Skip to main content

Garett Bolles Puts Broncos Coaching Staff on Blast

Garett Bolles said the quiet part out loud.

Whispers of locker room fractures were fated to emerge when the one-win Denver Broncos jumped out to a 1-5 start. As a result, head coach Sean Payton's purge of the roster is well underway.

The roster shake-ups we've seen in the last week or so could be just the tip of the iceberg. 

First out the door were edge-rushing flops Randy Gregory and Frank Clark, with their sheer lack of production, making the Broncos' respective decisions to jettison them fairly simple

Payton's ongoing roster purge remains fluid and wide receiver Jerry Jeudy is the name most often floated in rumors and reports when it comes to potential trade ahead of the October 31 NFL deadline.

At the podium, Payton has said one thing about trading players and doing the exact opposite — make no bones about it. Although he did admit recently that the Broncos will always listen when the phone rings. 

While Payton may feel confident foiling the media with his coach-speak, he's taking a much bigger risk of unsettling his own locker room. Payton’s strong hand has kept a lid on  internal strife going public to date, but a few small snippets slipped out after the Broncos' 19-8 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs.

“We came up short,” Broncos left tackle Garett Bolles said on Thursday night. “The bottom line is that we've all got to get better. I've got to get better. Our players have to get better. Our coaches have to be better.”

What happens next for the Broncos? Don't miss out on any news and analysis! Take a second and sign up for our free newsletter and get breaking Broncos news delivered to your inbox daily!

Bolles accepted responsibility for the Broncos' failures at the player level. But it's rare to hear a player call out the coaches, even if it was more Freudian than calculated.

Bolles' words ring true. Payton certainly has to be better, as he admitted to a massive snafu in Week 6's loss at Arrowhead. Defensive coordinator Vance Joseph has been under fire all season long for the Broncos' historically bad showing on his side of the ball. 

With Bolles' name being linked to trade rumors, speaking out about Payton and his coaching staff, even if it wasn't by name, could accelerate a ticket out of town. However, the Broncos don't have a young developmental option to replace Bolles in the starting lineup if he were to be traded. 

“People are going to talk,’’ Bolles said Thursday night via Chris Tomasson of The Denver Gazette. “It starts with (the media). You guys start the rumors, so at the end of the day, I’m a Bronco. Everyone’s a Bronco. We’re going to ride as Broncos until otherwise. I stay positive and love my teammates. I love being here and we go from there.”

On Payton's part, the search for answers throughout the entire organization is nothing new. In fact, it's a healthy pursuit for a team that's mired in the AFC West basement and angling for a top-5 draft pick in 2024, despite the presence of a quarter-billion-dollar quarterback.

Much now depends on whether Russell Wilson can continue to withstand the barrage of criticism that his last two lackluster outings have invited and how it's clouded his future in Denver. Although some fans bemoan Wilson's tone-deaf comments of optimism, he has remained stoic in preaching team unity thus far, especially if the Broncos are going to turn things around.

However, post-game on Thursday, Wilson passionately claimed that he's going to sort out his own performance first and foremost. Just like we're trained when we get on an airplane relative to deploying oxygen masks in the event of an emergency, Wilson can't help the Broncos until he helps himself. 

“We’ve been playing really good ball on offense for the past several weeks,” Wilson said. “I think the best thing we can do is just keep believing and play cleaner. I have to play better. That starts with me. I know I’ll respond the right way.”

The agitation the Broncos are currently in the throes of has the collateral benefit of exposing to Payton which players aren't going to buy into his long-term vision. No doubt, the Broncos players will continue to offer up the standard empty platitudes and promises, especially the type that coaches like to hear, but not veteran linebacker Alex Singleton, who talked about trying to play better as a team in Week 7. 

It may be a far cry from Von Miller's bold guarantee of the Broncos' whooping the Arizona Cardinals' posterior a few years back, which he and the team delivered on, but at least Singleton is keeping it real. 

“Like I said, we are together, and we’re going to continue to be together,” Singleton said post-game on Thursday night. “Whoever is here when we line up and play against Green Bay in a week and a half, we will try to play a better game than tonight.”


Follow Mile High Huddle on Twitter and Facebook.

Subscribe to Mile High Huddle on YouTube for daily Broncos live-stream podcasts!