broncos longshots see motivation through phillip lindsay ...€¦ · "when you get a chance to...

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Broncos longshots see motivation through Phillip Lindsay, Terrell Davis By Troy Renck KMGH July 22, 2019 When Eminem stepped to the mic to roar "Lose Yourself," he was, ostensibly, speaking to rappers. He might as well have been talking to NFL players. Training camp longshots to be specific. Look If you had One shot Or one opportunity To seize everything you ever wanted In one moment Would you capture it Or just let it slip? Terrell Davis realized his dream in 1995. As a sixth-round pick, he climbed from eighth string on the depth chart. He received little chance before training camp, an ordinary back with pedestrian numbers at Long Beach State and Georgia. Then came the hit on special teams, and he still feels the repercussions to this day. "It changed my life forever," the Hall of Famer told Denver7. Placed on kickoff duty in Tokyo against the 49ers -- something Davis had never practiced other than metal reps -- Davis stormed downfield after 49ers returner Tyronne Drakeford. Davis collided with Drakeford at the 19-yard line, turning him into Flat Stanley with a vicious tackle. "I had to do something to make them remember me," Davis said. Davis revealed a secret about that smash on Monday. Turns out he was a kicker in Pop Warner for several years, and prided himself on making the tackle on his boots, racing to beat this brother to the ball carrier. "I hadn't done it for years, but it all came back to me," Davis said with a smile. Monday, Davis and Phillip Lindsay talked shop at UCHealth Training Center. Both provide motivation for rookies trying to stick as longshots. Davis became a starter in Week 1. Lindsay turned in one of the greatest performances by a undrafted free agent last season, rushing for 1,037 yards and scoring 10 touchdowns. I asked Davis what he would tell those waking up with butterflies -- or pterodactyls -- in their bellies as they attempt to make the team. "When you get a chance to make something happen, you have to make yourself known somehow," Davis said.

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Page 1: Broncos longshots see motivation through Phillip Lindsay ...€¦ · "When you get a chance to make something happen, you have to make yourself known somehow," Davis said. Lindsay

Broncos longshots see motivation through Phillip Lindsay, Terrell Davis By Troy Renck KMGH July 22, 2019 When Eminem stepped to the mic to roar "Lose Yourself," he was, ostensibly, speaking to rappers. He might as well have been talking to NFL players. Training camp longshots to be specific. Look If you had One shot Or one opportunity To seize everything you ever wanted In one moment Would you capture it Or just let it slip? Terrell Davis realized his dream in 1995. As a sixth-round pick, he climbed from eighth string on the depth chart. He received little chance before training camp, an ordinary back with pedestrian numbers at Long Beach State and Georgia. Then came the hit on special teams, and he still feels the repercussions to this day. "It changed my life forever," the Hall of Famer told Denver7. Placed on kickoff duty in Tokyo against the 49ers -- something Davis had never practiced other than metal reps -- Davis stormed downfield after 49ers returner Tyronne Drakeford. Davis collided with Drakeford at the 19-yard line, turning him into Flat Stanley with a vicious tackle. "I had to do something to make them remember me," Davis said. Davis revealed a secret about that smash on Monday. Turns out he was a kicker in Pop Warner for several years, and prided himself on making the tackle on his boots, racing to beat this brother to the ball carrier. "I hadn't done it for years, but it all came back to me," Davis said with a smile. Monday, Davis and Phillip Lindsay talked shop at UCHealth Training Center. Both provide motivation for rookies trying to stick as longshots. Davis became a starter in Week 1. Lindsay turned in one of the greatest performances by a undrafted free agent last season, rushing for 1,037 yards and scoring 10 touchdowns. I asked Davis what he would tell those waking up with butterflies -- or pterodactyls -- in their bellies as they attempt to make the team. "When you get a chance to make something happen, you have to make yourself known somehow," Davis said.

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Lindsay scaled a higher mountain, like a 14er in Crocs. The former CU star went undrafted, a tattoo he now features on his chest. Former Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall told me he last week he knew Lindsay was a lock after the first practice. Lindsay did not see it that way, though he brimmed with confidence. "When I stepped onto that field I never had a doubt. You can't doubt yourself because no one is there to help you out," Lindsay said. "You have to prove yourself. You can't stop working. You've got to stay consistent everyday. You have to outlast guys, and stay healthy. It's a long camp." Lindsay looked up to Davis growing up. He read his book to inspire his own journey. Lindsay is now a walking example of defying the odds to players like former CU Buff receiver Juwann Winfree and Colorado State inside linebacker Josh Watson. "Seeing how he works and that mindset he carries, it definitely carried over to me. He's a dog. And he's not taking no for an answer," said Winfree, who was limited in practice on Monday after getting his calf and ankle rolled up on Sunday. "Having that mindset, and having that confidence, that can get you where he's at. Before camp, even now, he said his spot is not solidified. Nothing has changed with him. He still has that chip on his shoulder." Watson earned one of the 90 roster spots with the Broncos after a strong local combine. He has received time with the starters in recent days following Todd Davis' calf injury. "I am definitely aware of Lindsay's story. Being an undrafted guy, it's up to me show up, be coachable and make plays," Watson said. "It's about controlling the controllables. And doing my job everyday." Longshots, by definition, require imagination. They require stubbornness, and the ability to ignore critics and doubters. But the carrot dangling in Denver is realistic. Somebody will reach it. Fourteen of the last 15 years an undrafted player has made the final roster, and countless late-round picks have stuck. "I still see it in (Lindsay). When I first talked to him about wearing my number, it was apparent he wasn't a kid just happy to be here. He was different. And he still has that attitude. He's pissed off (over the doubters)," Davis said. "When you are in the position (as a longshot), you can't take anything for granted. I knew I was doing well, but I didn't allow myself to believe I had made it until the final cut." Footnotes Tight end Jake Butt missed his second consecutive practice as he recovers from knee surgery. He's coming back from his third ACL procedure, and facing a battle to make the team. ... Receiver Trinity Benson, speaking of longshots, continues to turn heads. He caught multiple passes on Monday for big gains, and is the mix for the punt returner's job. He is quick and elusive. His ability to make the team will likely fall on his special teams acumen. ...

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‘Important To Give Back To These Kids’: Broncos Running Back Phillip Lindsay Hosts Free Camp By Michael Spencer CBS Denver July 15, 2019 Denver Broncos running back Phillip Lindsay hosted a free camp for boys and girls on Monday. The students are in first through 8th grades at Evie Garrett Dennis Campus in Denver Public Schools. “I wanted to host a free camp here in my neighborhood because I feel like it’s important to give back to these kids,” said Lindsay. “I was in their shoes. For a lot of these kids, they don’t have the money to go out and do these camps, so it’s big for these kids.” Lindsay and the Broncos report to training camp on Wednesday and have their first practice on Thursday morning. “I’m ready,” said Lindsay when asked about his availability. He missed the final game of his rookie season after injuring his wrist. “At the end of the day, I’m ready for whatever. It comes down to whatever they (the Broncos) feel is best for me. It’s a long season. I’d rather be able to go 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 games than go one game. It just depends on what coach Fangio and all them feel like I should be doing right now.” “In my mind I’m ready. I’m 100%. That’s all I can say, once camp hits and y’all see me, y’all know what I’m going to be doing.”

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Broncos star Phillip Lindsay inspires Pueblo prep athletes By Ryan Severance The Pueblo Chieftain June 13, 2019 The stars were out and shining bright at the Pueblo Convention Center Wednesday night at the inaugural All Star Preps Best of Pueblo awards banquet that celebrated the tremendous accomplishments of local high school student-athletes The event, which was attended by more than 850 student-athletes, coaches and parents from throughout Pueblo County, as well as the special guest speaker — Denver Broncos star running back Phillip Lindsay, who delighted and inspired those who attended. “It’s actually really special with all these athletes here. We have a lot of great athletes in Pueblo a lot of people don’t notice just because we’re a small town and they look down on us. But I think we actually have the hardest working athletes in the state,” said Nico Martin of Central High School, who was awarded most valuable player in boys basketball at the event. “You look at all our sports —we’re always contenders for state — so it’s a blessing to be here. It’s really cool to get all the athletes that have done so much through the year and have been noticed in here. I’m proud of everyone here just because I know how hard they’ve worked, too.” Freshman Audrey Maroney of Rye High School, who took home the award for best girls cross-country runner, said it was special to be recognized in front of her peers, and that it was great to see athletes across all sports honored and not just the more popular sports such as football and basketball. “It doesn’t happen a lot, especially at a small school, so it’s really cool to be recognized,” she said. “It’s really cool to see everybody here, especially all of the athletes together, because we really don’t get together as athletes a lot and celebrate all of our achievements.” Brendon Garcia, a Pueblo County High School senior who was named the most valuable wrestler at the event, also enjoyed the festivities. “It was pretty cool to win the award and represent Pueblo,” he said. “This event is cool for Pueblo and getting to see everybody.” Lindsay, who did a question-and-answer session on stage in front of the crowd with Chieftain Publisher Lee Bachlet, left a huge impression on the athletes with his words of inspiration and encouragement. Among the many topics he touched on, Lindsay spoke about the adversity he has faced in his life and career and how he was able to overcome that to achieve football stardom. Jaxon Garoutte, a junior wrestler from Pueblo County High School, said Lindsay’s talk was awesome and that he said many things he will take with him and apply to sports and his life. “It was great to know that somebody that has made it is feeling kind of the same way about things as I do,” Garoutte said. “I took away that his motivation, he was just always on the grind, he wanted to stand

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out, and he did things different than everybody and didn’t care about fitting in or anything like that. I thought that was really important and that’s really something to live by.” Garoutte’s sister, Jersey Garoutte, a junior soccer player at Pueblo West High School, said Lindsay talking about the importance of grades in high school stuck with her. “He put a big emphasis on that and that’s something I’ve been working on and trying to keep up at the same time. Him talking about school was really nice to hear,” Jersey said. The grown-ups enjoyed the speech as well. “It was really good. He seems like a really good kid to have around your family,” Julius King, the grandfather of a Rye High School student-athlete, said.

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Denver Broncos running back visits Schriever By Airman Jonathan Whitely 50th Space Wing Public Affairs June 10, 2019 Denver Broncos running back Phillip Lindsay visited Schriever Air Force Base, Colorado, June 7, 2019, to learn about the base and show his support for men and women in the armed forces. Lindsay visited the base fitness center and the dining facility to meet with fans and talk about his path to the NFL. “Hard work is something you can’t run from,” he said. “You work hard or you don’t. Everybody wants something, but you will never get to something if you aren’t willing to work for it. It could take time – days, weeks, months or even years, but if you have the drive, it will almost certainly pay off. You just have to be patient.” Lindsay also visited the 2nd, 4th and 22nd Space Operations Squadrons and the 50th Security Forces Squadron to learn how Team Schriever masters space and cyberspace operations. “I’m grateful for our troops,” Lindsay said. “We would not have this beautiful country without them, and I definitely wouldn’t be able to play football. It means a lot for me to come out here, you guys put your life on the line for people like me, and I’m thankful.” During his visit, Lindsay had the rare opportunity to send a command to a satellite, communicate with deployed assets via a military satellite communication system and train with Security Forces in a crisis response simulator. Master Sgt. Robert Shaw, 2nd Space Operations Squadron Global Positioning System sustainment superintendent, was instrumental in making this visit happen. “I’ve known him for more than 12 years, since I coached his football team when he was younger,” Shaw said. “Phil has always been supportive of the military. He’s always been interested in the uniform we wear and what it means. He’s always been supportive of the men and women who serve.” Shaw also said Lindsay has consistently had a good work ethic. “He’s always had the heart and the motivation,” Shaw said. “He’s the kind of guy who will do whatever it takes to win.” Lindsay encouraged people to keep a positive mindset. “One of the great things about being a kid is having big dreams,” he said. “No one says you can’t achieve your goals. It’s important to keep those dreams, no matter how big they are, this is how I got to where I am.” Shaw said Lindsay learned the importance of being a part of a team at a young age.

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“One time when he was younger, he was complaining about his offensive line not blocking well enough,” Shaw said. “So, his dad told him he had to play on the line. Let’s just say he learned real fast no one member of a team is more important than another.” Lindsay said he hopes to be remembered as more than an athlete. “When it’s all said and done, I don’t want to be known as an NFL player,” he said. “I want to be known as the person my mom and dad raised me to be. I want to be known as a genuinely good person because in the end, we’re all just people. There’s not a huge difference between me and you.” He also said he is hosting a football camp for kids in July. “Being active in the community and giving back is important,” he said. “Making an impact is something bigger than just football.”

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Phillip Lindsay Is Inspiration for the Undrafted By Kalyn Kahler MMQB April 24, 2019 A year ago, Phillip Lindsay sat and waited for his phone to ring. He watched running back after running back get picked in the NFL draft. As the rounds passed by, the only person calling was his agent, Mike McCartney, working ahead in setting up free-agent deals for him. McCartney says he’s never had a player who wanted to get drafted as badly at Lindsay did. He was obsessed. Area scouts liked Lindsay but decision-makers weren’t keen on drafting a 5' 8", 190-pound running back, even if he was coming off back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons at Colorado. It hurt when his hometown team, the Broncos, took their second running back of the draft in Round 7 and it wasn't him. After the draft was officially over, he swallowed his pride and signed with Denver as an undrafted free agent. We all know what happened next. Lindsay made the team, earned a starting role, posted 1,037 rushing yards and nine touchdowns and made the Pro Bowl. Lindsay is the most recent reminder that there is value beyond the seven rounds of the draft.

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NFL Combine Snubs Can Look To Phillip Lindsay For Inspiration By Arnie Stapleton Associated Press February 27, 2019 More than 330 of college football’s finest players are gathering in Indianapolis this week for the NFL’s annual combine, where they’ll be poked and prodded, timed and tested, quizzed and questioned. Not all the players who will get drafted in April are on the invite list. The combine simply can’t accommodate all worthy candidates, and some prospects will work their way into teams’ draft plans via their impressive pro day performances or private team workouts in the coming weeks. Emblematic of the inexact science of projecting which players will succeed in the pros is this: Super Bowl 53 featured 30 undrafted players on the rosters of the New England Patriots (16) and Los Angeles Rams (14). More than a third of the 300-plus players invited to the combine last year didn’t get drafted, whereas 38 players who weren’t at the combine did. Among them were P.J. Hall, a defensive tackle from Sam Houston State who was drafted by Oakland in the second round, and two players from Southern Miss: defensive back Tavarius Moore, a 49ers’ third-rounder, and running back Ito Smith, a fourth-round selection by Atlanta. The biggest snub last year was Colorado running back Phillip Lindsay, the first undrafted offensive rookie ever selected to the Pro Bowl. Lindsay understandably has chips on both shoulders, one for going uninvited to the combine and the other for going undrafted altogether, and he figures one had plenty to do with the other. “Oh yeah, it’s disrespectful. But it fueled my fire and got me here to where I am today,” Lindsay said. “Maybe I wasn’t meant to go to the combine.” Miffed that John Elway had used a seventh-round selection on Arkansas running back David Williams, whose career numbers over four years with the Razorbacks didn’t even add up to Lindsay’s senior stats, the Colorado native nearly took the Baltimore Ravens’ offer before calling back and accepting the Broncos’ proposal. “But I’m going to win the starting job,” Lindsay added as he hung up on his new employer, vowing to beat out Williams, third-round pick Royce Freeman, incumbent Devontae Booker, and anyone else they would bring in. At 5-foot-8, Lindsay was accustomed to the underdog role, so he was ready to put his immeasurable attributes such as desire and hustle up against anyone’s bench press, 40-yard dash or vertical jump.

