Home Blog Page 23

Turning my grief into purpose: A father’s promise

Hispanic Heritage Series – Part V of V

From the Publisher:  Zee Ferrufino has been a longstanding community leader with a business minded vision and one of giving back to the community. Ferrufino’s career in radio has expanded from KBNO to other radio stations.

His presence in Spanish-language radio has provided his listeners with entertainment, news and information. In 1990, Ferrufino lost his 10-year-old son, Robby to cancer. That tragic journey left Ferrufino and family with extreme sadness and loss. 

Given Ferrufino’s positive nature he has turned that loss into a positive partnership with St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital in memory of his son, Robby. Ferrufino’s story is about keeping his son’s memory alive and helping children who are experiencing cancer and the challenges their families face. Ferrufino is dedicated to fundraising for St. Jude’s year after year. A man of vision, compassion, and a savvy business sense he continues work with St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital, helping children, families and keeping his son Robby’s memory alive. 

Losing his son has changed his life forever. Today, he turns that pain into hope for thousands of children by supporting the mission of St. Jude.


By Zee Ferrufino

Photo courtesy: Zee Ferrufino

I’m an immigrant originally from La Paz, Bolivia, in South America. Today, I live in Denver, Colorado, where I own and manage Spanish-language radio stations.

Through my work, I’ve been blessed with the opportunity to connect with my community and amplify causes that truly matter. One of those causes — perhaps the one closest to my heart — is St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital®. 

My connection to the mission of St. Jude began during one of the most painful moments of my life. In 1990, I lost my son Robby to cancer. That experience changed me forever. Robby was only 10 years old, a joyful, vibrant child who was always smiling. We spent a lot of time together because he loved coming with me to work.

Photo courtesy: Zee Ferrufino

Once, at an airport, Robby met Mother Teresa of Calcutta. When she told him she would pray for him, he asked her instead to pray for the children at the local hospital in Colorado where he received treatment. He was so generous that he was known for giving away gifts he received to other kids there. At such a young age, he also had the chance to attend a national football championship and a presidential inauguration.

He became a source of inspiration for my family and my community. I think about him every single day.

That experience taught me one of life’s greatest lessons: to have faith. And I knew I couldn’t just stand by and do nothing. My motivation to get involved with St. Jude came from a deep desire to help other children — supporting their healing, contributing to the search for cures, and making sure other families had the chance we didn’t. 

Since then, I’ve had the privilege of raising thousands of dollars each year — more than $60,000 annually — to support this mission. I’ve also visited the hospital, and seeing firsthand the impact it has on children’s lives has been truly transformative.

What inspires me to keep supporting St. Jude is simple: the mission never ends. The challenge is still there, and more children need our help every day. We cannot give up. Every dollar raised, every message shared, every event held is one more step toward a future where no child dies from cancer 

I know my support has helped make the hospital’s work possible and has contributed to the incredible efforts of the doctors searching for cures. What gives me the most hope is knowing that all the research and discoveries made at St. Jude are shared with hospitals around the world. That means every donation has a global impact.

Being part of the St. Jude community carries a deeper meaning for me. It’s a commitment I’m proud of. As a Latino, as a father, and as a member of this community, I’m honored to contribute to such a noble cause — one that brings comfort to children fighting for their lives at the very beginning of their journey. 

My dream is for the work of St. Jude to continue, and for the resources to never run out.

Support or donate to St. Jude at https://www.stjude.org/donate/donate-to-st-jude.html.

Broncos defense grounds Jets in London

0

Denver’s defense packed the passports and the punch, grinding out a 13–11 win over the New York Jets at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The Broncos held New York to 82 total yards, with nine sacks for 55 yards lost and just 45 passing yards allowed as the unit squeezed the life out of the Jets’ offense.

Denver Broncos against the New York Jets at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, England on October 12, 2025. Photo by Gabriel Christus / Denver Broncos

The Broncos’ defense was relentless from the first series to the final whistle. Justin Fields never found air against Denver’s pass rush, completing just nine passes for 45 yards and taking 9 sacks for a stagering loss of 55 yards. 

Bo Nix managed the moment: 19-of-30 for 174 yards and a 16-yard TD to Nate Adkins to close the first half, the day’s lone touchdown and the difference in a game dominated by defense. Wil Lutz supplied the rest with field goals from 57 and 27 yards, while Denver overcame a third-quarter safety to slam the door in the fourth.

