The terms ‘off the rails’ and ‘train wreck’ are both turns of phrase that describe the same tragedy, and both perfectly describe what the Denver Broncos are presently experiencing.
This locomotive has completely flown off the tracks, and into the nearby crowd of on-lookers.
What caused this disaster, who were the casualties, and how can this train get back on the tracks? All that and much more in this edition of the Denver Broncos stock report
Stock Up
Greg Dulcich
When looking over the historical success — or lack thereof — rookie tight ends have experienced, one can make a very compelling argument that there is no other position where it’s harder to make an impact as a rookie.
On top of that, Greg Dulcich has barely practiced since being drafted, and was selected in the third round. This isn’t freak-of-nature Kyle Pitts going top-four with the expectation he’ll change the way we view the tight end position.
Yet still, Dulcich made a massive impact and knocked Albert Okwuegbunam off the gameday roster in the first appearance of his NFL career.
Dulcich scored the Broncos’ only touchdown over the last two games — a 39-yard scamper from Wilson that briefly made Broncos Country feel like maybe everything would be ok.
YOU ABSOLUTELY LOVE TO SEE IT.
📺: ESPN | @Greg_Dulcich pic.twitter.com/JDh8s1kyjJ
— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) October 18, 2022
He also converted a third down on his first NFL reception.
Despite that being all for Dulcich though, he still finished the game trailing only Jerry Jeudy in terms of receiving yards and receptions. And, to be frank, he should’ve blown Jeudy out of the water, as Wilson missed him over the middle, wide-open, on three separate occasions.
— Steven Ruiz (@theStevenRuiz) October 18, 2022
https://t.co/lKtJas0Cwu pic.twitter.com/ihgInuQC9e
— Bob Sturm (@SportsSturm) October 18, 2022
Baron Browning
It certainly appears like the Denver Broncos’ Baron Browning experiment is paying off, and in a major way at that.
He's not Von Miller, OK?
But the way Baron Browning dips around the edge and dances after his sacks really brings back memories. You love to see it.
— Jon Heath (@ByJonHeath) October 18, 2022
In his debut performance, Browning recorded arguably the greatest game by a pass-rusher in the history of Pro Football Focus’ data collection (since 2006), as he exited the game with the highest pass-rush win rate and pressure rate they had ever recorded.
But, he still had to prove he wasn’t a one-game wonder, and boy, did he prove it.
The Broncos pressured Justin Herbert on 23 of his 59 dropbacks, Herbert's 3rd-highest pressure rate (39.0%) faced in a game in his career.
Bradley Chubb has generated 14 QB pressures over the last two weeks, trailing only Za'Darius Smith (15).#DENvsLAC | #BroncosCountry pic.twitter.com/6FCcBqJB76
— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats) October 18, 2022
Browning finished the game with a sack, two tackles for loss, two pass breakups, and an interception tying for the team lead in every category. He also added a bevy of pressures to his stat sheet.
Baron Browning sacked Justin Herbert in 2.70 seconds (from snap to sack).
The @Broncos defense averages the fastest time to sack (3.76 seconds) in the NFL this season, and only unit under four seconds.#DENvsLAC | #BroncosCountry pic.twitter.com/1k9Ot25r9z
— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats) October 18, 2022
Through just two starts at the position, Browning has 2.5 sacks.
Alex Singleton
Alex Singleton gave the Denver Broncos a herculean effort tonight in place of Josey Jewell, and it still wasn’t enough.
It was impossible to not feel his impact on this game, as he managed to clobber the Bolts to the tune of 19 solo tackles, two of which came in the form of a tackle for loss.
19 solos for Alex Singleton? … Alex Singleton … pic.twitter.com/0YYoP9JhC5
— BEE 🐝 (@Bruddah_Bee) October 18, 2022
The next four leading tacklers for the Denver Broncos combined for 21 solo tackles. The Chargers’ four leading tacklers combined for 20. Singleton nearly did that all on his own.
During this offseason, this columnist wasted a lot of pixels bemoaning the lack of depth at linebacker, and right now, Singleton is laughing directly in his face.
Denver Broncos Defensive Line
As usual, the defensive line was remarkable for the Denver Broncos, even if it wasn’t quite as noticeable as it typically was.
