2016 Denver Broncos season
{{short description|NFL team season}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox NFL team season
| team = Denver Broncos
| logo =
| year = 2016
| record = 9−7
| division_place = 3rd AFC West
| coach = Gary Kubiak
Joe DeCamillis (interim, Week 6)
| owner = The Pat Bowlen Trust
| general manager = John Elway
| stadium = Sports Authority Field at Mile High
| playoffs = Did not qualify
| pro bowlers = {{Collapsible list
|title = 6
|1 = CB Chris Harris Jr.
|2 = LB Von Miller
|3 = WR Emmanuel Sanders
|4 = S Darian Stewart
|5 = CB Aqib Talib
|6 = WR Demaryius Thomas
}}
| AP All-pros = {{Collapsible list
|title = 3
|1 = CB Chris Harris Jr. (1st team)
|2 = LB Von Miller (1st team)
|3 = CB Aqib Talib (1st team)
}}
| uniform = File:Broncos uniforms.png
| shortnavlink = Broncos seasons
}}
The 2016 season was the Denver Broncos' 47th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 57th overall. It was also their second and last season under head coach Gary Kubiak, as he retired at the end of the season due to health concerns.{{cite news |last=Jhabvala |first=Nicki |title=Gary Kubiak resigns as Denver Broncos' head coach |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2017/01/02/gary-kubiak-resigns-denver-broncos-head-coach/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=January 2, 2017 |access-date=January 2, 2017}}
The Broncos entered the season as defending champions of Super Bowl 50, after undergoing numerous roster changes as well as an off-season and preseason that was dominated by a quarterback controversy, following the retirement of Peyton Manning. Following a 4–0 start, the team sputtered down the stretch, missing the playoffs for the first time since 2010, as well as having their franchise-record streak of five consecutive playoff appearances and five consecutive AFC West division titles snapped. In addition, the Broncos became the 12th consecutive team to fail to repeat as Super Bowl champions, as well as the first reigning champion to miss the playoffs since the 2013 Baltimore Ravens. In terms of statistics, the Broncos' offense scored more than 30 points only once and ranked 27th in total offense. Head coach Gary Kubiak abruptly resigned at the end of the season citing health reasons but would remain as a consultant for the Broncos before returning to coaching in 2019 as the assistant head coach/offensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings, where he spent 2 seasons before retiring from coaching following the 2020 season.
This was the Broncos' last winning season until 2024.
{{TOC limit|3}}
Coaching changes
- February 12: Brian Callahan, who had served as the Broncos' offensive quality control coach since 2010, was hired as a quarterbacks coach with the Detroit Lions.{{cite news |author=Renck, Troy |title=Brian Callahan, Broncos offensive quality control coach, hired by Lions |url=http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_29512426/brian-callahan-broncos-lions |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=February 12, 2016 |access-date=February 12, 2016}}
- February 16: Klint Kubiak, son of Broncos' head coach Gary Kubiak, was hired as the offensive quality control coach, replacing Brian Callahan. Klint Kubiak previously served as a coaching assistant with the Minnesota Vikings from 2013 to 2014, and was a wide receiver's coach at the University of Kansas in 2015.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Klint Kubiak leaves post at Kansas to be Broncos offensive assistant |url=http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_29524286/klint-kubiak-leaves-post-at-kansas-join-father |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=February 16, 2016 |access-date=February 16, 2016}}
=Gary Kubiak's health problems=
On October 9, shortly after the Broncos' Week 5 loss to the Atlanta Falcons, head coach Gary Kubiak was taken to a Denver-area hospital, after experiencing flu-like symptoms and extreme body fatigue. According to executive vice president/general manager John Elway, Kubiak had been feeling ill prior to the loss to the Falcons, and following a precautionary MRI and CT scan, Kubiak was diagnosed with a "complex migraine." Special teams coordinator Joe DeCamillis served as the team's interim head coach for the team's Week 6 Thursday Night loss at the San Diego Chargers, while Kubiak underwent a doctor-mandated week of rest. This was the second time in three years in which Kubiak experienced a health scare; in November 2013, while serving as the Houston Texans' head coach, Kubiak suffered a mini-stroke after collapsing on the field during a game against the Indianapolis Colts.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Gary Kubiak diagnosed with "complex migraine," will not coach Thursday in San Diego |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/10/gary-kubiak-hospitalized-overnight-denver-broncos/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 10, 2016 |access-date=October 10, 2016}} Concerns over his health ultimately resulted in Kubiak retiring from coaching at the end of the season.
Roster changes
=Free agents=
==Unrestricted==
==Restricted==
==Exclusive-Rights==
=Signings=
style="background:#ff9; border:1px solid #aaa; width:2em;"|
| Indicates that the player was a free agent at the end of his respective team's {{nfly|2015}} season. |
=Departures=
=Retirement of Peyton Manning=
On March 7, two days before the start of the {{nfly|2016}} league year, quarterback Peyton Manning retired after 18 NFL seasons.{{cite news |author=Renck, Troy |title=Peyton Manning retires from football: "I love the game...I will miss it." |url=http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_29606293/peyton-manning-retires-from-football-i-fought-good-fight |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=March 7, 2016 |access-date=September 8, 2016 |archive-date=March 9, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309045655/http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_29606293/peyton-manning-retires-from-football-i-fought-good-fight |url-status=dead}} In his four seasons with the Broncos (2012–2015), Manning threw for 17,112 passing yards and 140 touchdowns, both second in franchise history behind John Elway. Manning also set numerous league records, including single-season passing yardage (5,477) and single-season touchdown passes (55), both of which were achieved in 2013.{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=Peyton Manning: A career by the numbers |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Peyton-Manning-A-career-by-the-numbers/23864071-79f8-4abb-a1fd-f1ce7d6eed57 |work=Denver Broncos |date=March 6, 2016 |access-date=March 6, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307104134/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Peyton-Manning-A-career-by-the-numbers/23864071-79f8-4abb-a1fd-f1ce7d6eed57 |archive-date=March 7, 2016 |url-status=dead }}
Since his retirement, four of Manning's records have been surpassed by either Tom Brady or Drew Brees: combined regular season and postseason wins (200 – surpassed by Brady in {{nfly|2016}}{{cite web |title=Tom Brady sets record for all-time QB victories |url=https://www.nfl.com/news/tom-brady-sets-record-for-all-time-qb-victories-0ap3000000750645 |work=NFL |date=December 4, 2016 |access-date=December 4, 2016}}), regular season wins (186 – tied with Brett Favre, surpassed by Brady in {{nfly|2017}}{{cite web |author=Reiss, Mike |title=Tom Brady passes Brett Favre, Peyton Manning with 187th win |url=http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/21033998/new-england-patriots-tom-brady-becomes-nfl-all-winningest-quarterback |work=ESPN |date=October 15, 2017 |access-date=October 15, 2017}}), regular season passing yardage (surpassed by Brees in {{nfly|2018}}{{cite web |author=Knoblauch, Austin |title=Drew Brees becomes NFL's all-time passing leader |url=https://www.nfl.com/news/drew-brees-becomes-nfl-s-all-time-passing-leader-0ap3000000972095 |work=NFL.com |date=October 8, 2018 |access-date=October 8, 2018}}) and regular season touchdown passes (surpassed by Brees in {{nfly|2019}}{{cite web |author=Bergman, Jeremy |title=Drew Brees passes Peyton for most career TD passes |url=https://www.nfl.com/news/drew-brees-passes-peyton-for-most-career-td-passes-0ap3000001089040 |work=NFL |date=December 17, 2019 |access-date=December 17, 2019}} and then again by Brady in 2020).
Manning was also one of two remaining active players who were drafted and had played in the 1990s—the other being fellow 1998 draftee Charles Woodson of the Oakland Raiders. Woodson also retired following the 2015 season, making 2015 the last one to feature players drafted in the 1990s.
=Trades=
- March 11: The Broncos acquired quarterback Mark Sanchez in a trade that would have sent a 2017 seventh-round selection to the Philadelphia Eagles; however, Sanchez was released on September 2, voiding the trade.{{cite news |author=Terranova, Justin |title=Is this the end for Mark Sanchez? |url=https://nypost.com/2016/08/23/is-this-the-end-for-mark-sanchez/ |newspaper=New York Post |date=August 23, 2016 |access-date=August 23, 2016}}{{cite news |author=Renck, Troy |title=Mark Sanchez acquired by Denver Broncos for 2017 draft pick |url=http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_29626539/broncos-acquire-qb-mark-sanchez-conditional-2017-draft |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=March 11, 2016 |access-date=March 11, 2016}}
- April 9: The Broncos were involved in a trade that sent offensive tackle Ryan Clady to the New York Jets (see draft section below).{{cite news |author1=Renck, Troy |author2=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos trade Ryan Clady, 7th-rounder to Jets for 5th-round pick |url=http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_29746745/broncos-trade-ryan-clady-7th-rounder-jets-5th-round-pick |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=April 9, 2016 |access-date=April 9, 2016}}
- October 25: The Broncos acquired tight end A. J. Derby in a trade that sent a 2017 fifth-round selection to the New England Patriots.
=Draft=
{{main|2016 NFL draft}}
==Draft trades==
=Undrafted free agents=
All undrafted free agents were signed after the 2016 NFL draft concluded on April 30,{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=Get to know the Broncos' 21 college free agents |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Get-to-know-the-Broncos-21-college-free-agents/897d0855-5f4e-4e2e-9bb9-9e13300eaf2e |work=Denver Broncos |date=May 2, 2016 |access-date=May 2, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160504130448/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Get-to-know-the-Broncos-21-college-free-agents/897d0855-5f4e-4e2e-9bb9-9e13300eaf2e |archive-date=May 4, 2016 |url-status=dead }} unless noted otherwise.
=Suspensions=
On August 12, safety Shiloh Keo was suspended for the first two games of the {{nfly|2016}} season for violating the league's substance abuse policy. The suspension was a result of a DUI arrest in Idaho in February.
=Injuries=
- August 12: One day after the Broncos' first preseason game against the Chicago Bears, wide receiver Bennie Fowler revealed that he suffered a fractured elbow after blocking a punt.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos WR Bennie Fowler to miss time with elbow fracture |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/08/13/bennie-fowler-broncos-elbow-fracture/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=August 12, 2016 |access-date=August 12, 2016}} Fowler missed the first two games of the season.
- August 15: Defensive end Vance Walker suffered a ruptured ACL in his right knee during practice,{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos DE Vance Walker done for season with torn ACL |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/08/15/vance-walker-injury-denver-broncos/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=August 15, 2016 |access-date=August 15, 2016}} and was placed on the season-ending injured reserve four days later (August 19).
- September 18: Linebacker DeMarcus Ware suffered an ulna fracture in his right forearm, during the Broncos' Week 2 win over the Indianapolis Colts. Ware collided with teammate Von Miller, with both converging on a sack attempt of Colts' quarterback Andrew Luck. Ware missed six weeks of action, before returning in Week 8.{{cite web |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos' Aqib Talib, Brandon Marshall out; DeMarcus Ware to play vs. Chargers |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/30/denver-broncos-san-diego-chargers-preview/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 30, 2016 |access-date=October 30, 2016}}{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos' DeMarcus Ware to have surgery on forearm; out 4-5 weeks |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/19/demarcus-ware-forearm-injury-denver-broncos/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=September 19, 2016 |access-date=September 19, 2016}}
- October 24: Running back C. J. Anderson suffered an injury to his right knee during the first quarter of the Broncos' Week 7 win over the Houston Texans, though he returned in the second quarter and played the remainder of the game. Two days later (October 26), media reports indicated that Anderson missed practice and sought multiple medical opinions on his knee.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos RB C.J. Anderson undergoing further tests, strong possibility of missing time |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/27/broncos-cj-anderson-knee-injury/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 27, 2016 |access-date=October 27, 2016}} After an MRI revealed that he suffered meniscus damage,{{cite web |title=Broncos RB C.J. Anderson has meniscus damage, out indefinitely |url=http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/17900192/denver-broncos-rb-cj-anderson-meniscus-damage-knee |work=ESPN |date=October 27, 2016 |access-date=October 27, 2016}} Anderson was placed on injured reserve, and will miss a minimum of eight weeks.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos' C.J. Anderson has meniscus repaired and is placed on IR |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/28/cj-anderson-knee-injury-broncos/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 28, 2016 |access-date=October 28, 2016}} Also on October 24, linebacker Brandon Marshall suffered a hamstring injury, and missed the team's Week 9 loss to the Oakland Raiders.
