Broncos Country… what is happening right now? Ten straight wins. Ten. As in double-digits. As in “are we seriously doing this?” Because apparently yes. Yes we are. Denver walks into Sunday night, strolls out 24–17 over the Raiders, and now sits at 11-2, their best start since the Peyton-Manning-robot-neck season of 2015. Somebody cue the Super Bowl 50 highlight reel.
And the wild part? It didn’t even feel fluky. Bo Nix—literal rookie, looks like he should still be asking where homeroom is—comes out tossing 31-for-38. Smooth. Calm. Efficient. 212 yards and a rushing TD like it was nothing. Dude plays like he’s been in the league longer than half the defensive coordinators.
.@BoNix10 runs it in 🔥
📺: CBS pic.twitter.com/bNygiIZnrD
— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) December 7, 2025
But the real “holy hell” moment? Marvin Mims Jr. going 98 yards on a punt return like he stole something. A full-field sprint, house call, vibes immaculate. Pure electricity. If your jaw didn’t hit the floor, check your pulse.
HOW 'BOUT IT!#ProBowlVote + @marvindmims pic.twitter.com/H1tb5rJRQm
— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) December 7, 2025
Throw in Nik Bonitto harassing the Raiders backfield with two sacks, and suddenly the Broncos defense looks like they woke up and chose violence again. Vintage chaos. The good kind.
Nik Bonitto está FAMINTO! 🐴
📺: #DENvsLV ao vivo, em português, no NFL Game Pass pic.twitter.com/QyazP7XjPl
— NFL Brasil (@NFLBrasil) December 7, 2025
Now—because the gambling gods hate all of us—there was the late, super questionable, “was that really necessary?” penalty that let the Raiders kick a meaningless field goal to cover the spread. Absolutely brutal. Bettors screaming into pillows nationwide. The rage was instant. But for the actual football part? Zero impact. Denver still locked it down, still took the win, still strutted out with the AFC West lead and four games left to keep the heater alive.
the Broncos are officially That Team. Hot as lava. Confidence through the roof. Fans losing their minds. And for the first time in a long time, it’s not delusion—it’s actually happening on the field.
