Archive for March, 2007

More from Roger Goodell …

March 30th, 2007 - 1:15am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Without further ado, here are a few leftovers from Thursday morning’s breakfast speech by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell that didn’t make it into either of the stories on the main site:

ON BRONCOS FANS: I don’t think there are better fans in the NFL — or in professional sports — than right here in Denver.

ON PAT BOWLEN: He has been, without a doubt, a mentor to me. We all know that we don’t get to places without a lot of people that support us, help us and provide guidance, and Pat has done that for the 25 years of my career. … He really has been a terrific mentor and friend and has provided a lot of leadership to me, and I know for a fact that I wouldn’t be standing before you today as Commissioner of the National Football League without Pat Bowlen.

Click to continue reading “More from Roger Goodell …”

Upstairs, Downstairs

March 27th, 2007 - 11:12am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

According to The Denver Post, Keith Burns is about to become the newest member of the Broncos’ coaching staff.

The Post reports that Burns, the club’s longtime special-teams captain, will retire and transition from the ground-floor locker room to the second-floor coaches’ wing in an assistant special-teams coaching slot. The team already has a pair of assistant special-teams coaches in Ryan Slowik and Jimmy Spencer, with new special-teams coordinator Scott O’Brien overseeing the unit.

Burns had been an unrestricted free agent the past three and a half weeks.

“I think Keith is going to make a great coach,” Head Coach Mike Shanahan told the Post.

What do you think of the reported move? Sound off below.

For Openers: Where and With Whom the Season Can Start

March 26th, 2007 - 2:44pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

The NFL released the nationally-televised games for Week 1 of the year, and for the third consecutive season, the Broncos will open the year out of the coast-to-coast limelight.

For now, however, we can deduce some potential scenarios for the Broncos’ season-opening game.

1. The Broncos can’t face any of the teams whose openers were announced Monday. This rules out starting the season against the San Diego Chargers, Indianapolis Colts or Chicago Bears.

2. The Broncos can only be at home against an NFC opponent. This is because CBS traditionally does not carry any late afternoon games during the second weekend of September, owing to their coverage of the mens’ singles final of the U.S. Open tennis championships. Since the NFL has never scheduled the Broncos for a regular-season game beginning at 11 a.m., this rules out the Broncos’ six home games against AFC foes — three against their division rivals, two against AFC South opponents Tennessee and Jacksonville and one against the Pittsburgh Steelers. This leaves the Green Bay Packers and Minnesota Vikings as the only potential opponents for a season-opening home game.

3. The Broncos cannot play a road game against a team in the Mountain or Pacific time zones. Again, this owes to CBS’ U.S. Open coverage. So say goodbye to being the opposition for Lane Kiffin’s first game as head coach of the Oakland Raiders.

This leaves the following possibilities for the Broncos’ Week 1 game:

vs. Green Bay
vs. Minnesota
at Detroit
at Kansas City
at Buffalo
at Houston

The league also announced its Thanksgiving games, and the Broncos learned they will not play on Thanksgiving for the first time since the 2004 season. Christmas Day falls on a Tuesday, meaning the Broncos will not play on one of the two major holidays for the first time since 2003.

WEEK 1 GAMES THAT HAVE BEEN ANNOUNCED:

Sept. 6: New Orleans at Indianapolis - NBC - 6:30 p.m. MST
Sept. 9: Chicago at San Diego - FOX - 2:15 p.m. MST
Sept. 9: N.Y. Giants at Dallas - NBC - 6:15 PM MST
Sept. 10: Baltimore at Cincinnati - ESPN - 5 p.m. MST
Sept. 10:Arizona at San Francisco - ESPN - 8:15 p.m. MST

The full schedule will be released in April.

