The scene is high in the Colorado mountains, about three hours and 20 years from where Trevor Siemians crazy dream would play out. A 9-year-old boy crashes his face into a tree. Todd Siemian has been snowboarding and trying to keep up with his 4-year-old brother, Trevor, when, bam, the impact cracks his goggles and breaks his nose. Young Trevor has never seen so much blood.The good news is that the Siemian family is well-prepared. Dad Walter is a plastic surgeon, and mom Colleen is a nurse whos seen far worse in the ICU.Hell be OK. Youll see, Dad assures. He grabs a butter knife, slides it up Todds nostril and resets his nose. Trevor just stands there, eyes fixed, like hes watching a Teletubbies video.A few hours later, Trevor enters his first and only downhill ski race. And wins.Hes pretty unique, Todd says today. I cant recall a time in which hes really had any freak-out sessions.FLASH FORWARD TWO decades, to the morning of Aug. 29, as preseason is winding down for the Denver Broncos. Man, it is a sight. Head coach Gary Kubiak announces in a team meeting that Trevor Siemian is the new starting quarterback of the defending Super Bowl champs, igniting the room into an eruption of spirited applause. When the noise calms and the meeting ends, Siemian calls his dad back home in Florida.Typically, he undersells the moment. I got the job, he says. But his dad quickly clips the conversation short, saying hell have to call back. He is just about to perform surgery. Anyway, by his sons tone he thinks the job means something less significant, maybe a sponsorship deal or something.This is why the Broncos love Siemian: He seems unaffected by, and possibly oblivious to, the big deal he has become. The 24-year-old -- whose college career was so decidedly unremarkable that he nearly took a job in real estate two years ago -- is the replacement for a surefire Hall of Famer, Peyton Manning. His team got off to a 6-3 start to the season, and he hasnt cracked.Hes unflappable, says Broncos general manager John Elway of the QB he took with the seventh-to-last pick of the 2015 NFL draft. He really does a tremendous job of keeping his mind on what hes doing. He doesnt let the outside forces affect him at all.Outside the Broncos organization, fans and local media remain skeptical that a kid who started only 18 games at Northwestern can do the job. After opening the season 4-0 and completing 67 percent of his throws, Siemian injures his nonthrowing shoulder. He misses one game, then regresses to 55 percent in his next four starts. In a Week 9 bludgeoning at the hands of the Raiders, Siemian finishes just 18-of-37. Surely there must be something better behind Door No. 2. Denver Post columnist Mark Kiszla decries that defensive coordinators have caught up to Siemian and that its time to fast-track first-rounder Paxton Lynch. They expand the book on him every week, Kiszla writes of Siemian, and every new page is a little less flattering.Still, its easy to forget that Siemian has beaten Cam Newton, Andrew Luck, Andy Dalton and Philip Rivers and that the Denver running game has suffered since C.J. Anderson tore up his knee on Oct. 24 (see the Broncos 33 rushing yards in the 30-20 loss to the Raiders). After that game, Kubiak still insists that Siemian is his guy and scoffs at the notion that he is simply a stopgap starter on a team with a dominant defense. I feel really good about what Trevors doing, but Trevors like any other player -- hes got to get better, Kubiak says.IN AN NFL in which rosters are built on scouting reports, painstaking video dissections and gaggles of middle-aged men holding stopwatches, an underdog success story like Siemians isnt supposed to happen. And it probably wouldnt have if fate hadnt allowed Kubiak a rare chance to channel-surf one fall Saturday night.Its Nov. 15, 2014, and Siemians disappointing senior season at Northwestern is nearing an end with a visit to No. 18 Notre Dame. His team is 3-6 and needs to win out to be bowl-eligible. In his only year as a full-time starter -- hed platooned with Kain Colter the previous two seasons -- Siemian knows his already slim chance of impressing NFL scouts is fading to nothing. Its hard to imagine playing in the NFL when two weeks earlier hed finished a 48-7 drubbing at Iowa on the bench.But Siemian is stoked to play in front of 80,000 Fighting Irish fans and on national TV. He keeps his focus as the Wildcats fall behind. He was just like, All right, well get the next one, former Northwestern offensive lineman Hayden Baker says now.Sitting in Baltimore, Kubiak is enjoying the bye weekend and a rare Saturday night off as the Ravens offensive coordinator. There are other games to watch -- Alabama leads a nail-biter at No. 1 Mississippi State, and Kubiaks alma mater, Texas A&M, is about to kick off with Missouri -- but even though the Wildcats trail 40-29 