D.J. Jones had a quiet day on the stat sheet, but drew three holding penalties on Zion Johnson, who was flawless from a penalty standpoint through the first five weeks of his NFL career. It’s easy to overlook, but the -30 yards created from those holding penalties, more than doubles the negative yardage total Denver created via sacks tonight.
Speaking of sacks, sixth-round pick Matt Henningsen recorded the first sack of his career and is looking like a relative steal for the Denver Broncos.
DeShawn Williams had two pass breakups, one of which would’ve stopped Los Angeles on fourth down, if not for a lucky Charger bounce.
Dre’Mont Jones had a bad facemask penalty, but was otherwise making a positive impact all over the field on Monday night. He had a key pressure to end the Chargers’ first OT drive, setting Russell Wilson and the offense up in near-perfect position for a walk-off drive.
Patrick Surtain II
Once again, Patrick Surtain II looked like the best player on the field and the best cornerback in the league, despite the final result.
This week, the task was locking down Mike Williams and he did precisely that.
Pat Surtain vs. Mike Williams tonight https://t.co/M7zJpr10Tm
— alex (@highlightheaven) October 18, 2022
As a result of getting ‘The Surtain Treatment’, Williams was targeted just five times across the Chargers’ first 82 offensive plays, and Denver’s top cornerback allowed a mere eight yards.
Wunderkind Justin Herbert averaged 1.6 yards per passing attempt targeting Williams.
That’s over a full yard less than the 2.7 yards per rushing attempt that Melvin Gordon averaged before being benched for ineffectiveness, just to contextualize the hell Surtain inflicts on his opponents.
Patrick Surtain did not allow a reception in coverage for the second time in a game this season.
Surtain has allowed just 142 yards on 35 targets this season, the 2nd-fewest yards allowed in the NFL (min. 30 targets).#DENvsLAC | #BroncosCountry pic.twitter.com/50JSh6Z8tT
— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats) October 18, 2022
Russell Wilson
Holster the rotten tomatoes, Broncos Country.
No, by no means is Wilson living up to preseason or pre-trade expectations, but this is a stock-up, stock-down exercise, in which his last game was the worst start of his NFL career. He looked so washed-up and gun-shy against the Colts that, on Twitter, ‘Russell Wilson contract’ began trending in the Denver area.
He opened tonight’s game up by going 10-for-10 for 116 yards and a touchdown while targeting nine different receivers in the process.
Then, it all went off the rails, and by the game’s end, Wilson saw ghosts more often than he saw his open receivers.
Some of it was the offensive line, and some of it was the receivers struggling to create separation on occasion, but there were plenty of pressures, sacks, and wasted plays created by Wilson holding the ball far too long, deciding to scramble before any pressure was present, missing open receivers, and generally looking like a fledgling rookie quarterback trending towards the ‘bust’ label.
The #Broncos gave Russell Wilson a $245 million contract to lock him up for 7 years and they're ranked dead last in points per game in the NFL.
They also scarified their future by giving away two 1st round picks, two 2nd round picks and 3 players.
This. Is. Bad.
— Dov Kleiman (@NFL_DovKleiman) October 18, 2022
After his flawless start, Wilson closed the game 5-for-18 for a measly 82 yards, and those numbers are fluffed by a pretty improbable 47-yard snag by K.J. Hamler. Outside of that one play, Wilson completed 23.5 percent of his passes at 2.1 yards per attempt. That’s unacceptable for the NFL’s second-most expensive quarterback, even with offensive line woes.
So, how did Wilson manage to land in stock-up, as it’s clear he deserves more criticism than praise? There was a glimmer of hope.
In that Colts game, it was nothing but a cold, dark, nuclear winter.
Russell Wilson: “Broncos country, let’s ride”
Broncos country: pic.twitter.com/xxy3XjSI8m
— LakeShowYo (@LakeShowYo) October 18, 2022
Stock Down
Damarri Mathis
It’s been overlooked as a result of how well Surtain has been playing, but the shoes of Ronald Darby were always going to be large and difficult to fill. That’s especially true when you’re asking a Day 3 rookie cornerback to fill said shoes.
