If you thought that was fun, Broncos fans, imagine what kind of numbers Phillip Lindsay might roll out in 2020 if he starts the year with two healthy wrists instead of one?

“It’s about repetition,” Lindsay said. “I might go to work with (former Broncos wideout) Emmanuel (Sanders) in the offseason, about really getting the details, now that I’m healthy enough to do it. Things like that.”

A year ago, the former Denver South and CU Buffs star spent the last week of December getting his right wrist surgically repaired, the preamble to a winter of rest and rehab.

Heading into New Year’s Eve 2019, it’s less about healing and more about refining, catching up for lost time. And lost targets.

“(This winter) is going to be a lot better because I get to do more things, such as receiving, running routes and catching the ball,” Lindsay explained. “And just have a whole (winter), a whole offseason, of just getting better, finding ways to be more explosive, gain a little bit more weight. And just find ways so I can get to the top next year.”

Even with a new offensive coordinator and a banged-up offensive line in front of him, Lindsay still found a way to make history, becoming the first undrafted NFL tailback to ever rush for 1,000 yards in each of his first two seasons in the league after running for 53 on 18 carries in a season-ending 16-15 victory over Oakland.

“He’s been tremendous,” Broncos general manager John Elway said of Lindsay during his end-of-season news conference Monday. “He’s got a heart the size of his whole body.”

Even if that body is already wearing the scars of the NFL grind.

Lindsay, who wound up 15th in the NFL in rushing yards with 1,011, admitted Monday before packing up his locker that his right wrist, while healed, has never quite been the same — at least from a comfort perspective — as it was before it got dinged up last fall.

“If you’ve ever had a surgery, you’re always going to have something nagging at it,” Lindsay said. “It is what it is. It’s who I am now, you know? So it’s a part of me now.”

At any rate, this winter is going to be about beefing up the other parts. The frame, especially. At 5-foot-8 and 190 pounds, Lindsay wants to add lean muscle mass while maintaining his trademark explosiveness.

“I’m going to take a couple things out of my diet and see if it helps me out in general,” the former Buffs bell cow said. “And I just want to eat cleaner this year coming up … honestly, it’s harder to eat clean during the season because you’re getting banged up and hit so much. So (I’m) just trying to stay consistent in what I do and go from there.”

He’s also hoping for more consistent performances late in games, both for himself and for a team that struggled to finish off opponents in the second half. The Broncos were 4-5 in games decided by eight points or fewer this past autumn and blew halftime leads against Jacksonville, Minnesota and Indianapolis.

“I’ve said it before, we won these (close) games and we ended up giving (some of) those games away,” Lindsay said. “And next year, we’re just going to have to take ‘em. And we have the tools. And we’re going to go get a couple more pieces in the draft and a couple more pieces in free agency, which should put us over the top.”