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Troy Renck: Bo Show remains a hit, especially in clutch, but Broncos cannot keep winning this way

Troy Renck, The Denver Post on

Published in Football

LANDOVER, Md. — As his right knee perched 2 inches above the ground, the Denver Broncos’ season became lost in the clouds.

Everything seems possible when Bo Nix makes plays like this.

You saw it. You know it. You Bo-lieve it. Clear the schedule. Check Expedia for flights to Santa Clara, Calif., in February.

Late in the second quarter Sunday night, Nix stepped up in the pocket, sprinted forward and ducked his right shoulder to avoid Washington linebacker Preston Smith. It worked. Sort. Of. There was no hit, but Smith caught Nix's right foot, leaving the quarterback no choice but to go airborne to prevent a sack, while firing a sidearm touchdown pass to Courtland Sutton.

Had Patrick Mahomes made this play, they would have stopped the game and given him an ESPY. With Nix, it provided a highlight of his potential, of what he can be on any given Sunday.

The problem? In the wake of their ninth consecutive victory, 27-26 over the Commanders, it is obvious the Broncos cannot keep winning this way. Not against good teams. Which are looming on the schedule in the final month.

That is my opinion. As you might imagine, it is not shared by Sean Payton.

"The journey of a good team's season involves games like this. You do believe it can happen and that you can do it again. There cannot be false belief," Payton said. "We did not escape. We won."

It took an incredible sequence, involving a timeout and a club.

On fourth down from the 3-yard line in the extra period, Marcus Mariota drilled a laser to Terry McLaurin for the score. It set up a do-for-die two-point conversion. The Broncos stopped the clock to get a picture of what Washington might do.

Nik Bonitto, quiet for much of the game, deflected Mariota's pass for the walk-off victory.

With the hand that had the cast on it.

"At the end of the day," Bonitto said, "I was happy to help us find a way to win.”

Again. It was nervy. It was exhausting. Just like those victories against the Giants, Giants and Texans.

But this is not sustainable.

The Packers, Jaguars, Chiefs and Chargers? Perhaps you have heard of them. They are all waiting, eagerly wanting to end Denver's pursuit of the AFC's No. 1 seed.

At the game's ending, you could see the beginning of trouble. That overtime was required against one of the NFL's worst defenses made that abundantly clear.

Nix had to complete all four of his passes in the extra period for 71 yards to set up R.J. Harvey for a score. And the defense had to overcome failing on a goal line stand -- a dizzying sequence that involved a McLaurin touchdown negated by holding, followed by a 39-yard pass to Deebo Samuel to the 1-yard line and a McLaurin score

And let's be clear, Bonitto's paw prevented a loss. Mariota's pass was floating to a wide open Jeremy McNichols for the game winner. No one was near him. But that's how things go when you are on a roll. Washington decides to let a free rusher go, and he is the most athletic player on Denver's defense.

Payton, of course, wants balance. Knows he should run the ball, even with J.K. Dobbins sidelined indefinitely with a foot injury. He writes it on his Waffle House menu-sized play sheet, says it during halftime interviews as he did again on this winter-coat required evening at Northwest Stadium.

Thing is, Payton loves passing like Oprah loves good books, especially when Washington used different fronts than expected.

 

And it all leaves the Broncos in a dangerous position if this trend continues. They need not apologize for a road win against a sorry opponent -- and Washington without Jayden Daniels is akin Paul McCartney without the Beatles.

But, let's set the bar a little higher, right?

Through the chants of the sea of orange of fans behind the Broncos' bench after the game, you could hear the page being turned. This is becoming Nix's offense again. His team. The Bo Show.

But this production is not ready for Broadway. Otherwise known as the NFL playoffs.

Nix provides hope. He needs help. Isn't it obvious? Didn't the fourth quarter tell us that?

Payton does not trust his run game as the Broncos deal with their new reality without Dobbins. He would have taken over in the second half with 50 yards, while siphoning the clock.

Payton repeatedly showed you what he thought of his replacements -- RJ. Harvey, Jaleel McLaughlin, Tyler Badie -- after Washington shaved the deficit to 20-17.

With 12:40 remaining in the game, Nix, who had thrown an ugly interception to linebacker Bobby Wagner in the previous possession to set up the Commanders scoring drive, promptly dropped back three straight times. It revealed why the Broncos entered Sunday leading in three-and-outs.

Nix completed a 2-yard pass to Marvin Mims, a 5-yarder to Pat Bryant and was sacked on third-and-3. The drive took 2 minutes, 13 seconds off the clock. Instead of creating room to exhale, it became another one of these games the Broncos find ways to win this season, and win ugly.

Then on third-and-4 from the Broncos' 35-yard line with 3:04 remaining, Nix, who finished 29 of 45 for 321 yards, lined up in shotgun with an empty backfield. An incompletion to Sutton followed.

They cannot keep doing this. It is leaving zero elasticity for the defense. Yes the group has met the challenge, but this not the 2015 Orange Rush that created turnovers and delivered touchdowns.

You can appreciate the win, and know more is needed.

How about we set the bar higher than, "Who cares what it looks like, only the scoreboard matters."

That explanation would have sufficed in any of the previous nine seasons after Peyton Manning. In fact, the last time the Broncos played here in 2017, Brock Osweiler represented the fifth quarterback change among three different players that sason. His play wrecked the game.

That team was awful. This team has a chance to do something special. Remember, Expedia, hotel rooms and Tupac's "California Love?" humming in our ears?

It is all available to these Broncos. There is a real possibility that the postseason will feature no Joe Burrow, Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson.

There may never be a cleaner path in the playoffs for Nix. But it must be paved on the ground, unless Payton plans on switching to an uptempo offense (spoiler alert: that will never happen, and should not because it would undermine the team's greatest strength).

The Broncos defense allows for bewildering mistakes, covers for a lack of discipline -- Bonitto has to know better than to pull a player off an invisible pile even if it should have resulted in offsetting penalties -- and the inability of the of Nix to play keepaway without a bell cow back.

In the end, the Broncos delivered another victory. But for a team dreaming of a Super Bowl, they cannot keep winning this way.

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