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“You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing you think you cannot do.”
-Eleanor Roosevelt
Sometimes 365-ish days seems so much longer then a year. It’s only been a year since the Broncos made Bo Nix their quarterback of the future, a change that was both heralded and mocked from different corners of the pigskin intelligentsia. But watching Nix in only his second training camp – barking pre-snap adjustments, chest-bumping a lineman after a touchdown throw in drills – you’d think he’s a seasoned veteran. Hey certainly plays beyond his years. Er, year. Um, days. It’s hard to believe that just 12 months ago, this same guy was, by his own admission, mostly trying not to look like an idiot. That’s what Nix himself said recently about his rookie mindset: “A lot of times as a rookie, you just don’t want to look like an idiot. Now you can go out there and look a lot better than an idiot.” As seasoned as he was coming into the pros, Nix wasn’t even really “faking it ‘til you make it”. He was just processing it all as fast as he could – and suddenly, Broncos Country is bo-lieving in a way it hasn’t in a long time.
When Denver drafted Nix twelfth overall in 2024, the move had as many skeptics as believers. The team had just trudged through an eight-year playoff drought featuring a carousel of quarterbacks and false messiahs. (Remember the Trevor Siemian experience? The Paxton Lynch dream that wasn’t? The one-year Case Keenum detour, the ghost of Joe Flacco experiment, the brief flicker of Drew Lock, and of course the Russell Wilson Let’s Ride fiasco? Broncos fans aged several decades this last decade.) Dropping an unproven rookie into that mix felt like another risky spin of the QB roulette wheel. How many times can you go back to that well of optimism? But Nix immediately offered something different – a spark of genuine hope and leadership that this franchise hadn’t felt since Peyton Manning hung up his cleats.
From the moment he arrived, Bo Nix carried himself like a leader. Literally from Day One: last season Nix became the first Broncos rookie to be voted a team captain since 1967. (To put that in perspective, the last time it happened, Lyndon Johnson was President and a rookie running back named Floyd Little – nicknamed “The Franchise” – was the guy wearing the C.) Think about that. John Elway wasn’t a captain as a rookie. Neither was Peyton. But Bo Nix walked into a veteran NFL locker room and so impressed his teammates that they put the C on his chest before he’d even thrown a regular-season pass. Even head coach Sean Payton, who’s been around the league a long time, was stunned – he said he’d never had a rookie captain before. “It’s unusual for a rookie to be named a captain… It’s a credit to him, and I think his teammates felt that he belonged in that position,” Payton remarked last year, essentially framing Nix as an outlier. In response, Nix gave the kind of earnest, mature answer you’d expect from a ten-year vet, not a wide-eyed newbie: It’s a privilege and an honor… I don’t take it lightly. I’ve got to come to work every day and prove I should be the captain.
Of course, being named a captain is one thing – living up to it is another. Early on, Nix had his “welcome to the NFL” moments. The Broncos’ season opener in Seattle last year was a trial by fire: the crowd was ferocious, Denver’s offense sputtered, and Nix’s stat line was modest. He didn’t throw his first touchdown pass until Week 4. At times, he looked like… well, a rookie quarterback trying to figure it out. The confidence we saw in press conferences sometimes looked a bit like a façade on game days, as Nix is now more open about. He was swimming in it, processing a new playbook and the speed of pro defenses – showing that pre-loaded confidence externally while internally just hoping not to mess up. September was rough. The Broncos started 1-3, and cynics around the league started sharpening their knives. What a dumb move by the Broncos to put a rookie on such a pedestal.
But what separates Bo Nix – and what started converting doubters into believers – was how he responded to those early struggles. Instead of wilting, he got better. Much better. By midseason, the game seemed to slow down for him. The rookie jitters faded, the real confidence emerged, and the wins started coming. Denver went on a tear in the back half of 2024, winning six of their final ten games, and losing others by unexpectedly close margins. Nix wasn’t just managing games; he was making plays – throwing 24 touchdowns in that span and outdueling a few established stars along the way. The Broncos finished 10-7 and snagged a wild-card spot, ending a playoff drought that had hung over the franchise since Super Bowl 50. All Bo did in Year One was set virtually every franchise rookie passing record (3,775 yards and 29 TDs, if you’re counting) and give a proud but battered fan base a reason to feel genuinely excited about the future again. Not too shabby for a kid who started the year just trying to act confident.
