ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Through the first three games of Noah Fant's NFL career, the first-round pick has performed exactly how Offensive Coordinator Rich Scangarello said he would've expected.

In Scangarello's mind, Fant has put together a season with some good, some bad and some "flashes of greatness."

And the Broncos' first-year offensive coordinator has reason to believe those flashes of greatness could become more and more frequent.

"I don't want to make it sound like they're same player, [but] it reminds me of [San Francisco 49ers tight end George] Kittle," Scangarello said Thursday. "George's first year in the league I think he led the NFL in drops. He was a liability in the run game at times. He would break the huddle and be unsure."

As a rookie, Kittle caught 43 passes for 515 yards and two touchdowns. Last season — Kittle's second in the league — he secured his first Pro Bowl appearance as he caught 88 passes for 1,377 yards and five touchdowns. He also set the single-season record for receiving yards for a tight end.

Why did it take time for Kittle to make the jump from Iowa to the pros?

"We ask more of our tight ends than any other position outside of the quarterback," said Scangarello, who coached with the 49ers before taking the job in Denver. "They need to know the run game, pass protection and they have to be pass-route runners. And when they practice, that means [they're] fatigued, because they run routes and they block like a lineman. All that adds up and accumulates on a guy when he plays a lot of reps, especially when they're rookies and they're learning the league. That's the trickle-down effect, that's what happens when a guy gets loose with the ball or tries to do too much. The finer things aren't there.

"A year from now, he'll be a completely different player and you hope that he is like Kittle, and he's confident and he breaks down. Could that happen next week and get better and better? Absolutely, and that's the goal."

The first-round pick has taken steps forward each week. After catching two passes for 29 yards in Week 1 and four catches for 33 yards in Week 2, he tallied three catches for 37 yards against the Packers. He is currently on pace to record 48 catches for 528 yards this season, which would rank higher than Kittle's rookie total.

"There's going to be good plays and bad plays, and it's my job to try and eliminate those bad plays," Fant said. "It's just a matter of keep pressing forward and keep getting better."

Fant did lose a fumble early in the third quarter, but Scangarello said the Broncos must live through some of the growing pains to reap the benefits of Fant's ability.