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Durangoans’ faith vindicated: Denver’s defense leads the way

Broncos beat Carolina Panthers 24-10 in Super Bowl 50

SANTA CLARA, Calif. – Von Miller and the rest of Denver’s dominant defense realized the only way to ditch their doubters was to bring home the silver ball from the Golden Gate City.

There’s no denying Denver now.

The Lombardi Trophy is headed back to the Mile High City, thanks to a defense that hammered Cam Newton like he’d never been hit and hounded the rest of the Carolina Panthers into bobbles, bumbles and fumbles in a 24-10 beat-down that was both epic and classic.

Seven sacks.

Four takeaways.

Any more questions?

The “Orange Rush” finished first in the NFL in sacks, yards per play, pass defense and total defense this season. But their detractors dissed them all year, dismissing all that dominance and turning them into the Rodney Dangerfield of defenses.

Few Doubts in Durango

Durangoans downtown Sunday night had few doubts

True nationally perhaps, but few in Durango ever doubted their heroes. Their loyalty would be rewarded.

“I’m very excited but pissed they didn’t score a touchdown,” said Durango resident Gabriel Ulsh, let down after the Denver Broncos settled for a field goal on their opening drive. It gave them a 3-0 lead they would never relinquish.

At Derailed Pourhouse, Ulsh reflected on Super Bowls past.

“They sucked two years ago. It was a heartbreaker,” he said. But when the team won in the 1990s, “The town went crazy. There were gunshots. You name it.”

Durango native Joni Ditzler said she took a bath earlier Sunday to calm her nerves before the big game.

“Now I’m tingling,” she said. “My dad and I have been watching the Broncos our whole life. He’s in Estes Park, so we’re texting during the game.”

At Steamworks, Dana Moody and her husband caught the game by chance. Visiting from California, the couple rushed to Walmart this weekend to stock up on Broncos gear.

“We know its a gun-toting state, so we put on our Bronco gear,” she said.

But across the nation, all anyone seemed to be talking about in the lead-up to Super Bowl 50 was Newton’s dances and dabs and the “Thieves Ave.” secondary after the Panthers piled up 48 takeaways, including nine in the playoffs.

“I’m telling you, we don’t get no respect,” cornerback Chris Harris Jr. had said 72 hours before the Broncos got the chance to change all that.

Cornerback Aqib Talib put it best: “We got goal boards in our locker room, and we see everything that we’ve done this year. But everything will be forgotten by next season if we don’t come home with that trophy.”

They’re taking it home, proof they belong right up there with the ‘85 Bears, the ‘00 Ravens and the ‘02 Buccaneers.

Maybe above them all.

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