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“It comes down to heart,” Lindsay said. “It comes down to you not sitting here and letting people tag you as something. They’re sitting here telling you this is who you are. How dare somebody tell you this is who you are? That’s why it’s funny when these commentators tell you he’s going this round or he’s not this, he’s not that. “We don’t sit here and critique how they talk on TV, and a lot of time what they’re talking about, it’s stupid.” Lindsay rushed for 1,037 yards and nine touchdowns as a rookie. Only a wrist injury denied him a shot at breaking Dominic Rhodes’ record of 1,104 yards for undrafted rookie running backs, set in 2001. Notable players who aren’t among the 338 invited to Indy this year include Nebraska running back Devine Ozigbo, Georgia State receiver Penny Hart, Utah State running back Darwin Thompson, Cincinnati defensive tackle Cortez Broughton, and North Carolina receiver Anthony Ratliff-Williams. Lindsay is pulling for every one of them to have a rookie season like he did. He’s proud to serve as an I-told-you-so example for all this year’s snubs. “For me, I would tell everybody that the combine’s cute. It’s something where you go and put some little pants on and let them weigh you and all that,” Lindsay said. “Don’t worry about it. If it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be. And that’s it. “There’s nothing necessary about the combine. The combine’s just something that somebody put together to … I don’t know. I wasn’t part of the combine, so I couldn’t tell you.”

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Mr. Phillip Lindsay Goes to the State Capitol By Marshall Zelinger Associated Press February 6, 2019 Denver Broncos star rookie running back Phillip Lindsay turned into "Average Joe" Phillip Lindsay when he did what any one of us could do: testify for a bill at the Colorado State Capitol. "My name is Phillip Lindsay and I represent the Denver Broncos," Lindsay told the House Business Affairs and Labor Committee on Wednesday. "First and foremost, I'd like to thank my teammates for being here today to support myself and the situation we're having today." The situation was HB19-1083 to require athletic trainers to be licensed instead of simply register with the state. "I'm not going to say I was nervous, but I didn't know what to expect," said Lindsay. His testimony lasted just 2 minutes, 42 seconds. The limit was three minutes. "It's a lot harder than going into a game. You just have to prepare yourself differently than you would be motivating for your team," said Lindsay. He wanted to tell the committee about his experience at South High School, when he tore his knee, consulted with the school's athletic trainer and then played later in the year. "I had a trainer that checked my knee and said it was OK, so I sat out the second game, came back the third and completely blew it out then," said Lindsay. "I went into college with my knee, I couldn't bend or straighten my knee." Had that athletic trainer been required to be licensed may not have changed what Lindsay went through. And from a technical aspect, being registered versus being licensed does not require the athletic trainer to do any more work. They still need to have a bachelor's degree, an accredited athletic training education program and pass a competency exam. There was uncertainty in the committee hearing if trainers registered in Colorado were unable to travel out-of-state to perform their medical duties in a state that requires licensure. The trainers with the Denver Broncos supported this bill, so Lindsay supported them. "In this profession, you get hurt a lot, so they're going to be there by my side, so I wanted to make sure that I help them, just like they help me out," said Lindsay. Quarterback Case Keenum was among the half dozen teammates who attended the hearing to support Lindsay. Offensive lineman Max Garcia sat next to Lindsay, along with tight ends Jake Butt and Jeff Heuerman. "In my eyes, I'm just like anybody else trying to help the state of Colorado," said Lindsay.

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So, what would he have been doing on a snowy Wednesday afternoon instead of doing his civic duty of testifying at the Capitol? "I would just be rehabbing my wrist, watching film, trying to do nutrition for my body, just relaxing," said Lindsay. "Probably be sitting at home on my honey-do list," said Keenum. Current professions that require only registration in Colorado include: Bail Bonds Agents Lobbyists Psychotherapists Current professions that require licensure in Colorado include: Physicians Nurses Massage Therapists Plumbers Veterinarians The bill passed the first committee 10-to-1.

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Broncos Phillip Lindsay & Others Help Push For Athletic Trainer Bill By Shaun Boyd CBS Denver February 6, 2019 The State Capitol is not a place you expect to see Broncos players. But six Broncos, including quarterback Case Keenum and running back Phillip Lindsay, brought an all out blitz to a committee hearing to give back to those who have their back — athletic trainers. Those trainers say unless the state changes the law to license them as health professionals, they won’t be able to travel out of state anymore. Lindsay told lawmakers a personal story about why he supports the bill. He says before he became a running back for the Broncos, he played for Denver’s South High School where he blew out his knee his senior year. “I didn’t have the money to go to an athletic trainer to rehab like I wanted to. So I had to use school trainer. She worked on my knee. It didn’t come out well. So I went into college with my knee… I couldn’t bend or straighten my knee. I ended up having to red shirt and lose two years.” But the Colorado Athletic Trainers Association says it goes beyond quality control. “We truly are the first responders. We have to make life-saving decisions,” Jim Keller, President of the Association told lawmakers. He says under a new federal law, trainers need to be licensed as health professionals or their liability insurance will no longer work out of state. Representatives Edie Hooton and Kevin VanWinkle say right now trainers are registered in Colorado. Their bill would make a change in name only — from registration to licensure — to comply with federal law. “In practice this would allow a Colorado athletic trainer to travel to Kansas, practice their profession and have their Colorado liability insurance cover them in case of a malpractice incident in Kansas,” Hooton said. For Lindsay and his teammates it’s about peace of mind and taking care of those who take care of them. “I have a great staff at the Denver Broncos that have my back 24-7. and I just feel more comfortable that they’re licensed.” While republicans typically oppose licensing bills, this one passed its first committee with only one no vote — the democratic chair of the committee.

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Rookie Report: Phillip Lindsay needs no introduction By Zach Pereles DenverBroncos.com January 8, 2019 “My name’s Phillip Lindsay, I went to the University of Colorado, and I’m from Colorado.” In three succinct statements, Phillip Lindsay introduced himself to the Denver Broncos in a high-pitched voice over the offseason, much to the joy of his veteran teammates, who would go on to impersonate the diminutive running back throughout the season. “I was kind of nervous,” Lindsay admitted Dec. 2, minutes after the Broncos defeated the Bengals. These days, though, he needs no introduction. Maybe it’s the locks of curly hair that tumble out of his helmet or his unbound enthusiasm and fiery personality on the field. But in all likelihood, it’s the 1,037 rushing yards, 10 total touchdowns and first-ever Pro Bowl selection by an undrafted offensive rookie. By now, not only do his own teammates know and respect Phillip Lindsay, but the entire NFL does, too. The all-time leader in several categories at the University of Colorado, Lindsay has a story that is well-known by now. He didn’t get an invitation to the NFL Combine and responded with a 4.39 40-yard dash and a 35.5-inch vertical leap at his Pro Day, numbers that would have been among the best at his position at the Combine. With those numbers and the production to back it up, he expected to be drafted, just as he had expected to be at the Combine. Another no. After nearly deciding to head to Baltimore as an undrafted free agent, Lindsay — with the help of his mother — decided to stay home and play for the team he had cheered for growing up. If things didn’t work out, at least he would still be close to home. But as Lindsay said on Dec.6, “So far, I’d say it’s worked out.” The Broncos would certainly agree. “You can look at it statistically and see what he’s meant to the offense,” Case Keenum said on Dec. 26. “But more than that, beyond the numbers, he’s the spark that gets us going. He’s been really good in all areas of the game. I really appreciate what he’s done as an undrafted free agent rookie.” Similar praise rolled in from all of his teammates throughout the season.

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It came from Garett Bolles, who played against Lindsay when the two were in college: “I can’t even put it into words how proud I am of him and his leadership, his demeanor and his attitude every single day — coming in here to work and him putting in the work... . He just goes out there and does what he needs to do. He deserves the world. That kid is going to be special in this league for a long time.” It came from Shelby Harris, who had trouble chasing down Lindsay from the start: “He’s Colorado-born, and he’s a Bronco, born and raised. I remember just from the beginning of OTAs I was like, ‘This little dude has got some juice.’ He’s definitely surprised a lot of people, but no one in this building, because everyone knew what he could do. He surprised a lot of people and I’m happy for him, but he still has a lot more to go. He still has a lot more potential that he can get.” The praise didn’t just come from teammates, though. It came from opposing coaches as well. “There are a lot of different ways to get to the NFL, and the only thing that matters is when you get to the organization that you’re given an opportunity,” Texans head coach Bill O’Brien said on Oct. 30. “It’s what you do with that opportunity, and obviously Lindsay’s done a great job. He runs hard, and he’s a very difficult guy to tackle.” Lindsay came to the Broncos buried on the depth chart. He made his first impressions not on offense but on special teams. At that point, he was wearing the No. 2, and he was able to contribute both in coverage and in the return game. Making an impact on offense, at that point, wasn’t the way to the roster, even after he scored a touchdown in the preseason opener and adding another 32 yards the following game. “Special teams is what I have to make sure I am executing on,” Lindsay said following the second preseason game. “I think I did some good things on special teams during certain parts, but I also need to go and clean up some more things. I really need to focus on that.” But Lindsay’s talent on offense was obvious. After recording 49 yards in the third preseason game and getting extensive playing time with the starters, Lindsay had shown he belonged. Like most starters and key players, he sat out the fourth preseason game. In a matter of months, he had gone from missing the combine and going undrafted to hoping his special teams work would pave a path to an NFL roster to becoming a vital cog in Denver’s offense. “The grit that he has, the way that he plays, I wish we had 53 guys like that,” President of Football Operations/General Manager John Elway told 9NEWS at halftime of the fourth preseason game. It was easy to see why Elway said what he did. After accruing 102 total yards in Week 1, Lindsay added 111 in Week 2, becoming the first undrafted rookie to eclipse 100 total yards in each of his first two games. Later in the year, he’d power a three-game winning streak over the Chargers, Steelers and Bengals with three 100-plus-yard efforts. After receiving the game ball for a career-high 157 rushing yards in Cincinnati, Lindsay instead gave it to the offensive line.

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“I don’t like that attention,” Lindsay said. “It’s not about me. It’s about the team. That’s how it’s always been in my life. When you have family, and you’re in the middle of two older sisters and two younger brothers, it’s about them. It’s about your family. That’s what it’s about.” In a magical season for Lindsay as an individual, it always came back to the team aspect. The mindset he had when he was chasing down opposing kick returners is the same mindset he had as he chased down history, becoming the first undrafted offensive rookie to make the Pro Bowl. “I’ll tell you what about Phillip, he’s the same exact guy that he was when he first got here,” Von Miller said Dec. 27. “When he was No. 2 running around here in OTAs, nobody really knew who he was. He was catching screens and passes all over the place. Then he got a little bit of success and he was the same exact guy. Hats off to Phillip for doing that. For being from Colorado, going to CU and having the whole town on your back, it can be tough, but he’s been the exact same guy. Hats off to Phillip. He’s still got a lot more to go. To keep his head down and to keep going, for him to be able to do that, it shows the type of person that he is.” Going into this year, hardly anyone outside Colorado knew who Phillip Lindsay was. Next year, he will need no introduction.

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Phillip Lindsay named Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s Professional Athlete of the Year By Aric DiLalla DenverBroncos.com January 8, 2019 Rookie running back Phillip Lindsay has been named the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s Professional Athlete of the Year for 2018, the organization announced Tuesday. Lindsay, a Colorado native who attended South High School and the University of Colorado, rushed for 1,037 yards and recorded 10 total touchdowns. He shattered the Broncos’ undrafted rookie rushing record and was named a Pro Bowler. He is also a candidate for the NFL’s rookie of the year award. Lindsay will be honored in early April alongside Jennifer Kupcho — the Amateur Athlete of the Year — and this year’s Colorado Sports Hall of Fame class, which includes former Broncos tight end Daniel Graham. Graham tallied 102 receptions for 1,072 yards and seven touchdowns in four seasons with the Broncos. He attended the University of Colorado, where as a senior he was named a first-team All-American and won the John Mackey Award given to the nation’s best tight end.

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Mr. Phillip Lindsay Goes to the State Capitol By Ben Swanson DenverBroncos.com January 3, 2019 Though Phillip Lindsay's season was cut short due to injury, he can still end his first year in the NFL on quite the high note. The NFL announced Thursday that Lindsay is among the five players nominated for the 2018 NFL rookie of the year award, which is voted on by fans and announced during Super Bowl LIII festivities. Lindsay set new a Broncos record for rushing yards by an undrafted rookie during his exemplary season and made NFL history by earning the first Pro Bowl selection given to an undrafted offensive rookie. He was also the third undrafted rookie since 1970 with at least 1,000 rushing yards and came just 67 yards short of Dominic Rhodes' NFL record for rushing yards by an undrafted rookie running back. Lindsay was nominated for NFL rookie of the week honors six times in 2018, winning once after a 157-yard, two-touchdown performance against the Bengals in Week 13. "He's had a tremendous year," President of Football Operations/General Manager John Elway told Broncos TV after that performance. "I think what everybody sees about him on the field, the way he runs, but also the way he carries himself and his 'want to' and his attitude and the way he goes about his business as a rookie — we're thrilled to have him and glad he picked us, being a college free agent. He's been tremendous and I think this is the first step for him. I think he'll have a tremendous career." The other four nominees for rookie of the year are Giants RB Saquon Barkley, Browns RB Nick Chubb, Colts LB Darius Leonard and Browns QB Baker Mayfield. Each of the four other nominees were drafted in the first or second rounds of the NFL Draft.

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How Phillip Lindsay Went from Undrafted to Pro Bowl—Without Ever Leaving Home By Dan Pompei Bleacher Report December 27, 2018 A delivery truck from a local appliance store pulls up to the Lindsay house. On the truck are a refrigerator, a stove and a microwave. The appliances are Christmas presents from Phillip Lindsay to his mother. Another delivery truck will come soon with a brown La-Z-Boy recliner. That's for his father. It is, Lindsay knows, the least he can do. After all, the 24-year-old Broncos rookie running back must be the only player in the NFL who is still living in mom and dad's house. Lindsay himself arrived home Christmas morning at 4 a.m. after the Broncos' Monday night loss in Oakland. In the first quarter of the game, he surpassed 1,000 rushing yards for the season, becoming the third undrafted running back in league history to top that mark. But then in the third quarter, a silver helmet struck his wrist like a mallet on a crab shell. He was done for the game, and done for the season. "When he got home, I looked at his arm," his father, Troy, says. "I knew there was something wrong. He got a little sleep. At 10, we took him to get an MRI. Then he went down to the facility." By the afternoon, the news was out. Lindsay was done for the year and could be facing a lengthy recovery. But in the evening, Christmas was celebrated in the Lindsay house as it should be. Normally, it's just Phillip and his parents in their modest ranch home in Aurora. But this week, the house is bustling as Lindsay's two sisters, Sparkle and Cheri, and two brothers, Zach and Marcus, join the group. Phillip is giving up his bed to Cheri and sleeping on the couch. Diane Lindsay has been knocking herself out. She has dermatomyositis, an autoimmune disease that slows her but does not deter her. For Christmas, there was turkey and ham—enough for the family to eat for a few days. For New Year's, there will be meatballs with potatoes and homemade rolls. Phillip is 5'8", 190 pounds, but he eats a lot of what he likes. And he likes those meatballs. Then there are the desserts she makes—rum cake, chocolate chip cookies, Hello Dolly cookies (the Lindsays call them magic cookies), fudge, toffee, brownies and turtles. Every year, Mom has to hide the turtles from Phillip or they will be gone before Christmas. This year, they were in the trunk of her car. Gifts have been exchanged (Phillip got a silver bracelet from his parents). There are games being played—Battleship, Old Maid and Clue. And it's loud. "Very loud," Mom says. It's all OK, though. This is how Mom and Pops—that's what they call Troy—like it. "We're a happy family," Pops says. "We still understand how important it is to laugh."