A Return to the Veteran Backup

March 20th, 2007 - 1:22am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

From 1997 through 2004, the Broncos had a veteran backup quarterback standing at the ready. From Bubby Brister to Chris Miller to Gus Frerotte to Steve Beuerlein and on to Danny Kanell, Denver’s backup was not only a veteran — but one who at a point in his career had been a full-time starter. Miller, Frerotte and Beuerlein had even been Pro Bowlers, while Brister and Kanell had directed previous teams to a playoff win and a division title, respectively.

In 2005, the Broncos veered away from that postulate, opting to keep Bradlee Van Pelt as their only relief option. But that year, he wasn’t needed; he didn’t see extensive action until the final half of the regular season with the Broncos’ playoff seed coated in cement.

The signing of Patrick Ramsey — made official Monday — shakes up the quarterback situation, but it also brings the Broncos back to what they had for most of their recent years: a veteran standing at the ready.

Of course, Ramsey hasn’t claimed the job; Preston Parsons returns after a year on the practice squad, while the team also signed former UAB passer Darrell Hackney in January; he was a preseason casualty in Cleveland last year. But of the Broncos’ quarterbacks behind incumbent Jay Cutler, only Ramsey has been an NFL starter — or has thrown a pass in a regular-season game, for that matter.

Ramsey also possesses a similar background to another backup quarterback of recent Denver vintage. Like that understudy, he spent multiple seasons with the Redskins, occasionally serving as the starting quarterback. Like him, he had a one-year stopover elsewhere before joining the Broncos.

That passer, of course, is Frerotte, who played two seasons for the Broncos before departing for a potential starting opportunity in Cincinnati that only materialized for three starts in 2002. His peripatetic career has since witnessed three more stops for an NFL total of seven teams, pushing him into the realm of passers like Chris Chandler and Steve DeBerg who stayed in the game by remaining portable and open to potential suitors.

But in his two Denver seasons, Frerotte posted a passer rating of 85.5 over his two seasons and seven starts. Only Jay Cutler’s 88.5 rating is higher among all Denver players to throw at least one pass this decade. Frerotte also went 4-3 in seven regular-season starts as a Bronco, and was 6-3 in games during which he threw at least 15 passes.

If Ramsey can mimic those numbers, he’ll be a succesful pickup.

The ‘Quiet Storm’ Dissipates in Denver

March 20th, 2007 - 12:21am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

It was early in the 2005 season when Gerard Warren described Courtney Brown perfectly.

“I call him ‘The Quiet Storm,’” Warren said. “When he’s on the field, he’s causing havoc and making things happen without speaking a word.”

This was after Brown’s Broncos debut, when he sacked Drew Brees and recovered a fumble in helping the Broncos turn a 14-3 halftime deficit to the San Diego Chargers into a 20-17 win that jolted their season to alive and started a run of 14 wins in 16 games.

Brown helped make that win happen in his return from a dislocated elbow — which, in itself, meant the game encapsulated his career. He was capable of the spectacular, but always existed under injury’s shadow — which finally caught up to him last year when a training-camp knee injury torpedoed his season before it began.

Back in September 2005, though, Brown had just played like the No. 1 overall pick he was in 2000. Yet he remained characteristically reticent about his accomplishments in that game, which was his first in nearly a full year.

“I was glad I had the opportunity to contribute,” he said at the time.

Brown seemed all the more placid compared with the majority of his fellow ex-Browns, who are loquacious — but in different ways.

Gerard Warren is blunt, as unvarnished as a tree in the north Florida woods he knows so well. Kenard Lang is boisterous, but his often-outrageous statements are varnished with a layer of common sense. Ebenezer Ekuban, meanwhile, is the tactician of the group; his offerings are more analytical, but unfailingly honest all the same.

Michael Myers rounded out the group, but he wasn’t a former first-round pick like Ekuban, Warren, Lang and Brown. Each had a redwood of expectations dropped upon them upon entering the NFL. Each carved out his own niche.

But just as Brown was the quiet one of the group, he was also the one most ignored by good fortune, evidenced by the fact that he missed more games than he actually played between 2001 and 2006. Just when it seemed as if the litany of injuries would stop, something arose anew — a left knee injury last summer that was ultimately the death knell on his Denver career.

