football

Horse Tracks: Remembering Craig Morton

Yahoo Sports

Good morning, Broncos Country! Craig Morton, the Broncos’ Ring of Fame quarterback who helped Denver transition from NFL irrelevance to Super Bowl contender in the late 1970s, died May 9, the Broncos announced on Monday. We are saddened to learn of the passing of #BroncosROF quarterback Craig Morton, who died on Saturday at the age of 83.

Morton quarterbacked the Broncos from 1977-82 and led the team to its first playoff appearance and Super Bowl berth (XII vs. Dallas) in the 1977 season. 📰 »… pic.

twitter. com/3hpZT1vDss — Denver Broncos (@Broncos) May 11, 2026 Morton, drafted by the Cowboys in 1965, joined the Broncos in 1977 and led them to their first playoff appearance, first AFC Championship and first Super Bowl berth that season. With the help of the Orange Crush defense, Morton secured home playoff wins over two stalwart franchises, the Pittsburgh Steelers and Oakland Raiders, on the way to Super Bowl XII.

Morton had even spent several days in the hospital for a hip injury just before the Raiders game, where he led the Broncos Facing off against his former team, Morton and the Broncos fell short in Super Bowl XII, losing 27-10 behind eight turnovers. For his performance during that 1977 season, Morton was named the AFC’s Offensive Player of the Year as well as Pro Football Writers of America’s Comeback Player of the Year and Sporting News’ Player of the Year. “Craig Morton is unbelievable.

To me he’s the most valuable player in the National Football League this year. ” HAVEN MOSES, New YOrk times 1978 As a Bronco, Morton led the team to two division titles and three playoff berths, finishing his career in Denver as the quarterback with the most passing yards (11,895), passing touchdowns (74), pass attempts (1,594) and completions (907) in franchise history at the time. John Elway would shatter those records, but Morton’s 41 regular-season wins remains the third most in franchise history.