Broncos injuries: Noah Fant held out of practice Wednesday

Broncos tight end Noah Fant (hip/foot) was held out of practice Wednesday.

Denver Broncos tight end Noah Fant (hip/foot) was held out of practice Wednesday but coach Vic Fangio remains hopeful that the rookie will be able to play in Sunday’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

In addition to Fant, defensive end Adam Gotsis (knee), right tackle Ja’Wuan James (knee), defensive lineman Dre’Mont Jones (ankle) and guard Ron Leary (concussion) were also held out of practice.

Elsewhere on Denver’s injury report, outside linebacker Jeremiah Attaochu (foot), inside linebacker Alexander Johnson (knee), inside linebacker Joe Jones (back), outside linebacker Von Miller (knee), nose tackle Mike Purcell (shoulder/knee), outside linebacker Malik Reed (ankle) and cornerback Isaac Yiadom (shoulder) are listed as limited.

For the Chiefs, cornerback Morris Claiborne (shoulder), defensive end Frank Clark (illness/shoulder) and cornerback Rashad Fenton (hamstring) were held out of practice. Running back Damien Williams (rib) and guard Andrew Wylie (shoulder) were limited. Quarterback Patrick Mahomes (hand) fully practiced Wednesday.

Denver and Kansas City will practice again Thursday and Friday.

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Broncos coach Vic Fangio thinks TE Noah Fant will be OK

Broncos rookie tight end Noah Fant has a foot and hip injury but should be okay, coach Vic Fangio said.

Denver Broncos rookie tight end Noah Fant suffered a foot and hip injury during Sunday’s 38-24 win over the Houston Texans but should be fine, coach Vic Fangio during his Monday press conference.

“I think he’s OK,” Fangio said. “He got stepped on and his foot got a little bruised there, which it is OK, and a little hip irritation injury. They’re still doing more tests on him but hopefully optimistic.”

Fant (6-4, 249 pounds) was selected by Denver in the first round of April’s draft out of Iowa. Before leaving Sunday’s game with his foot injury, Fant caught four passes for 113 yards and a touchdown.

With Fant sidelined, the Broncos are down to just Jeff Heuerman and Troy Fumagalli at tight end. Fullback Andrew Beck can also play tight end as needed. Heuerman and Fumagallo have both caught one touchdown pass this year. Beck has just four total catches all season.

Fant has now caught 35 passes for 492 yards and three touchdowns this year. In terms of receiving yards, Fant has been the best rookie tight end in the NFL this season. He’s averaging 14.1 yards per reception.

Denver will have off Monday and Tuesday before returning to practice Wednesday. The Broncos will release a mid-week injury report on Wednesday that will provide more clarity on Fant’s status.

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After a long drought, the Broncos may finally have a franchise QB in Drew Lock

It’s been a long time since the Broncos have had a credible quarterback. Rookie Drew Lock looks eager to end that drought.

To say that Broncos general manager and President of Football Operations John Elway has exercised some really interesting decision-making at the quarterback position since Peyton Manning retired following the 2015 season would be damning with faint praise. Even as Elway and his staff built one of the best defenses in the league, the quarterback position — from Paxton Lynch to Trevor Siemian to Brock Osweiler to Case Keenum to Joe Flacco to Brandon Allen — has been the obvious Achilles heel that has kept Denver out of the postseason since Manning’s last game, when the Broncos beat the Panthers in Super Bowl 50.

Lynch was Elway’s most prominent failure; Denver took the Memphis alum with the 26th pick in the 2016 draft, and Lynch did very little through his two seasons with the team. Siemian was the comparative “savior,” as the 2015 seventh-round pick out of Northwestern managed an 18-touchdown, 10-interception season in 2016. But Siemian regressed in 2017, and thus began the parade of ineffective veterans with Keenum and Flacco.

When Denver took Missouri quarterback Drew Lock in the second round of the 2019 draft, it was thought to be yet another example of Elway leaning too hard on his “big guy/big arm” bias. The 6-foot-4, 228-pound quarterback proved to have all the mobility and arm strength you’d want in a prospect, but he had a GPS that was dangerously out of whack at the best of times — the primary reason he completed just 56.9% of his passes over four seasons for the Tigers.