From start to finish, the front swarmed: pressures stacked into drive-killing losses, edge contain choked off scrambles, and the back end erased quick-game outlets. The result was a time-of-possession edge and a flight home with a win that felt like an identity statement.  Final: Denver Broncos 13, New York Jets 11.

In other sports the Denver Nuggets closed it out with defense and composure. Nikola Jokic: 12 points, 9 rebounds, while the rest of the rotation did the heavy lifting late.

Colorado Avalanche 3, Buffalo Sabres 1 — Colorado tightened the screws in the third and moved to 3–0–1 on the young season, with balanced scoring and steady goaltending.

Pueblo voters will decide on who calls the shots

Is it the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning for the city of Pueblo’s experiment with a strong mayor form of government? Voters will make that decision on November 4th when they vote on the city’s Ballot Question 2C. Will it be staying the course with a strong mayor or revert to what it had for years?

Until 2019, Pueblo, like a majority of Colorado cities, was run under a city manager form of government. The position is not an elected office, but one selected by a majority of the city council. The position is essentially a non-political chief administrative officer.

With a city manager, the mayor is usually the president of the city council and serves mainly in a ceremonial and informal capacity for things like ribbon cuttings or making non-political proclamations.

A city manager’s role is administrative with duties that include working with department heads and ensuring efficiency in city government. The city manager also interacts with city council to enact council directives.

A strong mayor form of government, as Denver has, gives the mayor the responsibility for setting policy and legislative agendas, drafting budgets, overseeing public safety, exercising veto power over city council, appointing directors and staff positions and serving as the face of city government.

Current Pueblo Mayor Heather Graham, who also once served on Pueblo’s city council, favors retaining the current system. A request for comments from Graham went unanswered but in a recent debate with city councilman Dennis Flores, the mayor said Pueblo should stay the course, that it has benefitted from the current system.

Graham pointed to housing growth, rising applications for building permits and a cleaner city. Having a strong mayor, she said, also minimizes what she called ‘dysfunction’ on city council. 

Flores, who is term limited and also ran unsuccessfully for mayor when the city was deciding on shelving the city manager model, wants the old system back. He labels the experiment a failure. “I’ve worked under both forms of government,” he said. Pueblo’s population is simply too small to have a single person deciding policy. It needs a city manager that answers to council. 

Flores thinks the years under a strong mayor have actually been detrimental to the city’s growth and image. “We would be a lot better off in a lot of areas, especially in the area of economic development.” 

Flores, a Pueblo native, said with two strong mayors—Nick Gradisar served as mayor before Graham—the city has floundered. “The last five years,” he believes, “everything has been slow walked” and it is giving outside investors a wrong impression of the city. Too many developers with an eye on the city, he said, have become “frustrated and walked away.” I was told when we went to this form of government seven years ago,” he said, “that it was a big mistake and that we would live to regret it.” It was, he says, a prescient prediction.

Nonetheless, it is what voters wanted in 2018. On November 4th, they will once again decide what is best for the city. While Pueblo is the largest city and economic hub of southern Colorado, its population of 110,000, Flores believes, is just too small to continue with a single person calling the shots.

“There are 271 cities in Colorado that have a city manager form of government,” Flores said. Only three—Denver, Colorado Springs and Aurora—are large enough to justify a strong mayor form of government. 

Strong mayors have dominated for decades across the country with many attaining almost mythical status. But they have all been in huge population centers. The best examples are New York, with mayors like LaGuardia, Bloomberg and Guiliani and Chicago with bombastic figures like Richard Daley who ran the city with an iron hand for five consecutive terms.

Nobel Prize is as elusive as it is a great honor

0
David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

Maria Corina Machado Parisca of Venezuela won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize. No doubt that President Trump is very disappointed as he and his people appear to have tirelessly campaigned for the honor.

That goes to show that no matter how much one wants something and how political one gets in trying to achieve it, there are honors that reflect objective truths to jurors that do not include alternative realities and narratives in their thinking. Ironically, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a Trump loyalist, was among those that recommended Machado for the Prize.

Along these lines is the work of Nikola Jokic who helped to make the Denver Nuggets worthy of world championships without seemingly concerned about his winning three Most Valuable Player NBA awards in the process. He has reached so much for something beyond himself that anything personal is secondary.

