logo
Two Broncos employees named on The Athletic's '50 under 40' list

Two Broncos employees named on The Athletic's '50 under 40' list

USA Today08-03-2025
Two Broncos employees named on The Athletic's '50 under 40' list
After the Denver Broncos' successful 2024 campaign that concluded with a playoff appearance, the Broncos found themselves with a few more honorees, this time from the sideline and from the front office.
The Athletic recently released its annual "50 under 40" list, and a pair of Broncos employees made the cut. Quarterbacks coach Davis Webb and Vice President of Community Impact/Executive Director of the Denver Broncos Foundation Allie Engelken were recognized as two individuals who are "under 40 years old and shaping the NFL landscape," via Aric DiLalla of the team's official website.
Webb, 33, was a first-time quarterbacks coach on head coach Sean Payton's staff in 2023, where he helped then-Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson to significantly better numbers than his 2022 campaign. Webb is also a former NFL quarterback who played for the Buffalo Bills and New York Giants. In 2024, Webb helped rookie quarterback Bo Nix (a player only six years Webb's junior) to several team and NFL records throughout the year.
Engelken also has an impressive resume at under age 40. In her sixth year with the Broncos, one of Engelkin's biggest projects is as the face of the recent rollout from the team's ALL IN. ALL COVERED. campaign, which will bring all 277 Colorado high schools free Riddell Axiom helmets.
Both Webb and Engelkin will surely be impactful in the future for the Broncos, and hopefully part of the team's reemergence into the upper AFC echelon of teams.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Louis Rees-Zammit became "fed up" with NFL
Louis Rees-Zammit became "fed up" with NFL

NBC Sports

timea few seconds ago

  • NBC Sports

Louis Rees-Zammit became "fed up" with NFL

The NFL means Not For Long, in more ways than one. For Welsh rugby star Louis Rees-Zammit, it didn't take much time for him to realize that a pro football career was not in the cards. So he pulled the plug and went back to his original sport. 'I just felt like I was kind of wasting my talent out there,' Rees-Zammit said, via the Times. 'It's very difficult to get into the NFL if you haven't gone through the college system. You just don't get the same opportunities as those boys. I was getting minimal reps, and it was just something that I was fed up with when I was practicing there.' During his time with the Chiefs and Jaguars, Rees-Zammit witnessed the ever-revolving door. 'It was absolutely brutal,' he said. 'I was seeing new players every day, players cut every day. It was pretty tough, and I knew that going out there.' Rees-Zammit did not make it to the active roster for any NFL team. He spent time with both the Chiefs and Jaguars. He played some preseason football. But, ultimately, he decided he wouldn't make it. The kicker may have come from witnessing the influx of a new crop of college players during the 2025 offseason program. That's the case every year. Fresh prospects, who have been playing tackle football for years. And so Rees-Zammit has returned to the sport that he grew up playing, where that experience gives him a significant advantage against someone like, say, a career pro football player who decides to take up rugby on a whim.

Microsoft and NFL announce multiyear partnership to use AI to enhance game day analysis
Microsoft and NFL announce multiyear partnership to use AI to enhance game day analysis

CNBC

timea few seconds ago

  • CNBC

Microsoft and NFL announce multiyear partnership to use AI to enhance game day analysis

Microsoft and the NFL announced on Wednesday that they're extending their partnership to bring real-time game data and analysis to coaches and players using Microsoft Copilot and Azure artificial intelligence. The multiyear partnership will upgrade the NFL's sideline viewing system by equipping 32 teams with more than 2,500 custom-built Microsoft Surface Copilot tablets to enhance data collection during game days. Microsoft and the NFL said the deal will also support operations by helping managers track factors such as weather delays or technical equipment issues. The NFL and Microsoft are not disclosing how long the extension will be or the total cost of the deal. "Enhancing the league is a responsibility we take seriously, and Microsoft has been a trusted sideline technology partner for over a decade. With Microsoft's AI technologies, including Copilot, we see tremendous opportunities to elevate the gameday experience for our clubs and deliver an even more compelling product to our fans," NFL Chief Information Officer Gary Brantley said in a press release. The extension builds on a long-standing partnership between Microsoft and the NFL. Since the 2014 season, all NFL teams have had access to league-provided, specially configured Microsoft Surface tablets, according to the NFL. Previously, Microsoft had more than 2,300 Surface sideline viewing system devices installed across the NFL. NFL Deputy CIO Aaron Amendolia told CNBC in an interview that the existing tablets have already been swapped out for the preseason and the new devices are being used on the field now. He said that during live games, players have only seconds on the bench between plays to analyze formations and look at different angles and pictures. AI helps players and coaches filter through that tremendous amount of data automatically, Amendolia said. "This is not AI making decisions. It's not AI informing decisions. What it really is, is AI allowing people to get at information faster with less manual intervention," Amendolia said. For coaches, Amendolia said game data such as snap counts or personnel counts on the field can be fed into an Excel sheet in real time with Copilot, which frees them from doing such tasks and calculations themselves. Most recently during the 2025 NFL Combine, coaches and scouts used Microsoft Azure AI to evaluate more than 300 prospective players for selection in the NFL draft. Microsoft said Wednesday that clubs will soon be able to use AI for drafts outside of the NFL Combine, as well as for productivity across all business functions, including finance, human resources and events. Football club staff will also soon be able to use AI agents for player scouting and salary cap management, Microsoft said. The league has already implemented a type of artificial intelligence into its OnePass fan guide app for events, Amendolia said, that can help with fan questions and answers. He said the NFL is trying to train that so-called agentic AI to be more customer service focused. The tech giant is also separately working to infuse Azure AI video tools during teams' practice sessions to help with coaching, evaluations and player injury assessments. Amendolia said this video component will involve automatically analyzing metadata so users can quickly find certain players, camera angles or plays in video footage.

