Denver, CO
Avalanche goalie Scott Wedgewood shines early, Colorado stars help fend off Ducks
ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Colorado Avalanche looked tired after one period Friday night, but one of their new goaltenders kept them afloat until the rest of the club found enough energy to grind out a win.
That script has been a familiar one during the toughest stretch of schedule the Avs have faced, and these points might prove to be incredibly valuable. Scott Wedgewood made 29 saves, the Avalanche rebounded to fend off the Anaheim Ducks, 4-2, at Honda Center.
“After the first 20 (minutes), we weren’t happy with anything,” Wedgewood said. “A couple guys voiced their opinions on what could be done better and we turned the tide. You can’t accept the first period at this level.
“You put this jersey on and you expect to win every night, right? You have this squad, this team and ever since I got here, I put the jersey on and I expect two points. We expect two points. It’s the standard you have to hold ourselves to.”
Nathan MacKinnon had a goal and two assists, while Cale Makar, Mikko Rantanen and Valeri Nichushkin had two points each. Wedgewood, along with Mackenzie Blackwood, has repeatedly provided a level of consistent goaltending the club had been lacking.
The overall play for the Avs is not near its peak, and a season full of injuries combined with a stretch of 13 road games in the past 17 contests has likely played a part in that. But they have now won six of eight, and are a season-high five games better than .500 (20-15-0).
“You chip it in different ways,” Avs coach Jared Bednar said. “We get a power-play goal, a 5-on-5 goal, a shorthanded goal, then the guys did a nice job with the empty net. I thought the penalty kill was great.
“But probably the difference in this game because of what we gave up — which was too much — was Wedgewood. I thought he was outstanding.”
This game may have turned on a bad-luck play … for the Avs. Anaheim defenseman Olen Zellweger clipped MacKinnon in the face with his stick and was sent to the penalty box for high sticking. The officials conferred and decided to wipe away the infraction. It looked from multiple replay angles that MacKinnon was hit by the puck after Keaton Middleton tried to clear it out of danger, but a zoomed-out angle showed that Zellweger clearly got the reigning MVP ahead of the puck.
So, with the Avs down a goal and trying to kill off a penalty, the hockey gods evened out the fortune. Zellweger stumbled near the top of the Anaheim offensive zone, which allowed Logan O’Connor to spring Parker Kelly for a breakaway and a shorthanded goal at 6:40 of the second. It was Kelly’s third goal of the season and Colorado’s second of the year while shorthanded.
Nichushkin put the Avalanche in front midway through the second. Anaheim goalie John Gibson didn’t handle a Makar shot cleanly, and Nichushkin was waiting at the doorstep for one of the easiest goals he’s going to score. It was his 10th of the season in just 18 games played.
Colorado’s power play came to California mired in a 5-for-48 slump, but the Avs scored twice with the extra man Thursday night in San Jose and struck again for an insurance goal early in the third against Anaheim. MacKinnon started the play with a rare dump-in from the neutral zone. Rantanen kept the Ducks’ clearing attempt in the offensive zone, and then MacKinnon found Makar with a cross-ice pass for the defenseman’s 10th goal of the year at 3:30 of the third.
MacKinnon added an empty-net goal, and pushed his NHL-leading point total to 55 in 35 games.
The Avalanche survived the first period, but only because Wedgewood was stellar. Colorado looked like a team playing on the road for the 13th time in 17 games, and like a club playing for the second straight night against a rested team. Anaheim had nearly 80% of the expected goals and seven of the eight high-danger chances in the opening 20 minutes, per Natural Stat Trick.
Beyond Kelly’s goal, the Avs’ penalty kill has also surged since completing the double goaltending switch. Colorado killed off five Anaheim power plays in this one, including one in the final four minutes. The Avs are now 20 for 21 on the kill since swapping Alexandar Georgiev for Blackwood.
