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Dan Reeves has barely merited a mention in the lead-up to the Super Bowl, his imprint on these Denver Broncos an afterthought.

Maybe it's just too easy to forget that every key architect of this season's Broncos, from general manager John Elway and coach Gary Kubiak on down, was mentored by Reeves, who led Denver to three Super Bowl appearances nearly three decades ago. And too hard to realize that, in a roundabout way, he influenced the way this edition of the team was built.

The bloodlines run deep, yet the patriarch is outside of the current inner circle. On Sunday, he'll turn on the TV at home in Atlanta and watch from afar as Denver faces the Carolina Panthers in the big game, "cheering for the Broncos, without question," the 72-year-old Reeves said. "I've got too many great friends there, so many people in that organization I think the world of."

Start with Elway, the quarterback for most of Reeves' Denver tenure from 1981-92, who says his efforts to build a No. 1 defense were inspired at least in part by his former coach.

Then there's Kubiak, Elway's backup back in the day. Rick Dennison, the offensive coordinator, was a linebacker for Reeves. Wade Phillips, the defensive coordinator, originally was brought to Denver for that job by Reeves in 1989, then replaced a fired Reeves as head coach in 1993.

Bill Kollar, the defensive line coach, was an assistant to Reeves with the Atlanta Falcons. And Joe DeCamillis, the special teams coordinator, began his NFL career working for Reeves with Denver in the 1980s, then later went with him to the New York Giants and Falcons. Taking Reeves' role as father figure further? DeCamillis is his son-in-law.

Elway and Reeves were the key figures on Broncos clubs that reached the 1987, 1988 and 1990 Super Bowls, coming up short each time. Elway later won titles in each of the last two seasons of his Hall of Fame career — the second one against Reeves' Falcons.

Elway returned to the Broncos in 2011 as executive VP of football operations, adding the GM title in 2014. His biggest move was signing Peyton Manning. After their high-flying offense was routed by the Seattle Seahawks in the Super Bowl two years ago, Elway made an effort to revamp his defense — a unit that deserves most of the credit for reaching Sunday's matchup against Carolina.

"I learned from (Reeves) that you have to play great defense. He had a lot of great defensive teams, and that's where I get my instincts on the defensive side," Elway said. "That defense kept us in a lot of football games when I was young, because we weren't doing much offensively, until the chains came off late in the game and we were able to win some."

Reeves' take?

"You've also got to worry about defense. You've got to worry about special teams," he said. "And now (Elway) understands that a lot better than he did when you're just the quarterback."