BLIZZARD. BROKEN ANKLE. HEARTBREAK. The Denver Broncos were ONE win from the Super Bowl — home-field advantage, elite defense, no Mahomes, no Jackson, no Burrow in their path — and it all vanished in a snowy nightmare against the Patriots.
Bo Nix goes down with a fractured ankle. The offense sputters. Another one-score gut punch ends the season. Players are left speechless, burning with a fire that won’t die.
“I’m not going to let that taste leave my mouth… probably for the rest of my life,” edge rusher Jonathon Cooper said. That raw pain is fuel — but it also exposed brutal truths about an offense that forced the Broncos to live on the razor’s edge all year.
Sean Payton has already started swinging the axe, firing offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi and WR coach Keary Colbert. But that’s just the beginning. Here are the four explosive changes Denver MUST make to turn close calls into blowouts and finally bring home the Lombardi Trophy.
1. Stop Settling — Demand Game-Breaking Big Plays
The Broncos survived 12 one-score thrillers because their offense couldn’t pull away early. Fourth-highest three-and-out rate in the league. Courtland Sutton carried the deep threat load almost alone (tied for 9th with 17 catches of 20+ yards). Everyone else? Invisible.
J.K. Dobbins led with 21 runs of 10+ yards — then got hurt in Week 10. No one stepped up. Defenses tilted everything toward Sutton and dared Denver to beat them another way. The Broncos rarely did. Result? Nail-biters every week and zero margin for error when Nix went down.
2. Unleash the Ignored Speed Demon: Marvin Mims Jr.
Sean Payton loves big receivers. Marvin Mims Jr. is 5-11, 182 pounds — and has been buried on the depth chart for three years. Until injuries forced him into action in the playoffs.
Suddenly Mims erupted: team-high 155 playoff receiving yards, a 52-yard bomb (longest Broncos completion of the postseason by 23 yards), and the ONLY player with multiple 20+ yard plays AND a 50+ yard play this postseason.
Forced into duty, he delivered. Will Payton finally admit he’s been sleeping on a homegrown explosive weapon?
3. Fix the Invisible Run Game — Especially in Bad Weather
Payton preaches balance, but the numbers don’t lie: 19th in carries, 16th in rushing yards per game, 15th in 10+ yard runs. Then in the snowy AFC title game? Running backs got just 18 carries while the wind howled.
Payton himself called the failed fourth-and-1 pass (instead of a run) one of his biggest regrets. He’s already promised an “urgent” offseason study of the ground attack. Broncos fans are tired of watching their team abandon the run when it matters most.
4. Stop Broadcasting Every Play Before the Snap
Defensive coaches around the league whispered it all season: Denver’s personnel groupings became predictable. Sub patterns gave away tendencies. The Patriots looked like they were “reading the mail” on the perimeter and on that crushing fourth-down failure.
Payton is a genius play-designer, but even geniuses must evolve. Time for deeper self-scouting and real scheme disruption — not just annual tweaks.
The Broncos were agonizingly close. Fix these four flaws and they won’t need late-game heroics or perfect health to win it all. Ignore them… and that bitter taste stays forever.