I first became very interested in the meaning of the Nobel Prize recognition when one of my three favorite intellectuals, Octavio Paz, received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1990. The others are Carlos Fuentes who also was nominated several times for the honor and Gabriel Garcia Marquez who received the Nobel award for Literature in 1982.

I had the honor of spending time with Paz and Fuentes. Paz and his devastating dissection of the Mexican soul left an imprint in my own being and sense of self. 

Fuentes’ work as a premier novelist of Mexico illuminated the human side of a dark pre-Colombian past that is today becoming the foundation of the Mexican new and emerging identity. He came to Denver several times and with every talk he gave and every conversation we had, confirmed a literary treasure, sometimes hidden in plain sight.

Also, who can forget Garcia Marquez and his great novel One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967), the seven generations of the Buendia family and the village of Macondo he created. His magical realism reinvented the lives of that family and their community several times.

The Nobel Prize is awarded in Chemistry, Physics, Literature, Economics, Medicine and Peace. Although the awards have an equal status, Peace has garnered the most attention because it is awarded for international work in the most sensitive of areas. 

The first American to receive this award was Theodore Roosevelt for mediating the Russo-Japanese War in 1906. This was followed by President Woodrow Wilson in 1919 for his role as a founder of the League of Nations, Secretary of State Frank Kellogg in 1929 for the Kellogg-Brian pact that renounced war as a national policy, Secretary of State George Marshall in 1953 for the Marshall Plan to reconstruct Europe, Martin Luther King in 1964 for civil rights advocacy, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in 1973 for his effort to end the Vietnam War, Vice President Al Gore for his advocacy on the environment and President Barack Obama for his contributions to international diplomacy.

The Nobel awards in other categories include Milton Friedman and Paul Krugman in Economics in 1976 and 2008 respectively and Toni Morrison, the Black writer for her work in Literature in 1992. It is clear that the efforts of all the Nobel Prize awardees, Americans and others around the world have historic significance.

It is also clear that constructing an elaborate campaign and using political power to garner a successful outcome in this regard does not guarantee that the institution will bend to that power. For the nominee, the Nobel process is an exercise in achievement and much luck.

New Broncos Orange Cash Scratch offers instant $100,000 wins

Any day can feel like game day with the Colorado Lottery’s new $5 Denver Broncos Orange Cash Scratch ticket. Inspired by the team’s classic 1970’s defensive unit, the limited-edition ticket lets fans celebrate throwback Broncos pride with a chance to win up to $100,000 instantly, plus unforgettable second-chance prizes including Denver Broncos season tickets and a VIP trip to the 2026 Draft in Pittsburgh.

Licensed under Scientific Games, LLC, the limited-edition Orange Cash Scratch ticket celebrates the iconic throwback Broncos orange and gives fans an opportunity to score big both on the spot and through bonus drawings.

Second-Chance Bonus Draws

Non-winning tickets still carry plenty of power. Fans can scan their non-winning $5 Orange Cash Scratch tickets in the Colorado Lottery mobile app or enter the 22-digit code online for a shot at:

  • Grand Prize: A VIP trip for two to the 2026 Draft in Pittsburgh, valued at more than $27,000, featuring premium hospitality, exclusive behind-the-scenes access, and unforgettable experiences. (Drawing date: Jan. 13, 2026)
  • Second Prize: Two pairs of 100-level stadium season tickets for the 2026 Denver Broncos season. (Drawing date: Dec. 16, 2025)
  • Third Prize: Two pairs of 300-level stadium season tickets for the 2026 Denver Broncos season. (Drawing date: Dec. 16, 2025)
  • Fourth Prize: Six pairs of 500-level stadium season tickets for the 2026 Denver Broncos season. (Drawing date: Nov. 18, 2025)

All entries received during the promotion period will be eligible for each consecutive drawing. However, winners of a lower-tier prize will not be eligible to win a higher-tier prize.

“The Denver Broncos are an iconic part of Colorado’s sports legacy, and we are thrilled to give fans the chance to celebrate their team through the Orange Cash Scratch ticket,” said Senior Director of the Colorado Lottery, Tom Seaver. “From instant prizes to unforgettable experiences, this game is all about bringing more wins to Broncos Country.”

Each of (A) Denver Broncos Team, LLC d/b/a the Denver Broncos Football Club, and (B) On Location Events, are acting solely as prize providers and branding partners in connection with the drawings and are not responsible in any way for administering or conducting the promotion. None of the NFL Entities have offered or sponsored this promotion in any way.

For more information, visit coloradolottery.com.