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Mom is a psychotherapist by day and Mom by night. How she does it, nobody knows. Pops wakes up faithfully at 2:30 a.m. to drive a bus. He is the one who taught Lindsay how to be a running back. How to be a man. How to be the type of person who won't let even a season-ending injury ruin his family's Christmas. "Phillip pretty much did everything he had to do this year," Pops says. "So it's time to rest. His spirits are good." If not for this place, Lindsay never could have accepted so much disappointment after so much delight. He never could have gained more scrimmage yards than anyone in the University of Colorado's history. He never could have become a Denver Bronco. He never could have become the first undrafted rookie offensive player to make a Pro Bowl. Home is what made the whole thing possible. Except for the five years Lindsay lived in an apartment in Boulder while at college, he has known only one home since he was four years old. That's about the age when he started taking handoffs from Pops. Troy Lindsay knows something about handoffs. He was a running back, too, and he played at Colorado State. Then he coached his son for four years in youth football. Phillip played in the Broncos' Futures Football middle school program and became the first alum to make it to the NFL. The Lindsays couldn't afford to attend Broncos games, but they always watched their team on television. Phillip once was given a jersey of Quentin Griffin, who played in 2003 and 2004. Griffin, a 5'7", 195-pound running back, was a player Lindsay could identify with. When he was in eighth grade, Lindsay met then-Broncos wide receiver Demaryius Thomas and got his autograph. Last spring, he became his teammate. At Denver South High School, Phillip wore the same number his father wore, 22, and he broke Pops' Denver Public Schools career record for rushing yards. His coach was Tony Lindsay, Troy's brother. Tony was a running back, too, as were three of his four sons. Phillip's two younger brothers were running backs as well. "It's just something that runs in the blood," Pops says with a shrug. Lindsay never could forget a phone call of encouragement he received from Broncos running back Willis McGahee after Lindsay tore his anterior cruciate ligament when he was a senior in high school. He needed all the encouragement he could get. At Colorado, Lindsay took a redshirt season, and it took him a few years to get his burst back. In his junior season, he started showing flashes of what he once was. By the time he was a senior, he led the country in rushing attempts. That wasn't enough to entice NFL teams, however. The combine committee invited 32 running backs—but not him.

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When Lindsay started preparing for the draft, he ran the 40-yard dash in 4.56 seconds. He worked on improving his speed with personal trainer Loren Landow, who since has become Denver's strength and conditioning coach. At Colorado's pro day in front of a Broncos contingency that included general manager John Elway, head coach Vance Joseph, player personnel director Matt Russell and personnel adviser Gary Kubiak, Lindsay ran a 4.39 40—faster than 25 running backs at the combine. Then the Broncos asked him to stay a while to catch passes. Still, he was passed over 256 times in the NFL draft—10 times by his hometown team. After the final pick, his phone blew up. The Broncos, Ravens, Colts, Falcons, Texans and Chargers wanted him. Lindsay was at home with his parents, brothers and sisters. His agent, Mike McCartney of Priority Sports, was on the phone. The Ravens and Broncos each offered $8,000 guaranteed and told him he had 15 minutes to decide. The Broncos had drafted two running backs—Royce Freeman in the third round and David Williams in the seventh. When they chose Williams, who had rushed for fewer yards in his entire college career than Lindsay had rushed for as a senior, Lindsay was triggered. "That's f--king bullshit," he yelled after their pick. "F--k the Broncos!" There was vigorous debate in the house—fighting might be a better way to put it—about where he should sign. His siblings argued against the Broncos. "I was not going to choose the Broncos," he says. "I was pissed at everybody. But mostly at them. I was like, 'I ain't never heard of David Williams.' It was disrespectful. I was real close to choosing Baltimore." McCartney advocated he sign with the Broncos because he thought Lindsay would have his best opportunity there. McCartney asked the Broncos for more money. They increased their offer to $15,000 guaranteed. And then Diane, who had been quiet, spoke. "Phil, I feel you need to stay home," she said. "I feel like Denver is the right spot for you, and you will excel." When Mom speaks, the Lindsay kids listen. "I listened to my mother about it mainly because I would get to stay home and be at the house," he says. "If I didn't make the team, at least I'm home. I didn't have to find my way back home. I thought, Baltimore, damn, every time I go out the door, I'm going to get robbed. I never really have been out of the state. To be someplace I didn't know anything about would be kind of hard." Elway and Joseph called back, needing an answer. Lindsay was resigned to becoming a Bronco but still salty.

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"I'm coming," Lindsay told them tersely. "But mark my words: When I get there, and we are done, I'm going to be the starting running back." And with that, he hung up the phone on his new bosses. After taxes, Lindsay figured he could be sure of making $12,000—hardly enough for a home purchase. Renting a one-bedroom apartment would cost about $1,300 a month, and he did not know for certain where he would be working—or if he would be working—come September. Living with Mom and Pops was the only reasonable choice. He could have the whole basement at home to himself, save for the laundry room. "My basement," he could call it. He could even have his pride. "I didn't want to be that person who came back to the house and didn't have a job," he says. "I chose to stay because it's financially better. But I wasn't going to come back unless I had a job." He had a job, and he did everything he could to keep it. Lindsay drove 20 minutes from home to Broncos headquarters for his first OTA practice. It was then that outside linebacker Von Miller got his first look at him, wearing No. 2. "I didn't think much," Miller says. "I can't sit here and lie. I was like, Who is this guy?" In addition to being one of the game's superstars, Miller is king of the Broncos locker room. If you are going to be a denizen of his kingdom, you need to prove your worthiness. And so Lindsay did. "He was like the fourth running back on the roster," Miller says. "The first play he's on the field, they threw him a screen, and he takes it the distance. The second play, he takes a slash play the distance. So I'm like, He can play outside the tackles and take screens, and run between the tackles, too? This guy's a player. It was instant. Then training camp came, and it was more, more, more. Every single day, he reassured me he was the guy we needed." Before the pads went on, his position coach, Curtis Modkins, noticed unusual vision, patience, burst and an understanding of blocking schemes. During training camp, Lindsay went from being looked at as a player who at most was expected to be a special teams contributor to one who could have a significant role in the offense. In his first game, he got 17 touches—more than any other running back—and scored on a 29-yard reception. The next week, he had his first 100-yard rushing game. By late October, he was a starter. In early December, he was named Offensive Player of the Week after he rushed for 157 yards and two touchdowns on 19 carries. Of course, he made the long runs that have trended on Twitter. And he has made the short, tough runs that moved chains that were mostly unnoticed publicly but appreciated just as much by his coaches. It was as if someone forgot to tell him he was an undrafted free agent.

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"He just walks around like he's 6'4", but it's not like he has little-man syndrome," Miller says. "He's just a big guy at heart, and I thought that was really dope." After the first practice of rookie minicamp, it was Lindsay who stepped forward to break down the film. During media training, Broncos executive vice president of public relations Patrick Smyth asked for a volunteer to do a mock interview. Lindsay's hand shot up to show the team how it should be done. When Lindsay knew he'd made the squad, he needed to swap his No. 2 for a running back's number. Instead of wearing a number that carried no expectations, Lindsay asked Hall of Famer Terrell Davis for permission to wear his No. 30. He has worn it well. Cornerback Chris Harris Jr. has been showing up at Broncos headquarters at 6 a.m. every day to get treatment for his fractured fibula. He finds Lindsay there at the same time. "I see that work ethic," he says. "He's proved himself every day with hard work, being consistent and having no fear. He's a dog. The vets respect that." He is as popular on the town as he is in the locker room. Miller says more fans approached Lindsay than him at Temple Night Club after a recent game. "He's probably a bigger star than I am," he says, laughing. "It's great. It's the hair and everything. They notice him." Lindsay has a prodigious brown/blond afro with curls and shoots spreading in all directions. "I'm noticeable," Lindsay says. "Kids love to see it. How about this wild hair? I like it. It's who I am." This isn't just another good running back to the people of Denver. They don't start GoFundMe campaigns to pay the Pro Bowl expenses for someone they don't feel a larger connection to. Lindsay is one of them. Memories are everywhere in this old house. The living room is where Lindsay watched Batman on TV and then ran around dressed like the Caped Crusader. The basement window is where burglars broke in on the day he committed to Colorado. They turned the house upside down, took all of his mom's jewelry, including her wedding ring, and beat their German Shepherd mix, Rambo, with a stick. That switch by the front door wouldn't turn on the lights a few times when money was tight and bills weren't paid. In the garage, they made up a game called Ghost. Pops would put a blanket over his head and in complete darkness try to catch the kids. There were some mean games of cops and robbers in the backyard.

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Lindsay takes some teasing from teammates for living at home. He laughs along because the benefits outweigh the drawbacks. He can never forget who he is as long as he's in this house. He bought new beds for everyone. When his playing-time bonus money comes in, he plans on buying new carpeting. And he will pay off some of the bills. Cowboys cornerback Chidobe Awuzie was Lindsay's teammate at Colorado, and they remain the best of friends. Awuzie understands Lindsay as well as anyone. "That ferocious spirit he has comes from his upbringing—his mom, dad, two sisters, two brothers," he says. "They are all the same. They are very honest with each other. They point out faults, always in a joking manner, always from a loving place. There is a lot of profane language. It comes with it. They are so open." Tattooed across Lindsay's chest is Family First. The same tattoo can be found on the chests of his brothers, his sisters and his cousins. A day does not go by when Phillip doesn't talk to Mom and Pops, even if he's traveling. He talks to his sisters and brothers, too, often playing Call of Duty. But there's nothing like a face-to-face at the kitchen table. "He'll talk to his father daily about the team," Mom says. "This is what happened in practice. This is what's going on. He gets the continued support, the emotional support and the backing." When Mom's disease flares up and calcium deposits start rubbing nerve endings, it can bring her to tears. Phillip is a comfort, helping her put on shoes, setting the table or bringing up the laundry. Autoimmune diseases often are activated by a traumatic event. In Diane's case, it was her third pregnancy—with Phillip—that was the onset of many problems. But that pregnancy, she will tell you, also was the onset of many blessings. Mom still washes his clothes and picks up after him. She also makes sure he dresses appropriately for whatever function he's heading out to, and she prepares him for what's next on his schedule. He will lie next to her at times for a head rub. Mother and child share an irrepressible determination—something that will serve Lindsay well if the diagnosis of a scaphoid fracture and lengthy recovery hold up. "Once he gets his mind on something, he's pretty much gonna do it," Pops says. "He's just like that." Someday, this may be a football documentary. It will be a better bedtime story. Lindsay won't be in the basement forever. Money, as it inevitably does, will change things. Before long, he will be living in a condominium in a trendy neighborhood. There will be high ceilings, granite countertops and hardwood floors. Maybe a view of snow-capped mountains. After that, who knows where life will lead?

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Some things, though, are forever. "Money comes and goes," he says. "But having love for each other, that will never end." Phillip Lindsay never will be far from where he came from.

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Broncos Phillip Lindsay Gifts Life-Saving Gear To Denver Police Officer, Former Teammate By Karen Morfitt CBS Denver December 20, 2018 The Denver Broncos headquarters was overrun with first responders from every corner of Colorado on Thursday. Broncos players got the chance to meet the men and women in blue who will be wearing life saving tactical gear that they helped buy. Part of a partnership with Shield 616 was spearheaded by All-Pro linebacker Von Miller. “The standard vests that they have, only stop handguns and when I heard that, I was blown away,” Miller said. On Thursday, dozens of first responders from agencies across Colorado were invited to the teams practice field to be fitted with their own advanced active shooter gear, and then given the opportunity to meet the players. For Denver Police Officer Andrew Bergner, it was less of an introduction and more of a reunion with his old friend Phillip Lindsay. “We’ve been best friends since college and now he’s out there making the Pro Bowl and everything, so I couldn’t be happier for him,” he said.

Bergner was a corner back at the University of Colorado, Denver Broncos running back Phillip Lindsay was a teammate but their friendship goes back to a meeting at a football camp in high school. “We both had the same dream same goal to become a police officer,” Lindsay said. While Lindsay continued on the football path, Bergner went on to the police academy and is now serving his community. When Lindsay learned about the team’s partnership with Shield 616 and the mission to get active shooter gear to law enforcement, he thought of one person. “Andrew popped into my head and so I jumped on the fact that if I could buy him anything to keep him safe on the streets because it is dangerous, then I was going to do what I have to do.” he said. New to the job, Bergner says the gear and having the support of an old friend brings peace of mind. He says when Lindsay is ready to make the move into law enforcement he will be there ready to show him the same support. “You know I hope he has a long career in the NFL and then he comes out here and I can teach him some stuff,” he laughed.

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Player Q&A: Phillip Lindsay By Staff DenverBroncos.com December 19, 2018 Coming out of the University of Colorado as an undrafted free agent, Phillip Lindsay and his abilities on the football field were relatively unknown to those outside the state. But to Lindsay, a Denver native, that didn’t matter. He knew he had the talent to contribute at the NFL level, and he never doubted that, even after his named wasn’t called in any of the seven rounds of the NFL Draft. As soon as he joined his hometown Broncos, Lindsay started putting that confidence in himself to work. He quickly became an offseason standout, serving as both a running back and a special teams contributor as he battled to make an NFL roster. A strong preseason guaranteed him a spot on the roster, and he starred in his first NFL game by scoring a touchdown and gathering 102 total yards against the Seahawks in his debut. Now, 12 games later, he’s one of the top running backs in the NFL, a key part of the Denver offense and a top candidate for NFL Rookie of the Year. As Lindsay helps the Broncos make a late-season playoff push, we caught up with him to discuss his record-breaking rookie season, his favorite play so far, the best piece of advice he’s received and more. Zach Pereles: What’s the biggest difference between when you came into the NFL and where you are now? Phillip Lindsay: “Game speed is the biggest difference. It’s slowing down a little bit. The game speed has changed most. You can’t really change anything about the size of other players or anything like that. The size is always going to be there. But the game speed has slowed down, for sure, as I’ve gained a little more experience.” ZP: You have the chance to break some pretty impressive rookie records. You’ve always been a team-first guy, but are those numbers ever in the back of your head? PL: “No, I don’t ever really focus on that. Like you said, it’s about the team. It is what it is. You just roll with it. I don’t think about it.” ZP: John Elway said that he’d love to have 53 Phillip Lindsays on his roster. What does him saying that mean to you? PL: “It means a lot. It’s an honor to have him say that about me. If you have 53 Phillip Lindsays, then the locker room is going to look good. Like, we’re going to look good. We’re all sexy. I can’t say the same right now looking at some of our players, my teammates.” ZP: Do you have a favorite NFL play so far? PL: “Right now, it’s probably my first touchdown of my career. Case [Keenum], he hit me on a diagonal route, and I was able to run. I had some good blocks from DaeSean Hamilton and the linemen, and I was able to have my first career NFL touchdown. I still have the football back at home, and that’s the play I remember most so far.”

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ZP: Do you have a welcome-to-the-NFL moment? PL: “The big hit from [Texans cornerback] Kareem Jackson for sure. Kareem hit me pretty hard on that one. The ball was in the air, I didn’t know he was as close as he was, and I got a welcome to the NFL. He told me that was my welcome-to-the-NFL moment after the play, too.” ZP: What’s the best piece of advice you’ve received so far in your NFL career? PL: “The biggest thing came from my running backs coach, Coach Curtis Modkins. He told me, ‘You stay the course through everything. Don’t flinch.’ That’s probably one of the biggest things I’ve learned is just ‘Don’t flinch.’” ZP: Do you get recognized when you go out in the community now more than you did in the past? PL: “I get recognized a lot more, but me being from here and going to the University of Colorado, I’ve been pretty well-recognized because of my hair. So that makes it easier to recognize me. That’s probably why. So I’m used to it. I have to sign a lot of autographs and take a lot of selfies with people, but it’s OK.” ZP: There was a point after the NFL draft where you almost decided to sign elsewhere, even though you grew up a Broncos fan. But your mom convinced you otherwise. How did that process play out? PL: “It was all just listening to her. It was listening to her gut and telling my gut to listen to her. It was mainly just that she felt like it was the right thing — the right situation for me. And when she feels a certain way, it’s usually right. So far, I’d say it’s worked out. It’s been pretty good.”