with just five minutes left, Kubiak doesnt switch the channel. Instead, he watches Siemian hit a clutch pass over the middle for a big first down and then scramble right for another. From the 6-yard line, Siemian tucks the ball and runs for a touchdown. After a turnover, he finds Kyle Prater on a quick route for 17 yards to help set up the field goal to tie the game. The Wildcats go on to win in overtime 43-40.The next morning, Kubiak strides into the office, where coaches are making small talk about what they did Saturday night. Still struck by Siemians poise, he asks, Did anybody see the quarterback from Northwestern?The next week at Purdue, Siemian continues to impress anyone watching as the Wildcats cruise to an early 21-0 lead. Then in the second quarter, he runs a quarterback sneak on fourth-and-1. But Siemian gets stuffed short ... and doesnt get up. By the time Siemian is placed on the trainers table, Baker knows his roommate has torn his ACL. Northwestern holds on against Purdue but plays its final game of the season without Siemian and loses to Illinois. The bowl hopes are gone; for Siemian, everything seems over.I wonder if Ill ever play football again, Siemian tells his family and friends.His surgery in early December is a success, and Siemian spends the next few weeks recovering in Illinois. He visits coach Pat Fitzgeralds office and says he is thinking of giving up football. No, man, you need to train, Fitzgerald remembers telling him. Your best football is ahead of you.Siemian hears the same message from one of his mentors, a guy named Steve Schnur. About 20 years earlier, Schnur had far more success quarterbacking Northwestern than Siemian ever did, winning back-to-back Big Ten titles. But his smaller frame didnt appeal to the NFL, and Schnur didnt get invited to any camps. He instead became an exec with Duke Realty.Siemian had interned at Duke Realty the summer before his senior year and was, by all accounts, a natural -- personable, a fast learner, trustworthy and never stressed by any projects he was given. Hes got a presence about him, Schnur says. But when Siemian talks to him about giving up football, Schnur offers no sales pitch for real estate. He says that the corporate world can wait and that if he has even the slimmest shot at the NFL ...Go for it, Schnur tells him. The NFL will move on quickly from you.While the stars of the class of 2015 go to the combine, Siemian begins to rehab his knee. His name isnt even on a long list of quarterback prospects handed to Kubiak when he becomes the Broncos head coach that January, instead relegated to a pile labeled others. Kubiak asks and is told that Siemian tore his ACL.There were some people concerned about his health, Kubiak says now. So it was a matter of just saying, Hey, this kids got a big league arm. Hes very bright. Lets just do some homework on him.Siemian isnt healthy enough to work out at Northwesterns pro day on March 3, but a few weeks before the draft he holds his own workout. Kubiak dispatches passing-game coordinator and QB coach Greg Knapp to Evanston for the April 9 session. He is the only coach who shows up, along with reps from a handful of other teams, to watch Siemian essentially throw on one leg.Knapp likes to take a player out to dinner the night before his workout and has a lot of questions to resolve that night. Is Siemian sharp enough? Will he be a fit in the quarterbacks room? Its a unique situation. Siemian wont just have to keep up with the coaches; hell have to keep up with Manning.Knapp loves the kids answers and instincts. The workout the next day leaves him even more encouraged. He couldnt do a lot of mobile stuff, Knapp says. But he could drop straight back and throw the ball, and I could see how it came off his hand and see how tight the spin was and what kind of arm strength he had. It really showed up in person that this guys a natural thrower.So Siemian, via luck and a decent workout, wins the Broncos interest -- enough to warrant the 250th pick in the draft. The team that shows the next-most interest, according to Fitzgerald, is Cleveland, which has him in for a visit two weeks before the draft. Think about that: Trevor Siemian could have wound up in the city where quarterback dreams die.LANDING IN DENVER really is a dream scenario: the opportunity to learn from Manning, a legend in his final season, and a quarterback brain trust of general manager Elway, Kubiak and Knapp. Hes No. 3, behind Manning and Brock Osweiler, Mannings heir apparent. No pressure and plenty of space to grow.Siemian doesnt like to talk about his relationship with Manning. Its almost as if detailing what some describe as a friendship -- Siemians family says the two are golf buddies -- would be disrespectful. But there clearly is warmth between the legend in his final season and the long shot in his first. When Siemian has