Early detection starts with a mammogram

0

Breast Cancer Awareness Month is a reminder to get screened

In support of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment is urging Coloradans to take a life-saving step: schedule a mammogram.

According to the American Cancer Society, breast cancer accounts for about 30 por ciento (or 1 in 3) of all new cancers among women each year in the United States, and more than 42,000 women are expected to die from it this year.

When breast cancer is detected early, the chances of successful treatment and survival improve significantly. 

“A mammogram can detect breast cancer early, and it can be completed at a low or no cost,” said Ian Kahn, CDPHE cancer program manager and co-chair of the Colorado Cancer Coalition. “This Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we encourage women 40 and older to get screened annually; or however frequently your doctor recommends; to help detect this disease early.”

A mammogram is an important, routine breast screening that can detect abnormal breast tissue and determine breast tissue density. Follow-up testing, like a biopsy, may be needed with an abnormal mammogram result. Consult your provider to get connected with follow-up testing and treatment should a cancer diagnosis be made. Nearly 100 por ciento of women who find breast cancer early survive for at least five years. Breast cancer death rates in the United States have dropped by 44 por ciento since 1989, according to the National Breast Cancer Foundation, with much of that decrease due to increased screenings.

Additional information and resources:

  • Contact your doctor or health care provider to set up a screening. Some imaging centers don’t require a referral. 
  • Life-saving mammograms are also available free of charge to individuals who qualify through the Women’s Wellness Connection program, which operates at over 100 clinics across the state. The Women’s Wellness Connection program serves individuals aged 21 to 64 who are without health insurance or have limited insurance and demonstrate financial need. Find a Women’s Wellness connection clinic near you.
  • The Colorado Cancer Coalition lists a variety of local and national resources available.
  • Visit the National Breast Cancer Awareness Month page for more information and ways you can help raise awareness.

Our Government

White House

President Trump Declaration for Enduring Peace and Prosperity, ending more than two years of profound suffering and loss, opening a new chapter for the region defined by hope, security, and a shared vision for peace and prosperity.  President Trump along with President of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Emir of the State of Qatar, and President of the Republic of Türkiye pledged to work collectively to implement and sustain this legacy, upon which future generations may thrive together in peace.

Colorado Governor

Governor Polis released a statement welcoming the long-awaited release of the hostages who have been held captive since Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, and an end to the violence in Gaza, moving the region closer to peace after more than two years.  Governor Polis said, “I am encouraged by the beginning of this agreement and hope the release of the hostages sets the stage to rebuild Gaza and establish a peaceful, prosperous, and safe future for Palestinians, Israelis, and the Middle East.” 

Denver Mayor

Mayor Mike Johnston and the City and County of Denver today announced “Park Hill Park” will open to the public on Oct. 28. As the park is still in need of extensive renovations, public access will be restricted to daylight hours and limited, passive use such as walking, jogging, and enjoying nearby nature.

A Week In Review

0

Africa 

Dozens killed during South Africa bus crash 

At least 42 people were killed in South Africa when a bus overturned. The incident occurred at a steep mountain pass, and authorities are investigating the cause of the accident. Among those who were killed include seven children.  

Mali imposes tariffs on Americans

Officials in Mali introduced a bond of up to $10,000 for Americans who visit the country. The fee is like one imposed by the Trump Administration on Mali residents. The two countries have worked to improve diplomatic relations in recent months, including on subjects like counterterrorism cooperation and economic partnerships. 

Asia 

Earthquake hits Philippines 

A 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck the Philippines’ southern coast last week. At least one person was killed, and parts of the country experienced power cuts. Only a week before this earthquake, the Philippines also experienced another 6.9 magnitude earthquake that left 74 people dead. 

Taliban confirms it attacked Pakistani troops 

A spokesperson from the Taliban government said 58 Pakistani military members were killed. The Taliban accused Pakistan of violating Afghan airspace and bombing a market inside its border. Pakistan said the attacks were unprovoked and accused the Taliban of firing at citizens. 

Europe 

Russian strikes target Kyiv 

At least 540,000 people in Ukraine experienced power outages after overnight Russian missile and drone attacks occurred. Officials from Russia confirmed it used weapons to target energy facilities used by Ukraine’s military. The country has recently escalated attacks on Ukraine’s energy facilities and transport infrastructure. 

