BRONCOS

Fangio’s plan for improving the Broncos offense is the definition of insanity

Dec 6, 2021, 4:20 PM

On Monday, Vic Fangio stated the obvious. The day after his team scored nine points in a pivotal game against the Chiefs, the head coach offered an honest assessment of the Broncos offense.

“We (have) to figure out a way to score more points,” Fangio said. “We’re in the bottom third in the league in that and we’ve got it we’ve got to do better scoring points. No doubt about it.”

Well, he’s not wrong. Currently, the Broncos are averaging 19.8 points per game, placing them 23rd in the NFL in that category.

They’re nearly in the bottom quarter of the league when it comes to scoring offense. Their ineptitude is bettered only by the Panthers, Dolphins, Jets, Falcons, Giants, Lions, Bears, Jaguars and Texans. That’s a who’s who of bad offensive teams.

At this point in the season, it’s clear that the struggles aren’t an aberration. They’re a pattern. They’re the norm.

So it stands to reason that the Broncos would do something to change things up. Since what they’re doing hasn’t worked through 12 games, it seems logical that they’d try a new approach.

They could redefine roles. Maybe Pat Shurmur goes to the sidelines, where he can communicate directly with his quarterbacks? Maybe someone else write the script for the first 15 plays of the game?

They could change personnel. Maybe Teddy Bridgewater goes to the bench and Drew Lock gets a start? Maybe Javonte Williams becomes the full-time feature back and doesn’t split time evenly with Melvin Gordon down the stretch?

They could rethink their philosophy. Maybe every drive that ends in a kick, even when it’s a punt, isn’t a good thing? Maybe playing conservative, don’t-make-a-mistake football isn’t a good approach?

All of these things seem like fair questions. They appear to be potential solutions to what ails the Broncos.

So which one is Denver going to implement? Well, none of them.

“No, not really,” Fangio answered on Monday when asked if he had any plans to change personnel, roles or anything on offense.

His additional explanation was no more satisfying.

“Our starters and the guys we’re playing are the guys that we have,” Fangio added. “And we’re gonna stick with them.”

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, but expecting a different result. The Broncos are living proof of that axiom.

Broncos

Sean Payton and George Paton at their Broncos NFL Draft press conference Broncos trade up...

Andrew Mason

Broncos ‘wide open’ for trade up in the first round

Trading up remains a possibility, Broncos coach Sean Payton said, with George Paton affirming that some trades up are worth the risk.

9 hours ago

George Paton J.J. McCarthy...

Andrew Mason

George Paton: Round 1 isn’t the only place where Broncos can find a quarterback

During his time with the Vikings, the Broncos general manager watched as Minnesota missed on two first-round QBs, changing his thinking

18 hours ago

Sean Payton George Paton Broncos...

Will Petersen

Sean Payton, George Paton asked directly if Broncos will take QB

"If we had the tip sheets as to who everyone else was taking it'd be easier to answer that question," Broncos head coach Sean Payton said

22 hours ago

Courtland Sutton...

Will Petersen

ESPN suggests Broncos could use Courtland Sutton to trade up

This mock is a bit quirky, as Bill Barnwell proposes a trade for every team, but he sees the Broncos with potential to get to No. 4 overall

1 day ago

Byron Murphy...

Cecil Lammey

The Broncos can bolster their d-line with mid-round picks in 2024

Denver needs to get better in the trenches, something they can do on the defensive side of the ball in the middle rounds of the draft

1 day ago

Bo Nix Broncos mock draft...

Andrew Mason

The Broncos may want to move down in the draft — but they may not have a trade partner to do it

The best Broncos draft plan might be to trade down ... but what if they can't find any partners who want to move up to their No. 12 spot?

2 days ago

Fangio’s plan for improving the Broncos offense is the definition of insanity