After benching Russell Wilson, how long before Sean Payton loses trust of Broncos locker room?

With arrogance as ugly as it is unfounded, Broncos coach Sean Payton tapped into another page Wednesday from his big jerk playbook. He took the football away from Russell Wilson, because Wilson now serves Payton better as a scapegoat than a quarterback.

“I’m hopeful it gives us a spark,” Payton said.

He insisted benching Wilson for Jarrett Stidham was a football move all about winning for a team that’s two weeks away from packing up the gear and heading to Cancun for vacation.

Maybe Payton believes he can BS all of us knuckleheads all the time.

But I don’t believe a word you’re saying, Sparky.

My lack of trust in Payton goes far beyond the fact Wilson has won 115 regular-season games in his NFL career, while Stidham is a 27-year-old journeyman who has won zero.

This move stinks of money, because details of his $245-million contract extension would make it extremely costly for Denver if Wilson gets seriously injured before messy divorce proceedings with the team begin in the offseason. Worse, it reeks of retribution by Payton, who blew a must-win game against New England by calling two stupid timeouts late in the fourth quarter, then tries to play us all for fools by blaming Wilson.

In 40 years of following the Broncos from Greeley to London and the Super Bowl to the basement of the AFC West, I’ve never listened to a coach so full of self-aggrandizing balderdash as Payton spews on the regular.

With general manager George Paton, who compounded the mistake of trading for Wilson by rubber-stamping a massive extension before he threw a single touchdown pass in Denver, standing in the wings, Payton looked TV cameras in the eye and sent a message to the locker room: If Wilson isn’t safe, nobody is.

“I can’t replace the entire offensive line. I can’t bring in five new receivers,” said Payton, whose offensive genius has produced 21.8 points per game, which ranks Denver 6th among 32 league teams in scoring. “If it continues over a period of time, there will be another guy here talking to you.”

Those are the words of a coach who inherited Wilson, then has acted as if the task of molding an offense around an unconventional quarterback was more a burden than a challenge.

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