“I was lucky,” Siemian said. “I got to see how Peyton went through the week and his day to day and how he progressed watching tape through the week. You just get better knowing what to look at, knowing what tendencies to look at, as you go. When you’re in college you think you know what you’re doing but I really didn’t.”
Now the starter, Siemian arrives at the Broncos’ facility around 6:15 a.m. and follows a daily script and arduous routine similar to Manning’s. On game days, he’s adopted a few of Manning’s ways, too.
Spoiler!
In the first quarter against the Cowboys, Siemian threaded the needle after a play-action fake to hit Emmanuel Sanders over the top in the end zone.
“That’s a big-time throw with the right placement of the ball,” head coach Vance Joseph said. “That’s hard to do.”
In the second quarter, Siemian recognized a mismatch in coverage on a third-and-9 and found running back C.J. Anderson, who cut inside and left Cowboys safety Jeff Heath on his back as he sprinted into the end zone.
“We knew we were getting man coverage in the red zone and Trev gave me a little double move route out of the backfield,” Anderson said. “Thank God we worked on that route in practice multiple times.”
Then in the third quarter, Siemian changed the call on a third-and-6, yelled “Omaha” and handed the ball off to Anderson, who skated around the right guard and up the middle of the line for a first down.
“The third-and-6 run check was something that 18 would have done,” Anderson said. “… The things he has seen, you can definitely see him go, ‘Hey, I’ve seen that before’ and puts us in the right position.”
Returning from surgery
Three days after the Broncos’ 2016 season ended, Siemian flew to Los Angeles to have his left shoulder repaired. It was crushed in a Week 4 game at Tampa and for nearly three months he played in pain and with an ugly bump atop his joint. It was his separated clavicle pushing up under the skin.
Colleen (his mom), a nurse, and Walter (his dad), a surgeon, knew he needed to get it repaired and knew he would need help after surgery, so they flew him back to Orlando for a month of their care. By then Siemian was a bona fide NFL starter, with plenty of bruises as proof. But he still carried around a perceived stain on his record.
“I think he’s always going to have that stigma that he was a seventh-rounder,” Colleen said. “He even said to us when he was home after his shoulder surgery, ‘I’m going to have to get that seventh-round stigma off my back.’”
When he was cleared to return, Siemian was tasked with re-earning the job he had already won once before. And he’d do so with a new coaching staff and another offense, and amid another summer of noise, dramatically titled The Decision by local sports talk radio.
At the start of the year, when Mike McCoy was hired as offensive coordinator and began to rebuild the playbook, he spoke to his quarterbacks about their preferred plays. He wanted to know what they liked and disliked so he could tailor a system to fit both Siemian and Paxton Lynch. Now, when McCoy asks Siemian to review playsheets before game days, Siemian liberally uses his red pen.
“Mike gives me a hard time sometimes because we highlight our favorite plays on the call sheet and sometimes I give it back to him with freaking 70 percent of the call sheet highlighted,” he said. “I think I’m just comfortable with a lot of the stuff we’re doing. I don’t speak for myself, but everybody’s really comfortable at any given time of the game with what’s being dialed up. We’re just doing our best to execute.”
Von pulled up a couple times vs the Cowboys, cost them a big play downfield. The flag against him was bad, he was at Daks waist then dropped to the ground because of this thing called gravity.
If you don't want your QB to get hit then he shouldn't run. Those hits were all on running QB's who hide the ball and try to take off running. What they did to Cam in the SB was beautiful. When Cam runs he attacks and pounds guys on the D, then he expects them to take it easy on him when he wants to go down. alex waits until the very last second to slide, makes it hard for a guy to know if he can hit him or not. I thought the hit in the pocket was clean, it happens every week in every game.
A fan base that roots for guys like Kelce, reek, and even Peters should not be complaining about the best OLB in the NFL being physical. [Reply]
Originally Posted by RunKC:
Adam Schefter @AdamSchefter
Bills ruled out DT Marcell Dareus and OT Cordy Glenn for Sunday's game vs. Broncos.
1:07 PM · Sep 22, 2017
Originally Posted by Holladay:
I have been following this thread the whole time. I get a kick out of some of the comments. Definitely passionate fans on both sides.
I wasn't able to watch Denver the first game. In the second he looked fairly solid, which surprised me having been reading this thread.
In the end we are 2 games in. That is all. Very difficult to predict.
Continue the "Family Feud"...quite entertaining.
Great post. I really love the way you put space between your sentences. Easy reading when your tired. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BlackOp:
Yeah..and that incredibly flagrant late hit on Smith didn't even get a flag...I'd like to find out who that ref is #U129 and keep a record of his officiating. He is staring at Smith the whole time and the ball is nearly half way to Charles when he is hit. Can you imagine Houston hitting Manning that late and not getting a penalty?
Those were the Manningstein years...where they would just strangle Hali in the 4th quarter and the refs would ignore it...
Cheating asswipes...Miller is a douchebag.
I cant post this photo enough...it was on a 4th quarter TD pass.
Post it a few more times, maybe you'll feel better... [Reply]
Originally Posted by Tombstone RJ:
Post it a few more times, maybe you'll feel better...
Typical response for a cheating Donk fan when blatant cheating is ignored by the league. They aren't bothered by it. They've come to expect it. Do you know why Donk fans hate the Patriots? It's because they have been better at cheating than the Donks have. [Reply]
Originally Posted by jjchieffan:
Typical response for a cheating Donk fan when blatant cheating is ignored by the league. They aren't bothered by it. They've come to expect it. Do you know why Donk fans hate the Patriots? It's because they have been better at cheating than the Donks have.
You mean like when Andy Reid cheated the market by calling Maclin. How is Maclin doing this year for the Chiefs? How's about that draft pick? [Reply]