The Denver Broncos sit at 0.91 — the strongest pull in Von Miller's top 10 — but what makes the neighbor set structurally interesting is how far it spreads beyond football.
The shape is broad: nine of the top 10 neighbors score above 0.77, and the cluster spans five distinct subcategories. Three fellow athletes anchor the core: John Elway at 0.84, Larry Fitzgerald at 0.80, and Miesha Tate at 0.79. But the set doesn't stay inside the NFL. House of the Dragon lands at 0.80 — nearly level with Fitzgerald — and UFC News appears at 0.77, signaling that MMA audiences overlap meaningfully with this one. G-Eazy (0.78) and Walmart Fuel Station (0.78) round out the top 10, the latter being the most structurally unexpected entry in the set.
The subcategory tally across the top 10 breaks down as: four Athletes, one Sports Teams, one TV Shows, one Musicians and Bands, one Gas Stations, one News Publishers, and one Sports Teams entry for the Seattle Seahawks at 0.78. That mix — combat sports figures, a prestige fantasy drama, a musician, and a fuel retailer all clustering at similar scores — points to an audience that isn't defined by a single sport or content type but by a broader male-skewing, action-and-entertainment profile that cuts across categories.
The absence of any NBA, MLB, or soccer entities in the top 10 keeps the shape grounded in football and combat sports, with entertainment and lifestyle brands filling the remaining space.