Still, though, Mathis didn’t perform up to the standard on Monday night.
Whereas Darby’s coverage had been so sticky opposing quarterbacks were forced to target Surtain (demonstrated by the fact Darby was targeted at the third-lowest rate in the league through five weeks, per PFF), Justin Herbert couldn’t get enough of picking on Damarri Mathis.
Fortunately, Mathis wasn’t burned for any massive completion and even came up with a massive pass breakup on a fourth-down attempt.
Unfortunately, Mathis was penalized four times for defensive pass interference, totaling 87 yards, and converting two third downs for the Chargers. Plus, that matchup came against Josh Palmer and a depleted Los Angeles receiving group.
Damarri Mathis has become the NFL's leader in pass interference penalties in just one game. He has 4 tonight, nobody else has more than 3 this season
— Rodger Sherman (@rodger) October 18, 2022
Before you pin those all on strict officiating, no other player received multiple defensive pass interference calls, so it would be odd that only one player would be impacted by a variable that should seemingly have a negative impact on every coverage player on the field.
Most weeks, Mathis will have a tougher task than this, and now, Los Angeles has laid out the blueprint for everyone else — stay away from Surtain and target No. 27.
And bad news Broncos fans, the way opposing second-team offenses feasted on Michael Ojemudia in the preseason, makes it tough to trust that he’ll be the savior of the secondary.
Denver Broncos Special Teams
The Denver Broncos special teams had their worst moment of the entire 2022 NFL season, and it couldn’t have come at a worse time.
On the final punt of the game, P.J. Locke was backed into Montrell Washington by Ja’Sir Taylor, and the subsequent muffed punt was quickly recovered by the Chargers, to set up an easy game-winning field goal, despite the defense not allowing L.A. to convert a single first down all overtime.
#Broncos Montrell Washington muffs the punt, sets the #Chargers up with great field position. pic.twitter.com/N9B1lZygam
— NFL Unlimited (@NFLUnlimited) October 18, 2022
As bad as that was, it’s made even less excusable by the fact it wasn’t the first muffed punt from Denver in this game. Washington muffed a separate punt earlier and was just fortunate enough to fall on it.
Through three weeks, Washington was listed as a ‘stock-up’ player because his punt returns, in a small sample size, were arguably the best in the league.
This week, Washington deserves to be listed as a ‘stock-down’ player, because this week, in a small sample size, his returns were probably the worst in the league.
Denver Broncos Offensive Line
It’s hard to know exactly where to point the finger for the failures of the offensive line, though the correct answer probably is, ‘at everyone’.
The offensive line played horribly, and Wilson was quickly pressured on a lot of his dropbacks, but a large share of those were self-inflicted. Even when the offensive line immediately allowed a sack on the Broncos’ final drive of regulation, it’s clear that the protection wasn’t properly adjusted before the draft, as one of the pass rushers closest to the quarterback was left entirely unblocked.
Drue Tranquill timed the snap perfectly, sacking Russell Wilson in just 2.25 seconds, the 4th-quickest sack this season.
The Chargers win probability increased from 46% to 61% as a result of the sack.
Tranquill (2022): 7 pressures (T-5th among off ball LB)#DENvsLAC | #BoltUp pic.twitter.com/AH2i905lYd
— Next Gen Stats (@NextGenStats) October 18, 2022
When Peyton Manning was in Denver, he constantly elevated the offensive line by making sure they were in the right look. It’s impossible to say Wilson is doing that. Now, no one’s Peyton Manning, but is Wilson even operating that pre-snap aspect of the game at a Teddy Bridgewater-level?
It sure doesn’t feel like it.
The Broncos’ offensive line also struggled to get any push in the run game, against a defense that ranks 22nd against the run, according to Football Outsiders’ DVOA metric.
Melvin Gordon
After an ineffective night that saw him gain just eight yards on three carries, Melvin Gordon was promptly benched in favor of Latavius Murray and Mike Boone.
During the game, Melvin Gordon was spotted pouting on the sidelines several times by ESPN’s cameras, including when the Broncos broke the tie to take a late 16-13 lead.
After the game, Melvin Gordon liked several tweets saying the Broncos should cut or trade him, seemingly signaling his desire to be sent elsewhere.