Denver, CO
Saturday AFC Showdown Comes With Massive Stakes for Broncos
The Denver Broncos defeated the Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas Night, but their inconsistent performance may not inspire confidence in the season finale. The Broncos will take on the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 18, which could be the deciding game for the division title, where the winner takes all.
However, since the Broncos beat the Chiefs, they remain a game and a half up on the Chargers, so if the Chargers lose to the Houston Texans on Saturday, Denver clinches the division. For Saturday only, Broncos Country will join Texans fans in rooting for Houston.
Chargers Are a Tough Matchup
Based on how the Broncos played against the depleted Chiefs, the Chargers will be a tough out in the season finale. The Chargers have been playing clean, efficient football over the past six or so weeks, and Bo Nix has yet to defeat them.
Of course, the games are played for a reason, and the Broncos could step up, address their issues over the next 10 days, and put together a great game plan to walk out with the win vs. L.A.
Unless several additional Week 17 games go Denver’s way, the Broncos will still have a lot to play for in that final game against the Chargers. However, having the division locked up going into Week 18 could take some of the pressure off the Broncos, who are pushing hard for the division title.
The Broncos need to play more freely, as everyone seems to be feeling the late-season pressure, which has led to the kind of silly mistakes they weren’t making earlier in the campaign. Teams want to reach critical mass in late December and be playing their best football, not the other way around.
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Issues to Fix During the Mini-Bye
Now, the Broncos’ defense is a much bigger issue and has been since they faced the Las Vegas Raiders in their first game. A lot of what made Denver’s defense so scary and hard to handle — the pass rush — hasn’t been the threat it was.
The Broncos have allowed the possibility of breaking the single-season sack record to slip through their hands, even though they’ve already beaten the franchise record set in 2024 (63). The single-season sack record is 72, and the Broncos have 64, after only sacking Chiefs third-string quarterback Chris Oladokun once.
The Broncos’ offense has been more efficient and consistent since Week 10, but the unit struggled to capitalize on the four scoring drives of 14-plus plays against the Chiefs, hitting paydirt on only 2-of-4 red-zone possessions. The Chiefs’ defense had a great game plan, forcing the Broncos to inch down the field, but it’s not as threatening as the Chargers’.
The onus is on the Broncos to show drastic improvements over this mini-bye. The offense needs to find consistency again, or hope that this latest Chiefs game was a fluke.
What’s at Stake
To be clear, either way, the Broncos will have a lot on the line in their season finale against the Chargers, but if the Texans can win on Saturday, giving the Broncos the division, it would be one less thing at stake. If the Broncos clinch the division with a Texans’ victory over L.A., they can only be the No. 1, No. 2, or No. 3 seed.
If the Texans don’t beat the Chargers and the Broncos lose next week, they could fall as far as the No. 6 seed in the playoffs. So, Saturday is an important day throughout Bronco-land, even though the team has already played this week.
The Takeaway
Internally, the Broncos have had Super Bowl aspirations since the end of last season, and they were none too quiet about those goals during training camp. The AFC is up for grabs, and home-field advantage could go a long way to making it to the Super Bowl.
Denver would secure the top seed and division crown with a win next week, regardless of what happens on Saturday at SoFi Stadium. However, if the Texans can give the Broncos a little help by taking the division out of the equation, it would be a Mile-High gift this holiday season, and perhaps even take some of the fight out of the Chargers for Week 18.
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Denver, CO
Dale Kistler Obituary | The Denver Post
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Denver, CO
Where to watch Minnesota Timberwolves vs Denver Nuggets Playoffs: TV channel, start time, streaming for April 18
The 2026 NBA postseason is finally here after a thrilling Play-In Tournament saw the Phoenix Suns, Orlando Magic, Philadelphia 76ers and Portland Trail Blazers officially earn their spot in the playoffs
The postseason action continues on Saturday as the Minnesota Timberwolves visit the Denver Nuggets in Game 1 of the first round. We’ve got you covered on everything you need to know to tune in for tip off.
Want to see the full National Basketball Association schedule for April 18 and how to watch all the games? Check out our sortable NBA schedule to filter by team or division.
What time is Minnesota Timberwolves vs Denver Nuggets Game 1?
Tip off between the Denver Nuggets and Minnesota Timberwolves is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. (ET) on Saturday, April 18.
How to watch Minnesota Timberwolves vs Denver Nuggets on Saturday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Saturday, April 18, 2026, at 11:45 a.m.
Watch the NBA Playoffs on Fubo
NBA scores and results
See scores, results for all of today’s games. .
See NBA scores, results from April 17
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Denver, CO
Timothy Weil Obituary | The Denver Post
Timothy Weil
OBITUARY
Timothy Robert Weil 1952-2026 Tim Weil was born in Los Angeles, California.
In his early life he held many jobs, but he often commented that among his most memorable and rewarding roles was using his Spanish fluency to teach elementary school students in East LA. It instilled in him the importance of social justice which he in turn emphasized to his children.
On April Fool’s Day, 1981, he and “NC” (Nancy) married, a partnership that launched a unique and fulfilling life. Theirs was a union of sly, poetic witticism; they collaborated in writing jokes, songs, stories, and mythologies for over four decades. They maintained a high level commitment to wordplay and the celebration of silliness for most of their marriage. Tim and Nancy lived together in Boulder, CO, Chico, CA, Alexandria, VA, and Takoma Park, MD, before finally landing back in Denver as empty-nesters.
Tim found community in many places: Taking on a role as Assistant Scoutmaster with Page and Louis’ Boy Scout troop in Takoma Park; crafting an award-winning beer with his homebrewing group; staying in the game of baseball in the Ponce de Leon (over 50) league; playing bluegrass and folk music with other enthusiasts; performing stories with creatives at Denver venues; and joining Jewish congregations Temple Shalom in Maryland, and Temple Micah in Denver.
Tim’s creativity and playfulness were among his most defining features. Nothing was brighter than the gleam in his eye when he prepared to tell a joke, with a setup spanning about ten minutes of vivid details, often ending in a personalized, spectacularly delivered pun of his own design. To label those jokes mere “groaners” would be a disservice to his masterful storytelling. A piece he submitted to Rolling Stone about his jocular parasocial relationship with actor Lou Ferrigno received a personal rejection letter, noted as “very interesting” by the editor.
His professional work in the field of network security computing provided an outlet for his intellect as well as many professional and personal relationships throughout a career that spanned over 30 years. His writing was published in IEEE magazine and other tech journals.
Throughout his life he engaged deeply with visual art, literature, film, and music. He traveled far and wide, including to Jerusalem, Rio de Janeiro, Beijing, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, Vancouver, Seoul, Paris, Ipswich, London, and Edinburgh.
His recent struggle with severe depression was devastating for him and those close to him. It robbed him of his light and kept him in isolation from which sadly he was unable to escape. He will be remembered as the person who, despite the pain he carried, led an incredibly full life and touched the hearts of countless people with his witty humor and warmth.
He is survived by Nancy, his wife of 45 years, sons Page and Louis, daughter-in-law Jessica, grandsons Felix and Calvin, and cats Shackleton and Whiskey, along with many family and friends coast to coast.
A celebration of his life will be held in Denver at 1pm on Sunday, May 17th at Temple Micah, 1980 Dahlia Street. Bring your fondest memories of Tim. Please, no gifts or flowers. If you would like to make a donation in his memory, please consider American Foundation for Suicide Prevention https://afsp.org/.
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