Broncos eliminated from playoffs

New coach, new system, new roster, new staff. Same old story for
the Denver Broncos.
Josh McDaniels' first season as Denver coach ended the same
way Mike Shanahan's last one did: with a late-season flop and an
embarrassing blowout that wasted a strong start and kept the
Broncos out of the playoffs.
Jamaal Charles ran for a Chiefs-record 259 yards on 25
carries and linebacker Derrick Johnson returned two interceptions
of Kyle Orton for touchdowns in Kansas City's 44-24 rout Sunday,
their first victory in nine tries at Invesco Field.
"We blew it. In a very embarrassing way," Denver defensive
end Vonnie Holliday said. "We have to go back and watch this film."
Why bother?
"As embarrassing as this was, you have to go back and watch
this. You want to know which guys stepped up and gave it their all
... or did some guys just fold it up?" Holliday said. "When this
happens against a team like Kansas City. These guys had over 500
yards of total offense - I don't think they've gotten that in the
last three, four games. It's ridiculous.
"Charles is a good back, no doubt about it. We knew that
coming in. But what did he have, 300 yards by himself? That's
embarrassing."
For the Broncos it was eerily reminiscent of last season's
finale, when they were routed 52-21 by San Diego with a playoff
berth on the line, a loss that led to Shanahan's departure and
McDaniels' arrival.
But they don't appear any better off a year later.
Johnson returned his second interception 60 yards for a score
that gave Kansas City a 37-24 lead with 10 minutes left, then
Charles capped his amazing performance with a 56-yard TD run. He
bested Larry Johnson's franchise record of 211 yards set in 2005.
The Chiefs looked nothing like a 4-12 team against the
Broncos (8-8), who lost eight of 10 after a sizzling 6-0 start and
went 0-3 at home in the AFC West after going 3-0 in divisional road
games.
It was the first time the Broncos failed to win a division
game at home.
There were 10 scenarios when the day began for the Broncos to
avoid joining the 1978 Redskins and '03 Vikings as the only teams
since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger to miss the playoffs after a 6-0
start.
The Broncos went into their high-stakes season finale with a
thin receiving corps after Eddie Royal was held out with a neck
injury and McDaniels deactivated Pro Bowler Brandon Marshall and
tight end Tony Scheffler for disciplinary reasons.
Brian Dawkins insisted that wasn't the reason for this mess.
"No, that has nothing to do with missed tackles," he said.
McDaniels had accused Marshall, his best offensive player, of
exaggerating a hamstring injury two days after making his second
straight Pro Bowl.
That left Denver with Jabar Gaffney, Brandon Stokley, Brandon
Lloyd and Matt Willis, who was promoted from the practice squad 24
hours earlier.
"We're not going to look back on it and say that cost us this
game. That happened, whatever," said Gaffney, who had a career day
with 14 catches for 213 yards.
Neither Marshall nor Scheffler was at Invesco Field, and
McDaniels refused to say afterward whether they had a future in
Denver.
Other than Gaffney, the Broncos didn't play as if much was at
stake, never once holding the lead.
Pro Bowl teammates Dawkins and Champ Bailey weren't on the
same page on Denver's first defensive series, allowing Kansas City
to score its first offensive touchdown in the first quarter all
season with a four-play, 86-yard drive.
With Dawkins biting on a run fake, Bailey was burned for a
50-yard catch by Terrance Cooper. Bailey missed his assignment on
tight end Leonard Pope on the next snap, good for 29 yards. Two
plays later, fullback Mike Cox dived in from a yard out for Kansas
City's first TD on its opening possession in 18 games.
The Broncos trailed 30-24 in the fourth quarter and had a
chance to take their first lead after reaching the Chiefs' 40-yard
line. That's when Johnson stepped in front of tight end
<fstl:categorylink categoryId="102482">Daniel Graham and
returned Orton's pass 60 yards for his second score.
Then, Charles ended all doubt with his long TD, which put him
in striking distance of the NFL's single-game rushing record of 296
yards set by Minnesota's <fstl:categorylink
categoryId="469519">Adrian Peterson in 2007 against San Diego.
Instead, Charles encouraged coach Todd Haley to get
seldom-used Javarris Williams some work.
"I could have (gone) back into the game, but I just went up
to the coach (and said) I'm satisfied right now. I'll get it some
other time," Charles said.
Denver's playoff drought now stands at four years.
"We've got to look at what may be the common denominator in
why we're not finishing better than we're finishing," McDaniels
said. "I can't speak for years prior, but I can speak for this year
and we certainly didn't play nearly as well in the second half of
the season as we did in the first half.
"We've got to find an answer. This isn't an acceptable ending
to the season."
Notes: In a bit of bad timing, Marshall was
featured on the Broncos' game day program. ... Gaffney's 213 yards
were one shy of the team record set by Shannon Sharpe in 2002 and
the second-most in an NFL game this season. Dallas' Miles Austin
had 250 on Oct. 11 at Kansas City.