Walking off the field after their playoff-clinching win last December, Nix finally looked the part of the captain his teammates believed he was. Seeing him embrace Courtland Sutton amid the chaos – the veteran receiver bear-hugging the young QB with a grin that said everything: We got one. Sutton had been through the lean years, catching passes from what felt like a different quarterback every other week. Now here he was, finally thriving (he quietly had one of his best seasons ever with Nix at the helm), and it was clear he believed in the kid. We didn’t know it then, but a few months later Sutton would double down on that belief in a big way.
This week, after Sutton signed a four-year extension to stay in Denver, he spoke at a press conference and could not stop gushing about Bo Nix. “Bo is my guy,” Sutton said unequivocally. Keep in mind, Sutton’s seen a lot of quarterbacks come and go here; for him to hitch his prime years to Nix is telling. Sutton went on: “The dude’s mindset – he was already light years ahead of where anybody expected a rookie quarterback to be last year.” Light years ahead. Not just “pretty good for a rookie,” but beyond what anyone expected. And this isn’t just Sutton being a polite teammate – he backed it up with specifics: he talked about the advanced conversations they’re already having in camp, how Nix sees the field, how plays are “already possible” now that might have been unthinkable a year ago. “It’s promising,” Sutton said, clearly energized. He called Bo “a special dude on and off the field” and said sharing a locker room with him is “a special thing.” This is a 29-year-old Pro Bowl receiver who’s been around; he doesn’t throw around special lightly. If Sutton is all-in, maybe we all should be. The rest of the team is as well.
So what did Bo Nix do this offseason to earn such admiration? For starters, he worked his tail off. All day. Every day. He didn’t rest on a playoff berth or those shiny rookie stats. Instead, he went on a quest to get better – much better. In June, Nix made a pilgrimage to San Diego to spend almost a week with a certain future Hall of Famer: Drew Brees. Yes, the Saints legend and Super Bowl champion who knows a thing or two about thriving under Sean Payton. The idea was simple: pick the brain of one of the most cerebral and respected leaders to ever play quarterback. And it wasn’t just a one-off lunch or a quick phone call; Bo essentially shadowed Brees for several days. They dove into film, talked about the intricacies of Payton’s offense, and – maybe most importantly – discussed how to handle the less glamorous parts of QB life. “Your job is to go out there and complete passes and score points – everybody understands that,” Nix said, relaying Brees’ advice. “It’s the off-the-field — how are you encouraging guys? How are you making sure guys are seen and getting what they need, being put in a position to succeed… It’s all about those second-layer things.”
The phrase “second-layer things” stuck. That’s the kind of insight a 25-year-old Bo Nix needs from a cerebral veteran like Brees spelling it out. Leadership isn’t just rah-rah speeches and being Captain Awesome on game day; it’s the day-to-day cultivation of your team. Nix understands this intuitively, and still the reinforcement only strengthens his leadership skills. It’s checking in on your receivers, organizing that extra throwing session, grabbing dinner with the O-line, knowing when a teammate needs a pat on the back versus a kick in the butt. Bo soaked all this up. He basically went to Quarterback Grad School this summer, and Professor Brees was impressed enough to give him an open line to call anytime. How many young QBs take their offseason to study how to be a leader?
And if learning from Brees wasn’t enough, Nix also sought out the renowned throwing coach Tom House to refine his mechanics. Tom House is famous for working with guys like Tom Brady and Nolan Ryan – he’s 78 years old and has seen it all. House and Nix spent time tightening up every little detail of Bo’s throwing motion and footwork, looking for any inefficiency to iron out. “At this point, it’s tough to make big strides, so we want to find all the little things we can that may make a difference,” Nix explained. It’s the classic perfectionist mindset: chasing marginal gains. The difference between a good QB and a great one in the NFL often is those tiny details. Nix gets that. He’s attacking his weaknesses like a guy who refuses to have a sophomore slump.