- November 6: Defensive tackle Derek Wolfe suffered a hairline fracture in his elbow during the team's Week 9 loss to the Oakland Raiders,{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos receive "encouraging news" about Derek Wolfe's elbow injury; Aqib Talib day-to-day |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/07/broncos-receive-encouraging-news-about-derek-wolfes-elbow-injury-aqib-talib-day-to-day/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 7, 2016 |access-date=November 7, 2016}} and missed the team's Week 10 win over the New Orleans Saints.
- Weeks 8–10: Cornerback Aqib Talib missed three games due to a lower back injury.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos CB Aqib Talib declares he'll return for Broncos' Nov. 27 game vs. Chiefs |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/13/aqib-talib-denver-broncos-return/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 13, 2016 |access-date=November 13, 2016}}
- December 1: Fullback Andy Janovich, the team's sixth-round draft selection, was placed on injured reserve, after undergoing ankle surgery two days earlier.
- December 6: Running back Kapri Bibbs was placed on the season-ending injured reserve, after suffering a high ankle sprain during the team's Week 13 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars.
- December 10: Wide receiver Marlon Brown was placed on injured reserve due to recurring back injuries.
- December 16: Long snapper Casey Kreiter was placed on injured reserve, four weeks after suffering a calf injury during the team's Week 10 win over the New Orleans Saints.
Brandon Marshall
Linebacker Brandon Marshall missed multiple games due to a hamstring injury – the Broncos' Week 6 loss to the San Diego Chargers as well as the team's Week 14 loss to the Tennessee Titans.{{cite news |author=Wolfe, Cameron |title=Injuries to Brandon Marshall, Todd Davis are Broncos' biggest concerns headed into Patriots week |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/12/12/brandon-marshall-todd-davis-broncos-injuries/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=December 12, 2016 |access-date=December 12, 2016}}
Trevor Siemian
Quarterback Trevor Siemian missed two games due to injury. He suffered a sprain to his non-throwing shoulder during the team's Week 4 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers that kept him out of the Broncos' Week 5 loss to the Atlanta Falcons the following week. Siemian also suffered a sprained foot during the Broncos' Week 12 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs that kept him out of the team's Week 13 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars the following week. Backup quarterback Paxton Lynch, the team's first-round draft selection, filled in for Siemian in Weeks 4, 5 and 13.
Quarterback selection
Following the retirement of Peyton Manning, the Broncos underwent a process to select a new quarterback throughout the entire off-season and preseason. Brock Osweiler, Manning's backup quarterback from 2012 to 2015, signed with the Houston Texans as a free agent. Mark Sanchez was acquired in a trade with the Philadelphia Eagles, and the Broncos selected Paxton Lynch during the first round of the draft. Sanchez, Lynch and second-year quarterback Trevor Siemian competed for the starting quarterback position,{{cite news |author=Paige, Woody |title=Paige: Denver Broncos find themselves in yet another quarterback controversy |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/05/27/paige-broncos-find-themselves-in-yet-another-quarterback-controversy/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=May 27, 2016 |access-date=May 27, 2016}} with Siemian being named the starting quarterback for the start of the regular season{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Trevor Siemian named Broncos' starting quarterback for season opener |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/08/29/trevor-siemian-broncos-starting-quarterback-season-opener/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=August 29, 2016 |access-date=August 29, 2016}} and Sanchez being released on September 3. Following Sanchez's release, the Broncos signed Austin Davis, who was later waived on December 23.
Staff
{{NFL final staff
|Year=2016
|TeamName=Denver Broncos
|Front Office=
- Owner – The Pat Bowlen Trust
- President/chairman/CEO – Joe Ellis
- Executive vice president of football operations/general manager – John Elway
- Director of football administration – Mike Sullivan
- Director of player personnel – Matt Russell
- Director of pro personnel – Tom Heckert Jr.
- Director of college scouting – Adam Peters
- Assistant director of pro personnel – A. J. Durso
- Director of football analytics – Mitch Tanney
|Head Coaches=
- Head coach – Gary Kubiak
|Offensive Coaches=
- Offensive coordinator – Rick Dennison
- Quarterbacks/passing game coordinator – Greg Knapp
- Running backs – Eric Studesville
- Wide receivers – Tyke Tolbert
- Assistant wide receivers – Marc Lubick
- Tight ends – Brian Pariani
- Offensive line – Clancy Barone
- Assistant offensive line – James Cregg
- Offensive assistant/quarterbacks – Klint Kubiak
|Defensive Coaches=
- Defensive coordinator – Wade Phillips
- Defensive line – Bill Kollar
- Linebackers – Reggie Herring
- Outside linebackers – Fred Pagac
- Defensive backs – Joe Woods
- Assistant defensive backs – Samson Brown
- Defensive assistant/defensive line – Chris Beake
|Special Teams Coaches=
- Special teams coordinator – Joe DeCamillis
- Assistant special teams – Tony Coaxum
|Strength and Conditioning=
- Strength and conditioning – Luke Richesson
- Assistant strength and conditioning – Mike Eubanks
- Assistant strength and conditioning – Anthony Lomando
- Assistant strength and conditioning – Dennis Love
}}
Final roster
{{NFL final roster
|Year=2016
|TeamName=Denver Broncos
|Active=53
|Inactive=9
|PS=10
|Quarterbacks=
{{NFLplayer|12|Paxton Lynch|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|13|Trevor Siemian}}
|Running Backs=
{{NFLplayer|23|Devontae Booker|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|20|Justin Forsett}}
{{NFLplayer|40|Juwan Thompson}}
|Wide Receivers=
{{NFLplayer|16|Bennie Fowler}}
{{NFLplayer|14|Cody Latimer}}
{{NFLplayer|11|Jordan Norwood}}
{{NFLplayer|19|Kalif Raymond|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|10|Emmanuel Sanders}}
{{NFLplayer|87|Jordan Taylor|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|88|Demaryius Thomas}}
|Tight Ends=
{{NFLplayer|83|A. J. Derby}}
{{NFLplayer|85|Virgil Green}}
{{NFLplayer|82|Jeff Heuerman}}
{{NFLplayer|84|Henry Krieger-Coble|rookie=y}}
|Offensive Linemen=
{{NFLplayer|53|James Ferentz|C}}
{{NFLplayer|76|Max Garcia|G}}
{{NFLplayer|60|Connor McGovern|d=American football, born 1993|G|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|73|Russell Okung|T}}
{{NFLplayer|61|Matt Paradis|C|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|74|Ty Sambrailo|T}}
{{NFLplayer|79|Michael Schofield|G|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|71|Donald Stephenson|T}}
{{NFLplayer|70|Billy Turner|G|d=American football}}
|Defensive Linemen=
{{NFLplayer|93|Jared Crick|DE}}
{{NFLplayer|99|Adam Gotsis|DE|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|90|Kyle Peko|NT|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|92|Sylvester Williams|NT|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|97|Billy Winn|DE|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|95|Derek Wolfe|DE}}
|Linebackers=
{{NFLplayer|50|Zaire Anderson|ILB}}
{{NFLplayer|48|Shaquil Barrett|OLB}}
{{NFLplayer|51|Todd Davis|ILB|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|59|Vontarrius Dora|OLB|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|49|Quentin Gause|ILB|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|54|Brandon Marshall|d=linebacker|ILB}}
{{NFLplayer|58|Von Miller|OLB}}
{{NFLplayer|52|Corey Nelson|ILB}}
{{NFLplayer|56|Shane Ray|OLB}}
{{NFLplayer|57|Dekoda Watson|OLB}}
|Defensive Backs=
{{NFLplayer|37|Lorenzo Doss|CB}}
{{NFLplayer|25|Chris Harris Jr.|CB}}
{{NFLplayer|39|Taurean Nixon|CB}}
{{NFLplayer|34|Will Parks|SS|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|29|Bradley Roby|CB}}
{{NFLplayer|31|Justin Simmons|FS/SS|rookie=y|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|26|Darian Stewart|FS}}
{{NFLplayer|21|Aqib Talib|CB|}}
{{NFLplayer|43|T. J. Ward|SS}}
|Special Teams=
{{NFLplayer| 9|Riley Dixon|P|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer| 8|Brandon McManus|K}}
{{NFLplayer|45|Thomas Gafford|LS}}
|Reserve Lists=
{{NFLplayer|22|C. J. Anderson|RB|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|35|Kapri Bibbs|RB|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|67|Sam Brenner|G|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|15|Marlon Brown|WR|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|32|Andy Janovich|FB|IR|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|42|Casey Kreiter|LS|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|96|Vance Walker|DE|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|94|DeMarcus Ware|OLB|IR}}
{{NFLplayer|36|Kayvon Webster|CB|IR}}
|Practice Squad=
{{NFLplayer|30|Zac Brooks|RB|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|55|Dillon Day|C|d=American football}}
{{NFLplayer|69|Reese Dismukes|C}}
{{NFLplayer|98|Iosia Iosia|DE|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|64|Justin Murray|T|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|91|Travis Raciti|DE}}
{{NFLplayer|81|Steven Scheu|TE|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|17|Hunter Sharp|WR|rookie=y}}
{{NFLplayer|46|Kevin Snyder|OLB}}
{{NFLplayer|86|Austin Traylor|TE|rookie=y}}
}}
Preseason
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Week ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Date ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Opponent ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Result ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Record ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Venue ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Recap |
style="background:#cfc"
! 1 | {{dow tooltip|August 11, 2016}} | at Chicago Bears | W 22–0 | 1–0 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016081156/2016/PRE1/broncos@bears Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 2 | {{dow tooltip|August 20, 2016}} | L 24–31 | 1–1 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016082055/2016/PRE2/49ers@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 3 | {{dow tooltip|August 27, 2016}} | W 17–9 | 2–1 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016082757/2016/PRE3/rams@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 4 | {{dow tooltip|September 1, 2016}} | at Arizona Cardinals | L 17–38 | 2–2 | University of Phoenix Stadium | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016090164/2016/PRE4/broncos@cardinals Recap] |
Regular season
=Schedule=
As the result of winning Super Bowl 50, the Broncos earned the right to host the Week 1 kickoff game on Thursday, September 8, in a Super Bowl rematch versus the Carolina Panthers. The Broncos' {{nfly|2016}} schedule was announced on April 14.{{cite web |author=Swanson, Ben |title=Broncos' 2016 regular-season schedule released |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Broncos-2016-regular-season-schedule-released/a3ab5905-6944-4d1d-8ac7-e2efe36a315f |work=Denver Broncos |date=April 14, 2016 |access-date=April 14, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418074016/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Broncos-2016-regular-season-schedule-released/a3ab5905-6944-4d1d-8ac7-e2efe36a315f |archive-date=April 18, 2016 |url-status=dead }}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Week ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Date ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Opponent ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Result ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Record ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Venue ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Recap |
style="background:#cfc"
! 1 | W 21–20 | 1–0 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016090800/2016/REG1/panthers@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 2 | September 18 | W 34–20 | 2–0 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016091810/2016/REG2/colts@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 3 | September 25 | at Cincinnati Bengals | W 29–17 | 3–0 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016092502/2016/REG3/broncos@bengals Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 4 | October 2 | at Tampa Bay Buccaneers | W 27–7 | 4–0 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016100208/2016/REG4/broncos@buccaneers Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 5 | October 9 | L 16–23 | 4–1 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016100907/2016/REG5/falcons@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 6 | {{dow tooltip|October 13, 2016}} | at San Diego Chargers | L 13–21 | 4–2 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016101300/2016/REG6/broncos@chargers Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 7 | {{dow tooltip|October 24, 2016}} | W 27–9 | 5–2 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016102400/2016/REG7/texans@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 8 | October 30 | W 27–19 | 6–2 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016103008/2016/REG8/chargers@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 9 | November 6 | at Oakland Raiders | L 20–30 | 6–3 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016110600/2016/REG9/broncos@raiders Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 10 | November 13 | at New Orleans Saints | W 25–23 | 7–3 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016111303/2016/REG10/broncos@saints Recap] |
11
| colspan="6" |Bye |
---|
style="background:#fcc"
! 12 | November 27 | L 27–30 {{small|(OT)}} | 7–4 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016112709/2016/REG12/chiefs@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 13 | December 4 | at Jacksonville Jaguars | W 20–10 | 8–4 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016120405/2016/REG13/broncos@jaguars Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 14 | December 11 | at Tennessee Titans | L 10–13 | 8–5 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016121109/2016/REG14/broncos@titans Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 15 | December 18 | L 3–16 | 8–6 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016121810/2016/REG15/patriots@broncos Recap] |
style="background:#fcc"
! 16 | at Kansas City Chiefs | L 10–33 | 8–7 | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016122501/2016/REG16/broncos@chiefs Recap] |
style="background:#cfc"
! 17 | January 1 | W 24–6 | 9–7 | Sports Authority Field at Mile High | [http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2017010112/2016/REG17/raiders@broncos Recap] |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
=Game summaries=
==Week 1: vs. Carolina Panthers==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week One: Carolina Panthers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date={{tooltip|September 8|Thursday}}
|time=6:30 p.m. MDT
|road=Panthers
|R1=7|R2=10|R3=0|R4=3
|home=Broncos
|H1=0|H2=7|H3=0|H4=14
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,843
|weather={{convert|85|F|C}}, sunny and clear
|referee=Gene Steratore
|TV=NBC
|TVAnnouncers=Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth and Michele Tafoya
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016090800/2016/REG1/panthers@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/56901/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- CAR – Kelvin Benjamin 14-yard pass from Cam Newton (Graham Gano kick), 7:13. Panthers 7–0. Drive: 8 plays, 71 yards, 4:24.