And through the first half of the 2019 season, when Flacco was first ineffective and then injured, and Allen did little to elevate the offense in his stead, head coach Vic Fangio had the same line every time he was asked about Lock starting a game — the kid just wasn’t ready yet. Part of that was a thumb injury that had Lock on injured reserve, and when he was activated in late November, it was a case of perfect timing — Allen imploded against the Bills’ tough defense on November 24, completing 10 of 25 passes for 82 yards and a touchdown. At this point, if Lock could throw the ball at all, there wasn’t much chance of him doing any worse.

Activated as the starter in time for Denver’s Week 13 game against the Chargers, Lock completed 18 of 28 passes for 134 yards, two touchdowns, and one interception — not blowaway numbers, but good enough to give him another shot against the Texans on Sunday.

This was the same Texans defense that had just shut down the Patriots, so Lock was going to have to earn it here. This he did decidedly, completing 22 of 27 passes for 309 yards, three touchdowns, and one interception. With that performance, he became the first rookie in NFL history with at least 300 passing yards and three touchdown passes in his first career road start.

Lock just scalded Houston’s defense, especially in the first half, where his 235 passing yards were the most by a Broncos quarterback since Manning was under center. He also became the third Broncos rookie with a 300-yard game, joining Elway in 1983 and Tim Tebow in 2010.

Moreover, on plays like this — a 14-yard first-quarter touchdown pass to tight end Noah Fant — Lock showed that his accuracy has met his velocity.

The 5-8 Broncos are playing for the future at this point in the season, but at least at the most important position — and for the first time in a long time — there’s real and legitimate hope.

Broncos TE Noah Fant suffers foot injury vs. Texans

Broncos tight end Noah Fant suffered an injury against the Texans on Sunday.

Broncos tight end Noah Fant suffered a foot injury during the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game against the Texans. After initially being able to limp off the field, the rookie was carted back to the locker room for more evaluation.

Denver announced that Fant is questionable to return to the game.

Before leaving the contest, Fant caught four passes for 113 yards and a touchdown. With Fant currently on the sideline, the Broncos’ only remaining tight ends are Jeff Heuerman and Troy Fumagalli. Fullback Andrew Beck can also play tight end if needed.

Midway through the fourth, Denver leads Houston 38-17.

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Six Points with David Dorey: Week 13

Six items of interest heading into the weekend

Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Thanksgiving Day started with a 75-yard touchdown pass from David Blough, watched the 622 sideline views of Jason Garrett looking progressively more nervous and ended with the Falcons not only recovering the ultra-rare onside kick but doing it twice in a row.

Dallas Cowboys head coach – They haven’t beaten a winning team this year and they were embarrassed at home in from of a national audience yesterday. As was mentioned during the telecast, the Cowboys are the only team with the same coach they had in 2011 and they have not been to a Super Bowl. They lost 26-15 in a game that they were favored by seven points. And naturally, the calls for HC Jason Garrett to be fired are no longer a low roar. In jumps Las Vegas with the odds of a new coach.

Urban Meyer already lobbied for the job. Josh McDaniels seems like a lock to step in and run the Patriots whenever Bill Belichick steps down. Lincoln Riley would be in the vein of hiring a successful college coach and that worked out pretty well with Jimmy Johnson. I doubt they change anything during the season and they are still atop the NFC East. But as Jerry Jones said, the Cowboys have too much talent to be a 6-6 team.

David Blough – The undrafted 24-year-old rookie was a four-year player at Purdue who was originally signed by the Browns but was traded to the Lions. He became the first quarterback since Matt Ryan (2008) to throw a touchdown on his first NFL pass. Blough was called to start when Jeff Driskel’s hamstring had not healed enough. The rookie threw for 280 yards and two scores with one interception on his final pass. But that was 205 yards and one touchdown after his first pass. He found Kenny Golladay for 158 yards on four catches with the opening-play touchdown. No other receivers did much.