Oh, and then tack on the fact that Bo hit the weight room like a man possessed… When he showed up at minicamp in June, observers couldn’t help but notice that Nix looked, well, jacked. He’s always been a sturdy athlete (6’2″, around 215 as a rookie), but one Broncos reporter tweeted that Nix “packed on some muscle mass this offseason” and still has the same quickness as a runner. Standing on the sideline watching him now, you see it – the shoulders a bit broader, the biceps popping out of the jersey sleeves a little more. He basically spent five weeks in Phase 1 of Payton’s offseason program just lifting and conditioning, transforming his body. For the first time in his life, Bo had an offseason where he wasn’t prepping for the draft or the combine or recovering from a college season; he could focus purely on building NFL strength. And it shows. Physically, he looks every bit the part of a franchise QB who can take a hit and keep rolling. Mentally, he’s come back sharper too – the byproduct of all those hours of film study and absorbing wisdom from QB Yoda (Brees). Nix says he memorized the plays last season. He actually understands them this season.
The growth is evident to everyone at Broncos HQ. Ask around during camp and you’ll hear the same themes: confidence, command, composure. Offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi said you can “feel the comfort level” with Nix now. “He’s not thinking as much when you give him the play,” Lombardi observed. “He can get in and out of the huddle with a lot more comfort. He can just kind of play free and natural.” Translation: Year 2 Bo knows what he’s doing, and it shows. Last summer, you’d see him hearing a play call and maybe taking an extra second to process, or double-checking a formation. Now, he’s spitting out the play-call jargon like a second language and moving with a purpose. The indecision is gone. As Coach Payton described it, there’s “less pause, less hesitation… He’s playing fast.” Nix always had a knack for elusiveness – he was hard to sack even as a rookie – but now his mind is catching up to his feet. He’s seeing defensive looks quicker, going through progressions quicker, and making quicker decisions to either rip a throw or take off and run. That half-second saved is the difference between a sack and a 20-yard gain. It’s the difference between “decent young QB” and “wow, this guy’s got it.”
And the confidence – oh man, the confidence is real now. The semi-manufactured bravado is gone because Bo genuinely believes he can be great. He won’t say it in exactly those words (quarterbacks are all trained by PR folks to be humble robots in front of the mic, and Nix’s EQ is extra-high that way), but actually, scratch that – Nix did basically say it. When the NFL Network’s Top 100 list came out this summer, Bo Nix was voted the 64th best player in the league by his peers. Not bad after one year. He was asked about it, and Bo’s reaction was telling: “It’s cool to be on that list… but I want to be higher. I want to be the best in the world. And I’m not going to stop until I give it my best shot.” Read that again: the best in the world. That’s not a quote from a wide-eyed rookie just happy to be here; that’s a young man openly chasing others like Patrick Mahomes, chasing greatness. Some might roll their eyes at a quote like that – after all, lots of players say they want to be the best. But something about the way Nix said it strikes as authentic. As one local columnist noted, you often hear a lot of “fake confidence” in sports, empty platitudes from guys who don’t truly put in the work. Bo Nix, by contrast, exudes a genuine confidence that he backs up with obsessive preparation. He’s earned the right to talk about bigger things because everyone sees him grinding every day.
Perhaps the biggest endorsement of Bo’s leadership is how his teammates rally around him now. We talked about Sutton already – he’s all-in. But he’s not the only one. New tight end Evan Engram (a veteran who just joined the Broncos this offseason) said he’s “very impressed” with how Nix leads and how he’s “not afraid to challenge” himself and others to get better. The other day Engram even dropped a sky’s-the-limit type comment about Bo’s mentality driving the team. When a guy who played with Eli Manning and Trevor Lawrence is raving about your work ethic, that’s meaningful. Even on the defensive side, they see it: reportedly Nix has been talking a little smack to the defense during camp – in a fun, competitive way – and safety Brandon Jones said he loves seeing that “dawg” come out of Nix. Last year, as a newbie, Bo was quieter, careful. Now he’s confident enough to chirp at All-Pro corner Pat Surtain II in practice after threading a pass past him. And Surtain only speaks of Nix with competitive admiration. It’s all in good spirit, and it shows he’s comfortable in his own skin as the leader of this team. The whole vibe at Dove Valley is different when your QB has that swagger. Guys feed off it. You can see it in little moments – receivers running crisper routes because they know Nix will put the ball where it needs to be, linemen finishing blocks with extra oomph because they want to protect their guy, defensive players upping their game because they don’t want to be shown up by the offense in practice. Bo’s confidence is contagious.