Second quarter
- DEN – Andy Janovich 28-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 12:16. Tied 7–7. Drive: 5 plays, 80 yards, 2:36.
- CAR – Cam Newton 2-yard run (Graham Gano kick), 3:01. Panthers 14–7. Drive: 18 plays, 89 yards, 9:15.
- CAR – Graham Gano 44-yard field goal, 0:03. Panthers 17–7. Drive: 7 plays, 52 yards, 1:42.
Third quarter
- No scoring plays
Fourth quarter
- DEN – C. J. Anderson 25-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 14:50. Panthers 17–14. Drive: 8 plays, 78 yards, 4:08.
- DEN – C. J. Anderson 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 9:26. Broncos 21–17. Drive: 10 plays, 23 yards, 4:41.
- CAR – Graham Gano 36-yard field goal, 4:21. Broncos 21–20. Drive: 10 plays, 57 yards, 5:05.
|stats=
Top passers
- CAR – Cam Newton – 18/33, 194 yards, TD, INT
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 18/26, 178 yards, TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
- CAR – Jonathan Stewart – 15 rushes, 64 yards
- DEN – C. J. Anderson – 20 rushes, 92 yards, TD
Top receivers
- CAR – Kelvin Benjamin – 6 receptions, 91 yards, TD
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 5 receptions, 49 yards
}}
In a rematch of Super Bowl 50, the defending champion Broncos played host to the Carolina Panthers, in the opening kickoff game. This was the Panthers' first visit to Denver since {{nfly|2004}}. Following a fumble on the Broncos' initial possession, the Panthers grabbed the early lead, with a 14-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Cam Newton to wide receiver Kelvin Benjamin. The Broncos responded early in the second quarter, with a 28-yard touchdown by fullback Andy Janovich on his first rushing attempt. The Panthers then re-claimed the lead, with Newton rushing for a 2-yard touchdown, in an 18-play, 89-yard drive that took nine minutes off the clock. After the Broncos' offense went three-and-out, the Panthers added to their lead just before halftime, with a 44-yard field goal by placekicker Graham Gano.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Defense's big plays key Broncos victory in season opener vs. Panthers |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/08/denver-broncos-carolina-panthers-week-1/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=September 8, 2016 |access-date=September 8, 2016}}
Following a scoreless third quarter, the Broncos pulled to within a 17–14 deficit on the first play of the fourth quarter, with quarterback Trevor Siemian connecting on a 25-yard touchdown pass to running back C. J. Anderson. On the second play of the Panthers' next drive, Newton was intercepted by cornerback Chris Harris Jr. at the Panthers' 38-yard line, giving the Broncos excellent field position. Ten plays later, the Broncos grabbed their first lead of the game, with Anderson rushing up the middle for a 1-yard touchdown at the 9:30 mark of the fourth quarter. The Panthers methodically marched down the field, hoping to re-claim the lead, but had to settle for a 36-yard field goal by Gano to pull to within a 21–20 deficit with 4:25 remaining.
After the Broncos' went three-and-out, the Panthers had one last offensive possession. On the first play after the two-minute warning, the Panthers were facing a 4th-and-21 at their own 29-yard line, and a pass from Newton intended for Benjamin was incomplete; however, Harris was flagged for a facemask penalty, giving the Panthers a new set of downs. With 47 seconds remaining, Newton was flagged for intentional grounding with the Panthers at their own 47-yard line, but Broncos' cornerback Darian Stewart was also flagged for roughing the passer, with a helmet hit on Newton, resulting in both penalties offsetting. With only 14 seconds remaining, Newton completed a crucial pass to wide receiver Ted Ginn Jr. at the Broncos' 32-yard line, setting up Gano for a potential game-winning field goal. After the Broncos called a timeout in order to ice the kicker, Gano's 50-yard field goal attempt sailed wide left, sealing the win for the Broncos.
Notes
Andy Janovich became only the third player in Broncos' franchise history to score on his first rushing attempt; the other two are fullback Kyle Johnson and quarterback Bradlee Van Pelt, both of which occurred in 2005.{{cite news |author1=Groke, Nick |author2=Wolfe, Cameron |author3=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Andy Janovich is 3rd Broncos rookie to score on first career rushing attempt |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/08/andy-janovich-rookie-touchdown/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=September 8, 2016 |access-date=September 8, 2016}}
==Week 2: vs. Indianapolis Colts==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Two: Indianapolis Colts at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date=September 18
|time=2:25 pm. MDT
|road=Colts
|R1=3|R2=3|R3=7|R4=7
|home=Broncos
|H1=3|H2=10|H3=3|H4=18
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,379
|weather={{convert|85|F|C}}, sunny
|referee=Walt Coleman
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Jim Nantz, Phil Simms and Tracy Wolfson
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016091810/2016/REG2/colts@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/56928/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- IND – Adam Vinatieri 48-yard field goal, 8:17. Colts 3–0. Drive: 7 plays, 26 yards, 3:24.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 23-yard field goal, 5:30. Tied 3–3. Drive: 7 plays, 70 yards, 2:47.
Second quarter
- DEN – C. J. Anderson 4-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 11:41. Broncos 10–3. Drive: 6 plays, 69 yards, 3:19.
- IND – Adam Vinatieri 52-yard field goal, 2:43. Broncos 10–6. Drive: 9 plays, 21 yards, 3:36.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 43-yard field goal, 0:05. Broncos 13–6. Drive: 11 plays, 50 yards, 2:38.
Third quarter
- IND – Robert Turbin 5-yard run (Adam Vinatieri kick), 8:06. Tied 13–13. Drive: 13 plays, 79 yards, 6:54.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 33-yard field goal, 1:09. Broncos 16–13. Drive: 13 plays, 60 yards, 6:57.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Aqib Talib 46-yard interception return (Brandon McManus kick), 13:52. Broncos 23–13.
- IND – Frank Gore 7-yard pass from Andrew Luck (Adam Vinatieri kick), 4:02. Broncos 23–20. Drive: 12 plays, 80 yards, 5:28.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 35-yard field goal, 1:51. Broncos 26–20. Drive: 8 plays, 58 yards, 2:11.
- DEN – Shane Ray 15-yard fumble return (Trevor Siemian–Demaryius Thomas pass), 1:42. Broncos 34–20.
|stats=
Top passers
- IND – Andrew Luck – 21/40, 197 yards, TD, INT
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 22/33, 266 yards, INT
Top rushers
- IND – Frank Gore – 13 rushes, 44 yards
- DEN – C. J. Anderson – 20 rushes, 74 yards, TD
Top receivers
- IND – T. Y. Hilton – 4 receptions, 41 yards
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 5 receptions, 90 yards
}}
The two teams exchanged field goals in the first quarter, with a 48-yarder by Colts' placekicker Adam Vinatieri and a 23-yarder by Broncos' placekicker Brandon McManus. A 4-yard touchdown run by running back C. J. Anderson gave the Broncos the lead early in the second quarter. Vinatieri and McManus once again exchanged field goals late in the first half, with a 52-yarder by Vinatieri and a 43-yarder by McManus just before halftime. The Colts took the initial possession of the second half and tied the game at 13–13 midway through the third quarter, with running back Robert Turbin rushing for a 5-yard touchdown. However, the Broncos took the lead for good later in the third quarter, with a 33-yard field goal by McManus. On the Colts' next possession, quarterback Andrew Luck was intercepted by Broncos' cornerback Aqib Talib, who scampered 46 yards down the sideline for a touchdown to give the Broncos a 23–13 lead early in the fourth quarter. Following an exchange of punts, the Colts narrowed the Broncos' lead, with Luck connecting with running back Frank Gore on a 7-yard touchdown pass with four minutes remaining in the game. The Broncos then increased their lead to 26–20 on the first play after the two-minute warning, with McManus' fourth field goal of the game—a 35-yarder—and in the process, forced the Colts to burn all three of their timeouts. The Colts had one last offensive possession, hoping for a game-winning drive, however, on the very first play from scrimmage, Luck was strip-sacked by Broncos' linebacker Von Miller, and linebacker Shane Ray returned the fumble 15 yards for a game-clinching touchdown (with a two-point conversion pass from quarterback Trevor Siemian to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas).{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Denver Broncos defense fends off Indianapolis Colts for 34-20 win |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/18/broncos-colts-week-2-von-miller/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=September 18, 2016 |access-date=September 18, 2016}}
Notes
Demaryius Thomas passed Ed McCaffrey for fourth-place on the Broncos' all-time career receptions list – at the time, Thomas only trailed Lionel Taylor, Shannon Sharpe and Rod Smith,{{cite web |title= Denver Broncos Career Receiving Leaders |url=https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/den/career-receiving.htm |publisher=pro-football-reference.com |date=September 18, 2016 |access-date=September 18, 2016}} and surpassed Taylor in 2017.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos lose 3 defensive starters to injury, ejection; Demaryius Thomas reaches milestone; more notes |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2017/11/26/broncos-injuries-ejections-raiders/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 26, 2017 |access-date=November 26, 2017}} This was the only game during the {{nfly|2016}} season in which the Broncos scored 30 or more points.
==Week 3: at Cincinnati Bengals==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Three: Denver Broncos at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary
|date=September 25
|time=1:00 p.m. EDT/11:00 am. MDT
|road=Broncos
|R1=3|R2=13|R3=0|R4=13
|home=Bengals
|H1=7|H2=7|H3=0|H4=3
|stadium=Paul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio
|attendance=63,850
|weather={{convert|81|F|C}}, sunny
|referee=John Parry
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts and Evan Washburn
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016092502/2016/REG3/broncos@bengals Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/56936/CIN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- CIN – Jeremy Hill 3-yard run (Mike Nugent kick), 11:07. Bengals 7–0. Drive: 5 plays, 74 yards, 2:50.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 20-yard field goal, 4:05. Bengals 7–3. Drive: 14 plays, 73 yards, 7:02.
Second quarter
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders 41-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 13:57. Broncos 10–7. Drive: 3 plays, 46 yards, 1:03.
- CIN – Jeremy Hill 4-yard run (Mike Nugent kick), 4:57. Bengals 14–10. Drive: 8 plays, 62 yards, 3:36.
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders 7-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (kick blocked), 0:28. Broncos 16–14. Drive: 10 plays, 55 yards, 4:29.
Third quarter
- No scoring plays
Fourth quarter
- CIN – Mike Nugent 34-yard field goal, 14:52. Bengals 17–16. Drive: 15 plays, 60 yards, 8:18.
- DEN – John Phillips 1-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (run failed), 6:56. Broncos 22–17. Drive: 13 plays, 82 yards, 7:56.
