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DENVER, COLORADO – JANUARY 25: Jarrett Stidham #8 of the Denver Broncos rushes for yards during the fourth quarter in the AFC Championship Playoff game against the New England Patriots at Empower Field At Mile High on January 25, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
The Denver Broncos came up just short in the AFC Championship Game on Sunday, but they still played a major role in one of the biggest NFL television moments of the postseason.
CBS Sports announced this week that the Patriots-Broncos matchup averaged 48.618 million viewers, the most-watched playoff game on any network this year.
The broadcast peaked at 57.759 million viewers late in the fourth quarter.
This was a 10 percent increase from last year’s comparable early championship window.
The snowy conditions created a perfect backdrop, and the matchup between two iconic NFL franchises did the rest.
The New England Patriots ultimately escaped with a 10-7 win to advance to the Super Bowl, leaving the Broncos heartbroken on their home field.
Even in defeat, the numbers sent a clear message.
The Broncos-Patriots AFC Championship Game was the most-watched postseason game this year.
An average of 48.618 million people tuned in, with it peaking at nearly 58 million people watching.
Broncos are a MASSIVE draw.
When the Denver Broncos play, the audience follows, which speaks volumes about the direction of the franchise.
Broncos Have Been Must-Watch TV All Season
Sunday’s rating surge wasn’t an anomaly.
It was the latest data point in a season-long trend that saw Denver emerge as one of the league’s biggest draws.
Including the postseason, the Broncos appeared on CBS’ “Game of the Week” eight times this season.
Their Divisional Round overtime win over the Buffalo Bills averaged 39.597 million viewers.
This game set an NFL record for the most-watched Saturday playoff game ever.
That broadcast peaked at 51.288 million viewers during overtime, becoming the most-watched Saturday program on any network since the 1994 Winter Olympics.
Whether it was high-stakes finishes or a late-game comeback, Denver consistently delivered the kind of games that drive national interest.
Even in a low-scoring AFC Championship played in snowy conditions, the Broncos helped anchor a broadcast that outperformed every other playoff game this postseason.
Sean Payton Credited For Broncos Turnaround
The craziest part of Denver’s ratings surge is how quickly the franchise has transformed its national profile.
Just three seasons ago, the Broncos were coming off nearly a decade of missed playoffs and declining relevance.
From 2017-2023, Denver did not have one winning season.
They hadn’t reached the playoffs since they won the Super Bowl in 2015.
Under head coach Sean Payton, that narrative has flipped entirely.
With Payton at the helm, the Broncos have undergone a complete turnaround, reaching the playoffs in two straight seasons and finishing as the AFC’s No. 1 seed this year.
Denver went from irrelevance to one of the biggest draws in the NFL.
Payton’s Broncos didn’t finish the job Sunday, but reaching the AFC Championship Game in Year 3 of his tenure marked a definitive turning point.
The team is young, competitive, has a franchise QB and is increasingly central to the league’s biggest moments.
The audience size and the culture shift matter.
They make Denver more attractive to free agents and reinforce that this is a place players want to be.
This feels like it is just the beginning.
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