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Broncos get needed statement win in Sunday’s biggest upset

The Broncos rallied from a 14-point deficit to upset the defending Super Bowl champions on the road.
Sean Payton’s gutsy decision to go for a two-point conversion late in the game epitomized the Broncos’ vibe.
The Eagles’ streak of 12 consecutive home wins was snapped in Week 5.

It was a lot more than merely the NFL’s biggest upset on Sunday. When the Denver Broncos rallied from a 14-point deficit in the fourth quarter — at The Linc, of all places — to stun the Philadelphia Eagles it went down as a quintessential statement win.

Bold. Gritty. Resilient. Clutch.

Those were surely markers on the 21-17 smackdown against the defending Super Bowl champion, but they also represent the identity of a team that has served notice that it intends to keep stacking signature victories.

“The one thing our team is never going to do is quit,” Nik Bonitto, the star linebacker who collected 2 ½ of the six sacks on Jalen Hurts, said during his postgame news conference.

“We have some very resilient people in that locker room. I feel like we’ve been in that spot so many times where we’ll be down a score or two and just find a way to fight back and continue to keep playing. So, hat’s off to everybody.”

Until Sunday, though, the Broncos (3-2) were on the wrong end of the close ones this season. Both of their losses, at Indianapolis and at the Los Angeles Chargers, came on walk-off field goals as time expired. The Broncos entered Sunday’s game with the weird distinction of having never trailed in the fourth quarter — before the clock struck zeroes.

This time, it came down to a Hail Mary pass into a pack of players falling incomplete.

Instead of a miracle, the Broncos shut out the Eagles in the fourth quarter while the Bo Nix-led offense that had previously punted on six consecutive drives came to life.

It’s no wonder that Broncos coach Sean Payton said he was most encouraged that his team managed to finish the job. To some degree, Denver undoubtedly learned something from the tough defeats. Yet in another sense, it might have been more about a gut-check.

When Saquon Barkley zipped 47 yards with a Hurt pass for a touchdown that made it 17-3 early in the third quarter, conditions seemed ripe for a rout. Except that they weren’t. Never mind that the Eagles (4-1) had won 12 consecutive games on their home turf. Something happened.

“When you play somebody like that, you’re going to get punched,” Payton said. “It’s not going to be easy, but we kept fighting. That’s what I was most encouraged about. Just the fight, the grit, you felt — that’s the funny thing — that momentum shifted.”

Payton praised his young quarterback, Nix, for his leadership in crunch time — and it came with poise and performance. Nix didn’t commit a turnover and in completing 9 of 10 passes in the fourth quarter, came up with one clutch play after another. On a third-and-15 from the Eagles 45, he found Courtland Sutton over the middle for 34 yards, setting up his 11-yard TD dime to Evan Engram. On the next drive, he coolly took a one-yard sack rather throwing the ball away on a third-down scramble, forcing the Eagles to take their final timeout with 1:14 remaining, before the Broncos extended the lead to four points with a Will Lutz field goal.

Yet Payton’s gutsy decision to go for a two-point conversion after the Engram TD — Nix found Troy Franklin on a flat pass that made it 18-17 — put another stamp on the signature win.

Yes, it’s a team built by Payton, in his third season with the Broncos, with a resume that includes once calling for a surprise onside kick in the Super Bowl that helped his New Orleans Saints win a crown. On a day when he notched his 173rd career regular-season victory, which surpassed his mentor, Bill Parcells, for 15th place all-time, it was fitting that Payton came up aces on a critical game-management decision.

Payton could’ve opted for the PAT to tie the game, but in going for two, he went for seizing the lead on a play that was, of course, specially designed for such a situation. And not only did it underscore the bold statement that went a step further than an impressive rally from 14 points down, it ultimately took away the option for Philadelphia to tie the game and force overtime with a field goal on its final drive. It was masterful strategy.

“We came here to win a game, and I had two or three calls that I loved,” Payton said, referring to plays inside the 5-yard line.

“We felt … let’s do that. Let’s keep being aggressive.”

Parcells would be so proud. It worked. And it added so much to the statement the Broncos made in scoring what has been the rare victory against a quality opponent.

Since the start of last season, the Broncos were 1-10 against teams with a winning record — until Sunday.

Add that to the statement. After hearing all week about the measuring stick that awaited them — the other wins this season came against a rookie quarterback making his first NFL start for Tennessee and against a battered Cincinnati team missing Joe Burrow — they proved that can indeed measure up. It led to the perfect question for Payton’s postgame locker room address, as he asked his team: “Who are you afraid of?”

No, there’s nothing to fear.

“We talked about it,” Payton said. “I said, ‘Look, you don’t get a chance to play these games that have a ton of upside.’ Now, don’t get me wrong. There’s downside, but there’s a ton of upside relative to defining what you become.”

Here’s to a bold, confident identity that could ultimately develop into something special.

Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on social media on X and Bluesky.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

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