a question, no matter how small, Manning always seems willing to help.Peyton was an awesome example for me, Siemian recalls, for how to not just play quarterback but how to operate every day. How to be a teammate and how to be a leader in the locker room.It doesnt take long for them to connect. Manning is funny and sarcastic and likes to throw digs at his coaches and the younger quarterbacks over the course of a meeting. In one of Siemians first QB sessions in Denver, Manning zings him, and he zings right back. Knapp cant say what the barb was, but he says it told him a lot about Siemian. It was like, All right, this kids not just going to follow the lead, Knapp says. Hes going to be a leader.C.J. Anderson says Siemian and Manning share some personality traits, including that sense of humor. (His college teammates call Siemian a goofball and tell of the time he misplaced his helmet and then ran to the huddle, yelling, Im coming, boyyyyyys!)Peyton was a serious calm, Anderson says. Trevor is more of a funny-comedian calm. Hes kind of like Peyton. In between those lines, its business. Outside of it, its all fun and games.Asked the biggest lessons he learned from Manning, Siemian comes up with a lot of variations on this theme: Manning taught him how to approach the game Monday through Saturday, how to be prepared.I was very fortunate to be able to share the room with him, he says.DENVER BEATS CAROLINA in the Super Bowl as Siemian stands and watches. The whole world assumes that Manning will retire, maybe right there on the field. On March 7 he makes it official. Two days later, the real thunderbolt hits: Brock Osweiler is not sticking around. He takes a $72 million contract and leaves for Houston.Siemian -- as is his nature -- doesnt remember where he was when Knapp called him with the news. On the phone, Knapp tells him the Broncos will add some quarterbacks but reminds him that Kubiak will play the best man, regardless of financial commitment.All right, Siemian tells him. Thats all I needed to hear. Lets go.An old teammate sends Siemian a text, QB1, as a joke. And in early March, the truth is that such a message does seem kind of hilarious. Very few general managers wouldve taken the risk Elway did in letting Osweiler walk to Houston. The outside world screams, What is Elway thinking?But Elway knows what he has with Siemian in the mix. The coaches really liked how he handled the classroom and how he studied and picked up the offense, Elway says today. But until you see him under the lights, you never really know how theyre going to react. Until he gets in there, you never know.My mentality going into everything is, Ill be damned if Im not prepared for whatever comes my way, Siemian says. Im going to do whatever I can to be ready for it.The Broncos end up drafting Paxton Lynch in the first round and trading for journeyman Mark Sanchez, but neither can beat out Siemian by the end of preseason. Denver will begin defending its title in a rematch with Carolina.Elway couldnt ask for a brighter spotlight for his young quarterback.ON THE SIDELINE before the marquee NFL Kickoff game, Siemian stands calmly with his hand on his chest during the national anthem, while across the field Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly is so amped to hit him that he bounces and sways through every bar of the song.On the Broncos first play from scrimmage, Siemian wants to throw a quick screen, but a defensive end jumps right into his throwing lane. Instead of trying to throw it over the defender, Siemian pump-fakes and sidearms the ball around him.Elway is put at ease.For a guy taking his first snap in an NFL game to be able to readjust and make that play really showed us something off the get-go, Elway says.The Broncos eke out a 21-20 win. On Oct. 24, Elways decision to go with Siemian is put to a more binary test when Osweiler and the Texans come to Sports Authority Field at Mile High on a Monday night. Things do not go well for Osweiler. Seven months after the city fretted over his departure and whod replace him, Osweiler is consistently booed as he fumbles three times, losing one, and throws for just 131 yards in a 27-9 loss. Siemian throws for 157 yards and a score, but more important, he avoids mistakes. Good enough.His coach and general manager know not to measure Siemians performance by box scores. Hes done a tremendous job up to this point, Elway says. Hes only going to get better.And his teammates, who chose him as one of three midseason captains, know it too. Trev is my guy, linebacker Shane Ray says. What happened with Trev, nobody expected that.Not even a certain coach who was channel-flipping on his couch in Baltimore.Elizabeth MerrillMerrill is a senior writer in ESPNs features and enterprise unit. Prior to joining ESPN in 2007, she covered the NFL and wrote features for the Kansas City Star. She is based in the Midwest, and can be reached at Elizabeth.Merrill@espn.com.join the conversation follow @MerrillLizfollow @ESPN Moussa Diaby Jersey . Isner, ranked No. 14, won his eighth career singles title and took the title in New Zealand for the second time after his victory in 2010. The match was similar to Isners quarterfinal victory over fifth-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber which went to three sets, all tiebreaks and contained no breaks of serve. 