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Broncos' rookie Phillip Lindsay makes NFL history with Pro Bowl berth By Mike Klis 9 News December 19, 2018 Phillip Lindsay’s first professional football season began with no invite to the NFL Combine, a non-selection in the NFL Draft, and last-place spot on the Broncos’ five-man running back depth chart. It quickly catapulted to Lindsay making the Broncos’ 53-man roster, to starting tailback, to three, 100-yard rushing games, and to now a Pro Bowl berth. Lindsay became the first NFL offensive player in history to make the Pro Bowl as an undrafted rookie when the former standout of Denver South High School and the University of Colorado learned Tuesday he had been honored with a berth in what is the NFL all-star game. Dallas Cowboys cornerback Everson Walls is the only defensive player to make the Pro Bowl as an undrafted rookie when he was selected in 1981. Lindsay will be joined on the AFC Pro Bowl roster by Broncos’ teammate Von Miller, an outside linebacker and pass-rushing star. Miller, a Pro Bowler for the seventh time in his eight-year career, is tied for second in the league with 14.5 sacks. He is the only Bronco was named Pro Bowl starter and he’s also the defending Pro Bowl Most Valuable Player. Three other Broncos were named Pro Bowl alternates: Chris Harris Jr. was a first-alternate cornerback, rookie Bradley Chubb was a second alternate outside linebacker and Emmanuel Sanders is a fifth-alternate receiver. Harris and Sanders were having Pro Bowl-caliber seasons until they went down with season-ending injuries in a four-day span. Harris suffered a fractured fibula in the Broncos’ 12th game at Cincinnati, and Sanders blew out his Achilles during practice three days later. Chubb, the Broncos’ No. 5-overall draft pick in the first round, leads all NFL rookies with 12.0 sacks. Harris has three interceptions. Sanders still leads the Broncos with 71 receptions and 868 yards, numbers he produced in just 12 games. Lindsay joins kicker David Treadwell (1989) and Miller (2011) as the only Pro Bowl rookies in Broncos’ history. Running back Donnie Stone (1961) and linebacker/punter Jim Fraser (1962) were the only other Broncos rookies who were similarly honored when they were selected to play in the AFL All Star Game. Lindsay’s Pro Bowl berth, though, will generate the greatest celebration as his was the least expected, at least based on what NFL scouts and executives thought of him coming out of CU earlier this year.

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There were 32 running backs invited to the combine. None of them were named Phillip Lindsay. There were two fullbacks and 20 running backs drafted, including the Broncos’ Royce Freeman in the third round and David Williams in the seventh. Lindsay wasn’t among them. The Broncos gave him a decent, $15,000 signing bonus as an undrafted free agent, but when Lindsay reported with the full-squad Broncos during organized team activities (OTAs), he went to the rear of the running back line behind Devontae Booker, De’Angelo Henderson, Freeman and Williams. From these depths, Lindsay exploded into the AFC lead with 937 rushing yards and the league with 5.8 yards per carry through 12 games. Although opponents have zeroed in on him while holding him to 54 yards on 1.9 yards per carry in his past two carries, Lindsay is still second in the AFC with 991 rushing yards, just four behind the conference leader, Cincinnati’s Joe Mixon. It was the league’s coaches and players who carried Lindsay to his Pro Bowl nod as he didn’t finish in the top 10 among running backs in fan voting. Miller was second among the league’s outside linebackers in fan voting and Chubb was fifth. The Pro Bowl game will be played Sunday, Jan. 27 in Orlando.

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John Elway on RB Phillip Lindsay: 'I'd take 53 of him' By Kevin Patra NFL.com Dec. 6, 2018 Thirty-two NFL teams got it wrong. 32. Multiple times. Only one team could correct the mistake. As you begin to peruse material, magazines, online mocks, and read transcriptions of general managers blathering at the combine ahead of the 2019 NFL Draft, keep this fact in the back of your mind: 256 players were selected in 2018. Phillip Lindsay's name was not called. It's a comical indictment of every scout, general manager and the entire draft process that a player of Lindsay's caliber was deemed unworthy of even a late-round selection. Twenty running backs were selected. One is having a better statistical season than Lindsay. Even the Denver Broncos don't get a pass. John Elway selected two running backs in the draft: Royce Freeman in the third round; David Williams in the seventh. Lindsay has outplayed both. Elway got lucky Lindsay is a Colorado native. "You know he's a guy that we were looking at him in the sixth and seventh round, he was in our backyard and we were recruiting him and hoping to get him as a CFA and were fortunate to do that," Elway told Orange and Blue 760 on Tuesday. "Fortunate" is cosmically understating the situation. Lindsay has become the lifeblood of the Broncos' offense. The 5-foot-8 rookie runs like an iron fist. Once engaged, Lindsay blasts through opponents, picking up steam on the second level, and gallops away from defenders. His blend of power, speed, tenacity, and willingness to battle for every inch is joyous to watch. "He's a guy who is an underdog and plays with a chip on his shoulder, and that's what I like about him," Elway said, via the Mile High Report. "I think that his size was the one thing that was his drawback, but you look at his heart and you look at his ability and the speed." Lindsay has averaged 6.08 yards per carry this season, currently third-most in a single season since 1970, behind only Jamaal Charles (6.38) and Barry Sanders (6.13) and ahead of O.J. Simpson (6.03) and Adrian Peterson (6.03). In just 12 games, the Colorado product already has the third-most rushing yards in a season among undrafted rookies in the Super Bowl era. He's on pace for 1,250 yards, which would destroy the record (1,104 yards, Dominic Rhodes, Colts, 2001).

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At 190 pounds, Lindsay punches above his playing weight against defensive linemen and linebackers and can run away from defensive backs. According to Next Gen Stats, Lindsay reached 20-plus MPH on seven rushes this season, most in the NFL -- no other player has more than five such plays (Saquon Barkley and Tyreek Hill have five each). Lindsay's 28 runs of 10-yards or more are tied for third-most in the NFL among running backs with Christian McCaffrey, behind only Todd Gurley (33) and Ezekiel Elliott (32). Lindsay has played more than 100 fewer snaps than all three and earned more than 75 fewer carries than the top two. Oh, and he's one of two RBs with 900-plus rush yards and no fumbles this season (Barkley). As the Broncos surge toward a possible playoff spot, they are riding the undrafted rookie. In the past three games, Lindsay has gobbled up 346 yards, a whopping 7.86 yards per carry, and five touchdowns. In that span, Denver beat the Chargers, Steelers, and Bengals -- two of which are playoff teams. Lindsay's 157-yard, two-touchdown performance this past week earned him NFL Player of the Week honors. When the undrafted rookie had the cojones to ask Broncos star Terrell Davis if he could rock his No. 30 jersey this offseason, some looked sideways. Twelve games later, Lindsay is living up to the legend. "I'd take 53 of him," Elway said of Lindsay. "The way he plays the game and his attitude towards the game and the competitiveness, he's been absolutely tremendous this year and we're thrilled to have him." Thrilled and fortunate.

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Broncos’ Phillip Lindsay named AFC Offensive Player of the Week By Ryan O’Halloran Denver Post Dec. 6, 2018 Broncos running back Phillip Lindsay added AFC Offensive Player of the Week to his terrific rookie resume Wednesday. Lindsay won the award after rushing 19 times for 157 yards (both season highs) and touchdowns of six and 65 yards in Sunday’s 24-10 win at Cincinnati. “It’s not an individual accolade, it’s a team accolade,” Lindsay said. “Without my offensive line, without the receivers doing what they’re doing, I can’t get it. If (quarterback) Case (Keenum) isn’t calling the plays and didn’t check (into) some of those runs, then I don’t get that.” Lindsay enters Sunday’s game at San Francisco with 937 yards (fourth-most in the NFL) on 154 carries (tied for 14th-most) and eight touchdowns (tied for fifth-most). Lindsay is the first undrafted rookie to win the award since Green Bay running back Samkon Gado in 2005. Averaging 8.3 yards per carry against the Bengals, Lindsay became the first player since Jacksonville’s Fred Taylor in 2007 to average at least seven yards per attempt in three consecutive games. Lindsay also became the first Broncos rookie since Clinton Portis in 2002 to have back-to-back 100-yard games. In a conference call with reporters, San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan compared Lindsay to San Francisco starting running back Matt Breida, who has 744 rushing yards this season but is out for Sunday’s game because of an ankle injury. “Just watching (Lindsay), he’s very similar to the guy we have,” Shanahan said. “They hit the hole full-speed, they don’t mess around, they put their foot down and they go straight downhill. And when they get to one (tackler) left, they don’t slow down and try to make them miss, they make one cut and run away from them.” Lindsay’s role could expand after receiver Emmanuel Sanders sustained a season-ending torn Achilles on Wednesday. The Broncos may become even more committed to the run game. “My role is whatever it needs to be,” Lindsay said. “Whether it’s less touches or more touches, it’s going to be what it has to be.”

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Rookie of the Year front-runner Phillip Lindsay powering Broncos' playoff run By Jeff Legwold ESPN Dec. 4, 2018 Oh, Phillip Lindsay might be powering the offense on a Denver Broncos team that suddenly finds itself in the league's postseason race. And, sure, he might be on the doorstep of a 1,000-yard rushing season, sitting at 937 yards with four games to play. He might even lead the league in yards per carry at the moment with 6.1, but Lindsay still can't get any significant couch time in the Broncos' complex. "[The Broncos defensive line] has got this couch, and rookies aren't supposed to be on it, but I'm always on it," Lindsay said with a laugh. "They throw me off, and when they turn their back, I get back on. ... But they're not going to let me on the couch until next year." Ah, the life of a rookie. But Lindsay, who is fourth in the league in rushing, has done plenty of the heavy lifting of late, as the Broncos now have a three-game win streak with Sunday's 24-10 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals in Paul Brown Stadium. Lindsay finished out the game with a career-best 157 yards rushing to go with two touchdowns, including a 65-yard sprint around the left sideline for a third-quarter score. It was Lindsay's third 100-yard rushing game of the season, but his second in the past two games. He has scored five touchdowns in the current winning streak, and the undrafted rookie continues to win friends and influence people up and down the Broncos' roster. "He's just out of this world," Broncos linebacker Von Miller said. " ... I see it every day -- Phil is Phil, and everybody can see that now." "I think you judge lead backs by their durability, and he's been available every week," Broncos coach Vance Joseph said. "Everyone sees his size, and everyone's amazed of what he's doing right now ... he's a tough guy, he's fast through the hole. ... He gets to the second level with speed, and it's hard to tackle a back like that. He's been impressive; his maturity, his mentality, it's been impressive how tough he is." The 5-foot-8, 190-pounder has averaged more than 7 yards per carry in each of the team's past three wins and has had at least one run of at least 32 yards in each victory. And week after week, game after game, Lindsay keeps expanding his role in the offense as he helps a team that was 3-6 get into the thick of the playoff race. He had 67 yards on his first 12 carries on Sunday before Keenum spun to hand him the ball on a first-and-10 from the Broncos' 35-yard line as Denver was trying to build on a 14-3 lead. With left tackle Garett Bolles out front, Lindsay flanked the Bengals' defense, launching himself through a gap and sprinting untouched up the sideline for a 65-yard score.

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"I think I keep answering the same questions about Phillip after every game," Keenum said. "He's a guy -- I don't know what else to say about him except the league knows about him, I think opponents know about him ... he ought to be in the Rookie of the Year category, Pro Bowl, all that stuff, he deserves it ... he's a special dude." But it's not just Lindsay's double-take-worthy speed and decisiveness as a runner -- or even the growing pile of touchdowns -- that have won his teammates over. They like all of that, but it’s Lindsay's approach that they keep pointing to, how he acts in the days before and in the days after he blows up in a game. Lindsay is a Denver South High School graduate, went to the University of Colorado and is the first player from the Broncos' middle school football program to go on to play for the team. He lets one of his linemen spike the ball after he scores. On Sunday, Joseph tried to give Lindsay a game ball, but Keenum said: "He didn't want it, he wanted to give it to the offensive line." "[The offensive line] is doing a great job ... they're doing a great job, I can't stress that enough," Lindsay said. "They actually get mad if I don't get 5 yards. ... It's not about me, it's about the team." Lindsay has consistently credited his parents and four siblings for his approach to the game and how he makes his way through all of the growing attention. His teammates have embraced him, and the defensive line that won’t let him on the furniture has dubbed him "Pit Bull" out of respect for what they've seen from him. As Lindsay said, "When the defensive line gives you a nickname, you take it." The Broncos have four games remaining in the regular season and a puncher's chance at a playoff spot if they hold up their end of the bargain. Lindsay figures to be right in that mix, and nobody is happier than he is about everything, even as folks have moved on from questions about his size to ones about the "rookie wall." "When you're trying to win games and go to the playoffs," Lindsay said, "you don't have time for a rookie wall."

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Hometown Broncos hero Phillip Lindsay runs through Cincy on way to unprecedented achievement in modern NFL history By Mark Kiszla The Denver Post December 3, 2018 Phillip Lindsay is on a run so amazing the NFL has never seen anything like it. He has dashed from the bottom of the Broncos depth chart, bolted past defenders grasping at nothing but air, and kept on trucking to the end zone, headed to a place where no undrafted rookie has ever gone. “We call him the pit bull,” Denver teammate Domata Peko said Sunday, after Lindsay rushed for 157 yards in a 24-10 victory against Cincinnati. Pit bull. That’s kind of cute for a young man with a squeaky voice and a demeanor as gentle as a pussy cat. It’s also an apt nickname for the relentless fight found in Lindsay, generously listed in your game program at 5-foot-8 and 190 pounds. But in the modern history of pro football, it appears Lindsay will soon be called something else: Unprecedented. Since the full merger of the NFL and AFL took place in 1970, no undrafted offensive player has ever earned an invitation to Pro Bowl as a rookie. “He’s having a heck of a year,” said Broncos quarterback Case Keenum. “He ought to be in the rookie of the year category, Pro Bowl, all that stuff. He deserves all that.” If Lindsay, averaging 6.57 yards every time he touches the ball via a hand-off or a pass, isn’t invited to the Pro Bowl, they should cancel the game. As Lindsay ripped 65 yards so quickly through the Cincy defense that no Bengal could lay a paw on him on his way to a touchdown that blew open the game in the third quarter, this thought crossed my mind: I’ve been covering the Broncos for 35 years, a full generation, and never seen anything quite like Lindsay. So I did a little research and discovered nobody anywhere in the league has seen anything quite like Lindsay for nearly 50 years. Travel a long-and-winding road back to 1970, when the Beatles broke up, when the AFL and NFL finally got together. You will find how difficult it is for an undrafted rookie to make such a big impression he’s selected for the Pro Bowl. In fact, during the previous 48 previous seasons since the merger, only seven undrafted players have been named to the Pro Bowl as a rookie. Three were kickers, including David Treadwell in 1989. One was a kick-returner. Three defenders have also pulled off the rare feat, from Everson Walls with Dallas in 1981, through Rufus Porter (’88) and Brandon Browner (’11) with the Seahawks.

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But no offensive player has managed the trick. So I’m beginning to think this magic of Lindsay might be pretty rare. “I’m so happy he’s on our team. I’m happy we picked him up as a free agent, man,” Peko said. “I remember in training camp and OTAs, he was wearing No. 2, and all the guys were like: ‘Who the hell is that No. 2? He’s making plays on us, man.’ And now the world knows: It’s Phillip Lindsay, man.” Born in Denver, Lindsay is as Colorado as the “Native” bumper sticker on 1994 Ford Bronco. Devoid of ego, Lindsay lives in the basement of his parents’ house. Offered a game ball by coach Vance Joseph after a victory that evened the team’s record at 6-6, Lindsay didn’t really want it, because the offensive line deserves the accolades, he said. “I don’t like the attention,” Lindsay said. “It’s not about me, it’s about the team. That’s how it’s always been in my life. When you have family, and you’re in the middle of two older sisters and two younger brothers, it’s about them. It’s about your family. That’s what it’s about.” He has rushed for 937 yards. Only one of the 256 rookies drafted ahead of him has run farther. Saquon Barkley, selected No. 2 in the opening round by the New York Giants, has gained 954 yards on the ground. The Giants are paying Barkley $21 million. Lindsay’s salary is $495,000. Tell me: Who’s the better value? There’s a sofa at team headquarters. No rookie, no matter how weary after practice, is allowed to relax on it. “Rookies aren’t supposed to be on it, but I’m on it, so (the veterans) try to kick me off,” said Lindsay, laughing. “They throw me off it. But when they turn their back, I get on.” Just like a pit bull would. In a league where quarterbacks rule, Lindsay is the most valuable offensive player in Denver. The Broncos beat Cincinnati easily on a windy afternoon when Keenum threw for only 151 yards, because Lindsay did all the heavy lifting. The playoff chances of this team were flat-lining a month ago. Now the Broncos not only have a pulse, but renewed faith, despite injuries to key players from center Matt Paradis to cornerback Chris Harris Jr. Is it any surprise Lindsay is at the heart of this unlikely comeback? Scrolling through his imagination to describe how much a Colorado kid, raised by Denver South High and made a man at CU Boulder, means to these Broncos, Keenum scrambled for new superlatives: “I don’t know what else to say about him …” Start with these four words: Phillip Lindsay. Pro Bowler.

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Surprised? Nine months ago, Phillip Lindsay detailed his plan to prove the NFL wrong By Nicki Jhabvala The Athletic December 3, 2018 Nine months ago, Phillip Lindsay was the undersized running back decked out in Colorado Buffaloes apparel running the room at Landow Performance, a training facility in Centennial, owned by the Broncos’ strength coach, Loren Landow. Back then, Lindsay was merely a hopeful for the NFL combine, a longshot for the NFL draft and a maybe for a rookie minicamp invite. His 5-foot-8, 190-pound frame was apparently a deterrent for NFL teams casting their new rosters. But back then, Lindsay also made a boastful — and so far truthful claim — that has provided the foundation for his record rookie season. “I think a lot of people don’t understand how athletic I really am and how fast I am,” he said. “So I’m just working on speed so I can impress the scouts. I know what I can do. I know my ability. My biggest motto is ‘outlast people.’ That’s what it’s about. It’s about outlasting people. When you work hard and you take a lot of time for your body and you start to see results as time goes on and you see you’re still healthier than a lot of people because you put that extra work in to outlast him.” Sunday, in a 24-10 victory over the Bengals that brought the Broncos back to .500 (6-6), Lindsay turned in his finest showing yet with a career-high 157 rushing yards and two touchdowns, including a breakaway 65-yard score that left multiple defenders in his wake. Through the first 12 games of an NFL season he wasn’t even supposed to be a part of, according to the NFL’s scouting, Lindsay has amassed 937 rushing yards and eight touchdowns. His 1,126 scrimmage yards are the eighth-most by a Broncos rookie and the second-most among all undrafted rookies since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger. Sunday he averaged 8.3 yards per carry, following the 7.9 and 7.2 he averaged in his previous two games — all wins. No player has averaged at least 7 yards a carry over a three-game stretch in 11 years since Fred Taylor in 2007, and Lindsay’s 6.1 average for the season currently stands as a Broncos record. With every game, every 100-yard outing, with every odds-defying touchdown run, the same questions are typically asked because the journey makes so little sense. “I think I just keep answering the same questions about Phillip after every game,” said Case Keenum, who had fewer passing yards (151) than Lindsay had rushing yards. “I don’t know what else to say about him. I think the league knows about him and opponents know about him and key on stopping him, but he continues to do stuff. He’s having a heck of a year. He’s gotta be in the rookie of the year category, Pro Bowl, all that stuff. He deserves all that.”

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Lindsay, the University of Colorado’s second all-time leading rusher, was snubbed by the NFL combine and then snubbed by every NFL team, none more so than the Broncos, whose headquarters are 45 miles from Folsom Field. At Lindsay’s pro day in Boulder, where he ran a blazing 4.39-second 40-yard dash, Broncos general manager John Elway, director of player personnel Matt Russell, senior personnel advisor Gary Kubiak and coach Vance Joseph were all in attendance. What’s more: Joseph and Russell are CU alumni and Joseph’s former teammate, former Buffs quarterback Darian Hagan, was Lindsay’s running backs coach at CU. What’s more: The Broncos expanded their haul of picks to 10 on the third day of the draft thanks to trades. They took a running back with their last selection. But it wasn’t Lindsay, much as he hoped it would be. David Williams is now on the Jaguars’ roster. If any team should have known about the kid, it should have been the team down the road. But more perplexing than Lindsay’s draft status is the speed and power that defy his size, something his teammates can only shake off with a smile. “He’s just out of this world,” Von Miller said. “He’s a great running back and a great teammate. It’s really no surprise to me especially, because I’ve seen it time and time again at practice. I can see the aura around him when he’s walking through the locker room. He’s going to be great.” Domata Peko agrees. “I remember in training camp and in OTAs he was wearing No. 2 and all the guys were like, ‘Who the hell is that No. 2 making all these plays on us?’’’ Peko said. “And now the world knows. It’s Phillip Lindsay, man. “The funniest part about it is we had our introductions to meet the new guys, and Phillip Lindsay said this (raises his voice to a high pitch): ‘My name is Phillip Lindsay. From Colorado. Went to Colorado.’ I’ll never forget that. It’s stuck in my head forever. But now we call him the Pit Bull. Teams are starting to see that he’s a pit bull, he plays with a lot of energy. I love that guy.” Although Lindsay’s pro day 40 would have been the second-fastest among backs at the combine this year, his ability to burn defenders and drop them with quick cuts is unlike anything the Broncos have seen in recent years. Lindsay, per usual, credits the play of his offensive line. He also credits his health; late in the season at CU, his body would be too beat up to utilize his speed. But Lindsay mostly credits Landow, who tweaked his technique to improve his speed ahead of his pro day. “He got me healthier and more explosive, back to feeling like myself,” Lindsay said. “… But when you got people like Garett Bolles running off the line — he was chasing (defenders) — it helps you out.” Lindsay’s spark on offense has been a savior for a unit in transition this year, with Keenum under center and offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave calling the shots. Once viewed as the team’s third-down back,

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Lindsay has quickly morphed into an every-down back who can be used in pass protection, who can catch passes in the backfield and can run power plays, using every bit of his 190-pound frame to bulldoze his way through defenders. “I think you judge lead backs by their durability,” Joseph said. “He’s available every week. It seems like everyone sees his physical size and they’re amazed of what he’s doing right now. He’s a tough guy. He’s fast through the hole, so he successfully avoids contact through the first line of defense, which is important. Also, our line is blocking well. His ability to get to the second level with speed is impressive. It’s hard to tackle a back like that when he’s not touched on the first level. His maturity and mentality each week has been very impressive.” Lindsay’s production will especially be key as the Broncos, who are in the hunt for the playoffs, face the final quarter of the season possibly without one of their top defenders and playmakers. Cornerback Chris Harris Jr. , who was on the verge of finishing a career season, suffered a fibula fracture early against the Bengals. Harris joined a lengthy list of Broncos starters and key players lost to injury, including guards Ron Leary (Achilles) and Max Garcia (ACL), center Matt Paradis (broken fibula), and tight ends Jeff Heuerman (broken ribs) and Jake Butt (ACL). Harris said he won’t need surgery and should the Broncos make the postseason, he is confident he’ll be able to return in time. “We can still win out. I still have faith in all my guys to finish the season strong,” he said. “I need them boys to win so I can get back on the field.” With Lindsay, it’s certainly possible. After the game Sunday, Joseph awarded the rookie and the Broncos’ offensive line a game ball for their work on the ground. Lindsay wanted no part of it. “I don’t like that attention. It’s not about me,” he said. “It’s about the team. That’s how I’ve always been in my life. When you have a family and you’re the middle of two older sisters and two younger brothers, it’s about them. It’s about your family.”

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From Rod Smith to Chris Harris Jr.: Phillip Lindsay joins impressive group of undrafted Broncos By Jeff Legwold ESPN Nov. 29, 2018 If you listen to how things are going for the Denver Broncos these days, it might seem like Phillip Lindsay's full name is "And-Lindsay-wasn't-even-invited-to-the-combine." Because that's often what folks end say about the rookie running back as he rockets through a sliver of space for yet another double-digit gain. Lindsay leads the Broncos in rushing yards, carries, rushing touchdowns and surprised looks. As analyst Tony Romo said this past Sunday during the Broncos' 24-17 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers: "The whole league made a mistake." That's because Lindsay is the latest in a growing group of undrafted rookies the Broncos have signed, sealed and watched deliver. At 5-foot-8, 190-pound, Lindsay play with quickness, run with power and be mentally ready to perform in the biggest moments. "I was surprised when I didn't get drafted when it happened, a little bit mad, just surprised," said Lindsay, who played at Colorado. "But since then, my focus has really just been on doing my job, being prepared to play and taking advantage every single opportunity. Because I always believe in my abilities." Broncos linebacker Von Miller has been impressed with Lindsay's mettle. "Phillip? Phillip is that same guy he was when he came in," Miller said. "I think Phillip believed he could play and what he could do, and he just comes in, gets to work and does it." In 14 of the past 15 seasons, the Broncos have had at least one undrafted rookie make the team's opening week roster. Since 1997, 22 undrafted rookies have made Denver's opening week roster. And the profile, according to two of the most decorated undrafted players in franchise history -- former wide receiver Rod Smith and current cornerback Chris Harris Jr. -- starts with confidence. It's the belief you were overlooked and far from unqualified. "You work harder than you ever have before, as hard as you worked to get there, you work twice as hard to make it so you can stay," Smith said. Harris added: "You have to believe you can make plays, and every day you try to make enough plays no matter what you're doing so they notice. When I was on special teams as a rookie, I went at it like I wanted to be the best gunner on punt team anywhere. When I played on defense, I wanted to be making plays no matter what."

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In some ways it's also a product of the modern draft, which is just seven rounds. After the seven rounds are complete, there are many players remaining on draft boards around the league who carry a draftable grade and have futures as pros. Among the players in the Broncos Ring of Fame, for example, Karl Mecklenburg was a 12th-round pick in the 1983 draft, the 310th player chosen the same year the Broncos traded for John Elway while Gene Mingo and Smith were undrafted players. "Sometimes it's just how the picks fell that day," said Elway, the Broncos president of football operations/general manager. "Sometimes it's the picks that went in front of you, the names you have on the board when your picks came up and what you wanted to do in that moment. We know there are good football players left, players who could be really good Denver Broncos if we find the right guys and develop them." In Mike Shanahan's last year coaching the team, two of the players who made the 2008 Broncos as undrafted rookies -- linebacker Wesley Woodyard and punter Brett Kern -- are still in the league with the Tennessee Titans. A third undrafted player in that class -- tackle Tyler Polumbus -- is now the sideline analyst for the Broncos' radio broadcasts. "You kind of know the history here," Harris said. "You could see it again in camp, man, Phillip came to play. He's like me: He should have been drafted, but he wasn't. So you just show out every day to let people know." Lindsay went from potential depth player and returner to potential runner in the backfield rotation to the current No. 1 option. The Broncos have tried to manage his workload, even in the two games that fellow rookie Royce Freeman missed with an ankle injury. Lindsay hasn't had more than 18 carries in any game this season, but he has had two 100-yard rushing games -- he was the first back of the season to top 100 yards against the Steelers -- and four games with at least 90 yards rushing. Toss in his 24 receptions and you have a linchpin player in the offense. When Broncos coach Vance Joseph was asked this week to explain how Lindsay has been such an effective between-the-tackles runner, he could have been summing up Lindsay's launch up the depth chart. "It's speed and it's courage," Joseph said. "You've got to have courage to run through darkness, and that's what it is inside. Honestly, it is. In this league, the holes open and close. He has the courage and the speed to run through darkness and to run through the smoke, so to speak. He's so fast through the hole that by the time the linebackers see him, he's so close to them it's hard for those guys to tackle him. He gets into the secondary really fast. I think it's a combination of speed and courage."

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Broncos notes: Lindsay on pace to give No. 30 first 1,000 yard season in 20 years By Mike Klis 9 News November 26, 2018 For the first time in 20 years, the Broncos’ No. 30 jersey is headed for a 1,000-yard season. Terrell Davis should know rookie Phillip Lindsay is carrying his number well. Lindsay had four carries of 32, 14, 12 and 18 yards for 76 of his 110 yards Sunday in the Broncos’ 24-17 upset victory against the Pittsburgh Steelers. After his 2-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter held as the winning score, Lindsay handed the ball to left tackle Garett Bolles for the celebratory spike. “They deserve it," Lindsay said of his offensive line. “They’re out there putting their body on the line 24/7. They get the least talked about out of everybody and they come in here ready to work. On top of that, people were (trashing them) at the beginning. They deserve everything they get. They’re out there working.” Lindsay now has 780 yards – on a fabulous 5.8 yards per carry – with five games to go. He topped the team’s previous undrafted rookie record of 729 yards set by Selvin Young in 2007 and he’s on pace to surpass the 1,007 yards C.J. Anderson had last year as the best undrafted rushing season in Broncos history. As for No. 30, the last good season that number had was in 1998, when Davis rushed for 2,008 yards to win the NFL Most Valuable Player Award. Davis suffered a knee injury early the next season and was never the same, although by then he already had done enough to be elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Harris incentive Broncos’ cornerback Chris Harris Jr. hit the first of his $3 million incentive package Sunday by getting his third interception. That was worth a $200,000 bonus. “I needed that," Harris said. “A nice little check." If he gets two more, he’ll get another $300,000. Harris also has team-based incentives where if the Broncos win six games (he needs one more) and he plays 65 percent of the snaps (he may already have crossed that threshold), he’ll get another $300,000 bonus. He’ll get another $300,000 if the Broncos win 8 games and he records 75 percent playing time. Those 8 wins suddenly seem reachable.

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It’s a unique incentive package that only players like Tom Brady and Harris have -- players who arguably have outproduced the value of their current contract. Does Harris recommend such incentive packages for players? “I don’t plan on doing this ever again," he said, meaning he’d prefer to have the money guaranteed. “I’m not doing this again. This is probably the only year." Barrett to get MRI, X-rays negative on Brock’s ribs Broncos outside linebacker Shaq Barrett, who got his third sack of the season late in the third quarter Sunday, suffered a hip flexor and will have an MRI on Monday morning. It could be a concern because Barrett suffered a serious hip injury while working out in the offseason of 2017, although he didn’t miss any time. The Broncos also lost No. 3 cornerback Tramaine Brock to a rib injury. Brock has some cartilage damage, but X-rays were negative so there’s hope he can play next week at Cincinnati. Tight end Jeff Heuerman suffered a game-ending back injury but there is hope a week of treatment will allow him to play against the Bengals. Taylor finished for year After keeping receiver Jordan Taylor on their physically unable to perform (PUP) list following a three-week, midseason practice trial, there was hope the popular “Sunshine” could return later this year. That won’t be the case. Taylor will not be able to recover from surgeries on both hips in time to help the Broncos this year. He is confident he will be fully healthy and ready to play next year, when he is eligible for restricted free agency.

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Broncos' Lindsay uses combine, draft snubs as fuel for fire By Arnie Stapleton Associated Press November 24, 2018 Omitted from the combine invitation list and ignored in the NFL draft, Denver Broncos rookie running back Phillip Lindsay has gone from head-scratcher to head-turner. "I remember the first couple of times I watched him five, six weeks ago on video, I had to get a flip card to figure out who he was," Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. Broncos star linebacker Von Miller knows the feeling. He recalled that when Lindsay first showed up, he was known simply by the No. 2 jersey he wore. "When he was No. 2 running here in OTAs, nobody really knew who he was," Miller said. "He was catching screens and passes all over the place. Then he got a little bit of success and he was the exact same guy. Hats off to Phillip for doing that. For being from Colorado, going to CU and having a whole town on your back, it can be tough. But he's been the exact same guy." As in, the Broncos' best offensive player. When assessing the Broncos (4-6), whom the Steelers (7-2-1) visit this weekend , Tomlin started off not with Emmanuel Sanders or Case Keenum but with the former University of Colorado star he called "a great runner who is dangerous." On Friday, Lindsay said he appreciated the nod from Tomlin. "It is an honor. But now I've got to go out and do it again," Lindsay told The Associated Press. "In his case, it sucks for him because now it's time for him to see what it's about." Welcome, Mike Tomlin, to Phillip Lindsay's told-you-so tour. "I'm proud to be undrafted and to be able to do the things I've done because it's a slap in everybody's face," Lindsay said. "But you know at some point in time you've got to get past that and you have to go for other things that have that chip, something else has to always feed you. "First, for me, it was not getting drafted, so I had to prove myself to get into the NFL. Now, I'm in the NFL. Now my whole thing is to show everybody that I'm the best rookie running back coming out and I didn't even get drafted. So, shame on them." Lindsay also uses the combine snub as his motivation. "Oh yeah, it's disrespectful. But it fueled my fire and got me here to where I am today," Lindsay said.

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On opening weekend, Lindsay's 102 yards from scrimmage made him the third undrafted player — and first running back — in the common draft era (since 1967) to top 100 yards and score a touchdown in his NFL debut. With fellow rookie Royce Freeman, a third-round pick out of Oregon, injured, Lindsay made his first start in Week 8 at Kansas City and rushed for the most yards (95) in team history by a rookie in his starting debut. Lindsay is averaging 5.5 yards a carry and has rushed for 670 yards and five touchdowns, including two against the Chargers last week. He also has two dozen catches for 187 yards and a TD. "I think you can stop wondering 11 games in," Tomlin said. "I think he's got a big enough body of work. He's a guy to be reckoned with. Inside and out, he's capable of making big runs." Lindsay has become so valuable on offense that the Broncos are using Devontae Booker to return kicks and River Cracraft to return punts even though Lindsay is the team's best player at both. What impresses Keenum is Lindsay's upward trajectory even as defensive coordinators have begun scheming to stop him specifically: "I think for him to keep doing that is big time." "Obviously, it's Week 12 and it's not a fluke," Broncos coach Vance Joseph said. "He's a really good player. He's a durable player and he makes plays every week. "We're lucky to have him — very lucky." Several teams reached out to Lindsay and his agent after he went undrafted, but the Broncos had a built-in advantage. The first player from the Broncos Futures Football program for middle schoolers to sign an NFL contract, Lindsay starred at Denver's South High School before playing for the Buffaloes. Lindsay said he wanted to stay close to home — or, rather, at his parents' home. "When you're a college free agent, you're not getting a lot of money," Lindsay said. "So, you go somewhere else you damn near don't have no money. But for me, I'm able to stay at home right now, save my money and be more comfortable. And it was just the best fit for me, a better fit for me all around."

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‘He’s a guy to be reckoned with’: How local star Phillip Lindsay has quickly become an NFL household name By Nick Jhabvala The Athletic November 24, 2018 Mike Tomlin didn’t know who or what he was watching. It was early in the season, and Phillip Lindsay, a well-known name in Colorado, had already begun to leave his mark on the NFL, with a touchdown catch against Seattle and 107 rushing yards against Oakland to become the first undrafted rookie in NFL history to top 100 yards from scrimmage in each of his first two games. “I remember the first couple of times I watched him five, six weeks ago on cross video, I had to get a flip card to figure out who he was,” the Steelers coach told the Pittsburgh media Tuesday. “But he’s quick and fast, young Colorado guy and makes a lot of plays for them. I think you can stop wondering 11 (weeks) in. I think he’s got a big enough body of work. He’s a guy to be reckoned with. Inside and out, he’s capable of breaking big runs.” Although the Broncos sit at 4-6 and are on an uphill climb to .500 and even playoff contention, they boast one of the biggest surprises of the season — to those outside Colorado. For four years, Lindsay consistently produced at the University of Colorado and defied his 5-foot-8 frame to become the program’s all-time leader in all-purpose yards (5,926) and yards from scrimmage (4,849) and the Buffs’ No. 2 all-time rusher (3,707 yards). Snubbed by the NFL combine and overlooked by all 32 NFL teams in the draft, Lindsay not only has proved doubters wrong but also has quickly become a household name. No longer is he that kid from Colorado. Or that kid with the hair. Or simply that fast little back who went undrafted. Lindsay, in 10 games, has been the most consistent force on the Broncos’ offense and continues to climb the team’s record books with his 670-and-counting rushing yards as a rookie. To some, it’s a surprise. To Lindsay, it’s a promise fulfilled. “To me, there’s not another running back better than me,” he told The Athletic days before the draft. “Yeah, there are running backs bigger than me. But there aren’t running backs that are consistent like me, that went through the things I went through and are leaders. They’re just there. For me, I’m going to make an organization great and I’m going to be a leader and I’m going to do what I have to on and off the field, and I’m going to help football games and produce.” Lindsay’s impact can’t be overstated. He’s made a fan out of Hall of Famer Terrell Davis, won the respect of Von Miller and ranks fifth in the NFL with an average of 5.54 yards per carry. His 670 rushing yards rank ninth among all rushers in the NFL. Only two of those in the top 10 are rookies. The other, Saquon Barkley, was the second overall pick in 2018. He received a $21 million signing bonus from the Giants. Lindsay received a $15,000 bonus when he chose the Broncos as a free agent.

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With 60 more rushing yards, Lindsay will pass Selvin Young (729 yards in 2007) for the most by an undrafted rookie in Broncos history. “Done in the first half,” Broncos Ring of Fame receiver and fellow undrafted player Rod Smith said on Twitter. And if Lindsay maintains this clip, he’ll finish his first year in sixth place among all Broncos rookies — just below Davis’ 1,117 in 1995. Through 11 weeks, the Broncos rank sixth in the NFL with 49 big plays (20 or more yards). Lindsay has accounted for seven of those — six rushes and one catch. And of the Broncos’ 25 offensive touchdowns, Lindsay has six (five rushing, one receiving), including the go-ahead score in the Broncos’ upset victory over the Chargers last weekend in Los Angeles. After trotting into the end zone for the 2-yard score, Lindsay gave the Mile High Salute that Davis made famous. Before the start of the season, Lindsay reached out to Davis to get his approval for wearing his No. 30 jersey. And in the weeks since, Davis has regularly celebrated Lindsay’s feats with him, acknowledging him on social media and staying in touch. Lindsay had wanted to honor Davis with the salute, but the timing, he knew, had to be right. “I kind of thought I would do it later on,” Lindsay said. “I wanted to get more respect from people before I did anything like that.” Ask around the Broncos’ locker room and Lindsay has reached that goal. “I’ll tell you what about Phillip, he’s the same exact guy that he was when he first got here,” Miller said. “When he was No. 2 running around here in OTAs, nobody really knew who he was. He was catching screens and passes all over the place. Then he got a little bit of success and he was the same exact guy. Hats off to Phillip for doing that. For being from Colorado, going to CU and having the whole town on your back, it can be tough, but he’s been the exact same guy. Hats off to Phillip. He’s still got a lot more to go. To keep his head down and to keep going, for him to be able to do that, it shows the type of person that he is.” Lindsay, who was born and raised in Aurora and attended Denver South High before heading north to Boulder for college, is the 17th player to play football at every level in Colorado and the first NFL product to come through the Broncos Futures Football program for middle-school athletes. Despite making it big and despite quickly morphing into one of the hottest players in the league, Lindsay still lives at home with his parents, a setup that has pros and cons, he said. “Right now, it’s the smartest decision,” he said. “And plus, I have four brothers and sisters. Everybody is out of the house. It’s just me. Right now it’s just a smart decision for me to get on my feet.” Every decision is calculated — and has to be at this level, Lindsay said. But no decision was more significant than the one he had to make in late April after every team, including the Broncos, passed on him in the draft. Lindsay had to about 15 minutes to decide which team he’d join as a college free agent, and the long list of options was whittled down to primarily two — Denver and Baltimore.

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“I got my agent on my phone on one end, I got my family with me telling me what I should do and I’m sitting here and I had damn near all 32 teams calling me,” Lindsay recalled. “So you’re like, damn. And you don’t have enough time to weigh out all the pros and cons. My agent was really pushing for me to stay here because he felt this was the best opportunity for me. My father and my mother really felt I should stay here at the end. I was so close to going somewhere else just because of the situation and I was looking at the running backs and seeing somebody else drafted and then they want you. You get kind of upset. “But this is where it’s like: ‘Think before you do things.’ I had to calm down and think before I decided.” Lindsay informed the Broncos he’d be joining them. Regrets? “Hell, no,” he said. “I love it here. It’s my home state, and I’m earning my teammates’ respect. That’s all I can try to do.”

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Phillip Lindsay moves from comforts of home to top NFL rookie candidate By Mike Klis 9 News Nov. 19, 2018 In football, an inconvenient sport in the sense games are once a week leaving six other days for newspapers and TV stations to fill, the star returning to play at home has long been a go-to storyline. Broncos’ running back Phillip Lindsay, who has emerged as a star in his very first professional season, home is where his bed has been. Lindsay lives at mom and dad’s house, sleeping in his downstairs bedroom by night, and practicing with his hometown Broncos by day. Sundays, the hometown kid enters a whole new universe. “I’m being smart right now,’’ Lindsay said during a sit-down interview with 9NEWS this week. “I did go undrafted so it’s about saving money and being smart with your money right now.’’ Lindsay did get the third-highest signing bonus among undrafted rookies in the John Elway era at $15,000. Only Jamal Carter ($20,000) and Lerentee McCray ($17,000) received more. But had Lindsay been drafted in, say, the sixth round like Highlands Ranch-grown offensive lineman Sam Jones did, he would have got a signing bonus of $168,556. During his formative football years at Denver South High School and the University of Colorado, Lindsay was often called the best pound-for-pound running back, first in the state, then in the Pac-12. Such distinctions are often given to those who carry fewer pounds. Lindsay is 5-foot-7 ¼, 184 pounds, as officially measured at his Pro Day in March. With 591 rushing yards to lead all NFL rookies – 5 more than No. 2 overall draft pick Saquan Barkley of the New York Giants – Lindsay may well be the league’s best dollar-for-dollar player. His rookie ceiling figured to be a spot on the Broncos’ 53-man roster as a third down back and special team returner. He blew through that ceiling to become the Broncos’ starting tailback who has averaged 16 carries and two catches in the past three games. “No, I’m not surprised just because of the person I am,’’ said Lindsay, who plays against the AFC West-rival Chargers in Los Angeles on Sunday. “I work hard. I’m fortunate to have a good line and a great running back coach (Curtis Modkins).’’ Lindsay’s former college coach, Mike McIntyre, is under fire after the CU Buffaloes’ 5-0 start became 5-6. Ever since the Buffs blew a 31-3 lead to lose to Oregon State three weeks ago, McIntyre’s job status has been on high-alert watch. “Coach Mac is a great coach,’’ Lindsay said. “I know he doesn’t pay too much attention to what people say. He’s been in a predicament like that before where rumors have swirled and the next year (in 2016) had a great year.

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“It’s just unfortunate for him that a lot of his players got hurt at the wrong time. You got Laviska (Shenault) that’s coming off the (toe) injury he did. You had K.D. Nixon, who’s hurt. Coach’s son Jay McIntyre was hurt. A couple offensive linemen. It’s hard. The defensive lineman, Evan Worthington was hurt. That’s big. People don’t understand that. Now it’s about the young kids getting experience and that’s what’s happening right now.’’ Lindsay had plenty family and friends during his five years at CU (he redshirted his freshman year after suffering a torn ACL in his senior high school season). But there is local fame on the Boulder campus and there is national stardom while succeeding for the Broncos. “It’s a lot more attention on you,’’ Lindsay said. “For me, I don’t like all that attention so I kind of stay out of the spotlight. I stay to myself. As a rookie, it’s a lot. It’s a lot to focus on. Every day you’re doing something different. Games are fast. The week is fast. There’s so much stuff going on that you don’t have time to enjoy and sashay around.’’ How was your day, son? Secure at his folks’ home, fast and strong for any size, Lindsay is one of the league’s top Offensive Rookie of the Year candidates, along with Barkley, Indianapolis guard Quentin Nelson and possibly Cleveland quarterback Baker Mayfield if he continues to play well in the second half. Those three competitors for the rookie award were all drafted within the top six picks of the first round. Lindsay went in the “no round,” signing sometime after Washington used the No. 256 and final selection on receiver Trey Quinn. “I definitely would like it (the rookie award), but I don’t have any say in it, nor do I care about Barkley and Baker Mayfield, what they’re doing because I’m focused on winning games for us,’’ Lindsay said. “Of course, you’re going to want the big-name people to win it, but at the end of the day I’m going to keep moving forward. I’m going to have the offensive line and quarterback and everybody’s behind me. That’s all that matters.’’ For these final seven games, Lindsay is concentrating on improving his game. Just because a player has done more than expected doesn’t mean he can’t expect more from himself. “Just slowing down my reads,’’ he said. “Making the right cuts, helping my offensive linemen out more. Continue to get more involved in the passing game and get open and continue to break tackles. And just get more comfortable when being in the game. The more reps you get, the more times you’re in the game, I feel I have come far from the first game till now. And I feel like I have to continue to work on my pass blocking. I feel like I pass block well, but I haven’t had as many chances as I’ve wanted.’’

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Way Back When: Where Phillip Lindsay's season is tracking in Broncos history for undrafted rookie running backs By Jim Saccomano DenverBroncos.com Nov. 9, 2018 There is no question that one of the brightest players on the Denver Broncos this year is Phillip Lindsay. Everyone loves the play and attitude of the undrafted rookie running back from the University of Colorado, but the most uncommon aspect of his situation, what really makes it special, is that Lindsay was not drafted. All 32 teams passed on him for seven rounds before Denver signed Lindsay as a free agent. Local boy makes good. But here is how rare his situation truly is: Just over the season's halfway mark, Lindsay has already posted the 10th-most rushing yards by a rookie in franchise history. He has 591 rushing yards, good for sixth in the NFL, and at the halfway mark, he is the only running back in the league with fewer than 100 carries. In Broncos history, 59 years of play, Lindsay is just the fifth undrafted rookie running back with significant stats. But that list includes Wendell Hayes — who had 411 rushing yards in 1966, even before Floyd Little — and Hayes, while undrafted, had been cut in camps by Dallas, Denver and Oakland, which is way more camp experience than Lindsay had. Mike Bell was second in rushing on the Broncos with 677 yards in 2006, and rookie Selvin Young had 729 yards in 2007. The gold standard for Bronco undrafted rookie running backs so far though has been C.J. Anderson, a five-year player here and a vital cog on our Super Bowl 50 championship team. But in 2013, Anderson's rookie year, he was a reserve who ran for just 38 yards for the season. These references only point out how rare it is for Lindsay to be doing all this. After fellow rookie Royce Freeman (who's having a terrific season of his own, too!) was sidelined with an ankle injury recently, Lindsay became the first undrafted rookie to start in the NFL since Washington's Rob Kelley in 2016.

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The most yards for a Broncos undrafted rookie running back are the 729 by Young, and Lindsay certainly is within striking distance at 591 with seven games left to play. So while you are enjoying the season Phillip Lindsay is having for the Broncos, take just a moment to realize how truly rare it is.

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Broncos Briefs: Terrell Davis continues to be impressed by Phillip Lindsay By Ryan O’Halloran The Denver Post November 2, 2018 Twenty-three years ago, Broncos running back Terrell Davis emerged from obscurity as a sixth-round pick to rush for 1,117 yards as a rookie. This year, Phillip Lindsay has risen from being an undrafted free agent to enter Sunday’s game against Houston with 531 rushing yards (ninth-best in the NFL), putting him on pace for 1,062. The old No. 30 is impressed with the new No. 30. “He’s playing well,” Davis said Thursday after giving the keynote speech at the Broncos Business Huddle. “(What) I saw in training camp, he’s as advertised. He’s explosive, he’s strong for a guy his size (5-foot-8, 190 pounds) and he brings excitement to the game. “He’s a valuable weapon out of the backfield and has a lot of tools he can work with. I like where he’s going. I wish (the Broncos) would be playing a little better now, but they have a back they can count on for a very long time.” Lindsay wore No. 2 during the offseason program and preseason but once he made the team, he asked Davis if he could wear No. 30. Davis, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, happily approved. Lindsay has rushed for at least 60 yards in six of the Broncos’ eight games and also has 18 catches. Asked if watching another Broncos No. 30 running back flourish was special, Davis said: “It is because going to back to our conversation (after the preseason), I got the sense he’s a confident young man. He’s an underdog and I can identify with what he went through. He has a hunger. I said, ‘That’s what No. 30 is about.’ I think it’s perfect to have a guy who wasn’t drafted wearing No. 30.” Lindsay has been a bright spot during an otherwise disappointing first half of the season (3-5 record). “This team is just inconsistent, has some holes in certain areas and, obviously, the quarterback play (by Case Keenum) hasn’t been what they expected,” Davis said. “Defensively, they haven’t been the defense we expected them to be. A few games I’ve watched and tried to say, ‘All right, maybe they’ve turned the page.’ And (then) you don’t see it the next game.” Davis followed his rookie year with seasons of 1,538, 1,750 and 2,008 yards before injuries limited him from 1999-2001 and he retired. Davis said several members of his family, including his mother, live in the Denver area so he returns often. Chubb honored. Broncos linebacker Bradley Chubb was named NFL Defensive Rookie of the Month for October after totaling 16 tackles and 5 1/2 sacks in five games.