Brown gave the Broncos all he had, doing so quietly and efficiently. Yet as he proved in helping the Broncos notch the No. 2 run defense in 2005, he also did it effectively — when he was on the field. The spirit was willing. The effort was strong. But the body betrayed him.

Say ‘Cheese’

March 13th, 2007 - 3:06am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Henry and GrahamIf you want to get Travis Henry’s attention, simply say, “Cheese.”

But don’t merely expect a smile when he hears the word. Expect a story, too — of how the Broncos’ newest tailback earned an unusual nickname during his days at the University of Tennessee.

“It’s a long story. There was a guy, a senior . I was a freshman. His name was Corey Terry. We were scrimmaging and he hit me and I kind of buckled him. When we got back to the locker room. he was just like ‘Man, you’re hard. You’re hard. You’re like a block of cheese.’ He told me I was like a block of government cheese.

“He said I was hard to slice. A reporter heard it and they ran with it.”

The only slicing that the Broncos hope to see from Henry is of him knifing through opposing defenses — exactly what they expect from a runner who has three 1,000-yard seasons in the last five years.

“That’s been my M.O. my career,” Henry said. “I run it hard. I’m going to run it the whole game. I get better as I tote it. I think that’s the perfect way to describe it.”

Talking Tight Ends

March 12th, 2007 - 1:44am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Daniel GrahamAs Daniel Graham returns to his hometown, he joins a team that could likely use the boost a tight end of his ilk could provide.

That’s because the Broncos, a team that once used the tight end like no other, are coming off a season in which they got fewer receptions, yards and first downs per game from tight end than at any time this decade.

(Before I go any further, I must note the discrepancy in tight-end receiving totals from the games Jake Plummer started last year versus the ones in which Jay Cutler took part. In Plummer’s 11 starts, Broncos tight ends collectively averaged 2.4 receptions, 22.7 yards, 0.1 touchdowns and 1.4 first downs a game. Cutler’s five starts saw those averages skyrocket to 3.4 receptions, 53.4 yards, 1.0 touchdowns and 3.0 first downs per week, numbers that compare favorably to the performance of Broncos tight ends in previous years, particularly between 2000 and 2003.)

But back to the decade-long numbers. Granted, Shannon Sharpe’s exploits are now four years in the past. But the Broncos’ utilization of tight ends went far beyond the man who amassed more yardage, receptions and touchdowns than anyone else at the position. In fact, it was during the two seasons when Sharpe played for the Baltimore Ravens that the Broncos had their best per-game numbers from the position — 6.4 receptions (2001), 70.3 yards (2000), 0.8 touchdowns (2001) and 3.6 first downs (2001).

Graham’s receiving numbers don’t put him among the league’s pace-setters at his position, but the Patriots shuffle tight ends in and out of the lineup the way most teams do defensive backs.

Nevertheless, since Graham entered the league in 2002, his 120 receptions rank 24th among tight ends. But his 1,393 yards place him 18th; his 17 touchdowns are 10th-best and his 11.6 yards per reception is sixth among tight ends with at least 100 receptions since 2000.

It’s too early to tell just what kinds of numbers Graham will amass in the Broncos’ offense — although his receiving totals at the University of Colorado seem to show that he is capable of some spectacular tallies when given the opportunity to catch the football. But Graham’s first charge in joining the Broncos is obvious — to help the tight ends as a collective return to the productivity they displayed four, five, six and seven years ago, years when the Broncos demonstrated how to make tight ends indispensable to an efficient offense.

