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Mark Kiszla: In their year of living dangerously, can the Broncos make Super Bowl run without a running game?

LANDOVER, Md. — Do the Broncos ever do anything the easy way?

Every victory smile is covered in a Maalox mustache.

Oh, this heartburn hurts so good. 

It took the Broncos overtime and the big, bad hand of linebacker Nik Bonitto to thwart a two-point conversion for them to beat Washington 27-26 Sunday.

As the clock struck midnight on the East Coast, flipping the calendar from November to the nitty-gritty month of the NFL season, the Broncos have won nine in a row, with seven of the victories by a grand total of 17 points.

They flew back to Denver as the current No. 1 seed in the AFC and legit championship aspirations.

But there’s also a nagging question:

Can the Broncos make a Super Bowl run without a running game?

Although he did score what proved to be the winning touchdown with a five-yard dash in the extra period, rookie R.J. Harvey isn’t cutting it.

In the two games since being anointed the team’s No. 1 running back by default, Harvey has toted the rock 24 times for a paltry 65 yards.

Against the Commanders, Denver had to lean heavily on the arm of quarterback Bo Nix. Unable to move the football on the ground, Nix was required to throw 45 times. A 2:1 pass-to-run ratio is a dicey formula for success.

While a teeth-rattling defense is this team’s calling card, it would be wrong to call anybody other than J.K. Dobbins the MVP of Denver’s offense through 10 games, when the Broncos emerged as the championship contender that Payton promised us they were ready to be.

Dobbins ran for 772 yards, averaging a smash-mouth five yards per carry, and was on pace to become the first Broncos back to finish among the NFL’s top five players in rushing since Clinton Portis did it way back in 2003.

Then the feel-good story took a turn for the worse when Dobbins wrenched his left foot against the Raiders, suffering a Lisfranc ligament tear. He will bowl you over, but he has never been able to outrun his bad luck with injuries, which is why the Chargers let Dobbins go as a free agent.

And now the burden of Denver’s running game has fallen on the shoulders of Harvey.

And it appears to be a task for Harvey that’s too big of an ask.

While it would be unfairly premature to call Harvey a bust, selecting him with the 60th overall pick in the NFL draft was a mistake. While he’s a useful gadget, Harvey is more a whatchamacallit than a real weapon. He moves well laterally, but rarely plants his foot and puts the pedal to the metal, with only two rushes of more than 25 yards.

General manager George Paton has done yeoman’s work reshaping the Denver roster, but grabbing Harvey in the second round was a reach.

Yes, hindsight is 20/20. But I wasn’t the only knucklehead howling before the draft for the Broncos to trade back their slot at No. 20 in the opening round to get Ohio State star TreVeyon Henderson, who has emerged as a compelling reason why the New England Patriots have become the league’s most pleasant surprise.

When Denver reached for Harvey, the team’s glaring need for a tight end could’ve instead been filled with Harold Fannin Jr., who has made 51 receptions as a rookie despite being stuck with the clueless Cleveland Browns.

Through 10 games, Dobbins allowed Denver to play football that’s complementary to a championship-caliber defense. Despite Payton’s urge to throw the rock around the yard, the Broncos averaged 4.8 yards per rush, giving them a viable four-minute offense to run out the clock when nursing a tenuous lead late in the fourth quarter.

Denver no longer has that hammer in its toolbox.

A pillow fight is no way to win in the NFL playoffs.


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Broncos at Commanders grades: Nik Bonitto, Bo Nix come up clutch

The Broncos won their ninth straight game as they escaped with a 27-26 overtime win over the Washington Commanders on Sunday. Here are the grades from the victory: Offense The offensive burden fell on quarterback Bo Nix’s shoulders, as the Denver running game was a non-factor again without J.K. Dobbins. Nix delivered, besides one mistake […]

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Broncos hold off Commanders 27-26 in overtime to take over No. 1 seed in AFC

LANDOVER, Md. — The Broncos have taken over the No. 1 seed for the AFC playoff race. At least for a day. With a wild 27-26 overtime win over the Washington Commanders on Sunday night at Northwest Stadium, the Broncos moved to 10-2, the same record as New England, but the Broncos hold a tiebreaker […]


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