ESPN analysts on Colts benching Anthony Richardson for Daniel Jones: 'Tough season' ahead
ESPN analysts on Colts benching Anthony Richardson for Daniel Jones: 'Tough season' ahead

Indianapolis Star

timea minute ago

  • Indianapolis Star

ESPN analysts on Colts benching Anthony Richardson for Daniel Jones: 'Tough season' ahead

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson has reached a tipping point in his career, according to a couple of ESPN NFL analysts. On August 19, the Colts named Daniel Jones their starting quarterback for the 2025 season. Louis Riddick and Ryan Clark believe Richardson's response to the benching will go a long way in determining whether he remains in the league long term. Riddick said Richardson, the No. 4 overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, is going through a "brutal" stretch. 'Anthony is not without responsibility in this. And he knows that, too," Riddick said Wednesday on "Get Up." "He has spoken to that, too. And this is a hell of a hard lesson for him to have to learn. This is going to be a tough season for him. It really is. He's going to have to do some serious soul searching about, 'How do I perfect my process, so I never have to face this, feel this way again?' Because it's got to be brutal.' Jones and Richardson had similar statistics for most of training camp and in preseason games, but coach Shane Steichen highlighted the consistency of handling situations at the line of scrimmage favoring Jones. "I think Daniel did a great job doing that," he said. "AR has made strides in that area, but I do think he needs to develop." Clark agrees with Riddick that this season will challenge Richardson. 'He has to take his professionalism up a level. ... He has to show a level of football character to being the backup that changes not only the mindset for the Colts but the perception of him outside the building.' Richardson said he had "no hard feelings" over the move. His agent, Deiric Jackson, on Tuesday expressed disappointment, adding: "We have a lot to discuss." Jones started 69 of the 70 games in which he played for the New York Giants from 2019-24. New York when 24-44-1 in games he started. He had the NFL's lowest interception percentage (1.1%) in 2022, his one playoff appearance with the Giants (9-6-1). He passed for a career-high 3,205 yards with 15 touchdowns and 5 interceptions that season. Jones had a league-leading 19 fumbles as a rookie in 2019. Jones signed a one-year contract that counts $14.5 million toward the salary cap on March 11. Jones attended Duke, where he played from 2016-18, appearing in 36 games, and passing for 8,201 yards, 52 touchdowns and 29 interceptions. He also rushed for 13,23 yards and 17 TDs. Jones missed the last 8 games of the 2023 season with an ACL tear. He has also missed 9 games with neck injuries and 7 games with other injuries in his NFL career. Anthony Richardson suffered a dislocated pinkie on his right hand in the Colts' preseason opener against the Baltimore Ravens. He missed the rest of that game but did not miss any practice or game time afterward. Richardson played four games in his rookie season of 2023, missing time first with a concussion and then the rest of the season with a shoulder injury suffered in Week 5 or 6?? Richardson appeared in 11 games in 2024, missing four games because of a back and hip injuries. He was also benched for two games. Richardson appeared in 24 games at Florida from 2020-22, only playing reguarly in the 2022 season. He completed 54.7% of his passes for 3,105 yards, 24 touchdowns and 15 interceptions. He also rushed for 1,116 yards and 12 touchdowns. 23. The Colts picked Richardson No. 4 overall in the 2023 NFL Draft.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store