“When we made the goalie switches, you see where our penalty kill is going,” Bednar said. “The analytics have been good all year. I’m not putting it on our past goaltending, because that’s not fair, either, but goalies have their strengths and weaknesses and it seems like we’ve got a couple guys here now that are really in tune with our penalty kill.
“We’re getting the saves we need. We’re getting the whistles we need. They’ve just been really sharp.”
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Denver, CO
Broncos rotate CBs Riley Moss, Kris Abrams-Draine in sign of potential shift
LANDOVER, Md. — Riley Moss found himself in an unfamiliar spot.
On Washington’s third drive Sunday night, the Broncos cornerback stood on the visiting sideline with his helmet at his side and watched.
He wasn’t hurt. He wasn’t playing poorly.
Just the opposite, in fact. Moss felt great and ultimately felt like he played great, too. Sure, Commanders receiver Treylon Burks caught one of the most impressive touchdowns of the year in the NFL over him later in the game, but Moss had great position.
If there’s one snap he wants back, it’s an overtime go-ball to Deebo Samuel in which the talented receiver ran past Moss for a 38-yard gain that put Washington right down near the goal line and set up its final score.
Overall, though, Moss liked his outing.
He was not penalized. He played with good technique.
And yet here he was early in the game, on the sideline, watching second-year man Kris Abrams-Draine work.
Starting nickel Ja’Quan McMillian occasionally found himself in the same spot, watching rookie first-rounder Jahdae Barron play in the slot.
Both Moss and McMillian played a ton — Moss 77 out of 90 defensive snaps and McMillian 64 — in Denver’s 27-26 overtime win, but they also entered what could shape up to be a one-week happening or could be a new phase of the season in the Broncos secondary.
A work-share.
Head coach Sean Payton said after the game that the adjustment had nothing to do with the quality of work provided by Moss and McMillian.
Rather, defensive coordinator Vance Joseph and the Denver coaching staff liked how Abrams-Draine and Barron played so much when All-Pro Pat Surtain II missed three games with a pectoral injury that they wanted the pair to continue getting live game reps even with Surtain’s return Sunday night.
“It’s a good question,” Payton said of Abrams-Draine getting time in place of Moss during the game. “I know we were trying to, you know, when Patrick (Surtain) comes back and then you have these other guys, it was more about keeping these guys in game form. And I knew that we were going to try to.
“There was nothing — it was more about the rotation and just keeping them all going.”
Moss did not protest after the game.
“We have a deep room and they wanted to give (Abrams-Draine) a shot,” he said. “He played a hell of a game last week and he did well today, as well. It’s nice to know we have the bodies in our room to get it done.”
The third-year man said he took “full accountability” for the play to Samuel that set up Washington’s potential winning score.
“The entire game, (I was) locking them up and then that one slips,” he said. “We can’t have that. You’ve got to finish it out. That’s going to be the main thing is to be able to make that play late in the game.”
Moss thought he played well, “99.9% of the game. That 0.1%, though, we’ve got to make that play,” he added. “At the end of the day, that’s something I’m going to hold on me and get better at.”
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Denver, CO
Broncos QB Bo Nix after overtime victory: ‘Pressure is a privilege’
The Denver Broncos entered the NFL’s Sunday night game on an eight-game winning streak. The Washington Commanders came in on a six-game losing streak.
But Denver needed outside linebacker Nik Bonitto to bat down a 2-point conversion pass with 2:47 left in overtime to keep the streaks going as the Broncos escaped with a 27-26 victory.
“When you realize the game’s over, you can take a deep breath and enjoy it,” Denver quarterback Bo Nix said.
First with the football in overtime, the Broncos went 76 yards in five plays for a touchdown. The big play was a 41-yard gain when tight end Evan Engram took a pass across the middle from Nix and ended up at the Washington 11-yard line.
RJ Harvey ran 5 yards for Denver’s overtime touchdown, but Nix had gotten the rest of the yards on four consecutive completions.
