Broncos After Further Review: Saints’ stacked box dominates running game

The Bron­cos knew the degree of dif­fi­cul­ty going against New Orleans’ defense on Sun­day was high and that was before all of the avail­able quar­ter­backs were benched by the NFL office.

Against a Bron­cos’ offense led by wide receiv­er Kendall Hin­ton and Co., that tough defense became dom­i­nant, allow­ing only 112 yards in a 31–3 win.

Hin­ton and run­ning backs Phillip Lind­say and Royce Free­man took the quar­ter­back and/or direct snaps. The Saints were pre­pared for the run game and hemmed in every rush­er. The Bron­cos had 33 attempts for 100 yards.

The key? Flood­ing the box.

Accord­ing to The Den­ver Post’s game chart­ing (not includ­ing Hinton’s scram­ble and the botched snap that result­ed in a fumble) …

Six-man box: Six rush­es for 52 yards (one “bad” rush — gain or one yard or few­er). Lind­say car­ried for 14 yards on the game’s sec­ond play and Free­man 23 yards on the game’s third-to-last snap.

Sev­en-man box: Eight rush­es for 11 yards (six “bad” rush­es). Gor­don had an 11-yard carry.

Eight-man box: Sev­en­teen rush­es for 37 yards (eight “bad” rush­es). Gor­don had an 11-yard carry.

The Bron­cos declined to use full­back Jere­my Cox on any offen­sive snap to serve as the lead block­er role that helped Saints quar­ter­back Taysom Hill gain 44 yards on 10 car­ries. The Bron­cos’ 15 “bad” rush­es were a sea­son-high. Cen­ter Lloyd Cushen­ber­ry was booked for three “bad” run plays.

Here is the rest of our Saints-Bron­cos review:

Offense

Play­ing time. Gor­don led the skill posi­tion play­ers (35), fol­lowed by receiv­er Tim Patrick (31), tight end Noah Fant (30), receiv­er KJ Ham­ler (28), Hin­ton (24) and receiv­er Jer­ry Jeudy (22).  Eli­jah Wilkin­son replaced right tack­le Demar Dot­son at half­time and played 21 snaps, his first action since sus­tain­ing a leg injury against Tam­pa Bay in Week 3.

No answer for Jor­dan. It would have helped the Bron­cos’ make-shift offense had they blocked out­stand­ing Saints defen­sive end Cameron Jor­dan. He shed Gor­don to knock down Hin­ton on his first pass attempt. He dust­ed Gor­don to help stop Ham­ler for a two-yard loss. And he beat Dot­son for anoth­er knock­down. Also effec­tive was defen­sive tack­le Mal­com Brown, who twice beat Cushen­ber­ry for two run “stuffs.”

Apply­ing pres­sure. The Saints rushed five play­ers on five of Hinton’s 11 drop-backs. He was sacked once (booked to Wilkin­son 3.21 sec­onds) and knocked down four times. “Air”  yards for Hinton’s nine pass­es (not count­ing his throw­away) — 22, 22, six, 29, 16, 28, 0 and nine yards. The Bron­cos’ last pass attempt was Hinton’s inter­cep­tion with 10:04 left in the third quar­ter. They ran on their final 16 snaps.

Third down woes. The Bron­cos had no chance on third down because of their quar­ter­back sit­u­a­tion and noth­ing cook­ing on first and sec­ond downs. They were 1 of 10 on third down and need­ed an aver­age of 7.7 yards. They failed to con­vert on third-and‑3 (first series) and‑1 (Cushen­ber­ry snap led to lost fum­ble). The only con­ver­sion was a sev­en-yard rush by Free­man on third-and‑5.

Defense

Play­ing time. Safeties Justin Sim­mons and Kareem Jack­son played all 64 snaps, fol­lowed by inside line­backer Alexan­der John­son (63), cor­ner­back A.J. Bouye (62) and inside line­backer Josey Jew­ell (55). Dre’Mont Jones led the line­men with 50. Cor­ner­back Michael Oje­mu­dia played 25 snaps in relief of Bryce Calla­han (foot), his first action on defense since the Atlanta game. The Bron­cos played only two snaps of dime (six defen­sive backs).

Saints run wild. New Orleans rushed 44 times for 229 yards. The Saints had 17 rush­es of at least five yards. The Bron­cos had eight run “stuffs” (gain or one or few­er yards not count­ing short-yardage/­goal-line). John­son led with 1 1/2 “stuffs.” The Saints had wide lanes to run and plays that were well-blocked, sig­naled by only one booked missed tack­le (Jew­ell). The Bron­cos were sim­ply get­ting blocked up. The first touch­down run (Hill one yard) was well-designed. The for­ma­tion had two tight ends, one run­ning back to the left and run­ning back Alvin Kama­ra motioned from right to left. Hill coast­ed in around the right edge, where the Saints had five block­ers for five defenders.

“Blowout Pack­age.” Coach Vic Fan­gio unveiled the 4–3 front late in the blowout loss at Las Vegas and on five of the last six plays against New Orleans. Jew­ell comes off the field and a fourth line­men enters as a way to stem the run-game tide and to sim­ply get to the fin­ish line.

Two sacks for Walk­er. The Bron­cos rushed five or more on eight of Hill’s 22 drop-backs (36.4%), post­ing three sacks, one knock­down and five pres­sures for nine total dis­rup­tions. Defen­sive end DeMar­cus Walk­er had two sacks — 3.22 sec­onds when he looped out­side on a stunt and left tack­le James Hurst was late to pick him up, and 5.90 sec­onds when he forced Hill to fum­ble (which gave him the sack). Out­side line­backer Bradley Chubb’s sack was in 3.85 sec­onds when Jones’ pres­sure forced Hill into Chubb’s path.

Slow cov­er­age day. It was a semi-unevent­ful day for the Bron­cos in cov­er­age. Calla­han was tar­get­ed twice (two three-yard catch­es by Michael Thomas) and Hill was 0 of 2 against Bouye (incom­ple­tion and pass break-up that led to Essang Bassey’s inter­cep­tion). Oje­mu­dia had a pass break-up while play­ing zone cov­er­age, when Chubb did a nice job trav­el­ing with tight end Jared Cook down­field in cov­er­age, and allowed a 20-yard catch by Thomas. Oje­mu­dia made a nice tack­le on a lat­er­al to Thomas (one-yard gain).

Special teams

McManus sets record. Kick­er Bran­don McManus was able to attempt and make a 58-yard field goal when the Bron­cos’ third-down play lost five yards (Ham­ler on end-around). It was McManus’ sev­enth make of at least 50 yards this year (fran­chise sin­gle-sea­son record) and the sev­enth-longest field goal in team his­to­ry. His two kick­offs were a 3.13-second designed pop-up that rolled into the end zone and a 4.15-second touchback.

Strong day for Mar­tin. Sam Mar­tin con­tin­ued his strong punt­ing by aver­ag­ing 3.96 sec­onds on sev­en attempts (47.4 average/41.9 net) and one touch­back. The Saints’ only return was 17 yards when Mar­tin boomed a 55-yarder.

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