Ferris Bueller can take a day off. But Pat Surtain II cannot be absent.

One week after the coach and the quarterback squawked, talked and laughed about a sideline inferno that drew a comparison to a 1980s movie character, the Broncos learned how vulnerable they are without their best player.

On the Chargers’ first series, Surtain whipped his body on a tackle and slammed his head to the ground. He grabbed his facemask with both hands as Broncos Country hid its eyes. Surtain never returned, diagnosed with a concussion that will likely extend through the Saints game on Thursday given the number of protocol hurdles required to clear.

The Broncos without Pat felt like the Beatles without Paul. Or a drink without a straw.

With Surtain in the locker room, the Broncos fell behind 20-0 in the first half, booed off the field by the sellout crowd of 70,743. It felt like 40-0.

“When something like that happens, we have to be able to come together and have some fire. And we didn’t do that. It was kind of like a dark cloud over our head,” cornerback Riley Moss admitted. “It was a little bit of a funk. That’s something we have to work on, handling adversity better and getting through it.”

Sunday shone a harsh light on how far the Bo Nix offense is behind the defense and how chaotic life is without a star.

What other conclusion can we draw after the Chargers thumped Denver, 23-16?

In the NFL, the line between glorious and incompetence remains razor thin. There is little redeemable to say about Sir-Nix-A-Lot. Baby Got Back into the game with a fourth-quarter rally, but those were empty calories against a prevent defense.

Resilience is admirable, but I despise praising professional athletes for not quitting (tracing to 15 years of covering the try-hard Rockies who too often wanted Capri Suns and orange slices for keeping games close).

The Broncos provided a flicker of hope. So what? It does not erase getting their ears boxed for 50 minutes until they finally scored, avoiding the indignity of the first home shutout in franchise history. Coach Sean Payton conceded as much.

Denver Broncos head coach Sean Payton and defensive coordinator Vance Joseph on the sideline during the first quarter against the Los Angeles Chargers at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2024. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
Denver Broncos head coach Sean Payton and defensive coordinator Vance Joseph on the sideline during the first quarter against the Los Angeles Chargers at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver on Sunday, Oct. 13, 2024. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)



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