“Being able to go down the field and score flips the pressure,” Broncos coach Sean Payton said. “… Bo was fantastic in that final drive. Evan made a great play. A lot of guys stepped up. And then defensively, look, they’re a tough out. The quarterback was able to make some plays.”
Washington’s overtime drive to a 3-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Marcus Mariota to wide receiver Terry McLaurin was much more dramatic than Denver’s overtime series after the Commanders kicked a field goal on the final play of the fourth quarter to cap an 18-play possession.
The Broncos lost a fourth-down interception to a pass-interference penalty after Mariota made a miraculous escape from a sack, Mariota lost a 30-yard touchdown pass to McLaurin to a holding penalty and the touchdown that counted came on fourth down.
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As in each of the victories in the streak, Denver trailed on Sunday night before coming through with its seventh win by four or fewer points.
“I was told a long time ago by one of my many offensive coaches that pressure is a privilege and not many people get to be in that opportunity,” Nix said, “so if it’s going to be me who gets this opportunity, I’m going to make the best of it. It doesn’t always go your way. Fortunately for us, it’s gone our way in these games. Last year, we were on the opposite end of these close ones, so I understand what it’s like to be on the other side of things.
“But you just got to keep moving on, and you got to have a belief you’re going to find a way. It didn’t look great for a minute, but we just found a way to get the next best play and, at the end of the day, score one more point than they did.”
Before the overtime fireworks, the play of the game had occurred with 23 seconds left in the first half.
Denver took a 13-7 lead when Nix threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Courtland Sutton even though the quarterback was about to hit the ground, falling sideways after being smacked on a scramble.
“From my perspective, it kind of feels like you’re floating for a second,” Nix said. “But I was obviously a little bit close to being down, but stayed up just long enough. (Sutton) did a great job. He started on the other side of the field and ran all the way to the other side, so he just scrambled with me and got open.
“And in a game like that, we literally talk about a game of inches, but it really does come down to an inch or two every once in while.”
The pass to Sutton was Nix’s eighth completion of the drive as he accounted for all 64 yards in the scoring series.
“That was an amazing throw,” Payton said. “… That was an important drive. That two-minute drill was the difference between winning and losing.”
After Washington took a 14-13 lead on the opening series of the second half, Nix converted three consecutive third-down snaps – on an 11-yard scramble and completions of 31 and 21 yards – to set up Harvey’s 1-yard touchdown plunge with 3:59 left in the third quarter.
But in the fourth quarter, which has been so pivotal during Denver’s winning streak, Nix completed 6-of-11 passes for 32 yards, took a sack and was intercepted by linebacker Bobby Wagner at the Broncos 36, setting up one of the two fourth-quarter field goals that Washington used to send the game into overtime.
A former Pinson Valley High School and Auburn quarterback, Nix completed 29-of-45 passes for 321 yards with one touchdown and one interception and ran two times for 16 yards against the Commanders. The passing yardage tied for the second-most on Nix’s career list.
In their next game, the Broncos play the Las Vegas Raiders at 3:05 p.m. CST Sunday at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. At 10-2, Denver has a two-game lead at the top of the AFC West standings with five games to play.
“There’s something special, but we also feel like there’s more in the tank, more to grow from,” Nix said. “As much as we feel like we’ve had success, there’s a lot of guys in that locker room that are eager to perform better. We know that there’s a higher ceiling we can play up to.”
Denver, CO
Broncos fan finds massive YouTube show success with a mix of the profane, the inane and unabashed homerism
Brandon Perna might be the only Broncos fan grateful for the Russell Wilson era of Denver football.
Not for the quality of play — the Broncos notched 11 wins to 19 losses with Wilson as starting quarterback — or even because Wilson’s departure set the stage for a 2024 playoff berth and a 9-2 record this season, so far, for Perna’s hometown team.
No, Wilson in the orange and blue made Perna miserable. And man, was that good for clicks.
That misery helped Perna, 41, turn his own fandom into a flourishing YouTube channel. It’s one that’s lowbrow but thoughtful, and that takes fans seriously but treats sports fandom as what it’s supposed to be — fun.