Tight Ends to watch – Most tight ends do very little as a rookie but the better ones tend to break out in their second season. Here’s a quick list of the rookies drafted this year that are more likely to see a notable increase in 2020:

T.J. Hockenson (1.08 DET – Current stat line: 32-367-2)
Noah Fant (1.20 DEN – Current stat line: 30-374-2)
Irv Smith Jr. (2.18 MIN – Current stat line: 27-261-1)
Dawson Knox (3.32 BUF – Current stat line: 25-307-2)

Their production is all close. All but Knox are playing in the first year of their offensive coordinator and that should help them grow with their offense. Each leads their team’s tight ends except for Smith and Kyle Rudolph.

Christian Blake – The undrafted second-year player from Northern Illinois was signed to the practice squad, released, re-signed and so on until October 23 when he was brought up to the active roster. He was only catching one or two passes per game after Mohamed Sany left. Justin Hardy and Russell Gage also saw more work. Yesterday, Blake ended with six catches for 57 yards in the loss to the Saints – more than either Hardy or Gage though he scored once on his five catches for 52 yards. The Falcons are trying out other players and that’ll make the unit harder to predict unless one of them steps up more. With Julio Jones gone, both Gare and Blake saw nine targets, only one less than Calvin Ridley.

Mo Ali-Cox – Eric Ebron landed on injured reserve and that leaves Doyle and Mo Alie-Cox as the starters. Ebron totals 31 catches for 375 yards and three scores this year after posting 13 touchdowns in 2018. He was catching four or five passes for the last three games so his absence will be felt. Alie-Cox is an undrafted third-year player who was a basketball player in college (6-5, 267 pounds). Chances are that Doyle will see an increase in work more than Alie-Cox becomes a common target.  Watch this week when they play the Titans because, in Week 14, they face the Buccaneers No.31 defense versus tight ends.

Those Team Defenses – We all say defenses are too hard to call so why draft them early? Some of us don’t, some of us just cannot resist taking that first or second defense far earlier than everyone else. Last year – the Bears were the defense-I-have-to-have. Here’s where that stands between the top ten drafted defenses and where they currently rank.

The Bears are barely average and in a 12 team league haven’t been worth starting most of the time. The Rams did well though it never feels like it. Six of the top ten ended up below average.

And here is what we should have done.

Yeah, I’ll try to hold off on the Patriots next year. Bet someone else won’t.

4 plays prevented Broncos from starting 7-3 this season

The Broncos could have started 7-3 this year if four plays had gone their way.

The Denver Broncos haven’t been officially eliminated from playoff contention yet but with a 3-7 record, their chances of reaching the postseason are slim. Denver could have been in playoff position — and leading the AFC West — if four plays had gone its way this season.

In Week 2 against the Chicago Bears, the Broncos lost 16-14 on a last-second field goal. Had that field goal been unsuccessful, Denver would have started the year 1-1. A few plays before the field goal attempt, Broncos outside linebacker Bradley Chubb was incorrectly penalized for roughing the passer.

In Week 4 against the Jacksonville Jaguars, Denver lost 26-24 on a late field goal. Had that attempt been unsuccessful, the Broncos could have started the year 2-2. Denver outside linebacker Von Miller was questionably penalized for roughing the passer on Jacksonville’s game-winning drive.

In Week 8 against the Indianapolis Colts, the Broncos lost 15-13 on yet another late field goal. Had those three late-game kicks been unsuccessful, Denver could have started the year 5-3.

In Week 11, the Broncos were in position to take a 30-27 lead over the Minnesota Vikings on the road but quarterback Brandon Allen was unable to connect with tight end Noah Fant in the end zone on the final play of the game. Denver lost 27-23. Had Fant caught that pass and had those three kicks mentioned earlier gone wide, the Broncos could have started the year 7-3.

Pointing out those four plays is not meant as an excuse for Denver’s poor start this year — every team can point to plays that could have helped their record. But if those four plays had gone the Broncos’ way, some fans might feel differently about the state of the franchise.

“I think we’re close,” coach Vic Fangio said after Sunday’s loss. “But we haven’t gotten over the top well enough yet. We did in our previous game with the stop and then the ensuing first down to close it, but this game, we didn’t get it done. We’ll eventually get it done.

“These guys are good guys. They’re working their butts off. They enjoy coming to work. They like playing. We’ll just keep grinding and keep
pounding, and eventually we’ll get through.”

Denver isn’t an awful team. If the Broncos make a few improvements and if footballs start bouncing their way (and kicks go their way), the team will be back in playoff contention, perhaps as early as the 2020 season.