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas 55-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 4:24. Broncos 29–17. Drive: 4 plays, 83 yards, 1:39.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 23/35, 312 yards, 4 TD
- CIN – Andy Dalton – 21/31, 206 yards, INT
Top rushers
- DEN – C. J. Anderson – 14 rushes, 37 yards
- CIN – Jeremy Hill – 17 rushes, 97 yards, 2 TD
Top receivers
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 9 receptions, 117 yards, 2 TD
- CIN – A. J. Green – 8 receptions, 77 yards
}}
The Bengals grabbed the lead on their opening possession, with running back Jeremy Hill rushing for a 3-yard touchdown. The Broncos drove down to near the goal line on their second possession, which was aided by two Bengals' defensive penalties, however, the Broncos were forced to settle for a 20-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus. Following a Bengals' fumble on a punt return near midfield, the Broncos took the lead, with quarterback Trevor Siemian connecting on a 41-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders. Following an exchange of punts, the Bengals went back ahead, with Hill rushing for his second touchdown from 4 yards out. The Broncos responded, with Siemian throwing another touchdown pass to Sanders from 7 yards out. However, the extra point attempt was blocked. Following a scoreless third quarter, a 34-yard field goal by placekicker Mike Nugent gave the Bengals a 17–16 lead early in the fourth quarter. The Broncos then assembled a 13-play, 82-yard drive, culminating with Siemian firing a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end John Phillips (with an unsuccessful two-point conversion attempt). After the Bengals went three-and-out on their next possession, in which wide receiver A. J. Green dropped a critical third-down pass play, the Broncos added to their lead, with Siemian throwing his fourth touchdown of the game—a 55-yarder to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas with 4:32 remaining in the game. The Broncos' defense stood their ground on the Bengals' last two possessions.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Trevor Siemian, Broncos' star receiving duo shine in road win against Bengals |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/25/denver-broncos-cincinnati-bengals-trevor-siemian/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=September 25, 2016 |access-date=September 25, 2016}}
Notes
Trevor Siemian became the first quarterback in NFL history to throw for 300 yards and four touchdowns without an interception in a first career road start. With linebacker Shane Ray recording three sacks, this was the first time in franchise history in which the Broncos had two different players record 3+ sacks in a single game; linebacker Von Miller achieved three sacks vs. the Indianapolis Colts during the previous week.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Fun facts, key stats from Denver Broncos' victory at Cincinnati Bengals |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/09/25/denver-broncos-cincinnati-bengals-numbers/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=September 25, 2016 |access-date=September 25, 2016}}
==Week 4: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Four: Denver Broncos at Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Game summary
|date=October 2
|time=4:05 pm. EDT/2:05 pm. MDT
|road=Broncos
|R1=7|R2=10|R3=3|R4=7
|home=Buccaneers
|H1=7|H2=0|H3=0|H4=0
|stadium=Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida
|attendance=60,375
|weather={{convert|88|F|C}}, cloudy
|referee=Jerome Boger
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Spero Dedes and Solomon Wilcots
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016100208/2016/REG4/broncos@buccaneers Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/56958/TB_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas 11-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 13:26. Broncos 7–0. Drive: 1 play, 11 yards, 0:05.
- TB – Jameis Winston 7-yard run (Roberto Aguayo kick), 6:40. Tied 7–7. Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 6:46.
Second quarter
- DEN – C. J. Anderson 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 12:14. Broncos 14–7. Drive: 2 plays, 27 yards, 0:56.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 38-yard field goal, 0:05. Broncos 17–7. Drive: 9 plays, 47 yards, 1:14.
Third quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 24-yard field goal, 7:04. Broncos 20–7. Drive: 16 plays, 69 yards, 7:57.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders 5-yard pass from Paxton Lynch (Brandon McManus kick), 8:55. Broncos 27–7. Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, 4:39.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Paxton Lynch – 14/24, 170 yards, TD
- TB – Jameis Winston – 17/35, 179 yards, 2 INT
Top rushers
- DEN – C. J. Anderson – 19 rushes, 49 yards, TD
- TB – Charles Sims – 15 rushes, 28 yards
Top receivers
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 6 receptions, 94 yards, TD
- TB – Cameron Brate – 5 receptions, 67 yards
}}
The Broncos made their first visit to Tampa Bay since 2004. Cornerback Aqib Talib, who made his return to Tampa Bay where he played for the Buccaneers from 2008 to 2012, intercepted Buccaneers' quarterback Jameis Winston on the third play of the opening drive. The Broncos immediately capitalized, with quarterback Trevor Siemian throwing an 11-yard touchdown to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. On the Buccaneers' next drive, a 7-yard touchdown run by Winston tied the game, which would be the Buccaneers' only scoring play of the game. Following another interception of Winston by Talib, the Broncos re-claimed the lead, with a 1-yard touchdown run by running back C. J. Anderson. With 3:25 remaining in the first half, Siemian injured his non-throwing shoulder when he was sacked by defensive tackle Clinton McDonald, and backup quarterback Paxton Lynch, the team's first-round draft selection, took over in his NFL debut. Placekicker Brandon McManus added two field goals—a 38-yarder just before halftime and a 24-yarder midway through the third quarter. Lynch later threw his first touchdown pass—a 5-yarder to wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders—which put the game out of reach. At the 6:52 mark of the fourth quarter, the game was delayed for an hour and a half due to a severe weather threat in the Tampa area.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Aqib Talib, rookie QB Paxton Lynch star in Broncos' storm-delayed win vs. Bucs |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/02/denver-broncos-tampa-bay-buccaneers-aqib-talib/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 2, 2016 |access-date=October 2, 2016}}
==Week 5: vs. Atlanta Falcons==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Five: Atlanta Falcons at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date=October 9
|time=2:05 pm. MDT
|road=Falcons
|R1=10|R2=3|R3=7|R4=3
|home=Broncos
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=0|H4=13
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,802
|weather={{convert|72|F|C}}, mostly cloudy
|referee=Terry McAulay
|TV=Fox
|TVAnnouncers=Chris Myers, John Lynch and Pam Oliver
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016100907/2016/REG5/falcons@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/56972/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- ATL – Devonta Freeman 1-yard run (Matt Bryant kick), 11:18. Falcons 7–0. Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 3:42.
- ATL – Matt Bryant 46-yard field goal, 4:23. Falcons 10–0. Drive: 8 plays, 44 yards, 4:23.
Second quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 35-yard field goal, 11:39. Falcons 10–3. Drive: 10 plays, 40 yards, 3:54.
- ATL – Matt Bryant 33-yard field goal, 1:48. Falcons 13–3. Drive: 17 plays, 77 yards, 7:00.
Third quarter
- ATL – Tevin Coleman 31-yard pass from Matt Ryan (Matt Bryant kick), 7:53. Falcons 20–3. Drive: 3 plays, 42 yards, 2:01.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 46-yard field goal, 11:01. Falcons 20–6. Drive: 8 plays, 22 yards, 3:59.
- ATL – Matt Bryant 25-yard field goal, 8:20. Falcons 23–6. Drive: 6 plays, 68 yards, 2:41.
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas 3-yard pass from Paxton Lynch (Brandon McManus kick), 2:38. Falcons 23–13. Drive: 16 plays, 78 yards, 5:42.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 45-yard field goal, 0:14. Falcons 23–16. Drive: 7 plays, 44 yards, 1:42.
|stats=
Top passers
- ATL – Matt Ryan – 15/28, 267 yards, TD
- DEN – Paxton Lynch – 23/35, 223 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
- ATL – Devonta Freeman – 23 rushes, 88 yards, TD
- DEN – C. J. Anderson – 11 rushes, 41 yards
Top receivers
- ATL – Tevin Coleman – 4 receptions, 132 yards, TD
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 7 receptions, 80 yards
}}
The Falcons, making their first visit to Denver since {{nfly|2004}}, took a 10–0 lead in the first quarter, with running back Devonta Freeman rushing for a 1-yard touchdown, followed by a 46-yard field goal by placekicker Matt Bryant. The Broncos, with quarterback Paxton Lynch, playing in place of the injured Trevor Siemian, punted on their first two possessions, and got on the scoreboard early in the second quarter, with a 35-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus. Following an exchange of punts, a 33-yard field goal by Bryant just after the two-minute warning extended the Falcons' lead, in a drive that took seven minutes off the clock. In the third quarter, Lynch was intercepted by Falcons' safety Ricardo Allen at the Broncos' 42-yard line, and the Falcons capitalized, with quarterback Matt Ryan connecting on a 31-yard touchdown pass to running back Tevin Coleman to extend to a 20–3 lead. On the Falcons' next drive, Broncos' safety T. J. Ward forced a fumble off wide receiver Mohamed Sanu at midfield, though the Broncos had to settle for a 46-yard field goal by McManus early in the fourth quarter. The Falcons responded, with a 25-yard field goal by McManus to extend to a 23–6 lead with 8:24 remaining in the game. Hoping for a rally, the Broncos went on a 16-play, 78-yard drive, culminating in a 3-yard touchdown pass from Lynch to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas with 2:43 remaining. After an unsuccessful onside kick attempt, the Broncos' defense forced a three-and-out, but were forced to use all of their team timeouts prior to the two-minute warning. The Broncos advanced 44 yards in 7 plays, and pulled to within a 23–16 deficit, with a 45-yard field goal by McManus with only 19 seconds remaining. However, another onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, sealing the win for the Falcons.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Denver Broncos dealt first loss in Paxton Lynch's first NFL start |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/09/denver-broncos-atlanta-falcons-week-5/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 9, 2016 |access-date=October 9, 2016}}
Notes
Demaryius Thomas became the third player in Broncos' franchise history to achieve 50 career touchdowns; the other two are Shannon Sharpe (55) and Rod Smith (68).{{cite web |author=DiLalla, Aric |title=Next-Day Notebook: Demaryius Thomas reaches key mark |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-nextdaynotebook/Next-Day-Notebook-Demaryius-Thomas-reaches-key-mark/d4b1327b-9201-42c3-92e2-d4c58384877b |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161011172317/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-nextdaynotebook/Next-Day-Notebook-Demaryius-Thomas-reaches-key-mark/d4b1327b-9201-42c3-92e2-d4c58384877b |url-status=dead |archive-date=October 11, 2016 |work=Denver Broncos |date=October 9, 2016 |access-date=October 9, 2016 }}
==Week 6: at San Diego Chargers==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Six: Denver Broncos at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
|date={{dow tooltip|October 13, 2016}}
|time=6:25 pm. MDT/5:25 p.m. PDT
|road=Broncos
|R1=0|R2=3|R3=0|R4=10
|home=Chargers
|H1=7|H2=3|H3=9|H4=2
|stadium=Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, California
|attendance=58,904
|weather={{convert|70|F|C}}, fair
|referee=Craig Wrolstad
|TVAnnouncers=Jim Nantz, Phil Simms and Tracy Wolfson
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016101300/2016/REG6/broncos@chargers Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/56978/SD_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- SD – Hunter Henry 5-yard pass from Philip Rivers (Josh Lambo kick), 8:00. Chargers 7–0. Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 7:00.
Second quarter
- SD – Josh Lambo 37-yard field goal, 10:35. Chargers 10–0. Drive: 18 plays, 75 yards, 10:03.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 29-yard field goal, 5:40. Chargers 10–3. Drive: 4 plays, 0 yards, 2:08.
Third quarter
- SD – Josh Lambo 21-yard field goal, 10:41. Chargers 13–3. Drive: 5 plays, 51 yards, 2:10.
- SD – Josh Lambo 31-yard field goal, 7:15. Chargers 16–3. Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 2:00.
- SD – Josh Lambo 32-yard field goal, 3:31. Chargers 19–3. Drive: 8 plays, 50 yards, 2:51.
Fourth quarter
- SD – Penalty on Russell Okung enforced in the end zone for a safety 11:59. Chargers 21–3.
- DEN – Bennie Fowler 5-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 8:08. Chargers 21–10. Drive: 11 plays, 51 yards, 3:51.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 46-yard field goal, 0:27. Chargers 21–13. Drive: 11 plays, 56 yards, 2:36.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 30/50, 230 yards, TD
- SD – Philip Rivers – 18/29, 178 yards, TD
Top rushers
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 5 rushes, 46 yards
- SD – Melvin Gordon – 27 rushes, 94 yards
Top receivers
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 4 receptions, 40 yards
- SD – Hunter Henry – 6 receptions, 83 yards, TD
}}
The Chargers scored took a 10–0 lead, with quarterback Philip Rivers connecting on a 5-yard touchdown pass to tight end Hunter Henry, followed in the second quarter by a 37-yard field goal by placekicker Josh Lambo. Chargers' return specialist Travis Benjamin fumbled a punt return at the Chargers' 11-yard line, however, the Broncos did not gain any yardage, and were forced to settle for a 29-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus. Three third-quarter field goals by Lambo—from 21, 31 and 32 yards out—added to the Chargers' lead. The middle score occurred after a fumble by Broncos' wide receiver Jordan Taylor. McManus missed wide-right on a 56-yard field goal at the end of the third quarter. Early in the fourth quarter, the Broncos' defense forced a Chargers' punt that backed up the Broncos to their own 3-yard line.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Denver Broncos come unglued in loss to San Diego Chargers on the road |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/13/denver-broncos-san-diego-chargers-week-6/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 13, 2016 |access-date=October 13, 2016}}
On the next play from scrimmage, Broncos' offensive tackle Russell Okung was penalized for holding in the end zone that resulted in a safety, extending the Chargers' lead to 21–3. On the ensuing free kick, the Chargers committed another special teams turnover, with guard Kenny Wiggins fumbling the kick near midfield. The Broncos capitalized on this turnover, with a 5-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Trevor Siemian to wide receiver Bennie Fowler. The Broncos' defense forced a three-and-out on the Chargers' next possession with six minutes remaining in the game. On the sixth play of the Broncos' next drive, Siemian connected with running back C. J. Anderson on a 20-yard touchdown, however, another costly holding penalty on Okung negated the scoring play. Two plays later, Siemian connected on a pass completion to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas to the Chargers' 13-yard line, however, Chargers' linebacker Jatavis Brown forced a fumble off Thomas, which was recovered by cornerback Craig Mager, ending the drive with 3:35 remaining. The Broncos' defense forced another three-and-out, but used all three of their team timeouts in the process. A 46-yard field goal by McManus with 32 seconds remaining pulled the Broncos to within a 21–13 deficit. The Broncos recovered the onside kick at their own 46-yard line, however, four plays later, a desperation hail mary pass by Siemian fell short of the end zone.
