Broncos, Sean Payton, Bo Nix need these trends to turn for success

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Sean Payton stopped the question cold.

In November 2023, the Broncos had won five straight and just polished off a bully-ball win against Cleveland to get above .500 for the first time all season.

At 6-5, they had legitimate playoff aspirations. Quarterback Russell Wilson had 17 touchdowns and no picks in the red zone.

When a question about that performance came the coach’s way, he did not let it stand.

“Let’s back up a second,” Payton said then. “We haven’t been good in the red zone. We were good yesterday, but we haven’t been. We were near the bottom third in the league as a unit. Yesterday we were better. As it pertains to Russell, he’s measured just like our offense.”

Translation: Individual stats don’t matter. Production does. If the offense is bad in the red zone, the quarterback is bad in the red zone.

The 17-0 TD-INT ratio didn’t capture the sacks and penalties that beset the Broncos’ offense. It didn’t mask, in Payton’s eyes, that Denver was among the league’s worst offenses on goal-to-go situations.

It certainly did not convince Payton that Wilson was the guy to get Denver where it wanted to go long-term.

After Wilson’s December benching and the ensuing $85 million divorce, Payton outlined a long list of improvements the Broncos offense needed to make in 2024. Improvements they would definitely make, in his mind. Some systemic, some only thinly veiled as things the next quarterback — eventually first-round pick Bo Nix — would do better than Wilson. Be better in the red zone. Take fewer sacks. Play in rhythm rather than off schedule. Run the ball with more efficiency.

One game doesn’t provide enough data to do anything more than gather an early impression on the progress or lack thereof in those departments, but the very early returns indicate the Broncos have a long way to go in most of these areas and risk having to rely heavily — perhaps too heavily — on Nix in the search for further offensive progress.

Red zone woes

Payton has a truism he uses regularly about football teams. If you’re good on the road, good at home, good in bad weather or good in primetime, that isn’t about anything special in those departments. It’s probably because you’re a good team.

A similar notion applies in the red zone. If you’re good on offense, you’re probably good in the red zone.

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