226 yards with an 79.2 passer rating.

Up next for the Broncos is a bye in Week 11 followed by a home game against the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 12.

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Eagles vs. Broncos: 5 matchups to watch on defense

Philadelphia Eagles vs. Denver Broncos: 5 matchups to watch on defense

The Eagles and Broncos are just hours away from kicking it off in the Mile High City and as Jonathan Gannon contemplates how to slow down Teddy Bridgewater, other matchups will take center stage as well.

Even with injuries along the offensive line, Denver is physical at the point of attack and has some silky smooth wideouts on the outside.

Here are five matchups to watch when Mike Shula and company have the ball.