Notes
Special teams coordinator Joe DeCamillis served as interim head coach, while Gary Kubiak recovered from a migraine condition that he suffered during the previous week. As part of the NFL Color Rush program, the Broncos wore all-orange throwback uniforms. With the loss, the Broncos' NFL-record 15-game road winning streak against division opponents came to an end. This was the Broncos' final game in San Diego, as the Chargers relocated to Los Angeles after the {{nfly|2016}} season.{{cite news |title=Chargers announce they're bolting to Los Angeles |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2017/01/12/chargers-leave-san-diego-for-los-angeles/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=January 12, 2017 |access-date=January 12, 2017}}
==Week 7: vs. Houston Texans==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos 97thru11|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Seven: Houston Texans at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date={{dow tooltip|October 24, 2016}}
|time=6:30 pm. MDT
|road=Texans
|R1=6|R2=0|R3=3|R4=0
|home=Broncos
|H1=0|H2=14|H3=7|H4=6
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,865
|weather={{convert|71|F|C}}, partly cloudy
|referee=Carl Cheffers
|TV=ESPN
|TVAnnouncers=Sean McDonough, Jon Gruden and Lisa Salters
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016102400/2016/REG7/texans@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57007/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- HOU – Nick Novak 43-yard field goal, 7:11. Texans 3–0. Drive: 7 plays, 33 yards, 2:16.
- HOU – Nick Novak 43-yard field goal, 0:21. Texans 6–0. Drive: 10 plays, 39 yards, 5:05.
Second quarter
- DEN – C. J. Anderson 7-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 9:10. Broncos 7–6. Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 6:11.
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas 4-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 4:04. Broncos 14–6. Drive: 7 plays, 68 yards, 3:25.
Third quarter
- HOU – Nick Novak 29-yard field goal, 9:09. Broncos 14–9. Drive: 9 plays, 72 yards, 4:50.
- DEN – Devontae Booker 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 0:40. Broncos 21–9. Drive: 7 plays, 72 yards, 3:57.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 22-yard field goal, 11:36. Broncos 24–9. Drive: 7 plays, 22 yards, 3:20.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 32-yard field goal, 1:57. Broncos 27–9. Drive: 7 plays, 20 yards, 2:43.
|stats=
Top passers
- HOU – Brock Osweiler – 22/41, 131 yards
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 14/25, 157 yards, TD
Top rushers
- HOU – Alfred Blue – 11 rushes, 63 yards
- DEN – C. J. Anderson – 16 rushes, 107 yards, TD
Top receivers
- HOU – DeAndre Hopkins – 5 receptions, 36 yards
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 4 receptions, 86 yards
}}
The Broncos' defense surrendered only three field goals by Texans' placekicker Nick Novak, and spoiled quarterback Brock Osweiler's return to Denver, allowing only 131 passing yards. Osweiler spent the previous four seasons (2012–2015) as Peyton Manning's backup quarterback, and started seven games in 2015 while Manning was injured. The Broncos scored three offensive touchdowns: a 4-yard pass from quarterback Trevor Siemian to Demaryius Thomas, plus two rushing touchdowns, one from C. J. Anderson, and the other from rookie Devontae Booker. Placekicker Brandon McManus also added two field goals.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=As promised, Broncos ruin Brock Osweiler's return to Denver in win over Texans |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/24/denver-broncos-houston-texans-week-7/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 24, 2016 |access-date=October 24, 2016}}
Notes
This was the first of two games in which the Broncos wore their alternate navy blue uniforms{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos to wear alternate all-blue uniforms against Texans |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/18/broncos-to-wear-all-blue-uniforms-against-texans/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 18, 2016 |access-date=October 18, 2016}} – the other was Week 15 vs. the New England Patriots. This was Broncos' head coach Gary Kubiak's first victory against the Texans, for whom he coached from 2006 to 2013, as well as Kubiak's return to the sideline following a health scare that forced him to miss the team's Week 6 loss to the San Diego Chargers.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Aqib Talib presents Gary Kubiak with game ball after Broncos' win vs. Texans |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/25/aqib-talib-presents-gary-kubiak-with-game-ball-after-broncos-win-vs-texans/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 24, 2016 |access-date=October 24, 2016}}
During halftime, three former Broncos were inducted into the Ring of Fame: Placekicker Jason Elam, who played with the Broncos from 1993 to 2007 and is the franchise's all-time leader in field goals (395) and points scored (1,786); defensive lineman Simon Fletcher, who played with the Broncos from 1985 to 1995 and is the franchise's all-time leader in sacks (97.5) and consecutive games played (172); safety John Lynch, who played four seasons with the Broncos from 2004 to 2007.{{cite news |author=Saunders, Patrick |title=Broncos Ring of Fame inductees Simon Fletcher, Jason Elam, John Lynch salute fans, owner Pat Bowlen |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/24/broncos-ring-fame-inductees-simon-fletcher-jason-elam-john-lynch/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 24, 2016 |access-date=October 24, 2016}}
==Week 8: vs. San Diego Chargers==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Eight: San Diego Chargers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date=October 30
|time=2:05 pm. MDT
|road=Chargers
|R1=7|R2=0|R3=6|R4=6
|home=Broncos
|H1=3|H2=7|H3=7|H4=10
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,756
|weather={{convert|76|F|C}}, partly cloudy
|referee=Tony Corrente
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Greg Gumbel, Trent Green and Jamie Erdahl
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016103008/2016/REG8/chargers@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57017/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 28-yard field goal, 11:05. Broncos 3–0. Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 3:55.
- SD – Antonio Gates 7-yard pass from Philip Rivers (Josh Lambo kick), 7:24. Chargers 7–3. Drive: 7 plays, 85 yards, 3:41.
Second quarter
- DEN – Bradley Roby 49-yard interception return (Brandon McManus kick), 9:10. Broncos 10–7.
Third quarter
- DEN – Devontae Booker 3-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 12:45. Broncos 17–7. Drive: 2 plays, 10 yards, 0:45.
- SD – Travis Benjamin 14-yard pass from Philip Rivers (kick blocked), 4:02. Broncos 17–13. Drive: 13 plays, 98 yards, 7:42.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Juwan Thompson 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 12:32. Broncos 24–13. Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 6:30.
- SD – Casey Hayward 24-yard interception return (pass failed), 8:02. Broncos 24–19.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 22-yard field goal, 5:19. Broncos 27–19. Drive: 6 plays, 71 yards, 2:43.
|stats=
Top passers
- SD – Philip Rivers – 20/47, 267 yards, 2 TD, 3 INT
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 20/38, 276 yards, INT
Top rushers
- SD – Melvin Gordon – 23 rushes, 111 yards
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 19 rushes, 54 yards, TD
Top receivers
- SD – Dontrelle Inman – 4 receptions, 72 yards
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 5 receptions, 79 yards
}}
For the second time in a three-week span, the Broncos faced their AFC West rivals, the San Diego Chargers. Following a 28-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus on the Broncos' opening possession, a 7-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Philip Rivers to tight end Antonio Gates gave the Chargers their only lead of the game. The Broncos' defense then proceeded to frustrate the Chargers' offense, including three interceptions of Rivers. In the second quarter, Broncos' cornerback Bradley Roby returned an interception 49 yards for a touchdown, and Chargers' placekicker Josh Lambo later missed on a 44-yard field goal attempt. On the Chargers' opening possession of the second half, the Broncos took advantage of a Rivers' interception deep in Chargers' territory, and added to their lead, with running back Devontae Booker rushing for a 3-yard touchdown. Rivers subsequently threw another interception deep in Chargers' territory, his third of the game; however, a fumble by Booker gave the football back to the Chargers. Thirteen plays and 98 yards later, the Chargers narrowed the Broncos' lead, with a 14-yard touchdown pass from Rivers to wide receiver Travis Benjamin. Broncos' linebacker Shaquil Barrett blocked the extra point attempt, keeping the score at 17–13.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Defense's big plays key Denver Broncos' victory over San Diego Chargers |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/30/denver-broncos-san-diego-chargers-week-8/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 30, 2016 |access-date=October 30, 2016}}
The Broncos responded early in the fourth quarter, with running back Juwan Thompson rushing for a 1-yard touchdown. On the Broncos' next possession, quarterback Trevor Siemian was intercepted by Chargers' cornerback Casey Hayward, who returned the football 16 yards for a touchdown. The initial two-point conversion pass from Rivers to Gates was successful, however, it was nullified by an offensive pass interference penalty on Gates. Rivers' second attempt intended for tight end Hunter Henry was incomplete, keeping the score at 24–19 with 8:10 remaining in the game. Two long pass plays from Siemian—one to tight end Virgil Green for 31 yards and another to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas for 40 yards—gave the Broncos a first-and-goal at the 4-yard line. However, the Chargers' defense forced the Broncos to settle for a 22-yard field goal by McManus. The Chargers attempted a rally, and with 2:54 remaining, the Chargers had a first-and-goal at the 2-yard line, but Rivers threw four consecutive incompletions, the last of which was knocked away by Broncos' cornerback Lorenzo Doss at the goal line. While backed up deep in their own territory, the Broncos' offense went three-and-out, and were forced to punt, giving the Chargers one last possession. The Broncos' defense stood their ground, not allowing the Chargers to advance past midfield.
Notes
Broncos' defensive coordinator Wade Phillips was rushed to a Denver-area hospital, following a second-quarter sideline collision after Chargers' running back Melvin Gordon was blocked into him. Linebackers coach Reggie Herring filled in for Phillips for the remainder of the game. This was the Broncos' final game against the San Diego Chargers—home or away—prior to the Chargers' relocation to Los Angeles in {{nfly|2017}}.{{cite news |author=Groke, Nick |title=Wade Phillips leaves Broncos game on a stretcher after in-game collision |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/10/30/wade-phillips-collision-denver-broncos/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=October 30, 2016 |access-date=October 30, 2016}}
==Week 9: at Oakland Raiders==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Nine: Denver Broncos at Oakland Raiders – Game summary
|date=November 6
|time=6:30 pm. MST/5:30 pm. PST
|road=Broncos
|R1=0|R2=10|R3=0|R4=10
|home=Raiders
|H1=6|H2=14|H3=0|H4=10
|stadium=Oakland Alameda Coliseum, Oakland, California
|attendance=54,957
|weather={{convert|65|F|C}}, partly cloudy
|referee=Clete Blakeman
|TV=NBC
|TVAnnouncers=Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth and Michele Tafoya
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016110600/2016/REG9/broncos@raiders Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57032/OAK_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- OAK – Sebastian Janikowski 24-yard field goal, 10:21. Raiders 3–0. Drive: 8 plays, 47 yards, 4:12.
- OAK – Sebastian Janikowski 29-yard field goal, 4:52. Raiders 6–0. Drive: 9 plays, 47 yards, 4:27.
Second quarter
- OAK – Latavius Murray 1-yard run (Sebastian Janikowski kick), 14:07. Raiders 13–0. Drive: 9 plays, 57 yards, 4:28.
- DEN – Jordan Norwood 36-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 8:22. Raiders 13–7. Drive: 7 plays, 84 yards, 3:31.
- OAK – Latavius Murray 1-yard run (Sebastian Janikowski kick), 1:25. Raiders 20–7. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 1:39.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 55-yard field goal, 0:00. Raiders 20–10. Drive: 7 plays, 43 yards, 1:25.
Third quarter
- No scoring plays
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 44-yard field goal, 14:56. Raiders 20–13. Drive: 11 plays, 73 yards, 4:38.
- OAK – Sebastian Janikowski 35-yard field goal, 8:19. Raiders 23–13. Drive: 10 plays, 58 yards, 6:37.
- OAK – Latavius Murray 1-yard run (Sebastian Janikowski kick), 6:09. Raiders 30–13. Drive: 4 plays, 39 yards, 1:04.
