Denver, CO
Broncos center Alex Forsyth erases unpleasant Arrowhead memories in Chiefs win
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — With a little nod, a little flick of the eyebrows, Alex Forsyth acknowledged fate.
He is a believer, he affirmed in a dingy locker room in Kansas City, the place that could’ve broken him. A believer in what, he didn’t say. He simply believes things happen for a reason. And that meant Thursday night on Christmas must’ve happened for a reason, 411 days since the special-teams rep that made him infamous.
“It was just a special, special day,” Forsyth said. “Special night.”
The cards fell. On Monday, three days before a return to Arrowhead Stadium, reserve offensive lineman Forsyth found out he’d be starting at center for the Broncos. And starting for a while, in the most critical juncture of the season for Denver. Incumbent Luke Wattenberg had a shoulder injury, bad enough to land him on injured reserve. Forsyth would need to stare down the Chiefs, and with All-Pro defensive tackle Chris Jones.
Forsyth, too, would need to stare down the memory of a play he acknowledged he could “never forget.”
On Nov. 14, 2024, a younger Broncos team was poised to shatter a streak of eight straight losses to the Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium. Kicker Wil Lutz set up for a 35-yard field goal with Denver down 16-14 and a second left to play. Ex-punter Riley Dixon set up a hold, and Lutz swung. But on the snap, Chiefs outside linebacker Leo Chenal bowled Forsyth over.
Chenal swatted Lutz’s try away. Ballgame. Broncos tight end Lucas Krull stood on the sideline, head on hands. Denver had its most painful loss of the season, and one of its most painful losses to the Chiefs in a recent franchise history of painful Chiefs losses, and Forsyth was the goat.
“It’s always tough to come back from that — kinda get your mind off it, as much as you want to say focus on the next game and stuff,” Forsyth reflected on Thursday. “After a game like last year’s, it’s always tough to bounce back.”
That being said?
“Can’t let a bad play,” Forsyth noted, “ruin a career.”
And the story of Forsyth bloomed Thursday night, in a 20-13 win that served as some vindication for the entire franchise after a decade of misery at Arrowhead — and vindication for Forsyth. The Broncos’ offensive front surrendered just one sack and six hits on quarterback Bo Nix in a grind-it-out affair, and Forsyth, Nix’s teammate back at Oregon in 2022, was at the center. Jones did not beat him. Chenal was hurt. Forsyth opened up holes in the run game, with the Broncos totaling 128 yards on the ground.
He earned a game ball in the process, as the Broncos’ front didn’t skip a beat without Wattenberg.
“It was a tough trip home last year,” head coach Sean Payton said postgame, on Forsyth. “And it’s a little life lesson for someone like him to come back. And starting role, that was pretty cool.”
Payton dismissed Denver’s decade-long struggles at Arrowhead as “someone else’s demons.” Not the demons of this particular Broncos team. But in a way, those demons only piled on Forsyth’s shoulders after surrendering that field-goal block in 2024. Enough criticism floated Forsyth’s way that Nix and guard Quinn Meinerz came to their teammate’s very vocal defense.
Facing those demons again, Meinerz knows, is hard. The Broncos’ last time playing on Christmas came in Meinerz’ second season in 2022, when Denver got blitzed by the Rams 51-14. Even the prospect of playing again on such a holiday three years later, Meinerz told The Post, brought anxiety.
“Everybody gets scars a couple times here and there throughout their career,” Meinerz reflected.
Forsyth has scars deeper than most. Still, his Instagram and Twitter bios read “RIP Dad,” the man who’s served an inspiration in his journey. In general, the center is “extremely mentally tough,” as Meinerz said. And in warm-ups, as the memory of 2024 could’ve descended along with twisting tendrils of fog at Arrowhead, Forsyth didn’t pay much mind to the past.
“I gotta flush it, and move on,” he said postgame.
Since he was drafted in the seventh round in 2023, that sheer professionalism has endeared Forsyth to those in his room and beyond. Take Meinerz.
“Alex was ready for this moment,” the All-Pro guard told The Denver Post, on Thursday night.
Or take right tackle Mike McGlinchey.
“He works as hard as anybody in the (expletive) building,” McGlinchey said. “He’s been waiting for his opportunity to come in and do what he needed to do and there was never a doubt from us that that was how it was going to go today.”
Or take Nix himself, who gushed over Forsyth at the podium Thursday, after the Broncos’ second-year quarterback finished 26-of-38 for 182 yards, a touchdown and an interception in the Chiefs win.