“I don’t care if they’re … taking a 20-minute bathroom break at work to watch power rankings — like, (heck) yeah,” Perna said, reflecting on his audience in a recent interview in his home studio in Aurora. “Or they’re putting it on before they go to bed. Whatever it is, it makes me excited to do the next one. And hopefully I didn’t betray anybody by saying ‘Your team sucks’ the week before.”
Profane, inane and unapologetically pro-Broncos — “Go (expletive) yourselves, Kansas City” might be his “quoth the Raven” refrain — Perna has been running the “That’s Good Sports” show on YouTube for more than a decade. In that time, he’s grown regular viewership to reach the hundreds of thousands, and recently he crested 820,000 subscribers for the four or more videos he posts every week.
His self-described “bad football news presented in the form of even worse comedy” has grown into T-shirts, coffee custom-crafted for fans frustrated with awful penalties and an online community that spans the globe. His weekly “curse wheel,” which randomly targets teams for misfortune, had posted a playoff-level 9-2 record of successful curses through mid-November.
He’s navigated shifting YouTube algorithms, capricious sports gods and a saturated online market to turn his channel into a thriving operation.
It has grown from a one-man show to include co-writer Will Keys and editors Johnny Barker and Connor Sherrill, folks Perna credits with keeping the commentary sharp and production regular. He shouts out to other sports YouTubers like Tom Grossi and traditional sportscasters like Vic Lombardi for helping him find his footing.
Having the team in place ahead of the Wilson season had the channel ready to capitalize on the sudden influx of viewers. But getting to that point took years of toiling, as well as treating the burgeoning channel as a job — even when it didn’t have the paycheck associated with it.
‘Bigger and bigger goals’
Perna started working in the YouTube world as a video editor in the late 2000s, and he started running his channel casually in the early 2010s. He had left the increasingly corporate world of big-time YouTube production to focus on freelancing.
A quick, janky video, as he put it, changed things.
Peyton Manning, then the Broncos’ quarterback, threw seven touchdowns against the Baltimore Ravens in 2013 — a feat that hadn’t been accomplished in more than 40 years at that point. And that video’s success showed him there was an audience for his brand of irreverent analysis.
Over the following years, Perna was able to dedicate more time to the channel and lean on his wife, Jess Filipas, as the primary breadwinner. Some months and years tested his conviction — whether it was a bad Broncos season, the channel not hitting the way he knew it could, or personal travails, she said.
But his convictions — his authenticity about the views he brought — never wavered, Filipas said.
The relentless publishing schedule started to pay literal dividends in the late 2010s, to the point that Filipas was able to step back from her full-time job. Then they welcomed a newborn girl to the world in 2020.
The channel weathered the pandemic, as more folks chose to spend time indoors, leading to more sponsorships and contractual obligations. More production led to deeper connections with the audience — and between the cross-country team behind each episode.
“Things have gotten more complicated, but he’s had bigger and bigger goals,” Filipas said of her husband. “But he’s always known there’s more out there than him in the basement doing these videos alone.”
Keys, a lifelong Broncos fan who’s based in Sacramento, looped in with Perna in 2018. He started as a fan of the channel and clicked with Perna as a co-writer. The two cover each other’s blind spots and have similar enough senses of humor that they can fine-tune the antics that draw in viewers, Keys said.
Perna can read a phone book into his camera and get laughs, Keys said, and the visual humor of editors Barker and Sherrill completes the package.
They strive to show respect for the audience and to have breadth of coverage, Keys and Perna said. They don’t ignore games and don’t hate on teams or players. Even the epithets for the Kansas City Chiefs are built on divisional rivalry and that team’s long track record of success, not sneering dismissiveness.
In addition to news and game-driven publishing, Perna’s team also produces deep-dive pieces to help explain how the NFL arrived where it is today, whether that’s meant looking at past dynasties or broadcasting deep analysis of draft classes.
