Penalties doom Broncos in loss against Baltimore

BALTIMORE — Phillip Lindsay ardently believes that he did nothing wrong.

It doesn’t even alter what occurred here Sunday against the Ravens.

The Broncos trailed by a field goal with 2 minutes left until halftime when Baltimore linebacker Terrell Suggs strip-sacked quarterback Case Keenum at Ravens’ land. Players jostled to the football once Lindsay dove head first. He began putting his right arm into the scrum.

“I was on the floor and I went to the chunk ” Lindsay explained. “I went to attempt to hit it out and I suspect that the ref found that I was going at somebody. For me personally, I don’t even believe I did something wrong. But at the day’s conclusion, rsquo & that;s not my phone. So I definitely feel like I let down my team. ”

The Broncos were Lindsay was ejected.

Penalties became a motif for the Broncos at a loss.

Denver totaled 13 penalties. You have to move all of the way back into Dec. 20, 2015, for a Broncos performance so awful. In that game the Broncos committed 12 penalties for 127 yards at a loss against Pittsburgh. On Sunday, trainer Vance Joseph described his team’s lots of errors as “self-inflicted” and often based on “men losing their composure. ”

This ’therefore exactly why the Denver penalty breakdown: unnecessary roughness (Lindsay, cornerback Isaac Yiadom and abandoned protector Ron Leary); defensive offside (linebacker Von Miller, defensive end Derek Wolfe); offensive holding (left handle Garett Bolles double, ideal guard Connor McGovern twice); illegal use of hands (linebacker Todd Davis), neutral zone infraction (Miller), too many guys on the field (group ) and an illegal block in the trunk to erase a blocked field-goal return touchdown (offensive tackle Billy Turner).

Few errors were so glaring since the holds called on Bolles. The initial call negated a Broncos down at midfield late in the next quarter. Denver punted. The call pushed the Broncos from the Baltimore 5-yard lineup into this 15 early in the fourth quarter. Keenum threw an interception on the play.

“It wasn’t my own technique. It wasn’anything. I didn’t even perform with great,” Bolles said. “I hurt my team. I take full responsibilities for my own actions. It was unacceptable. I didn’t even shield No. 4 (Keenum), which Mr. (John) Elway brought me to do and I kept hurting my team.   … I apologize to my teammates and this company for the way I played. It was unacceptable. You’ll definitely see another No. 72 next week.

One of the Broncos’ most penalties was their final. Denver confronted fourth-and-1 from the Baltimore 6-yard lineup with just under 4 minutes. The flag fell before the snap to 12 guys in the huddle — even as tight ending Jake Butt beg his case to the official.

“As soon as I noticed 12 in the huddle, I stepped outside,” Butt explained. “I’m 5 yards away from the huddle. It’therefore exactly the identical thing if 12 is recognized by a quarterback. He measures outside and you don&rsquo. I stepped outside and I don’t even see how it can be called by them. ”

The play was an incomplete pass, all but ending any shot at a comeback.

Back at the Broncos’ living room then, Lindsay donned a suit worthy of a 70s disco floor. The problem? It was worn by him much sooner than Sunday. Lindsay’s durable words reflected the mindset of a team bit together with the punishment bug.

“That’s my fault,” Lindsay explained. “It’s something I&rsquo s not likely to happen. ”

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Five Broncos to watch in Saturday’s preseason opener

VIKINGS AT BRONCOS

Kickoff: 7 p.m. Saturday.

Where: Broncos Field at Mile High.

TV: KTVD-20.

Programmer: 850 AM, 94.2 FM and also 103.5 FM

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Five Broncos to watch

1. Bradley Chubb

The Broncos should extend Chubb’therefore playing time past the two possessions to the unit. Transitioning from a 4-3 defensive end to a 3-4 strongside linebacker at the bottom package means Chubb should take extra snaps so he can be accustomed to the policy and responsibilities in the run game once Seattle visits Week 1.

2. Paxton Lynch

The backup quarterback project remains his to lose, therefore Lynch shouldn’t give trainer Vance Joseph a chance to open up the contest. Lynch could get two-plus quarters to show the coaching staff and front office that they don’t must invest Sunday calling a veteran free agent passer or another team to inquire about a transaction. The Broncos’ expect that Lynch is he plays better than he practices.

3. DeMarcus Walker

Back at his natural defensive end location and back up to his organic 280 pounds, Walker is vying for a turning place as a backup end and sub-package interior pass rusher. He wants a successful preseason to prove he can be part of their game-day mix. “The matches will tell a story,” Joseph stated. “Live soccer and shooting on double-team cubes will be large for him along with his size gap (from last year). ”

4. Brendan Langley

A third-round pick in 2017, Langley probably starts the game component of training camp since the first time cornerback. The Broncos signed veteran Tramaine Brock and drafted Isaac Yiadom this offseason; Yiadom, in particular, has outplayed Langley. Joseph was back in his analysis of Langley on Thursday, stating he had a “OK week. ” He also needs to be better-than-OK and quickly.

5. DaeSean Hamilton

Hamilton has been semi-lost in the shuffle during camp because of Courtland Sutton’s star turn along with the unexpected play of River Cracraft and Tim Patrick. But Hamilton is making this group and he will use a solid August for a big portion of the game program come September. We’d love to watch him play with Keenum on Saturday because Demaryius Thomas and Emmanuel Sanders don’t need much work.

About the Vikings

Last year: 13-3 (initial in NFC North). Lost to Philadelphia in NFC title game.

Coach: Mike Zimmer (fifth season ).

Additions: QB Kirk Cousins (Washington), DT Sheldon Richardson (Seattle), QB Trevor Siemian (Broncos) and also LG Tom Compton (Chicago)

Departures: QB Case Keenum (Broncos), QB Sam Bradford (Arizona), QB Teddy Bridgewater (New York Jets) and RB Jerick McKinnon (San Francisco).

Outlook: Cousins creates his Vikings debut together with fresh offensive coordinator John DeFillippo, formerly Philadelphia’s qquarterback’scoach. … The league’s top-ranked defense in yards (275.9) and scoring (15.8) returns 10 starters and added Richardson. … The Vikings’ offensive lineup, however, needs sorting out. LG Nick Easton (neck) is headed to injured reserve and C Pat Elfelin is rehabbing a foot injury sustained last year and RG Mike Remmers hasn’t practiced since July 31.

What are your thoughts on the new stadium sign?

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