In a sport where victories often hinge on the thinnest of margins, the Denver Broncos received a painful reminder of just how narrow their path to success remains. Sunday’s 16-14 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs, in which a potential game-winning field goal was blocked as time expired, laid bare the Broncos’ razor-thin margin for error against the NFL’s elite.
A Valiant Effort Falls Just Short
On the surface, the Broncos did nearly everything necessary to topple the two-time defending Super Bowl champions. Denver won the turnover battle, sacked Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes a career-high four times, and held Kansas City to a single touchdown in four red-zone trips. As Broncos cornerback Pat Surtain II noted after the game:
On both sides of the ball, I felt like we were the more physical team. I bet you if you was to ask them about this game, they would look at it the same way, too.
Yet, for all their grit and determination, the Broncos still found themselves on the losing end when Harrison Butker’s 35-yard field goal attempt was swatted away at the death. Head coach Sean Payton, while proud of his team’s effort, acknowledged the fine line between victory and defeat:
Proud of how they fought, thought we outplayed them. But nonetheless you’ve got to beat a champion, and we weren’t able to do it. Obviously gut-wrenching.
The Mahomes Factor
Complicating matters for Denver is the presence of Patrick Mahomes, who improved to 13-1 as a starter against the Broncos. The prodigiously talented Chiefs signal-caller has been a one-man wrecking crew versus Denver, engineering improbable comebacks and game-winning drives with startling regularity. As impressive as the Broncos’ defensive effort was on Sunday, Mahomes still found a way to lead Kansas City to victory, albeit by the slimmest of margins.
Offensive Inconsistency Proves Costly
While Denver’s defense rose to the challenge, the offense struggled to maintain its early momentum. After racing out to a 14-3 lead, the Broncos mustered just 58 yards on their next four possessions, punt thrice and missing a long field goal. Those empty drives allowed the Chiefs to chip away at the deficit, ultimately setting the stage for Butker’s last-second heroics. Quarterback Bo Nix lamented the missed opportunities:
We’re close … we have to find a way to make a play when they don’t, make a play that wins it. In this league, that’s the line between playoff teams and teams that win championships and all the other guys.
The Road Ahead
Despite the heartache, the Broncos remain in the thick of the AFC playoff chase. At 5-5, they hold the conference’s final wild card spot, with a one-game cushion over the Indianapolis Colts and Cincinnati Bengals. Pivotal matchups with both those teams loom in December.
To navigate the daunting path to their first postseason berth in eight years, the Broncos must turn their narrow defeats into narrow victories. As Nix noted, that transformation is the hallmark of champions:
Hats off to them, they’ve just have found ways to win, over and over again … [It’s] impressive to see that they’re capable of that, [that they] find ways to win, and hopefully we’ll find that same way and be able to do that same thing.
The margin for error may be thin, but if the Broncos can master the art of winning close games, a return to the playoffs could be within reach. As Surtain II succinctly put it: “It was right there.” For a team desperate to recapture its former glory, “right there” is a starting point, not a destination.