German president set to visit the UK 

Germany President Frank-Walter Steinmeier is planning to visit the UK later this year. It will be the first German state visit to the country in 27 years. Visits like this are typically used to reinforce alliances and to encourage trade. Last summer, Germany and the UK agreed to a treaty that will create a direct rail link between London and Berlin. 

Latin America 

María Corina Machado wins Nobel Peace Prize 

María Corina Machado, Venezuela’s opposition leader, has been awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize. The Nobel Committee said Machado displays extraordinary civilian courage. In particular, Machado has campaigned against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro Moros, who has ruled the country for 12 years.  

Peru president removed from office 

Peru’s Congress overwhelmingly voted to remove President Dina Boluarte from office. Boluarte is one of the world’s most unpopular leaders, and under her leadership, there has been frequent protests, scandals and investigations, and a surge in gang violence. Jose Jeri will serve as interim president. 

North America 

Deadly explosion at Tennessee factory 

At least 16 people are believed to have been killed after a major explosion at a Tennessee munitions factory. The explosion occurred in Bucksnort, which is located about 56 miles southwest of Nashville. Officials are still investigating what caused the incident. All operations at the plant have been suspended. 

India/Canada look to restore ties 

Canada Foreign Minister Anita Anand traveled to India to visit with her counterpart  S. Jaishankar and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The two countries are working to restore ties after a Sikh separatist leader was killed in Canada. In 2023, former Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau accused India of being linked to the killing. This led to both countries suspending visa services and expelling each other’s top diplomats. 

Republicans wage war on health care, Dems vow to fight on

0

As the frenzy for candidate Donald Trump’s nomination began building last summer, the convention hall was brimming with all the campaign kitsch you expect. But the signs flooding the hall along with a chorus of approving chants were unlike any seen or heard at any nominating gathering before. 

They were ugly, they were racist. ‘Mass Deportation Now,’ ‘Deport Illegals NOW!’ But more than that, they were reflections of a month’s long campaign promise Trump made and now, as President, is keeping even as the government he oversees is shutting down.

Trump voters were giddy with the promised ICE roundups in cities across the country. But polls show a majority of Americans deplore the often soulless and brutish nature employed by masked agents.

A recent Homeland Security raid on a Chicago apartment complex took on the look of a Hollywood movie. In the dark of night, ICE agents repelled down from helicopters, dozens of vehicles jammed the streets, doors were kicked in, and chaos ensued. Immigrants as well as American citizens were detained or arrested.

Similar images of young and old, men, women and children, even infants, being swept up and taken to detention facilities have become daily fare in newscasts with some detainees flown to places as distant as Africa. 

The roundups are exactly what so many of Trump’s acolytes wanted. Then something happened and they weren’t so happy. His party, failing to get everything it wanted from Democrats who didn’t rubberstamp a funding bill, allowed the government to shut down. 

Then things got worse. Trump greenlit the plan he once denied knowledge of. Project 2025, a blueprint for thinning government, and orchestrated by OMB Director Russell Vought, kicked in.

The two men met to finalize a blueprint for culling the federal workforce or as Trump said to “clear out dead wood, waste and fraud.” The plan would target up to 750,000 federal workers in “Democrat Agencies” (sic) including IRS, EPA, FDA, the U.S. Forest Service and more. 

Taking it further, by the weekend eight states, all blue, including Colorado, had billions in federal dollars designated for various projects suddenly cut. In Colorado, $550 million for clean energy projects simply vanished. 

Because of the overlap between the U.S. Forest Service and Colorado, Kristy Burnett, Communications Manager for the State Forest Service said, it is still too early to gauge the effects of the federal shutdown. But state workers, she said, will continue “to work every day to serve Colorado residents.”

Colorado’s federal workforce is estimated at 50,000, a number that has shrunk since Trump took over as President in January. Several thousand government workers were fired by Trump’s friend Elon Musk in his DOGE sweep. But nearly every county will feel some pain. 

While Pueblo has less than 700 federal workers, said city councilman Dennis Flores, the lost income and uncertainty of the shutdown are still painful. “What he’s (Trump) doing to blue states who did not support him,” he said, “is actually harming people,” including people who voted Republican. “It’s a form of cruelty.” 

A pillar of the budget that Democrats cannot abide is the cut Republicans are making in healthcare. But Republicans disagree, saying the fundamental cause of the shutdown is Democrats desire to extend healthcare benefits to undocumented immigrants. 

