Broncos notes: Russell Wilson ushers in new Broncos era, in a hurry to win
New Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson is in a hurry to turn Denver's fortunes around.
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Hurry! Hurry!
Russell Wilson is reprising Peyton Manning's signature demand in Denver.
“We've got a championship-caliber football team,” the Broncos' new quarterback declared Wednesday after what he termed a “ great first day ” at training camp with his new teammates, coaches and playbook.
"Now it's time to just show up and prove it, go out and do it.”
Wilson isn't interested in patiently engineering a turnaround for a franchise that hasn't reached the playoffs since Manning recited his final “Hurry! Hurry” call in Super Bowl 50 more than six years ago.
Echoing high expectations expressed by safety Justin Simmons and receiver Courtland Sutton a day earlier, Wilson insisted the Broncos are ready to compete for a Lombardi Trophy.
He cited the team's mixture of youth and experience, speed and skill. And he had particular praise for the Broncos' work ethic after so many of his teammates gave up their last vestiges of summer vacation to gather with him at his estate last week in San Diego to refine routes ahead of training camp.
“Jerry Jeudy was in our QB meeting for an hour just for fun, just to listen and study and understand it all," Wilson added. “So, it's a credit to him and his work ethic. When your best players put that kind of work it, that just raises everybody else.”
The Broncos haven’t had a winning record since 2016. And general manager George Paton said Tuesday that he welcomes the buzz that surrounds his team following the hiring of rookie coach Nathaniel Hackett, the electrifying acquisition of Wilson for a package of picks and players — and the pending $4.65 billion purchase of the franchise by Walmart heir Rob Walton.
“We know expectations are higher than they’ve ever been here. We’re not blind to that. We embrace expectations,” Paton said. “But we have a long way to go.
"We haven’t won here in five, six years. We won seven games last year. We’re 0-0 now. The work starts now, a lot of work to be done. I know we’re going to embrace the process, and I look forward to the journey with Coach Hackett, with this team, and everyone involved.”
As far as Wilson is concerned, he sees no reason why that trek can't reach State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, where Super Bowl 57 will be held in February.
While Paton won't go that far just yet, he touted the team's core and trajectory.
“Anytime you get a franchise quarterback, a Super Bowl-winning quarterback, like Russell Wilson, it’s going to accelerate anything that you’re doing,” Paton said. “It wouldn’t have done any good to bring Russell in here if we didn’t have a foundation in place.”
One thing Wilson apparently isn't in a hurry to do is sign a contract extension. He has two years left on his current deal that pays him $19 million this upcoming season and $22 million next year. Wilson's new deal is expected to top $250 million over five years, but Paton demurred when asked for a timeline.
“We all want Russell here a long time,” Paton said. “Out of respect for his team and our team, we’re going to keep it in-house any discussions we may or may not have ... at the right time, we’ll get a deal done.”
Last week, Kyler Murray agreed to a deal with the Cardinals that adds five new years and up to $230.5 million in new money, and Baltimore QB Lamar Jackson appears in line for a mega-deal.
“I don't really worry about those guys and what they're doing. It's awesome for them,” Wilson said. “But it has nothing really to do with me. I'm excited to be here, I know that. I know I want to be here for a long, long time, hopefully the rest of my career."
Notes: The Broncos signed T Cam Fleming after T Tom Compton needed a back operation that landed him on the PUP list Wednesday. Fleming played in five games for Denver last season. The Broncos also waived OLB Kadofi Wright.
NFL finance group supports Broncos sale to Walmart heir
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — NFL owners will decide on Aug. 9 whether to approve the proposed $4.65 billion sale of the Denver Broncos to the Waltons, heirs to the Walmart fortune and America's richest family.
The league's finance committee met Wednesday and unanimously recommended the transaction for approval.
The committee will send a report to all clubs at a special league meeting on Aug. 9. Twenty-four of the 32 teams are needed to approve the sale of the storied franchise from the Pat Bowlen Trust to Rob Walton; his daughter, Carrie Walton Penner; and her husband, Greg Penner.
Commissioner Roger Goodell has made minority ownership a point of emphasis in the league. The Walton-Penner group met those wishes by including Starbucks board chair Mellody Hobson and former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice — both Black women.
The deal is the most expensive for a sports franchise in the world, surpassing the $3.1 billion sale earlier this year of Chelsea, one of European soccer’s blue ribbon teams, to an American-led consortium fronted by Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly.
Walton, 77, was chairman of Walmart from 1992-2015. He is the eldest son of founder Sam Walton and Helen Walton and has an estimated net worth of nearly $60 billion. He would become by far the richest owner in the NFL if the sale is approved as expected.
The Pat Bowlen Trust has run the franchise for several years and put the club up for sale last year after Hall of Famer Pat Bowlen’s children couldn’t concur on a successor to their father.
Bowlen, who bought the team in 1984, died in 2019, a month shy of his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