- DEN – Kapri Bibbs 69-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 5:18. Raiders 30–20. Drive: 2 plays, 75 yards, 0:51.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 18/37, 283 yards, 2 TD, INT
- OAK – Derek Carr – 20/31, 184 yards
Top rushers
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 10 rushes, 22 yards
- OAK – Latavius Murray – 20 rushes, 114 yards, 3 TD
Top receivers
- DEN – Kapri Bibbs – 1 reception, 69 yards, TD
- OAK – Amari Cooper – 6 receptions, 56 yards
}}
The Raiders dominated the time of possession by a 2–1 margin, and though the Broncos' defense limited Raiders' quarterback Derek Carr to 184 yards passing, running back Latavius Murray amassed 114 rushing yards as well as three touchdowns. The Broncos trailed 23–13 with eight minutes remaining in the game, and attempted a rally, however, quarterback Trevor Siemian was strip-sacked by Raiders' linebacker Khalil Mack, giving the Raiders a short field. A 1-yard touchdown by Murray extended the lead, a drive that was kept alive by one defensive holding and two pass interference penalties on Broncos' cornerback Chris Harris, Jr. On the Broncos' next drive, Siemian connected with running back Kapri Bibbs on a 69-yard touchdown pass to pull to within a 30–20 deficit, but the Broncos got no closer.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Denver Broncos lose ugly to Oakland Raiders, fall to third place in AFC West |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/06/denver-broncos-oakland-raiders-week-9/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 6, 2016 |access-date=November 6, 2016}}
==Week 10: at New Orleans Saints==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Ten: Denver Broncos at New Orleans Saints – Game summary
|date=November 13
|time=12:00 p.m. CST/11:00 am. MST
|road=Broncos
|R1=7|R2=3|R3=0|R4=15
|home=Saints
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=14|H4=6
|stadium=Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana
|attendance=73,138
|weather=Played indoors (dome stadium)
|referee=Bill Vinovich
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Jim Nantz, Phil Simms and Tracy Wolfson
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016111303/2016/REG10/broncos@saints Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57037/NO_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- DEN – Jordan Taylor 14-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 5:45. Broncos 7–0. Drive: 13 plays, 85 yards, 7:15.
Second quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 50-yard field goal, 13:42. Broncos 10–0. Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 1:11.
- NO – Wil Lutz 30-yard field goal, 0:00. Broncos 10–3. Drive: 5 plays, 50 yards, 0:29.
Third quarter
- NO – Willie Snead 3-yard pass from Drew Brees (Wil Lutz kick), 8:30. Tied 10–10. Drive: 7 plays, 90 yards, 3:50.
- NO – Willie Snead 5-yard pass from Drew Brees (Wil Lutz kick), 3:59. Saints 17–10. Drive: 4 plays, 38 yards, 1:36.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas 2-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 9:37. Tied 17–17. Drive: 7 plays, 27 yards, 3:52.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 28-yard field goal, 3:23. Broncos 20–17. Drive: 10 plays, 43 yards, 4:18.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 37-yard field goal, 2:50. Broncos 23–17. Drive: 4 plays, 2 yards, 0:18.
- NO – Brandin Cooks 32-yard pass from Drew Brees, 1:22. Tied 23–23. Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 1:28.
- DEN – Will Parks defensive two-point conversion, 1:22. Broncos 25–23.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 25/40, 258 yards, 2 TD, 2 INT
- NO – Drew Brees – 21/29, 303 yards, 3 TD, 2 INT
Top rushers
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 24 rushes, 76 yards
- NO – Mark Ingram II – 11 plays, 50 yards
Top receivers
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 8 receptions, 87 yards, TD
- NO – Brandin Cooks – 3 receptions, 98 yards, TD
}}
The Broncos, making their first visit to New Orleans since {{nfly|2004}}, jumped out to a 10–0 lead. First, quarterback Trevor Siemian connected with wide receiver Jordan Taylor on a 14-yard touchdown pass. The touchdown was initially ruled as an incomplete pass, but overturned by a replay challenge. Following an interception of Saints' quarterback Drew Brees by cornerback Darian Stewart, placekicker Brandon McManus added a 50-yard field goal early in the second quarter. The Broncos were attempting to add to their lead just before halftime, however Siemian was intercepted by cornerback Sterling Moore, and the Saints quickly advanced 50 yards in only 29 seconds, culminating in a 30-yard field goal by placekicker Wil Lutz. Early in the third quarter, the Saints tied the game, with Brees connecting with wide receiver Willie Snead on a 3-yard touchdown pass. On the Broncos' second possession of the second half, Siemian was intercepted by safety Kenny Vaccaro, and four plays later, another touchdown pass from Brees to Snead from 5 yards out gave the Saints a 17–10 lead.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos' secondary provides sparks in thrilling victory over Saints |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/13/denver-broncos-new-orleans-saints-week-10/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 13, 2016 |access-date=November 13, 2016}}
On the Broncos next drive, McManus missed wide left on a 42-yard field attempt early in the fourth quarter. Two plays into the Saints' next possession, Broncos' cornerback Bradley Roby forced a fumble off wide receiver Michael Thomas, which was recovered by Stewart at the Saints' 27-yard line. Seven plays later, the Broncos tied the game, with a 2-yard touchdown pass from Siemian to wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. After forcing the Saints to go three-and-out, the Broncos drove down the field, but had to settle on a 28-yard field goal by McManus. The Broncos' defense forced another fumble deep in Saints' territory, but had to settle on a 37-yard field goal by McManus with 2:50 remaining in the game, while forcing the Saints to burn the last two of their three team timeouts. The Saints then drove 75 yards in only six plays, culminating in Brees throwing a 32-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Brandin Cooks to tie the game at 23–23 with 1:30 remaining in the game. However, Lutz's extra point attempt was blocked by Justin Simmons, and Will Parks scooped up the football and ran to the end zone for a defensive two-point conversion. The Saints sideline claimed that Parks may have stepped out of bounds, but the initial ruling on the field was upheld after an instant replay review. The Saints' onside kick attempt was unsuccessful, sealing the controversial win for the Broncos.
Notes
Darian Stewart became the Broncos' first defensive player since Deltha O'Neal in 2001 to record three takeaways in one game.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos agree to 4-year extension with safety Darian Stewart |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/26/denver-broncos-darian-stewart-contract-extension/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 26, 2016 |access-date=November 26, 2016}}
==Week 12: vs. Kansas City Chiefs==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Twelve: Kansas City Chiefs at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date=November 27
|time=6:30 pm. MST
|road=Chiefs
|R1=0|R2=9|R3=7|R4=8|R5=6
|home=Broncos
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=7|H4=14|H5=3
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance= 76,819
|weather={{convert|44|F|C}}, mostly cloudy
|referee=Pete Morelli
|TV=NBC
|TVAnnouncers=Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth and Michele Tafoya
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016112709/2016/REG12/chiefs@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57074/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- No scoring plays
Second quarter
- KC – Russell Okung tackled in the end zone for a safety, 6:16. Chiefs 2–0.
- KC – Tyreek Hill 86-yard kickoff return (Cairo Santos kick), 6:04. Chiefs 9–0. Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, 0:12.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 33-yard field goal, 1:47. Chiefs 9–3. Drive: 10 plays, 60 yards, 4:17.
Third quarter
- DEN – Jordan Taylor 6-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 8:37. Broncos 10–9. Drive: 12 plays, 63 yards, 5:20.
- KC – Tyreek Hill 3-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 0:30. Chiefs 16–10. Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 7:07.
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders 35-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 7:47. Broncos 17–16. Drive: 4 plays, 88 yards, 1:37.
- DEN – Bennie Fowler 76-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 3:00. Broncos 24–16. Drive: 6 plays, 96 yards, 2:37.
- KC – Tyreek Hill 3-yard pass from Alex Smith (Alex Smith–Demetrius Harris pass), 0:12. Tied 24–24. Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 2:48.
Overtime
- DEN – Brandon McManus 44-yard field goal, 8:51. Broncos 27–24. Drive: 11 plays, 49 yards, 6:09.
- KC – Cairo Santos 37-yard field goal, 4:19. Tied 27–27. Drive: 10 plays, 46 yards, 4:32.
- KC – Cairo Santos 34-yard field goal, 0:02. Chiefs 30–27. Drive: 4 plays, 32 yards, 1:01.
|stats=
Top passers
- KC – Alex Smith – 26/44, 220 yards, TD
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 20/34, 368 yards, 3 TD
Top rushers
- KC – Spencer Ware – 17 rushes, 64 yards
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 24 rushes, 79 yards
Top receivers
- KC – Travis Kelce – 8 receptions, 101 yards
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 7 receptions, 162 yards, TD
}}
After a scoreless first quarter, the Chiefs took a 9–0 lead midway through the second quarter. After Broncos quarterback Trevor Siemian was strip-sacked near the goal line, offensive tackle Russell Okung was tackled in the end zone trying to recover the fumble and the Chiefs were awarded a safety; running back Tyreek Hill then returned the ensuing free kick 86 yards for a touchdown. A 33-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus just after the two-minute warning put the Broncos on the scoreboard. The Broncos grabbed the lead midway through the third quarter, with a 6-yard touchdown pass from Siemian to wide receiver Jordan Taylor. The Chiefs responded on their next possession, with Hill rushing for a 3-yard touchdown. The drive was extended after the Chiefs accepted an illegal formation penalty on the Broncos that nullified a 35-yard field goal by placekicker Cairo Santos. The Broncos re-claimed the lead midway through the fourth quarter, with a 35-yard touchdown pass from Siemian to wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders. After forcing a Chiefs' punt, the Broncos were attempting to run out the clock after earning a first down with 3:31 remaining in the game. Two plays later, and after the Chiefs had used all of their team timeouts, the Broncos extended their lead to 24–16, with a 76-yard touchdown pass from Siemian to wide receiver Bennie Fowler.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos blow lead late in regulation, lose to Chiefs in overtime |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/27/denver-broncos-kansas-city-chiefs-week-12/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=November 27, 2016 |access-date=November 27, 2016}}
However, the Broncos' defense was unable to keep the Chiefs out of the end zone. Quarterback Alex Smith methodically engineered a game-tying 13-play, 75-yard drive, with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Hill, coupled with a two-point conversion pass to tight end Demetrius Harris. The play was initially ruled down at the 1-yard line with 15 seconds remaining, but overturned by instant replay, sending the game to overtime. The Broncos won the overtime coin toss, and the teams exchanged field goals on their initial possessions: a 44-yarder by Brandon McManus followed by a 37-yarder by Santos. The Broncos' next overtime possession commenced with 4:19 remaining, and drove to as far as the Chiefs' 44-yard line. Instead of a short punt, Broncos' head coach Gary Kubiak elected to send McManus onto the field for a potential game-winning 62-yard field goal, however, McManus attempt was both short and wide left, giving the Chiefs possession at the Broncos' 48-yard line with 1:08 remaining. Four plays later, and with five seconds remaining, Santos kicked the game-winning 34-yard field goal for the Chiefs, which initially caromed off the left upright.
==Week 13: at Jacksonville Jaguars==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Thirteen: Denver Broncos at Jacksonville Jaguars – Game summary
|date=December 4
|time=1:00 pm. EST/11:00 am. MST
|road=Broncos
|R1=0|R2=10|R3=7|R4=3
|home=Jaguars
|H1=0|H2=3|H3=0|H4=7
|stadium=EverBank Field, Jacksonville, Florida
|attendance=63,075
|weather={{convert|70|F|C}}, partly cloudy
|referee=Craig Wrolstad
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Spero Dedes and Solomon Wilcots
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016120405/2016/REG13/broncos@jaguars Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57084/JAC_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- No scoring plays
Second quarter
- JAX – Jason Myers 47-yard field goal, 11:01. Jaguars 3–0. Drive: 7 plays, 30 yards, 3:08.
- DEN – Devontae Booker 6-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 6:54. Broncos 7–3. Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 4:07.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 32-yard field goal, 0:01. Broncos 10–3. Drive: 4 plays, 29 yards, 0:46.
Third quarter
- DEN – Bradley Roby 51-yard interception return (Brandon McManus kick), 7:34. Broncos 17–3.