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Fantasy sleepers for Week 12 of the NFL season

Touchdown Wire’s Pat Yasinskas examines nine under-the-radar players who could give your team a jolt down the stretch.

With injuries and byes, there’s a good chance you’re looking for fantasy sleepers this week. With that in mind, Touchdown Wire presents nine fantasy football sleepers for Week 12 of the NFL season:

9. Bo Scarbrough, RB, Detroit Lions

Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports

Scarbrough was brought up from the practice squad before Sunday’s game with Dallas. He ended up getting the bulk of the carries ahead of J.D. McKissic and Ty Johnson. He rushed 14 times for 55 yards. That should earn him more carries going forward, and he’s got a favorable matchup Sunday against Washington.

6 waiver wire pickups in fantasy football for Week 12

Fantasy football waiver wire targets for Week 12.

Last week in the NFL we saw more injuries pile up, more players come out of nowhere and even more surprising matchups across the board in fantasy football. By now, guys have either proven themselves to be reliable or their inconsistency has landed them on the bench or dropped altogether.

As trade deadlines come and go, the waiver wire continues to be a vital part of a playoff run in fantasy football.

With four teams on a bye (Cardinals, Chiefs, Chargers, Vikings), here are six waiver wire pickups for Week 12.

(AP Photo/AJ Mast)

RB Jonathan Williams: <1% rostered (ESPN)

With Jordan Wilkins still out (ankle) and Marlon Mack suffering a broken hand in Indy’s 33-13 win against Jacksonville on Sunday, the Colts needed someone to step up big in the run game. Williams fit the bill.

He finished the day with 13 carries for 116 yards and also added a huge reception for 31 yards. With a short week before the Colts travel to Houston to face the Texans, the Colts do not have much time to get healthy. Williams and fellow back Nyheim Hines will carry the workload in the backfield for the time being.

4 takeaways from Broncos’ brutal loss to Vikings

The Denver Broncos held a 20-0 lead over the Minnesota Vikings at halftime and found a way to lose the game.

If you stopped watching at halftime for some reason, yes, the Denver Broncos actually found a way to lose to the Minnesota Vikings.

The Broncos could not have played a better first half in jumping out to a 20-0 lead over the Vikings. But having to settle for some field goals on short fields kept it at a three-score game and the Vikings made the proper adjustments at halftime to make the game truly a tale of two halves.

With the loss, the Broncos drop to 3-7 on the season and will face the Buffalo Bills in another tough road test next week. Here are some takeaways from a brutal defeat.

1. The Broncos were on the wrong side of history

(Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

In the stat that no Broncos fan wants to hear, the Broncos became the first team in the last five seasons to give up a 20-point halftime lead.

Ninety-nine times had a team held a halftime lead of at least 20 points in the last five seasons and all 99 of those teams won the game. The Broncos were team No. 100 and they are now the one in 1-99.

2. If only the Broncos could learn to finish

(Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

The Broncos are 3-7 this season but could just as easily be 7-3 if there was some better execution in key moments. Losses against the Chicago Bears, Jacksonville Jaguars and Indianapolis Colts could have all been wins if not for some crucial miscues.

Sunday’s result was much of the same as the team just couldn’t find a way to make a big play when it needed one. That will come, particularly with this kind of experience.

The Broncos’ record suggests they are a poor team, but there is plenty to be optimistic about. Vic Fangio is a first-year head coach and there are some great young weapons on the squad with which to build on.

NFL fans rip refs for not calling pass interference on final play of Vikings-Broncos

No call here?

Nobody, it seems, knows that a catch is in the NFL. Now, it seems, we have no idea what pass interference is any more.

And by “we” I mean NFL refs, who continued to struggle Sunday as it looked like the crew working the Broncos-Vikings game in Minnesota missed what could have been three pass interference calls on the final three plays of the game, including one on that last play in the end zone that ended up being an incomplete pass that gave the Vikings a 27-23 win.

On third-and-goal from the 4 yard line, Broncos QB Brandon Allen threw a pass to Noah Fant that the WR couldn’t handle:

While both players had some contact on that play, a closer look shows that Jayron Kearse had a nice hold of Fant’s jersey:

Fans were not impressed with the refs: