Banged Up Drumstick: The Drive 11/22/17
Nov 22, 2017, 6:01 PM
Wednesday November 22nd, 2017
The Drive with Big Al & DMac LIVE in studio! The guys decide what to call Bill Musgrave, and concur that Paxton is tall. The boys put together a Thanksgiving plate, with Emmanuel Sanders as the ham, Von and Elway as the turkey, and McManus as the rolls with Taylor & Charles filling the role of ‘cranberry sauce.’
The guys decide what to call Bill Musgrave, and concur that Paxton is tall. DMac tells Big Al he would have asked John Elway what responsibilities are his after Elway called the Broncos players soft. Al says Elway was cooking the soup and burned the vegetables. In the Big 3 @ 3:30, the guys discuss the players kneeling for the national anthem, and fans who are protesting that action by not watching games. DMac says there is no going back now, and Al is excited about the new CB tandem in KC with Peters & Revis. Also, it’s becoming apparent that Paxton has changed his study habits.
The boys put together a Thanksgiving plate, with Emmanuel Sanders as the ham, Von and Elway as the turkey, and McManus as the rolls with Taylor & Charles filling the role of ‘cranberry sauce.’ DMac is concerned about Paxton Lynch’s study habits, and Al says he didn’t know what playing hard was until he played with a winner. DMac says Paxton has received more than a fair opportunity, and hasn’t shown anything. Al says it’s time to prove our love to Lynch, and the boys take some calls on how many lineman the Broncos
DMac says he would be cool with moving Derek Wolfe to IR. Al can’t imagine sticking with Paxton even if he throws five interceptions like Nathan Peterman, and says he wants to lose the right way. Also, why Kirk Cousins wouldn’t want to come here to Denver, and what happens if Paxton plays well the rest of the year. Al wants to see more out of Cody Latimer, and DMac wants to see Jamaal Charles get a chance to succeed somewhere else. DMac is done with Isaiah McKenzie, and wants to see Hunter Sharp get playing time. Also, DMac says John Elway’s big problem is that he’s never been a good General Manager.
(Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)