“People come back because I think they learn something,” Keys said “… We try to put a lot of thought into getting a good script, coming back to it multiple times, adding nuggets of information that no one else has.”
Perna will spend 75 hours a week working in the basement, writing and producing videos, Filipas said.
But he also pops up to play with their daughter — moments the whole family treasures, even if Filipas jokes about scheduling weekend outings so they’re not “listening to this madman scream about football” through the vents of their home during his Broncos livestreams.
Curse wheels and the joys of sports
Perna said he “did things the wrong way, probably stubbornly, for too long,” before finding success. He had expanded his coverage to the entire NFL, which helped draw in more eyeballs, and established a rhythm and a voice that kept them coming back.
But it was the Broncos’ two seasons with Wilson, the savior-turned-millstone of a floundering franchise, that truly helped the channel find its stride in 2022 and 2023, Perna said. Viewership exploded as people flocked to Perna’s weekly heartbreak.
One particularly ghastly outing, in which the Broncos lost to the Indianapolis Colts 12-9 on a Thursday night in 2022, also stands out to Perna. His publishing schedule keeps him from going to many games in person; that slog of a game was a rare exception.
Perna took his frustrations to his channel with an episode titled “The Worst Game Ever,” which went on to become another recurring theme.
The YouTube audience, it turned out, “enjoyed watching me be miserable,” Perna jokes now. But the show tapped into the highs and lows that most every sports fan experiences.
“If (Denver is) winning, you’re just going to have Broncos fans (watching) — and they’re excited with you,” Perna said. “When they’re losing, literally any fan of any team could come in and be like, ‘Look at this idiot suffering because his team let him down.’ ”
Those other fans make up some of the bread and butter of the channel’s audience. Perna looks to respect their time with real analysis tucked between the same lowbrow gags that won their attention in the first place. (“I’ve really got to find a way to spread out these poop awards,” Perna said on a recent episode, flashing an impish grin. “It makes me look immature.”)
Other gimmicks have taken on a life of their own.
Most NFL coverage features some kind of power rankings, where analysts try to list the best teams. Perna sees it as a tropey exercise in a sport where anything can happen any week.
So he’s added his own twist: a plastic, “Wheel of Fortune”-style spinning wheel — only with curses instead of prizes tied to the wedges. A spin of the wheel will doom the highlighted team. How that doom arrives, however, is part of the mystery.
Teams losing, poor outings from key players or even injuries get blamed on the wheel. For instance, Broncos star player Pat Surtain II, one of Perna’s favorite players, got hurt the week the wheel landed on Denver, even as the team won.
“Don’t let Pat find out!” Perna said. “That’s one we want back.”
Fans rewatch the episode to tally the wheel’s latest victims, Perna said, giving extra life to the channel and the community that’s grown around it.
“Russell Wilson and the curse wheel,” Perna laughs, crediting them for his success. “Those are the two things.”

Now that Perna has trialed-and-errored his way into what makes the channel work — and settled into 15-hour days to keep up with the football and posting schedules — he doesn’t want to lose focus on that community of supporters.
“The support is overwhelming and humbling, and I try to never take that for granted,” Perna said. “Because they keep you relevant in the space.”
He also gets to see how his formula as an overly dire, overly enthusiastic and consistently irreverent voice plays in an era long-missed by Broncos fans: a season of must-watch Denver football.
The wins this year have been ugly, improbable and exhilarating. Or, in a word, captivating — even for an audience outside of Broncos Country. The wins have also been piling up at a much faster clip than at any time since Perna made his show his primary professional focus.
“I’m ready for the Broncos to have some actual post-season success. Because I feel like once I’ve learned how to do this correctly, the Broncos haven’t been in the post-season,” Perna said.
“Last year, they got there. They didn’t win, of course, but we were just happy they were there. I hadn’t had the Broncos in the playoffs when I feel like I’ve done this (show) the right way. So much of (the Broncos’ success) predated that. So I’m enthusiastic that they’re winning.”
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