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Broncos HC Hackett chooses 64-yard FG try on 4th-and-5
Denver Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson (3) walks off the field following a 17-16 loss against the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Field. Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports

Nathaniel Hackett chooses 64-yard field goal try over Russell Wilson with two timeouts

Nathaniel Hackett very well may have a long career ahead of him as head coach of the Denver Broncos, but his tenure has started off in a head-scratchingly bad way.

The Broncos traded for Russell Wilson, one of the best quarterbacks in football, but paid a dear price for his services. They gave away three players, three 2022 draft picks — including a first and a second — and a 2023 first and second-round pick.

It was a monumental trade and quite the haul for the Seahawks in return, who were giving away their franchise, Super Bowl-winning, nine-time Pro Bowler quarterback. The Broncos went all-in with the trade for Wilson, though, but apparently, it was all for nothing. 

In the first game of the season against the Seahawks, to see Hackett take the ball out of Wilson's hands with the game on the line against his old team on Monday Night Football...well, it was just baffling.

Here's how it happened:

The Wilson-led Broncos got the football back after a punt on their own 22 with 4:02 to go in the game, down 17-16. The stage was set for Wilson to at the very least lead a game-winning field goal drive, and though that was ultimately attempted, the way it went down couldn't have gone worse for Hackett and his team.

Credit the Seahawks for forcing a 4th-and-5 after stopping a swing pass in the flats on third-and-14. Keep in mind, that the Broncos were at the Seattle 46, meaning they had a 64-yard field goal ahead of them. They also had two timeouts and one of the best quarterbacks in the league at their disposal, though, so easy decision, right?

Wrong.

Hackett, who was Aaron Rodgers' offensive coordinator in Green Bay for the past few seasons, had the option of letting Wilson take a shot at getting five yards, calling a timeout, and then continuing the drive (with one timeout still in their pocket, mind you) to see if they could make it at the very least an easier field goal.

The first-time NFL head coach instead decided to let the clock bleed down to 20 seconds before attempting a 64-yard field goal on fourth down, which the Broncos predictably missed.

Keep in mind that not only did the Broncos trade for Wilson but they also gave him a five-year, $242 million contract with $161 million of that guaranteed.

That's a ton of money to pay a quarterback just to take the ball out of his hands on the biggest play of the game. 

Hackett may be second-guessed for the rest of his career after that decision.

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