Fourth quarter
- JAX – Blake Bortles 22-yard run (Jason Myers kick), 14:03. Broncos 17–10. Drive: 12 plays, 70 yards, 5:45.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 41-yard field goal, 0:29. Broncos 20–10. Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards, 0:58.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Paxton Lynch – 12/24, 104 yards
- JAX – Blake Bortles – 19/42, 181 yards, 2 INT
Top rushers
- DEN – Kapri Bibbs – 5 rushes, 49 yards
- JAX – T. J. Yeldon – 14 rushes, 55 yards
Top receivers
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 6 receptions, 61 yards
- JAX – Neal Sterling – 5 receptions, 43 yards
}}
For the second time this season, backup quarterback Paxton Lynch started in place of Trevor Siemian, who missed the game due to a sprained foot. Following a scoreless first quarter, a 47-yard field goal by placekicker Jason Myers gave the Jaguars the brief lead. The Broncos then reeled off 17 unanswered points, with a 6-yard touchdown run by running back Devontae Booker and a 32-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus just before halftime. Then, in the third quarter, cornerback Bradley Roby returned an interception off quarterback Blake Bortles 51 yards for a touchdown. The Jaguars narrowed the Broncos' lead to 17–10 early in the fourth quarter, when Bortles ran for a 22-yard touchdown. Following an exchange of punts throughout the majority of the fourth quarter, the Jaguars were attempting a rally just after the two-minute warning, when Broncos' linebacker Shane Ray forced a strip sack and fumble recovery off Bortles in Jaguars' territory. Four plays later, McManus added a 41-yard field goal with only 33 seconds remaining to put the game out of reach.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=With Paxton Lynch at helm, Broncos hang on for win over Jaguars |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/12/04/denver-broncos-jacksonville-jaguars-week-13/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=December 4, 2016 |access-date=December 4, 2016}}
==Week 14: at Tennessee Titans==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Fourteen: Denver Broncos at Tennessee Titans – Game summary
|date=December 11
|time=12:00 pm. CST/11:00 am. MST
|road=Broncos
|R1=0|R2=0|R3=0|R4=10
|home=Titans
|H1=10|H2=3|H3=0|H4=0
|stadium=Nissan Stadium, Nashville, Tennessee
|attendance=68,780
|weather={{convert|50|F|C}}, sunny
|referee=John Parry
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts and Evan Washburn
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016121109/2016/REG14/broncos@titans Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57103/TEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- TEN – DeMarco Murray 1-yard run (Ryan Succop kick), 7:29. Titans 7–0. Drive: 11 plays, 70 yards, 6:06.
- TEN – Ryan Succop 53-yard field goal, 5:48. Titans 10–0. Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards, 1:00.
Second quarter
- TEN – Ryan Succop 41-yard field goal, 1:27. Titans 13–0. Drive: 19 plays, 74 yards, 8:04.
Third quarter
- No scoring plays
Fourth quarter
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders 3-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 9:58. Titans 13–7. Drive: 5 plays, 26 yards, 2:36.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 34-yard field goal, 4:28. Titans 13–10. Drive: 11 plays, 39 yards, 4:27.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 35/51, 334 yards, TD
- TEN – Marcus Mariota – 6/20, 88 yards
Top rushers
- DEN – Justin Forsett – 6 rushes, 17 yards
- TEN – DeMarco Murray – 21 rushes, 92 yards, TD
Top receivers
- DEN – Emmanuel Sanders – 11 receptions, 100 yards
- TEN – Delanie Walker – 2 receptions, 30 yards
}}
The Broncos' defense limited Titans' quarterback Marcus Mariota to only 88 yards passing on 6 of 20 attempts; however, the Titans controlled the first half time of possession by a 2–1 margin and led 10–0 in the first quarter. Running back DeMarco Murray rushed for a 1-yard touchdown and placekicker Ryan Succop kicked a 53-yard field goal; the latter scoring play occurred after the Titans' defense forced a fumble off Broncos' running back Justin Forsett. A 41-yard field goal by Succop just before halftime gave the Titans a 13–0 lead. The Broncos' offense did not cross midfield in the first half. After a scoreless third quarter, the Broncos were attempting to cut into the Titans' lead early in the fourth quarter, but the Titans' defense stopped the Broncos on a 4th-and-goal. After forcing a Titans' punt, the Broncos finally got on the scoreboard with ten minutes remaining in the game, with quarterback Trevor Siemian connecting on a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders. After forcing a three-and-out from the Titans, the Broncos marched down to as far as the Titans' 16-yard line, but had to settle on a 34-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus to narrow the Titans' lead to 13–10 with 4:33 remaining in the game. After forcing another Titans' punt, the Broncos had one last possession, hoping for a rally. With 1:04 remaining in the game, Siemian completed a pass to tight end A. J. Derby at the 41-yard line, however, Titans' linebacker Avery Williamson forced a fumble off Derby, which was recovered by safety Daimion Stafford to seal the win for the Titans.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos' playoff hopes in doubt after troubling loss to Titans |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/12/11/denver-broncos-tennessee-titans-week-14/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=December 11, 2016 |access-date=December 11, 2016}}
==Week 15: vs. New England Patriots==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos 97thru11|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Fifteen: New England Patriots at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date=December 18
|time=2:25 pm. MST
|road=Patriots
|R1=3|R2=7|R3=3|R4=3
|home=Broncos
|H1=3|H2=0|H3=0|H4=0
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,893
|weather={{convert|18|F|C}}, sunny
|referee=Walt Anderson
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Jim Nantz, Phil Simms and Tracy Wolfson
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016121810/2016/REG15/patriots@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57121/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- NE – Stephen Gostkowski 45-yard field goal, 12:27. Patriots 3–0. Drive: 4 plays, 4 yards, 0:49.
- DEN – Brandon McManus 33-yard field goal, 6:58. Tied 3–3. Drive: 8 plays, 47 yards, 2:55.
Second quarter
- NE – LeGarrette Blount 1-yard run (Stephen Gostkowski kick), 11:01. Patriots 10–3. Drive: 7 plays, 46 yards, 3:49.
Third quarter
- NE – Stephen Gostkowski 40-yard field goal, 5:28. Patriots 13–3. Drive: 11 plays, 61 yards, 5:12.
Fourth quarter
- NE – Stephen Gostkowski 21-yard field goal, 8:16. Patriots 16–3. Drive: 6 plays, 50 yards, 2:40.
|stats=
Top passers
- NE – Tom Brady – 16/32, 188 yards
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 25/40, 282 yards, INT
Top rushers
- NE – Dion Lewis – 18 rushes, 95 yards
- DEN – Justin Forsett – 10 rushes, 37 yards
Top receivers
- NE – Julian Edelman – 6 receptions, 75 yards
- DEN – Demaryius Thomas – 7 receptions, 91 yards
}}
The Broncos' defense limited Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady to 188 yards passing and no touchdowns, but their defensive effort was wasted by a poor performance from their inconsistent offense. The Broncos' only scoring play was a 33-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus. In the first quarter, a fumbled punt by Jordan Norwood led to a 45-yard field goal by Patriots' placekicker Stephen Gostkowski. An interception off Broncos' quarterback Trevor Siemian by cornerback Logan Ryan resulted in the only touchdown of the game—a 1-yard run by Patriots' running back LeGarrette Blount in the second quarter. Gostkowski added two more field goals—a 40-yarder in the third quarter and a 21-yarder in the fourth.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Broncos' offense goes cold, playoff hopes dwindle with loss to Patriots |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/12/18/denver-broncos-new-england-patriots-week-15/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=December 18, 2016 |access-date=December 18, 2016}}
Notes
The Broncos wore their alternate navy blue uniforms for this game.
==Week 16: at Kansas City Chiefs==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Sixteen: Denver Broncos at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
|date=December 25
|time=7:30 pm. CST/6:30 pm. MST
|road=Broncos
|R1=7|R2=3|R3=0|R4=0
|home=Chiefs
|H1=21|H2=0|H3=0|H4=12
|stadium=Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
|attendance=76,671
|weather={{convert|53|F|C}}, cloudy, rain
|referee=Tony Corrente
|TV=NBC
|TVAnnouncers=Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth and Michele Tafoya
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2016122501/2016/REG16/broncos@chiefs Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57139/KC_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- KC – Alex Smith 10-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 8:59. Chiefs 7–0. Drive: 7 plays, 77 yards, 3:51.
- KC – Tyreek Hill 70-yard run (Cairo Santos kick), 5:17. Chiefs 14–0. Drive: 4 plays, 81 yards, 2:12.
- DEN – Justin Forsett 1-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 1:54. Chiefs 14–7. Drive: 2 plays, 6 yards, 0:41.
- KC – Travis Kelce 80-yard pass from Alex Smith (Cairo Santos kick), 0:53. Chiefs 21–7. Drive: 2 plays, 84 yards, 1:01.
Second quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 52-yard field goal, 6:38. Chiefs 21–10. Drive: 6 plays, 37 yards, 1:47.
Third quarter
- No scoring plays
Fourth quarter
- KC – Cairo Santos 27-yard field goal, 11:59. Chiefs 24–10. Drive: 11 plays, 53 yards, 5:59.
- KC – Cairo Santos 39-yard field goal, 8:51. Chiefs 27–10. Drive: 6 plays, 15 yards, 2:58.
- KC – Demetrius Harris 2-yard pass from Dontari Poe (kick failed, wide left), 1:52. Chiefs 33–10. Drive: 10 plays, 43 yards, 4:31.
|stats=
Top passers
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 17/43, 183 yards, INT
- KC – Alex Smith – 25/36, 244 yards, TD, INT
Top rushers
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 5 rushes, 44 yards
- KC – Tyreek Hill – 6 rushes, 95 yards, TD
Top receivers
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 6 receptions, 44 yards
- KC – Travis Kelce – 11 receptions, 160 yards, TD
}}
The Chiefs jumped out to a 21–7 lead at the end of the first quarter, consisting of a 10-yard touchdown run by quarterback Alex Smith, followed by Smith throwing a pair of touchdown passes—a 70-yarder to wide receiver Tyreek Hill and an 80-yarder to tight end Travis Kelce. The Broncos' only touchdown of the game was a 1-yard run by running back Justin Forsett, which occurred after a Justin Simmons' interception of Smith. A 52-yard field goal by placekicker Brandon McManus midway through the second quarter was the Broncos' only other scoring play of the game; a fake field goal attempt just before halftime was unsuccessful. After a scoreless third quarter, the Chiefs pulled away in the fourth quarter, with two field goals by placekicker Cairo Santos—from 27 and 39 yards out—and nose tackle Dontari Poe throwing a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Demetrius Harris (with a missed extra point). The latter field goal occurred after Broncos' return specialist Kalif Raymond muffed a punt return.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=Denver Broncos miss playoffs with blowout loss to Kansas City Chiefs |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/12/25/denver-broncos-kansas-city-chiefs-week-16/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=December 25, 2016 |access-date=December 25, 2016}}
Notes
With the loss, the Broncos were eliminated from playoff contention for the first time since 2010, lost all three of their AFC West divisional road games for the first time since 2010 and suffered their first season sweep at the hands of the Chiefs since 2000. The Broncos' streak of five consecutive playoff appearances—the longest in franchise history—came to an end. For the first time since 1966, the Broncos' offense scored 10 of fewer points for a third consecutive game. The Broncos' defense surrendered 330 yards in the first half—the most the Broncos have surrendered in a half since 1981, and 484 for the entire game—the most since 2013.{{cite news |author=Jhabvala, Nicki |title=By the Numbers: Broncos' playoff hopes dashed in record-setting loss |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2016/12/26/denver-broncos-kansas-city-chiefs-by-the-numbers/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=December 26, 2016 |access-date=December 26, 2016}}
This would also be the final career game of outside linebacker DeMarcus Ware, who would have season-ending back surgery the next week.{{cite web|title=DeMarcus Ware, Kayvon Webster headed to IR|url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/DeMarcus-Ware-Kayvon-Webster-headed-to-IR/45d2f7ee-7ad9-4c1d-8385-7fdab69417a7|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170825094131/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/DeMarcus-Ware-Kayvon-Webster-headed-to-IR/45d2f7ee-7ad9-4c1d-8385-7fdab69417a7|url-status=dead|archive-date=August 25, 2017|author=DiLalla, Aric|website=DenverBroncos.com|date=December 28, 2016}}
==Week 17: vs. Oakland Raiders==
{{Americanfootballbox
|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}};text-align:center;
|state=autocollapse
|title=Week Seventeen: Oakland Raiders at Denver Broncos – Game summary
|date=January 1, 2017
|time=2:25 pm. MST
|road=Raiders
|R1=0|R2=0|R3=6|R4=0
|home=Broncos
|H1=7|H2=10|H3=7|H4=0
|stadium=Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado
|attendance=76,836
|weather={{convert|45|F|C}}, mostly cloudy
|referee=Brad Allen
|TV=CBS
|TVAnnouncers=Jim Nantz, Phil Simms and Tracy Wolfson
|reference=[http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/2017010112/2016/REG17/raiders@broncos Recap], [http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/57153/DEN_Gamebook.pdf Gamebook]
|scoring=
First quarter
- DEN – Devontae Booker 11-yard run (Brandon McManus kick), 10:15. Broncos 7–0. Drive: 8 plays, 84 yards, 4:45.
Second quarter
- DEN – Brandon McManus 22-yard field goal, 11:30. Broncos 10–0. Drive: 8 plays, 85 yards, 4:44.
- DEN – Devontae Booker 43-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 1:44. Broncos 17–0. Drive: 5 plays, 58 yards, 2:24.
Third quarter
- DEN – Virgil Green 2-yard pass from Trevor Siemian (Brandon McManus kick), 8:14. Broncos 24–0. Drive: 10 plays, 64 yards, 4:46.