By the numbers at tight end, this decade:

2000:
Receptions/Game: 5.6
Yards/Game: 70.3
Touchdowns/Game: 0.4
First Downs/Game: 3.5

2001:
Receptions/Game: 6.4
Yards/Game: 61.7
Touchdowns/Game: 0.8
First Downs/Game: 3.6

2002:
Receptions/Game: 5.5
Yards/Game: 56.3
Touchdowns/Game: 0.4
First Downs/Game: 2.8

2003:
Receptions/Game: 4.7
Yards/Game: 55.4
Touchdowns/Game: 0.6
First Downs/Game: 3.1

2004:
Receptions/Game: 4.1
Yards/Game: 50.3
Touchdowns/Game: 0.4
First Downs/Game: 2.6

2005:
Receptions/Game: 3.7
Yards/Game: 42.1
Touchdowns/Game: 0.1
First Downs/Game: 2.4

2006:
Receptions/Game: 2.7
Yards/Game: 32.4
Touchdowns/Game: 0.4
First Downs/Game: 1.7

Sundquist on the Three Signings

March 5th, 2007 - 11:02pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

SundquistMonday was as busy a day as one can recall for the Broncos in free agency, with three signings — unrestricted free agents Montrae Holland and Paul Smith and street free agent Travis Henry all signing deals with the Broncos.

Each fills at least a potential need. Holland brings an option at guard, where starter Cooper Carlisle is an unrestricted free agent. Smith provides special-teams help and depth at fullback, a position that has both Cecil Sapp and Kyle Johnson on the restricted free-agent market.

The signing of Henry, meanwhile, brings the Broncos a 1,000-yard runner just three days after they finalized the trade of last fall’s 1,000-yarder, Tatum Bell, to the Detroit Lions.

When Monday’s deals were complete, General Manager Ted Sundquist talked about what transpired. Excerpts are and will be in stories elsewhere on DenverBroncos.com, and, obviously, Sundquist wouldn’t get into potential signings or further players that he has targeted, but he did speak at length about the acquisitions, and about where the team stands as of four days into the league year.

Below is a transcript of what Sundquist had to say Monday night.

MONTRAE HOLLAND — WHAT CAN HE BRING TO THE TABLE THAT PERHAPS WASN’T THERE BEFORE?
With regards to Montrae Holland, you’ve got a guy that’s been a former starter, that is maybe out of the normal parameters of what people think we might be looking for at guard. He’s a bigger, stouter guy — a little more powerful. He has an excellent ability to sit down in pass protection and really keep the pocket from bowing in the middle. He is athletic for a guy who’s a 320-pounder. He moves well and I think he can execute what we’re trying to do in the run game. But definitely he’s a powerful guy at the point (of attack) in trying to root people out. He has starting experience, and with the possibility of having the right guard position open going into training camp, he’s going to bring some excellent competition there and hopefully can have an opportunity to be the starter.

HOLLAND’S PLAYING TIME DECREASED LAST YEAR. WAS HE CAUGHT IN A CHANGE IN PHILOSOPHY AND SCHEME LAST YEAR?
I couldn’t really answer why they didn’t play him last year.

PAUL SMITH, WHAT DOES HE PROVIDE?
Well, Paul Smith has been an outstanding special-teams player over the course of his career to this point. But certainly I think he was wanting to put himself into a position where he could contribute even more on the field from the fullback position. He’s athletic. I think he’s got good hands, which is important for our fullbacks, being able to slip out in the flat, catch passes at the goal line and things like that. Certainly that athleticism transfers to his ability to get up into the line of scrimmage and put body on body in regards to linebackers. We just liked what we saw with his competitiveness and certainly his production on special teams. With our new special-teams coordinator, Scott O’Brien, he puts a premium on that and this is a guy who’s really been a core guy for the Rams last year on that side of the ball. He was wanting to expand his role, and we’re going to give him that opportunity.

DID SCOTT O’BRIEN RECOMMEND HIM TO YOU?
Well, the scouts did, too.