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Walk through East Fourth Street on a Saturday night and you could very well be in any popular city in America. It features some of the countrys best food, hip bars and trendy stores.For those who havent been in downtown Cleveland in a while, the question will invariably come up: How did this happen?Its a complicated answer, as is every related to how urban renewal manages to succeed. But in Cleveland, the answer includes LeBron James, Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert and ... the chefs.Without LeBron, Cleveland -- which like many blue-collar cities gets its pulse from its sports teams -- might still be the Cleveland of old: the one known for its river being so polluted it caught on fire, for Earnest Byners fumble and for Michael Jordan over Craig Ehlo.Without the spectacle of LeBron, downtown Cleveland doesnt ever draw the crowds.Without the crowds, Gilbert doesnt gain the power -- he likely doesnt get a casino and perhaps never has the faith to move his company, Quicken Loans, to the city.But without the chefs, the speed of coolness that came to downtown Cleveland soon after LeBron left following the 2009-10 season would not have happened.LeBrons story youre more familiar with: High school phenom gets drafted by hometown team and turns it into a contender.In the process, the masses come to downtown and theres even a new type of visitor Cleveland never had -- a celebrity who flies into town just to see LeBron play.Economists have long argued that when sports teams get an economic boost, it comes at the expense of the community because every dollar is given to the team. But economists havent encountered sports owners like Gilbert, who not only is working on flipping the perception of Cleveland but has the countrys biggest renewal project on his hands in Detroit.LeBrons first seven years in the league built the foundation of the idea that downtown Cleveland could change. Thats when public money was first committed to revitalization.But in 2010, LeBron famously left. And the plans for what was to be built were in no-mans land. The Cavs returned to futility and the crowds dwindled.And then came the chefs.Michael Symon and Jonathon Sawyer are two native Ohioans who never forgot where they ccame from.ddddddddddddA year before LeBron left, Symon won The Next Iron Chef. As Symons career exploded and he became a celebrity chef, he branched out to other cities but always made Ohio his home.On Fourth Street, he had high-end Lola and Lolita, and this year he debuted a BBQ place named Mabels.Sawyer, who worked for Symon, also made his splash in Cleveland. Among his four restaurants is The Greenhouse Tavern.While LeBron was gone, the chefs did their work. They continued the good name of the city -- winning national awards and impressing out-of-towners with their fare -- and when LeBron came back, they were ready to capitalize even further.The chefs, huge sports fans who also have a presence at Cavs and Browns games, and LeBron work in tandem. On game nights, Sawyer and Symons restaurants are packed. Sawyer says 80 percent of his customers -- judging from area codes left for reservations -- since May have been from outside greater Cleveland.Thats insane, Sawyer said. You dont get that without LeBron.There are the usual stats put forth by Cleveland authorities, which are just projections: that the Cavaliers playoff run last season was worth $35 million in new spending. But those numbers are compromised by past economic studies put forth by cities that dont come close to Clevelands reality.Numbers more specific to Cleveland speak to its real rise. In 2000, three years before LeBron was drafted, a person could get a one-bedroom apartment in downtown Cleveland for $550. That same place might cost triple today as millennials living downtown have grown 77 percent in the last 16 years.Prior to this year, the Cleveland Indians and Cavaliers played in 156 combined seasons that ended in a title. Only two of those were won by those teams (the Indians in 1920 and 1948).With the Cavs winning the title last season and the Indians on the cusp of one, it could mean two titles in five months for the city.A city that has seen a remarkable psychological transformation through sport, but also a remarkable financial impact that reaches outside the coffers of the local owners. ' ' '