- OAK – Amari Cooper 32-yard pass from Connor Cook (pass failed), 3:09. Broncos 24–6. Drive: 3 plays, 63 yards, 1:29.
Fourth quarter
- No scoring plays
|stats=
Top passers
- OAK – Connor Cook – 14/21, 150 yards, TD, INT
- DEN – Trevor Siemian – 17/27, 206 yards, 2 TD, INT
Top rushers
- OAK – DeAndré Washington – 7 rushes, 43 yards
- DEN – Justin Forsett – 22 rushes, 90 yards
Top receivers
- OAK – Michael Crabtree – 5 receptions, 47 yards
- DEN – Devontae Booker – 2 receptions, 52 yards, TD
}}
The Broncos jumped out to a 24–0 lead midway through the third quarter and spoiled the Raiders' chances of earning the AFC West division title and a first-round bye. Running back Devontae Booker scored two touchdowns—an 11-yard run in the first quarter and on a 43-yard pass from quarterback Trevor Siemian, who also connected on a 2-yard touchdown pass to tight end Virgil Green in the third quarter. Placekicker Brandon McManus added a 22-yard field goal in the second quarter. The only scoring play allowed by the Broncos' defense was a 32-yard touchdown pass from Raiders' quarterback Connor Cook to wide receiver Amari Cooper. Cook substituted for starter Matt McGloin, who left the game in the second quarter with a shoulder injury. McGloin was named the Raiders' starting quarterback after Derek Carr suffered a season-ending leg fracture during the previous week.{{cite news |author=Groke, Nick |title=Broncos, at a coaching crossroads, stick with Trevor Siemian in blowout win over Raiders |url=http://www.denverpost.com/2017/01/01/oakland-raiders-denver-broncos-week-17/ |newspaper=The Denver Post |date=January 1, 2017 |access-date=January 1, 2017}}
Notes
This was Gary Kubiak's final game as the Broncos' head coach, as he retired from coaching on the following day due to concerns over his health.
=Standings=
==Division==
{{2016 AFC West standings|team=DEN}}
==Conference==
{{2016 AFC standings|team=DEN}}
=Statistics=
==Team leaders==
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | ||
style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Category
! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Player(s) ! style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Value | ||
---|---|---|
Passing yards | Trevor Siemian | 3,401 |
Passing touchdowns | Trevor Siemian | 18 |
Rushing yards | Devontae Booker | 612 |
Rushing touchdowns | C. J. Anderson Devontae Booker | 4 |
Receptions | Demaryius Thomas | 90 |
Receiving yards | Demaryius Thomas | 1,083 |
Receiving touchdowns | Demaryius Thomas Emmanuel Sanders | 5 |
Points | Brandon McManus | 119 |
Kickoff return yards | Cody Latimer | 200 |
Punt return yards | Jordan Norwood | 204 |
Tackles | Todd Davis | 96 |
Sacks | Von Miller | 13.5 |
Forced fumbles | T. J. Ward Von Miller | 3 |
Interceptions | Aqib Talib Darian Stewart | 3 |
{{small|Source for this section: Denver Broncos' official website.{{cite web |title=Denver Broncos Team Statistics |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/team/statistics.html |work=Denver Broncos |date=January 2, 2017 |access-date=January 2, 2017 |quote=NOTE: Search for the 2016 season.}}}}
==League rankings==
valign="top"
| {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" ! colspan=3 style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Offense |
style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Category
! style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Value ! style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| NFL rank |
---|
Total yards
| 323.1 {{tooltip|YPG|Yards per game}} | 27th |
Yards per play
| 5.1 | 26th |
Rushing yards
| 92.8 YPG | 27th |
Yards per rush
| 3.6 | 28th |
Passing yards
| 230.3 YPG | {{tooltip|T–|Tied for}}21st |
Yards per pass
| 6.9 | 20th |
Total touchdowns
| 35 | T–24th |
Rushing touchdowns
| 11 | T–20th |
Receiving touchdowns
| 20 | T–21st |
Scoring
| 20.8 {{tooltip|PPG|Points per game}} | 22nd |
Pass completions
| 339/570 (.595) | 25th |
Third downs
| 75/219 (.342) | 31st |
First downs per game
| 18.1 | 28th |
Possession average
| {{tooltip|29:03|Per game}} | 27th |
Fewest sacks allowed
| 40 | 24th |
Turnover differential
| +2 | T–13th |
Fewest penalties
| 119 | 27th |
Fewest penalty yardage
| 985 | 25th |
||
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! colspan=3 style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Defense |
style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Category
! style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Value ! style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| NFL rank |
---|
Total yards
| 316.1 YPG | 4th |
Yards per play
| 4.7 | 1st |
Rushing yards
| 130.3 YPG | 28th |
Yards per rush
| 4.3 | 18th |
Passing yards
| 185.8 YPG | 1st |
Yards per pass
| 5.8 | 1st |
{{tooltip|Total touchdowns|Opponents' touchdowns}}
| 30 | 3rd |
Rushing touchdowns
| 15 | T–18th |
Receiving touchdowns
| 13 | 1st |
Scoring
| 18.6 PPG | 4th |
Pass completions
| 306/552 (.554) | 1st |
Third downs
| 86/236 (.364) | 5th |
First downs per game
| 19.1 | 9th |
Sacks
| 42 | T–3rd |
Forced fumbles
| 16 | T–7th |
Fumble recoveries
| 13 | T–4th |
Interceptions
| 14 | T–12th |
Fewest penalties
| 110 | T–21st |
Fewest penalty yardage
| 990 | 26th |
||
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! colspan=3 style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Special Teams |
style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Category
! style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| Value ! style="{{NFLAltPrimaryStyle|Denver Broncos|year=2016|border=2}}"| NFL rank |
---|
Kickoff returns
| 22.9 {{tooltip|YPR|Yards per return}} | 11th |
Punt returns
| 8.5 YPR | 15th |
Gross punting
| 45.7 {{tooltip|YPP|Yards per punt}} | 16th |
Net punting
| 41.3 YPP | 9th |
{{tooltip|Kickoff coverage|Opponents' kickoff returns}}
| 20.2 YPR | 7th |
{{tooltip|Punt coverage|Opponents' punt returns}}
| 6.8 YPR | 7th |
|}
{{small|Source for this section: NFL.com.{{cite web |title=NFL.com Statistics |url=http://www.nfl.com/stats/team |work=NFL.com |date=January 2, 2017 |access-date=January 2, 2017 |quote=NOTE: Search for the 2016 season.}}}}
Awards and honors
=Pro Bowl and All-Pro selections=
Three Broncos were selected to the 2017 Pro Bowl: Linebacker Von Miller and cornerbacks Chris Harris, Jr. and Aqib Talib.{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=Three for the show: Chris Harris Jr., Von Miller, Aqib Talib selected for Pro Bowl |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Three-for-the-show-Chris-Harris-Jr-Von-Miller-Aqib-Talib-selected-for-Pro-Bowl/1a62be33-00db-4d2c-b0bb-865ab7a81f3d |work=Denver Broncos |date=December 20, 2016 |access-date=December 20, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161221175854/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Three-for-the-show-Chris-Harris-Jr-Von-Miller-Aqib-Talib-selected-for-Pro-Bowl/1a62be33-00db-4d2c-b0bb-865ab7a81f3d |archive-date=December 21, 2016 |url-status=dead }} All three were also voted to the {{nfly|2016}} All-Pro Team and named to the First Team.{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=Chris Harris Jr., Von Miller, Aqib Talib earn first-team All-Pro nods |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Chris-Harris-Jr-Von-Miller-Aqib-Talib-earn-first-team-All-Pro-nods/709a51f5-a180-4dee-a4ea-21d5935c4b66 |work=Denver Broncos |date=January 6, 2017 |access-date=January 6, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170107174951/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Chris-Harris-Jr-Von-Miller-Aqib-Talib-earn-first-team-All-Pro-nods/709a51f5-a180-4dee-a4ea-21d5935c4b66 |archive-date=January 7, 2017 |url-status=dead }} Safety Darian Stewart{{cite web |author=DiLalla, Aric |title=Darian Stewart named to 2017 NFL Pro Bowl |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Darian-Stewart-named-to-2017-NFL-Pro-Bowl/faa37db8-2ee9-4d47-a36c-7bc947cc1815 |work=Denver Broncos |date=January 17, 2017 |access-date=January 17, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170118164921/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Darian-Stewart-named-to-2017-NFL-Pro-Bowl/faa37db8-2ee9-4d47-a36c-7bc947cc1815 |archive-date=2017-01-18 |url-status=dead }} and wide receivers Emmanuel Sanders{{cite web |author=DiLalla, Aric |title=Emmanuel Sanders named to Pro Bowl |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Emmanuel-Sanders-named-to-Pro-Bowl/581697be-aa05-4f38-b4ea-a46f581d1e2a |work=Denver Broncos |date=January 18, 2017 |access-date=January 18, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170119064018/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Emmanuel-Sanders-named-to-Pro-Bowl/581697be-aa05-4f38-b4ea-a46f581d1e2a |archive-date=2017-01-19 |url-status=dead }} and Demaryius Thomas{{cite web |author=Swanson, Ben |title=Demaryius Thomas named to 2017 Pro Bowl |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Demaryius-Thomas-named-to-2017-Pro-Bowl/16cd5f5c-e54a-41f9-8971-d0d632e71f55 |work=Denver Broncos |date=January 23, 2017 |access-date=January 23, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170127040128/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Demaryius-Thomas-named-to-2017-Pro-Bowl/16cd5f5c-e54a-41f9-8971-d0d632e71f55 |archive-date=January 27, 2017 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }} were later added to the Pro Bowl roster as replacements.
Other news and notes
- August 25: Executive vice president/general manager John Elway was added to the NFL's competition committee.{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=Joe Ellis, John Elway join prestigious league committees |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Joe-Ellis-John-Elway-join-prestigious-league-committees/5a26a820-20be-496c-bde3-62f5d780f813 |work=Denver Broncos |date=August 25, 2016 |access-date=August 25, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160826203126/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Joe-Ellis-John-Elway-join-prestigious-league-committees/5a26a820-20be-496c-bde3-62f5d780f813 |archive-date=August 26, 2016 |url-status=dead }}
- September 7: The Broncos and wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders agreed on a three-year contract extension that will keep Sanders in Denver through the 2019 season. The initial three-year contract that Sanders signed with the Broncos in 2014 was set to expire after the {{nfly|2016}} season.{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=Broncos agree to terms with WR Emmanuel Sanders on a contract extension |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Broncos-agree-to-terms-with-WR-Emmanuel-Sanders-on-a-contract-extension/a63ad64b-3b2e-4b9d-aed6-bbc4a6646372 |work=Denver Broncos |date=September 7, 2016 |access-date=September 7, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171216041738/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/Broncos-agree-to-terms-with-WR-Emmanuel-Sanders-on-a-contract-extension/a63ad64b-3b2e-4b9d-aed6-bbc4a6646372 |archive-date=December 16, 2017 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}
- September 13: The Broncos' Color Rush uniforms were unveiled, which the team wore during their Week 6 Thursday Night loss at the San Diego Chargers. The uniform kit contained the following features: orange pants, which the team wore for the first time since 1979, orange socks and shoes, as well as block-style numerals trimmed in navy blue that mirrored the team's 1968–96 uniform style. Due to the NFL's one-helmet rule implemented in {{nfly|2013}}, the helmets remained the same, with the team temporarily replacing the modern primary logo with the throwback "D" horse logo.{{cite web |author=Mason, Andrew |title=NFL reveals Color Rush jersey for the Broncos |url=http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/NFL-reveals-Color-Rush-jersey-for-the-Broncos/e11d54a3-3b9d-4e90-8078-3157abaf0482 |work=Denver Broncos |date=September 13, 2016 |access-date=September 13, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170902105427/http://www.denverbroncos.com/news-and-blogs/article-1/NFL-reveals-Color-Rush-jersey-for-the-Broncos/e11d54a3-3b9d-4e90-8078-3157abaf0482 |archive-date=2017-09-02 |url-status=dead }}
- November 26: The Broncos and safety Darian Stewart agreed on a four-year contract extension that will keep Stewart in Denver through the 2020 season. The initial two-year contract that Stewart signed with the Broncos in 2015 was set to expire after the 2016 season.
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{reflist|30em}}
External links
{{commons category}}
- {{official website|http://www.denverbroncos.com}}
- [http://www.denverpost.com/broncos The Denver Post – Complete Broncos Coverage]
- [https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/den/2016.htm 2016 Season page on Pro Football Reference]
- [https://www.espn.com/blog/afcwest/category/_/name/denver-broncos NFL Nation Blog – ESPN]
{{Denver Broncos}}
{{Denver Broncos seasons}}
{{2016 NFL season by team}}