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‘He’s only going to get better’

‘He’s only going to get better’

Bo Nix’s hands flew to his head as soon as his pass hit Bobby Wagner’s hands, the Commanders linebacker standing in no-man’s-land in the middle of a zone. Nix didn’t see him. Or didn’t register him. A double-pump throw intended for rookie wideout Pat Bryant zipped instead directly to Wagner, and Nix came off the field patting his chest in apology for a baffling pick.

At that point Sunday night, conventional wisdom might have suggested a couple of handoffs to calm things down. Denver held a three-point lead over the Commanders. Time ticked in the fourth quarter. They could’ve elected to turn to the ground, and control the clock.

This Broncos offense, of course, is anything but conventional. Nix hit Marvin Mims on a short completion. And then hit Pat Bryant on another. And then was sacked on a third down. Three straight dropbacks. Just over two minutes came off the clock, in an eventual 27-26 overtime win that was excessively close for comfort.

In a world a few weeks earlier, this would’ve been J.K. Dobbins’ time to ring the bell. The veteran back made a living through 10 games in the second half, entrusted with the football whenever the Broncos needed a moment of offensive zen. But Dobbins was moved to injured reserve with a Lisfranc injury in mid-November, and in his place stand rookie RB RJ Harvey and gamer Jaleel McLaughlin. And Denver’s run-pass distribution has skewed toward pass across the past two weeks more heavily than in any previous two-game stretch this season: 65.4% of their offensive plays have come through the air.

“I mean, there’s no way you can downplay losing J.K., who was a top-five back when he was healthy this year. … He was obviously great for us,” tight end Adam Trautman said Monday.

“But we are obviously very confident in our backs, and then, obviously, we have a lot of confidence in our front.”

Harvey has struggled to get going in two games as the lead back, averaging just 2.7 yards a carry; he’s now at 2.6 yards per carry when taking away a 50-yard pop in Week 1 and a 40-yard touchdown scamper in Week 8. But the second-round pick quietly put forth a complete effort Sunday beyond the raw numbers on the ground, (35 yards, 13 carries, two touchdowns) — and the lack of emphasis on the run-game was more a function of game situation.

Denver went into Sunday’s matchup against Washington knowing that offenses have had success this season when running the ball in sub-personnel groupings — multiple tight ends, creative formations, etc. — against the Commanders. Washington head coach Dan Quinn, though, adjusted by deploying heavier defensive units, as Broncos head coach Sean Payton acknowledged postgame.

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