Republican leadership, including Vice President J. D. Vance, Senate leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson have repeatedly stated as much in defending the shutdown. While there may be some gray in their positions, some immigrants—though not undocumented—do receive health care benefits. 

Cuban and Haitian entrants and citizens of the Marshall Islands, Micronesia and Palau are entitled. But to suggest a new arrival or even a long residing undocumented person qualifies, as the Vice President said recently, is not accurate.

Still, the thread Republicans are using to sew their argument, is that Democrats are ready to provide billions in healthcare for “illegal aliens.” But on a number of occasions over the past week, television news anchors have interrupted these officials to correct the record on just who is and who is not eligible for healthcare benefits.

The reality is this: Undocumented immigrants can get certain healthcare under the 1986 EMTALA legislation signed by President Reagan. EMTALA, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, provides emergency medical care to all patients.  EMTALA also provides for all hospital patients whether they have Medicare or Medicaid coverage or not.

Denver Health and Hospitals, which serves one of Colorado’s highest number of Medicare and Medicaid patients, has so far not been affected by the shutdown, said Dr. Steve Federico, Chief Government and External Community Relations Officer. Also, Federico said, “We do not ask patients to disclose their immigration status as part of the care process.”

In justifying health care cuts, Republicans want to prevent “able bodied” men over age 18 from receiving Medicaid. “When you make young men work,” he said, “it’s good for them.” There are plenty of cuts the two parties differ on in the budget. But none is bigger than health care. 

Republicans have voted to cut as much as $1.1 trillion in federal health care spending through the decade. The cuts would reduce spending on Medicare, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act, Obamacare. Democrats call the cuts draconian and will result in as many as twelve million Americans losing insurance by 2034.

Democrats want to extend health care premiums provided through the ACA and keep insurance costs at current levels. Currently, these subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year. If the Republican budget holds, premiums, say Democrats, could rise by hundreds if not thousands of dollars in 2026. House Speaker Johnson said there is “zero chance” his party would capitulate to Democrats on Medicare and the ACA. With majorities in both houses, Democrats know they are in very difficult battle.

Nix Turns the Tide: Broncos shock Eagles with 4th quarter rally

0

Bo Nix showed veteran poise in his second year under center, leading Denver to a stunning 21–17 comeback win over the defending Super Bowl champions in Philadelphia.

Denver Broncos against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on October 5, 2025. Photo by Gabriel Christus / Denver Broncos

The Philadelphia Eagles, defending champs had the crowd, the momentum, and the lead. What they didn’t have was an answer for Bo Nix when it mattered most.

In his second year at the helm, Nix delivered his most defining performance yet, guiding the Denver Broncos to a gutsy 21–17 comeback victory over the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday. Down 17–3 early in the fourth, Nix orchestrated three consecutive scoring drives—methodical, composed, and efficient—to stun a crowd of nearly 70,000 and hand Denver its biggest win of the season.

Through three quarters, Nix and the offense looked outmatched. The Eagles’ front seven—led by Za’Darius Smith and Zach Baun—had sacked him twice and held Denver to just three points. Meanwhile, Jalen Hurts looked in command, hitting Dallas Goedert for a short touchdown and later connecting with Saquon Barkley on a 47-yard strike that electrified the stadium and put Philadelphia up 17–3.

Then, Nix flipped the script.

Opening the final quarter with renewed urgency, he leaned on J.K. Dobbins, who capped a 64-yard drive with a two-yard touchdown run to cut the deficit to seven. Denver’s defense responded in kind—Nik Bonitto and Ja’Quan McMillian combined for a crucial sack that forced a three-and-out.

From there, Nix took over. On the next possession, facing a long third down, he stood tall in the pocket and fired a strike to Courtland Sutton for 34 yards, then found Evan Engram on an 11-yard touchdown moments later. Showing his growing confidence, Nix stayed on the field for the two-point try and zipped a dart to Troy Franklin, giving Denver its first lead at 18–17 with just over seven minutes left.

After another defensive stand, Wil Lutz drilled a 36-yard field goal to extend the lead to four. The defense finished what Nix started, with Bonitto’s second sack of the game ending Philadelphia’s final drive.

“It’s all about belief,” Nix said afterward. “We’ve got a team that refuses to quit—no matter who’s across the field.”

For a Broncos squad that’s spent years searching for stability under center, Nix’s fourth-quarter composure against the reigning champs might be the clearest sign yet that they’ve found their quarterback—and their fight.