ENGLEWOOD http://www.detroitlionsteamonline.com/austin-bryant-jersey , Colo. (AP)major shifts are afoot for the Denver Broncos in the wake of the team’s most disappointing season in decades . A day after deciding to retain head coach Vance Joseph, Elway said he’s expanding Gary Kubiak’s front office role to help him in free agency and the draft. ”I’m not sure what his title is going to be,” Elway said Tuesday. ”I don’t even know what his title is now.” Kubiak returned to the Broncos last summer in a scouting capacity seven months after stepping down as their head coach over health concerns. As a senior personnel adviser, Kubiak scouted college and pro players and provided input on Denver’s offense to Joseph, a protege and first-year head coach with defensive roots. Elway said he considered firing his head coach following Denver’s 5-11 finish, which was the worst in his seven seasons as the Broncos’ chief football executive. ”It’s my responsibility to think about other options to see what would be best for the football team,” said Elway, who decided against embarking on a search for his fourth head coach in five years. Elway said he shoulders some of the blame for Denver’s dismal season and aims to fix the roster deficiencies this offseason to give Joseph a better hand. ”Looking back I feel good about the fact that we can stay where we are,” Elway said. ”With Vance making some changes on his staff … we’ll have a chance to get better.” Joseph jettisoned six assistants on New Year’s Day, including longtime running backs coach Eric Studesville, receivers coach Tyke Tolbert, O-line coach Jeff Davidson and special teams coordinator Brock Olivo. Joseph said he wanted to ”change the culture so we could get back to pushing our players to be the best that they can be and getting our best players to play at their best all the time.” Studesville, whose firing rankled running back C.J. Anderson and other Broncos, is interviewing for the Giants’ head coaching job Thursday. Joseph said he’s also taking the interim tag off offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave , who was promoted from quarterbacks coach when Mike McCoy was fired midseason with the Broncos in the midst of an eight-game skid that was their longest in a half-century. ”I think how we played offensively after we hired Billy was my vision of offense: to run the football, control the games Max Scharping Jersey , play great defense and to minimize the errors by the quarterback,” Joseph said. The Broncos were 5-0 when running the ball more than throwing it and 0-11 when they didn’t. Although they ranked third in the league in defense, they allowed 29 touchdown throws. Only the Giants, with 32, allowed more. The offense sputtered behind the turnstile trio of QBs Trevor Siemian, Brock Osweiler and Paxton Lynch, who combined for 19 TD throws, 22 interceptions and none of them topped Tim Tebow’s career passer rating of 75.3. Asked if one of the three QBs under contract for next season – Siemian, Lynch and Chad Kelly – could be the starter next season, Elway said, ”I don’t know,” avoiding an endorsement for any of them, all of whom are his draft picks. ”There is no doubt we have to get better at that position,” Elway said. ”For us to have a chance to get better, we have to get better at that position.” Even with a new QB, Elway acknowledged there might not be any quick fixes to return to the playoffs. ”That is our goal. That’s our mindset. Whether we can get there or not, I don’t want to raise the expectation level by saying Brian Burns Jersey , `Yes, automatically we’re going to get back there,”’ Elway said. ”But, our goals have not changed for the Denver Broncos and what we want to do – and that’s to compete for world championships. Now, we have to build toward that process. That starts now. Hopefully, we can get back to where we’re very competitive.” Joseph said he’ll change some things in his own approach in 2018. ”Early on in the season, I didn’t do a good job of pushing our coaches to make the proper changes that I thought could have helped us,” Joseph said. ”I allowed guys to coach – that was my goal – but I wasn’t very good at coaching the coaches. I’ll get better at that. That was one of my shortcomings. Elway said he, too, is open to blunt self-assessments. ”I don’t have all the answers,” Elway said when asked what he had learned in 2017. ”I want to search and find all the answers because I want this team to be as good as it can possibly be. I’m fortunate in the fact that I played for a long time. I’ve been in this job now for seven years. So, therefore, I’m always trying to get better. As soon as I think I have it down, I’ll retire.” — RENTON, Wash. (AP) — Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Tyler Lockett was already going to face heightened expectations coming off a breakout season during which he became Russell Wilson’s favorite target.Then Doug Baldwin was released — likely headed toward retirement — and Lockett was left with a new role.“His presence, that’s the biggest thing that is going to be missed,” Lockett said Tuesday. “It’s kind of hard when you’ve always had a vet to be able to teach you the ropes http://www.pantherscheapshop.com/cheap-authentic-greg-little-jersey , allow you to be able to learn the ins and outs on the field and off the field, and how to carry yourself in the type of world we live in. Different stuff like that. Not to have that every single day is going to be hard. It’s very hard to transition, but each and every day and each and every year something new happens.”And then Lockett added, “It’s time for me to step up and fulfill the role I’m called to be in this year.”Replacing its most consistent and productive wide receiver from the past half-dozen years is one of the major challenges Seattle will face going into training camp and the start of the season. Baldwin led Seattle in catches in four straight seasons from 2014-17 before Lockett had a career-high 57 receptions and 10 touchdowns last season to lead the Seahawks. Baldwin dealt with injuries most of the year, but still finished with 50 catches in the regular season.Seattle did its part in the draft by taking three wide receivers — highlighted by the selection of DK Metcalf — to try to fill some of the void left by Baldwin’s departure. But those new faces will be looking to Lockett as the most experienced pass catcher in Seattle’s locker room.“I think it happens naturally. They watch the way he works. He doesn’t have to say much just because of the way he works,” offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer said.Lockett showed last season that he was fully recovered from the broken leg he suffered late in the 2016 season, an injury that still affected him in 2017. His 57 receptions came on just 70 targets. His catch percentage of 81.4% was among the highest in the league for wide receivers. But Lockett was able to get open as much as he did in part because Baldwin was on the field, even in a limited capacity due to his injuries. The attention paid to Baldwin helped Lockett thrive.The loss of Baldwin may allow Seattle to move Lockett around the field more than in the past, including opportunities to work as a slot receiver and see if that could be another area where Lockett can exploit defenses. Or, as Schottenheimer described, “The best weapon for us is when they don’t know where Tyler will be.”“For me it’s all about just being able to further my game wherever I’m at,” Lockett said. “Wherever I’m at, it’s all about trying to get open or get other people open. And that’s what it’s all about.”