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Chubb is only the third Broncos player to win the award, joining inside linebacker D.J. Williams (December 2004) and teammate Von Miller (November 2011). “Every week he improves in something, whether it’s coverage or (pass) rush or just playing the run,” coach Vance Joseph said. Chubb is one of just seven rookies since 1982 to have at least 5 1/2 sacks during a three-game span and the first since San Francisco’s Aldon Smith in 2011. The Rams’ Aaron Donald (eight sacks), Kansas City’s Dee Ford (six), Chubb and Washington’s Ryan Kerrigan (4 1/2) led the league in October. Indianapolis guard Quenton Nelson was named Offensive Rookie of the Month. Footnotes. Miller on receiver Demaryius Thomas — his teammate from 2011 until Tuesday — being traded to Houston: “(Tuesday) was an extremely sad day. (Wednesday) was super weird. The thing that everybody says is, ‘That’s just the business.’ I love him to death but Sunday we’re going to have to get him. I’m happy for him going to a place where they need a receiver like him.” … The Broncos added fullback Andy Janovich (thigh) to the injury report and he was limited on Thursday. Right tackle Jared Veldheer (knee) was again limited and is “hopeful” to return after missing four consecutive games. … Ten Texans players were limited, including outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, who has a groin injury.

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Phillip Lindsay leads a youth movement key to Broncos' 2-0 start By Jeff Legwold ESPN Sept. 18, 2018 Domata Peko has played in 187 games in an NFL career that is now in its 13th season. And he has often said, with a laugh, that he doesn't learn a rookie's name "until they make the team. I appreciate them and how hard they work, but until they make the team I just call them by their number or something." Two weeks into the Denver Broncos' season, Peko knows a lot of rookie names -- and nicknames -- and some "thank yous" are in order. "I mean, we have Rolls Royce [Royce Freeman] and the pit bull, number 30, Phillip Lindsay," Peko said. "Just keep handing the ball to those two young guys -- they are doing great." The Broncos' youth movement was on full display during Sunday's 20-19 win over the Oakland Raiders, as it was in the season opener against the Seattle Seahawks. Ten rookies made the Broncos' 53-man roster, and coach Vance Joseph promised it was because the team had plans for them. That total included eight of the team's 10 draft picks from this past April to go with undrafted rookies Lindsay and linebacker Alexander Johnson. Also in the youthful mix is wide receiver Tim Patrick, who spent two stints on the Broncos' practice squad in 2017 -- his rookie season. It's a group that has quickly won over teammates with a no-nonsense approach and an attention to details. It's a noticeable departure from the previous two draft classes that had a selection of players who were often criticized by teammates for lacking in those areas. Some of the team's veteran players had gone as far as to use the word "entitled." Broncos linebacker Von Miller, a team captain, indicated how much differently this group of younger players is viewed in the locker room after Sunday's win when he was asked about the team's leadership. "It's not really about the six or five captains that we have," Miller said. "Honestly, the rookies and the new guys that we have, they are playing lights out. They gave us a hell of a boost on offense and defense. If we look at some of the things that Phillip Lindsay did for us today, and Tim Patrick and Courtland Sutton, all those guys, they weren't here last year. So we did a great job of going and getting playmakers and big-time guys that help lift everybody around them. That makes a captain and a leader's job a whole lot easier having guys like that." Lindsay, a graduate of Denver South High School, rushed for 107 yards Sunday, including a 53-yard run in the second quarter. With his 102 yards from scrimmage in the team's opening-week win over the Seahawks, Lindsay is now the first undrafted player in the league's history to top 100 yards from scrimmage in his first two games.

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Lindsay was the Broncos' back of choice during a 10-point fourth quarter. Patrick also had a 26-yard catch-and-run to put the Broncos in field-goal position to win Sunday's game. "I am here to be our spark player," Lindsay said. "I am here to make sure that I get my teammates going, whether it is on a punt, if it is on a kickoff or kickoff return, anything. I am going to do what I have to to get our team moving. ... I can't thank Mr. [John] Elway enough for letting me be a part of this." Freeman also had his first rushing touchdown of the season Sunday, which closed out the Broncos' first scoring drive of the game. Sutton came within two replay reviews of two of the biggest plays of the game. He had a 42-yard completion overturned early in the third quarter when replay showed he didn't maintain possession and he had a 21-yard touchdown erased when officials said his foot had touched out of bounds before he landed in the end zone. The plays were indicative of just how much quarterback Case Keenum is looking for the rookie because as he said, "I trust him." In all, seven of the Broncos' rookies were in uniform and played in Sunday's win, in addition to Patrick. And that's not going to change in the weeks ahead as coach Vance Joseph said those players have earned every minute of that time. "Those guys are qualified, we've got a lot of young guys playing, but they've shown us in the last two weeks that it's not too big for them," Joseph said. "They're just doing their jobs. They're good players, they're good athletes and they're tough guys. ... They're all qualified."

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How Phillip Lindsay's roots guide his devotion to the Denver community By Ben Swanson DenverBroncos.com September 19, 2018 All Phillip Lindsay wants to be for the kids who were at West High School’s Tuesday-afternoon football practice is Willis McGahee. As Lindsay approached the practice field at Sunken Gardens Park, ready to speak to the team, he recalled the impact that McGahee had on him in 2012, when he had an opportunity to touch a high-school student’s life, and Lindsay knew he could have that same effect six years later. The situation was much different in 2012, but the end result could be the same. Lindsay, fresh off surgery reconstructing his ACL after a devastating tear that ended his senior season at South High School, was at the lowest point of his life. His future in football was impossible to predict, and to him, the outlook didn’t seem bright. And then he got a call from then-Broncos running back Willis McGahee. At the time, McGahee was a busy man. The previous season, he had revitalized his career with a 1,199-yard Pro Bowl season and was in the midst of a troubling start to the Peyton Manning era (which, of course, ended up being just fine). Yet during a break in the week leading up to the Broncos’ Week 3 game against Houston, he took the time to call Lindsay, who was known in the organization because of his participation in the Futures Football program that the Broncos run with Denver Public Schools. Lindsay knew McGahee well, at least through his family’s television set. The standout University of Miami running back was a star on the Hurricanes’ early ‘00s teams, but his collegiate career ended abruptly when he tore his ACL, PCL and MCL in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl National Championship Game. “I knew his story with his knee and how hard it was to get back,” Lindsay says. “To be able to see what he did after that brutal knee injury, it felt good to get a call the day after surgery. He was just like, ‘Hey.’ He didn’t have to do that. He didn’t have to take the time, but he did. He felt the need to take the time to tell me I was going to be OK. And now I’m sitting here in the same shoes he was in as a Denver Bronco.” For Lindsay, who now knows all the responsibilities that come with being an NFL player, the call amazes him even more. “Being in this job here in the NFL, it’s hard to find time to do the little things sometimes,” Lindsay says. “It’s not even that you forget; it’s so much going on. And for him … in my senior year of high school, at my lowest point, he called out of the blue. I was watching a Colorado Buffaloes game, and he called me. That gave me a lot of hope. It felt good that somebody cared enough to be able to contact me and reach out to me at the lowest time of my life.”

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Though visiting West’s practice Tuesday isn’t the same scenario, Lindsay knows the standard that’s been set for him as far as making an impact on young lives, and he wants to hold himself to that — even just days after becoming the first undrafted rookie to record at least 100 yards from scrimmage in each of his first two games. “I’m never going to be too big for this,” Lindsay says. “This is how I grew up and where I came from. Everybody here knows who I am, and it just feels comfortable. I don’t have to sit there and put on an act for anybody. I can just be myself, which I am anyway. But [it’s great] to just be able to be here and feel comfortable and see these young men and try to impact them so they can go on to college.” So when he spoke to the students, who will participate in this week's Broncos High School Game of the Week against North High School, he spoke of that importance, hoping they might follow in his footsteps as a scholar with two degrees, regardless of whether they’re able to chase NFL dreams as he did. “That’s the biggest thing,” Lindsay says. “The NFL is going to be there, and it’s going to come and go faster than you would go to college. For college and getting a degree, it’s probably one of the most satisfying things you can have. Yeah, I’m in the NFL and I’m grateful for it, but at the end of the day, I do have my degree. I have two. I’m excited about that, and I want to make sure that they understand that.” Following the speech, Lindsay walked off the field, meeting a few players one on one, including one who told Lindsay that he’s his hero. As big as expectations may get for Lindsay as a Bronco, they may be even bigger as a local idol, and even if he can’t be Willis McGahee, being Phillip Lindsay will be enough.

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Phillip Lindsay has gone from undrafted to unforgettable By Arnie Stapleton Associated Press Sept. 18, 2018 Phillip Lindsay is taking the NFL by storm. He's also taking it all in stride. "I am just playing football, that's it," the Denver Broncos running back said after becoming the first undrafted player in NFL history to eclipse 100 yards from scrimmage in each of his first two NFL games. "I am just playing football for our team. I don't think of things like that." Keeping his head down has always been Lindsay's style. The 5-foot-8, 190-pound sparkplug was undeterred when he wasn't invited to the NFL combine and was bypassed by 32 teams in the draft despite piling up nearly 5,000 yards from scrimmage and scoring 39 touchdowns at the University of Colorado. "I mean, since when have I not been the underdog?" Lindsay said after signing a $15,000 bonus this spring to try out for his hometown Broncos. He quickly made his mark on special teams and worked his way into the first-stringer drills as a third-down back and slot receiver, and he hastily won over his teammates, too. "Guys like that in the league, you just can't cover them," Von Miller said after getting his first glimpse of the man who earned the nickname "Tasmanian Devil" for his frenetic style. "They're just assets to the offense. You have to have a back like that and we definitely have one." Lindsay gained 102 yards in his debut against Seattle , scoring on a 29-yard pass play. On Sunday, he topped that with a 111-yard performance in Denver's 20-19 comeback win over Oakland that included 107 yards on 14 carries. Lindsay, who won over Hall of Famer Terrell Davis by asking his permission to don jersey No. 30 , is still awed by the opportunity to play for the team he grew up watching. "For me, it's just a great opportunity to go out there," Lindsay said. "I am just happy we got the W. It's on to the next. We have a big game next weekend and we are going to go away." The Broncos (2-0) visit Baltimore (1-1) next weekend, and you can bet the Ravens will spend plenty of time preparing for the rookie running back who already has 178 yards on 29 carries for a whopping 6.1-yard average — even if he won't be starting. Coach Vance Joseph said Monday that Lindsay remains the third stringer behind starter and fellow rookie Royce Freeman and third-year pro Devontae Booker, who has five carries for 21 yards and two catches for 11 yards so far.

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"Our deal with that room is more of game planning, it's what they do best, it's who has the hot hand that day," Joseph said. "So, we don't have to make a depth chart change to give him more carries or to give Royce more carries or to give Book more opportunities. It's really what we do and to have three guys who are all different, it's really tough on defenses. "So, he can be the 3 and still get 10 touches or 12 or 14 or Book can be the 2 and still get seven or eight. So, it doesn't matter who's the starter." Look at Sunday's game as evidence: Freeman started but only got 16 snaps, less than Booker (22) and Lindsay (28). General manager John Elway has received plenty of kudos for his 2018 draft class but the gem so far has been the one player nobody drafted. A Colorado alum himself, Joseph was no stranger to Lindsay's talents. "It's hard to believe he didn't go to the combine," Joseph said recently. "Obviously he's a Buff, so I've watched Phillip for three years as a starter in a major conference. He was a great player. We were all surprised he didn't go to the combine, and obviously signing him as a free agent was tough because we drafted two backs. We pursued him heavy and he stayed home." The Broncos selected Freeman in the third round and Arkansas' David Williams in the seventh. While Williams toils on Denver's practice squad, Freeman has rushed for 99 yards and a touchdown on 23 carries for a solid 4.3-yard average through two games. The Broncos started out Sunday with three three-and-outs as Freeman, who would score on a 1-yard run in the second half, ran twice for minus-1 yard and 1 yard before Lindsay broke free for a 53-yard gain. "I am here to be our spark player," Lindsay said. "I am here to make sure I get my teammates going, whether it is on a punt, if it is on a kickoff or kickoff return, anything. I am going to do what I have to do to get our team moving."

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Denver's own Phillip Lindsay runs to NFL rookie record By Mike Chambers The Denver Post September 17, 2018 Native son Phillip Lindsay, the Broncos’ backup running back who is quick to thank his teammates and “Mr.” John Elway at every opportunity, etched his name in NFL history Sunday by gaining 107 yards rushing in the 20-19 victory over the Raiders. It was a proud day for the Denver native who is living a fairy tale two games into his NFL career. Lindsay became the league’s first undrafted rookie to produce at least 100 yards from scrimmage in each of his first two games. He had a team-tying-high 71 yards rushing plus 31 yards receiving in Denver’s Week 1 victory over Seattle. “Just playing football,” Lindsay, who also caught a pass for a 4-yard gain Sunday, said after being told of his record. “Just playing football for my team. It’s just a great opportunity to be here. I can’t thank (general manager) Mr. Elway enough for letting me be a part of this organization.” Lindsay has led the Broncos in rushing in both games, yet he’s listed third on the depth chart at running back behind Royce Freeman and Devontae Booker. Freeman also had 71 yards rushing in the opener but was limited to 28 yards on eight carries Sunday. Booker has become an afterthought with only five carries for 21 yards this season. Lindsay, who broke off a 53-yard run during Denver’s first drive of the second quarter, also returns kickoffs and is a gunner on the punt team. He considers himself a “sparkplug.” His coach agrees. “He is a good football player, not only as a running back, but as a guy who covers kicks for us and as a guy who catches the football for us,” Broncos coach Vance Joseph said. “He’s the total package football player. He’s been really impressive.” Lindsay and his family have long been Broncos fans, which means they understand the rivalry with the Raiders. Lindsay said he was priviledged to share the field with Oakland running back Marshawn Lynch, whom he out-gained. Lynch had 18 carries for 65 yards. “It means a lot. Coming from here and understanding the rivalry, just being able to win, and to be able to look up to one of my idols, Marshawn Lynch, and watch him out there, it’s a surreal moment,” Lindsay said. When asked again about his new NFL record, Lindsay said: “I don’t think of things like that. For me, it’s a great opportunity to go out there. I’m just happy that we got the ‘W’ and now it’s on to the next (game).”

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An oral history of unlikely Broncos running back Phillip Lindsay By Kyle Fredrickson The Denver Post September 15, 2018 The hometown kid actually made it. Phillip Lindsay’s dream began long ago when he was tossing a football with his siblings on the blacktop of their Denver neighborhood. Maybe you were in the bleachers when he became a Denver South High School legend. Maybe you watched him carry the rock over and over and over again as a Buffalo to revive a sleeping college football program. Or maybe you just decided to pick him up for your NFL fantasy league. Any way you slice it, Lindsay’s prominent role as a Broncos’ running back, pass catcher and do-it-all special teamer reminds us why we love sports. A torn ACL. No NFL Scouting Combine invite. Then a draft snub. Lindsay defied expectations at every turn, and on the second touch of his NFL debut last Sunday, he ran into the same end zone he envisioned so many times as a kid. The type of script made for the Hollywood screen. Appreciate his improbable journey with an oral history of Phillip Lindsay’s rise to the Broncos. Phillip was born on July 24, 1994, to parents Troy and Diane Lindsay. Phillip, 24, is one of five Lindsay children, all of whom who earned full-ride college scholarships for athletics.Two older sisters: Sparkle, 33, and Cheri, 29. Two younger brothers: Zach, 21, and Marcus, 19. Troy: “Phillip never crawled on his knees. He did the crab-walk all over the place real fast. Right then you’re like, ‘This is something different here.’ ” Diane: “I had named him the Tasmanian Devil when he was little because he would run all over the place. And he also had a great imagination. He would always have to dress up no matter what, whether it was Cowboys or Robin Hood or Batman. He would change clothes 100 times per day.” Troy: “His sisters punked the little boy.” Cheri: “I was the one doing the picking on. He was a little bit of crybaby.” Sparkle: “He watched me play college basketball quite a bit. I was always out at the court and he was always with me. He ate, drank and slept sports like all the rest of us did. His work ethic came from watching his sisters never stop. And from there, he took it by storm.” Troy: “Phillip started playing football when he was 8 years old and he played with the 9-and-10 year olds. Back then, they made him be a little lineman and he actually ended up being their player of the year. At about 12, he scored five touchdowns and most of them were on kickoffs.” Cheri: “People were like, ‘Oh, we need to see his birth certificate. He must be older than everybody.’”