We’re only about a week into training camp, so everyone is trying to temper their excitement just a tad – August optimism can feel fool’s gold by winter. Pressure and expectations can do funny things in the NFL. Defensive coordinators now have a year of film on Nix. The league tends to adjust to you in Year 2; the element of surprise is gone. And we can’t ignore that Broncos fans and brass alike are now expecting a big jump – not just sneaking into the playoffs, but maybe challenging the Chiefs in the AFC West. The shadow of doubt lurking here is this: What if Bo doesn’t meet these lofty expectations? In Denver, we’ve seen promising young QBs flame out before. Heck, Drew Lock had a hot stretch as a rookie and folks started crowning him – we know how that ended. Guaranteed that there are still skeptics around the league waiting to see if Nix will hit the so-called “sophomore slump”, and will come out chirping. The hype train is boarding at Union Station, but if the Broncos start 2-4, the same national talking heads praising Nix now will quickly trot out the “maybe he isn’t all that” narratives. That’s just how it goes.
And let’s be real: carrying the mantle of Franchise QB in a place like Denver is heavy. This fan base is used to Hall of Fame quarterback play – we’ve had Elway, we’ve had Peyton. You’re forever measured against those ghosts. Fair or not, that’s the deal. Nix’s phenomenal rookie year bought him a lot of goodwill, but the honeymoon can evaporate in a hurry if year two goes sideways. The standards are high, and so is the pressure he puts on himself. You can hear it when he talks about “the fear of not being ready, not being enough for the team” driving him. That’s a double-edged sword: it keeps him hungry, but it also means he knows what a big deal this is. There’s no blissful ignorance anymore, anywhere.
Yet, listening to Bo and seeing his approach, you get the sense he embraces all of this. He’s not shying away from the expectations – he’s openly talking about chasing greatness and winning championships. Sean Payton even said at the start of camp that discussing the Super Bowl has to be a “comfortable topic.” This isn’t the old “aw shucks, we’re just hoping to compete” routine. The Broncos, led by their 25-year-old quarterback, are openly aiming high. That tells me Nix has the organization’s full trust. Payton is a notoriously hard coach on QBs (just ask some of the young guys he’s worked with before), but he’s been effusive in praising Bo’s work ethic and growth. If Payton – who has a Lombardi Trophy and coached Brees for 15 years – is convinced enough to hitch his legacy in Denver to Bo Nix, that speaks volumes, at a loud volume.
Bo Nix arrived in Denver with manufactured confidence – not faking, just having to pretend you know what you’re doing long enough to actually learn how to do it. A year later, that confidence is very real, earned through talent, trial by fire, immense offseason work, and the genuine respect of his peers. He’s grown from a talented and mature kid who just didn’t want to screw up, into a young man who knows this is his team. His offense calls him “special,” his defensive teammates speak glowingly, his coaches trust him implicitly, and an entire city is daring to believe that maybe, just maybe, the long search for the next great Broncos quarterback is over.
There are no guarantees in the NFL. The story of Bo Nix is still in its early chapters, and yes, a plot twist or two may be lurking. But as of Summer 2025, the Broncos have a confident, hard-working, true leader and captain taking snaps – one who’s wholly unafraid of the weight on his shoulders. Embracing it, even. Bo Nix learned very quickly on the fly, and now that he’s made this first big leap, the possibilities seem endless. Bo Bo-lieves, always has, and now so many of us do too. If you’re not yet a Bo-liever, it might be time to hop on the bandwagon. There will be a lot of seats, but space is already getting crowded.
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