“Nobody prepares more in this league than he does,” Nix said. “I would say that he’s one of the most in-depth preparers I’ve ever seen. And it’s awesome to play behind him.
“I knew going into this game that he wasn’t going to leave a stone unturned, and he prepares like no other, and he’s going to do the best to put the team in the best chance of succeeding.”
The Broncos will need plenty more from Forsyth in the weeks ahead. The soonest Wattenberg’s eligible to return is the AFC championship game, if Denver makes it that far. Forsyth filled in for Wattenberg in a four-game stretch last season, with up-and-down results: eight pressures and a couple of sacks allowed in that timeframe, according to Pro Football Focus. The Broncos need a bigger leap in Forsyth’s third season.
They got the first jump, on Thursday. And they, and Forsyth, left the past behind at Arrowhead.
“I think it’s just sort of a God wink that he got to come back here and start and play the full game,” Nix said, “and we get our first win here in a long time.”
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Denver, CO
Broncos designate LB Drew Sanders for return from injured reserve
Denver, CO
Broncos offensive line is the engine that drives offense
I’ve been covering the Denver Broncos for his entire career and I remember writing up some pretty harsh criticism of his play early on — especially in regards to holding penalties. I recall at one point he was committing holding penalties at a record-breaking rate. He was so far above the rest of the field that he’d break charts if anyone tried to chart it. The best part of that saga is that he never let the outside noise (from me and many others) get to him. He worked on his craft and he got better. And then got even better to the point where it is pretty clear that he is one of the best left tackles in all of football. He is going to go down as one of the best tackles in franchise history too when its all said and done. It’s a great comeback story.
All that said, he wasn’t the only one of the Broncos players on that offensive line to make an impact with guard Quinn Meinerz also being named a PFF All-Pro player. The whole offensive line has been dominant in nearly every category and is the main engine that has driven the offenses successes this season.
4) Denver Broncos
Team OLi Grade: 83.0
Best-Ranked OL: Garett Bolles, 89.0 (7th overall, 3rd position)
Worst-Ranked OL: Alex Palczewski, 63.5 (159th overall, 61st position)
And one more to complete the picture comes from Sharp Football Analysis who has the Broncos ranked fifth-overall in their NFL Offensive Line Stats:
There is so much evidence that shows the trenches on both side of the ball is what has brought the success of the 2025 Broncos. It’s an area that Sean Payton has said in the past is always an area of focus. He knows you don’t win consistently if your team is being dominated in the trenches.
Denver, CO
Here’s how the NFL typically handles the top seeded team’s Divisional Round schedule
As the number one seed in the AFC, the Denver Broncos could end up playing on either Saturday or Sunday. It all comes down to which teams win during Wild Card weekend.
Head Coach Sean Payton was asked about the potential Divisional Round schedule and he said nothing is finalized. However, the NFL has been known to follow a certain schedule that could end up with the Broncos playing on Saturday if either the Buffalo Bills or Los Angeles Chargers win on Sunday and they’d play the following Sunday only if they had to wait until Monday for the outcome of the Houston Texans and Pittsburgh Steelers game.
The other thing with that extra week off is about preparation. One of the better questions the media asked of Payton on Friday was whether or not they do more advanced scouting on potential opponents they have not yet played this season.
“Look, there are four options,” Payton said. “One is in the division. We’ve played one two years in a row—or it feels like that with Houston. Buffalo. We’ll break down kind of all four and then look at… We’ll have personnel reports on the four… You do have enough time to look at third down, look at personnel packages, study situational football. I think that’s pretty common when you look at playoff history. A lot of times, you end up with a division team sometimes in the first round. I know that’s happened a number of times over the years with me. It’s hard to gauge how these other games are going to go not having spent much time looking at New England. [We’ve] seen Jacksonville. It’s one of those where you just watch them. You’re working while you watch them. You’re working on each plan, and then you go from there.”
I came away feeling like Payton and the Broncos know two of their potential opponents fairly well. The other two will get some high level review, but nothing super deep as there just isn’t enough time. That is saved for this coming week when the opponent is finalized.
Payton and his staff have some great experience coaching in the playoffs, so this young Broncos team should be well-prepared for their football game.
Frankly, I like the idea of the Broncos getting their game out of the way early. Give Payton and his staff an extra day to begin the prep work needed for the AFC Championship game provided they come out with a win in the Divisional Round.
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