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Sparkle: “He did everything: running back, receiver, kickoff return and defense. And Phillip was dunking a basketball at 14 years old.” Troy: “I’ve always coached Phillip. When he left me in high school, he went to my brother Tony. He needed his uncle to say, ‘I don’t give a [expletive] what your dad says, you’re going to do this.’” Troy: “His senior year, in his first game, he blew his knee out.” Sparkle: “He scored a touchdown and didn’t even know his ACL was torn.” Cheri: “He gets the surgery and bending and straightening just wasn’t happening. There were times I went home, my dad would sit on his back and we’d just kind of push that knee up to his butt. He’d be screaming. We were all crying, probably, because we knew how bad it hurt him.” Troy: “He was already offered to go to Colorado. But (coach John) Embree got fired and we didn’t know what the heck was going to happen with Phillip. When (CU coach Mike) MacIntyre came in town, pretty much every high school coach in Colorado told him, ‘Hey, if you don’t keep that kid on scholarship, you’d be a fool.’ ” MacIntyre: “The first time I ever met him, he couldn’t even bend his knee and weighed about 150 pounds. I just saw his energy inside of him that you see now and I said, ‘I’m going to take this guy no matter what. But I don’t know if he’ll ever play for us.'” Sparkle: “Phil said, ‘Do you think everything is going to be OK?’ I said, ‘I know it.’” Marcus: “He never lost faith.” Lindsay set the career mark for all-purpose yardage (5,926) through four seasons at CU and led the Buffaloes back to their first bowl game in a decade. Lindsay’s teammates included quarterback Sefo Liufau, center Alex Kelley, running back Christian Powell and linebacker Derek McCartney. David Plati has led the Buffs’ sports information department since 1984. Liufau: “When he first came in, I saw this guy in crutches with a knee brace on. We didn’t really know if he was going to be play, but every day I saw him rehabbing and working. He redshirted my freshman year, but boy did he give hell to that starting defense. He’s not scared of anybody.” Kelley: “It’s the middle of the season and he’s playing on the scout team against the starting defense. Phil tried to run over Josh Tupou, our starting nose tackle, and they started chirping at each other. Josh is a super big guy and Phil got right in his face ready to fight.” Powell: “He stood his ground.” Liufau: “We played Oregon in 2015 and early in the game against (defensive tackle) DeForest Buckner, something happened, and he asked Phil, ‘Do you know who I am?’ Then Phil just starts popping off, ‘I don’t care who you are! Come through the hole again!’” McCartney: “Before our junior year (the 2016 Pac-12 South championship season), we were struggling as a team. … There was a time that summer when people weren’t showing up on time, people weren’t

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coming to workouts, people weren’t doing the right thing all the time in terms of football. We had like a giant intervention with the team. “It wasn’t until Phillip got up and said something that it resonated well. He starts screaming, he was so passionate about what he was saying, and he’s calling people out by name and telling them exactly what they needed to do to be better. It was the first time I remember Phil really stepping up into to a vocal role. It showed everyone that Phil was for real.” Liufau: “He ran for more than 200 yards against Arizona State. After, he actually brought the whole O-Line with him to the interview after and explained those guys were the reason he was so successful and how he couldn’t have done it without them.” Plati: “If I had to rate all the players I’ve worked with over 35-plus years, I don’t think I’ve ever had anyone as humble as Phillip.” Despite record-setting college production, Lindsay did not receive an invitation to the NFL’s Scouting Combine. But many scouts, including those from the Broncos, attended Lindsay’s CU Pro Day in March. One month later, the Lindsays gathered at their family home to watch three-day NFL draft on television. Cheri: “We were trying to fill the time with stuff like dominoes, cards or getting out of the house a little bit. The phone calls and the text messages that were coming in weren’t that call. It was really frustrating.” Troy: “We were all just sitting there kind of waiting to see if we were going to hear his name.” Zach: “All these other running backs get drafted and my brother wanted to challenge them. He wanted to go against them.” Troy: “Those were heartbreaking times for him. But he just said, ‘Dad, to hell with it. I’m going to make this anyway.’ And I figured he would.” Right after the draft, everybody called, but by then it was like, ‘Nah, he’s staying with the Broncos.’ He’s a homeboy, anyway.” Zach: “It was the best thing that could have happened to him. Because when my brother gets mad or feels betrayed, he’s gonna go crazy. They just opened up a monster.” Lindsay signed with the Broncos in April. Among those who witnessed his NFL rise include: Coach Vance Joseph, special teams coordinator Tom McMahon, quarterback Chad Kelly, receiver Courtland Sutton, safety Will Parks and defensive tackle Shelby Harris. McMahon: “Our first introduction was at our local pro day. I fell in love with him that day.” Kelly: “I didn’t know who he was and Phil comes up to me with his iPad. He’s already rocking and rolling. I start asking him some questions, I’ve been here for a couple weeks, and he’s like, ‘Yeah, I already know what to do on 50, 60, 70, swing, diagonal and flat.’” Parks: “Every time you looked up in OTAs, he had the ball in his hands running like 40 yards for a touchdown. You already had a sense he was going to make this roster.”

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Harris: “I remember during training camp there was a team period. A linebacker blitzed up the middle, we’re watching it on film, and Phil just stuck his little body all up in there and was willing to stone the blitz. You see bigger backs that don’t do that. Right then it was like, ‘This kid has heart.’ We call him Pit-bull. He refuses to say no.” Sutton: “There was a play in practice where he was running a go-route. I remember thinking, ‘We’re going to let a running back do this? This is one of ours.’ He goes out there, lines up and he just smokes a linebacker and makes a heckuva catch on the sideline. I thought maybe he was lucky. But then he did it again. I was like, ‘OK, this dude can actually make plays.’” Joseph: “What he’s done hasn’t been just because he’s a local kid, he has earned his right to be here.” Kelly: “I even have friends back home who are drafting him in fantasy. Even my Uncle Jim was texting me after the first preseason game: ‘Man, I love No. 2. He’s a helluva player.’” Lindsay locked up a roster spot and made his NFL debut wearing the same number of his childhood hero — No. 30, running back Terrell Davis. Troy and Diane attended last Sunday’s game eight rows up in the southwest corner of Mile High. Phillip’s siblings watched on television. Troy: “Phillip had talked to Terrell Davis before and he actually had his number in his phone. He said, ‘Dad, I’m going to call him and ask this man for permission to wear No. 30. I respect him and it’s out of respect.’” Davis: “I didn’t expect him to reach out to me. It was like, wow, you just don’t see that. Nowadays you have a lot of young players who don’t understand the history of the game. A lot of them don’t care to understand. We talked on the phone and he told me about his mindset. He explained to me how he had my biography growing up, and how he lived his life and used it as a reference when he went through struggles. That made me feel good. “It’s appropriate for him to have the jersey. I was like, ‘Make it yours, brother.'” Troy: “Every morning before a game, Philip will call me. He knows I get up early, so he’ll call about 6 and we’ll talk about it. I’ll ask him how he’s feeling. He’ll let me know if he’s nervous or what’s going on with him. He has a little crystal that he’s gotta have. He’ll also say, ‘Tell mom I love her.” Diane: “This is something he’s dreamed about forever and ever as a young child.” Zach: “It’s a nerve-wracking feeling, because you want him to do good.” Marcus: “I wasn’t sure how much he was going to play or not, and the next thing I know, I see that he’s in the game. Then I see him catch the ball.” Cheri: “I looked up and I was like, ‘Oh, he has a lot of space.’” Zach: “It was funny, because that Friday my brother said there was going to be a play where he went one-on-one with (rookie linebacker Shaquem) Griffin. He said, ‘This kid isn’t going to be able to hold me.’ Sure enough. Damn. He said it.”

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Cheri: “My neighbors actually came downstairs and asked if everything was OK because I was screaming like a banshee.” Troy: “Phillip is this tough guy, but he’s still a mamma’s baby. He’ll lay down at home and she’ll rub all that hair of his. Then me and him will just talk about everything. Anywhere from money to girls to whatever, we’re a real close family all the way around.” Zach: “We talk every day on the phone. We really get into Call of Duty as a family, my brothers and sisters, and play online.” Marcus: “All the football stuff is cool, but seeing him happy is the best thing ever.” Cheri: “You have to prove to him he can’t do something. Or he’s just gonna try to do it.” Troy: “Phillip has kind of a magic to him.” Popular In the Community

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Broncos' Phillip Lindsay prepared to make impact in NFL debut By Troy Renck KMGH September 8, 2018 Phillip Lindsay follows a daily routine. Wake up. Pinch self. He is the first player from the Broncos Futures Football Program to reach the NFL. From middle school stalwart to high school standout to University of Colorado star, no one boasts deeper local roots than the running back. But if you think the Broncos' undrafted free agent remains satisfied, then you don't know Lindsay. "I want to go out there and do my part, whether it's one play or 10 plays. I want to be explosive," Lindsay told Denver7. "I am looking to make an impact on special teams in kickoff return and in coverage as a gunner. I want to go out there and make a tackle." The idea of Lindsay landing a roster spot became realistic after the first training camp practice. Linebacker Brandon Marshall let it slip that Lindsay would be the team's "third-down back." The derby remained open, but crystallized with each preseason game. Lindsay caught a touchdown pass at home, and finished the summer with 70 yards on 13 carries. "This is not a fluff story because he's a local kid," coach Vance Joseph said. "He's earned the right to be here." For Lindsay, the experience is a bit surreal. He grew up rooting for the Broncos, watching Demaryius Thomas and Emmanuel Sanders. His favorite memory was when quarterback Peyton Manning signed, an addition that led to a pair of Super Bowl appearances and a title in 2015. "Getting Peyton is the best moment anybody can have. He's the sheriff," Lindsay said. "It's so cool how he demanded excellence from everyone." Lindsay held a similar role in college. All but one of the Broncos' 10 draft picks served as college captains. And Lindsay filled that role as well, helping CU's program rebound during his time in Boulder. Playing at home brings advantages. But it can also create issues, like a fishbowl existence full of pressure and distractions. Lindsay insisted that's not the case for him. "It's easy for me because I am who I am. I don't try to flaunt myself. I am respectful. If people want to talk to me, I talk to them," said Lindsay, who is wearing No. 30 with the blessing of Hall of Famer Terrell Davis. "I just go on. It's normal. Everyone has a job, making a living, and this is mine."

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Lindsay rooted hard for the Broncos. He dreamed of playing for the team. Now, his family and friends will be cheering him from the stands. "I didn't go to Broncos games growing up because we didn't have the money. And two, I was mentally focused on my seasons, starting when I was in Little League to high school to college. I just went down the road," Lindsay said. "It doesn't mean I didn't watch the games -- I did. It's cool to be here with players like Demaryius and Emmanuel. Now, I am ready to do my part to help us win."

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Phillip Lindsay asks Terrell Davis if he can 'rock' No. 30 By Thomas Warren NFL.com Sept. 4, 2018 Broncos rookie running back Phillip Lindsay figures if he's going to set off on what he hopes is a career fit for the Hall of Fame, what better way to do it than sporting the number of a legendary Broncos runner currently in Canton. First, he called Terrell Davis to get his blessing. Lindsay surely understands the gigantic expectations that number comes with in Denver but it sounds like he's ready to meet the challenge. Lindsay wore No. 23 in college at Colorado where he went undrafted in 2017 after his senior season but the rookie earned a spot on the Broncos' 53-man roster with an impressive preseason showing out of the backfield and on special teams. He'll be third on the running back depth chart behind Royce Freeman and Devontae Booker to start the season but he'll likely get carries as the season progresses. Special teams, though, could be where Lindsay makes his mark. Who knows? He might be one kickoff tackle away from becoming a household name. It worked out pretty well for the original number 30.

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Phillip Lindsay more than cute little story for Broncos. Could former CU star earn 100 touches as NFL rookie? By Mark Kiszla The Denver Post August 19, 2018 Phillip Lindsay is the favorite son of Broncos Country. He’s as genuine Colorado as a “Native” bumper sticker on a 1994 Chevy Suburban. The cheering section for Lindsay spreads as wide as the four corners of the state. Cut him from the local NFL team? No way. Fans might never forgive the Broncos. “How’s my guy doing with the Broncos at training camp?” CU coach Mike MacIntyre asked, with the first words out of his mouth after a recent practice in Boulder. Well, Coach. The question isn’t so much how Lindsay is doing, but: How did the Broncos ever get by without him? Lindsay is going to make this team. The hardest place to find clarity on this Denver roster has been at running back. With so little contact during training camp that practices would’ve passed as a Fourth of July picnic back in Randy Gradishar’s day, it has been tough for coaches to determine the heir apparent to C.J. Anderson, sent packing by the Broncos after rushing for 1,007 yards last season. But a clear pecking order at tailback began to form Saturday night during an exhibition game against Chicago. Could it be the one-two punch capable of packing the most wallop is the rookie combination of Royce Freeman and Lindsay? Please say yes. Freeman is the thunder. Lindsay is the lightning. While Devontae Booker was listed No. 1 on the depth chart released early in camp, it’s clear the Broncos want Freeman to be their lead back. And the third-round draft choice from Oregon looks like the winner of the competition, as Freeman ran hard between the tackles and scored a touchdown against the Bears. His best attribute is one-cut efficiency through the line favored by Denver since the glory days of Terrell Davis. But Freeman ain’t no T.D., and I mean no disrespect, because who is? With a reputation as a power back, I asked Freeman last week if he can do more than move the pile. “Yes, sir,” he replied. After gaining 4,859 yards from scrimmage on 5.5 yards per touch during his career with the Buffaloes, Lindsay went undrafted by the NFL. Hey, these things happen when you’re nearly 13,995 feet shorter than a Colorado fourteener. The Broncos, however, gave Lindsay a shot. He’s run with it, caught on, kicked butt while working with special teams and stood his ground when big, bad Bears tried to mess with him during recent joint workouts between Chicago and Denver.

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From the jump, Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall insisted Lindsay has the distinct look of the team’s third-down back. When I relayed that little piece of happy information to MacIntyre, he grinned, then quickly reeled in his enthusiasm, as football guys often do before they study the film. “Well,” MacIntyre said, “Brandon Marshall isn’t a coach.” Well, Coach, ball don’t lie. At training camp, even a knucklehead like me notices when Denver quarterback Case Keenum checks down against coverage, the target of his throw is often Lindsay. Against the Bears, Keenum performed much more efficiently than in his clunker of a debut against Minnesota. But truth be told, Denver’s second offensive unit, led by ascending quarterback Chad Kelly, played with more energy. Put Lindsay in the backfield alongside Kelly, and the Broncos have two live wires creating sparks. Lindsay showed he could bring value beyond catching the football with an electric 15-yard rush on the first play of the second half. Cut him? Or offer Lindsay a spot on the practice squad? That would be nuts. Another NFL team would scoop up Lindsay faster than you can say Kyle Sloter. Lindsay will make the 53-man roster on the strength of his performance on special teams alone. But how much more can Lindsay can contribute? Can he be the NFL’s next mighty mite? OK, let’s not get carried away. Lindsay is not Maurice Jones-Drew, the 5-foot-8 back who rushed for 8,167 yards and 68 touchdowns in nine pro seasons. Using Darren Sproles and Danny Woodhead as a template, however, an optimistic but not totally unrealistic projection for Lindsay would be 100 touches from scrimmage as a rookie, with 300 yards on the ground and 300 yards as a receiver. For a player NFL regarded as too small, it would be a huge impact.