AND, OF COURSE, TRAVIS HENRY — WERE YOU ANTICIPATING HIM HITTING THE MARKET ON SATURDAY?
Well, Travis Henry, from my understanding, was the MVP of the Titans last year. Obviously, a lot was said about Vince Young and his rookie season and making the Pro Bowl, but I think a lot of people — coaches, scouts, football people — will tell you that a lot of things that Vince was able to do was because of the threat from the run game that Travis gave. As far as the surprise of them letting him go, they’ve got a new general manager (Mike Reinfeldt), and he may have come in with a different philosophy, and certainly Travis may have been looking out there for a different opportunity that brought him more than what the Titans were. Only he can answer that. The great thing was that we were prepared when he did hit the market, and we were ready to go and got him in there that evening after we saw that he’d been released.

DID HENRY VISIT ANYWHERE ELSE AFTER COMING TO DENVER?
No. He visited here, and then, in speaking with his agent, they were supposedly in communication with a number of teams — Green Bay, Oakland — but he came in here and we were able to kind of sell him on a number of things. First his fit in this scheme, and how we thought his skills would contribute to that. Secondly, the fact that he would be competing for a Super Bowl every year. I mean, that’s what we’re about — trying to get there. Third, the intangibles. Everybody that’s in the organization, from the people in the personnel office, to the people downstairs, to dealing with you guys. He was very impressed with that. It was just a matter of pounding out the contract, and we were able to do that. We kept him overnight and got it finished.

DID PURSUING HIM CAUSE ANY CHANGES IN SALARY CAP MANAGEMENT IN REGARDS TO PLAYERS YOU WILL PURSUE, OR ARE THINGS RIGHT ON TRACK?
Right on plan. Right on schedule. I’m very pleased with where we’re at right now, with still more to come. Henry’s (contract) was one that you had to prepare for. Again, you asked me earlier, was I surprised that he got let go — not surprised, but when he did get let go, then it was in the plans, but you kind of had to shift some things to make sure that you finished it off. We were able to do that without really upsetting the apple cart on the things that we wanted to do, and we were able to get it done.

1,000-YARDER ON THE MARKET FROM THE PREVIOUS SEASON — DOESN’T HAPPEN TOO OFTEN.
Yeah. He runs with authority, and I’ve been saying that for quite a while now — that we’re trying to get our running game back to a point where we’re running with some authority. You’ve got fourth-quarter leads in four games — especially at home — and you need to close an opponent out, and guys like Travis Henry have that ability to close a team out in the fourth quarter. Certainly as you look back at last season, you win three or four of those games where you’ve got leads at home — if you protect them with a good running game, like we did in those Super Bowl years, now you’re 12-4 or 13-3, and you’re talking about hosting a playoff game — and we’re right back to where we were a year ago when we were talking about all this.

WHAT’S INTERESTING TO ME IS HOW THE RUNNING GAME WAS IN THE TOP QUARTER OF THE LEAGUE LAST YEAR, YET THE PERCEPTION IN THIS BUILDING SEEMS TO BE THAT IT WAS A DISAPPOINTMENT.
Again, I’ve used the adjective “authoritative” in talking to our scouts and to Coach Shanahan and to prospective candidates for that position. Getting more authoritative in the way we attack a defense. You can churn up a lot of yardage, but if you’re not making third-and-1 or first-and-goal — sometimes a 1-yard run is as important as a 60-yard run. Certainly, we think that Travis, with the way he’s built and his power — I mean, fans are going to love this guy. I don’t know if they’ve had a chance to see any clips of him with Tennessee, but this guy runs with power.

I REMEMBER SEEING CLIPS OF HIM BACK IN HIGH SCHOOL IN FROSTPROOF, FLA. — HE RAN THAT WAY BACK THEN.
Yeah. He may have one of the best stiff-arms I’ve ever seen.

THIS WRAPS UP A BUSY DAY — BUSIER IN FREE AGENCY THAN ANY ONE DAY IN RECENT YEARS?
Yeah, but I think the thing fans have to remember is that there are some years when free agency is going to be all about retaining your team, signing your young players — guys that you drafted that are in the last year of their deal. And we had to do that last year. It was like, “Well, the Broncos didn’t delve into free agency.” Well, actually, we did. We signed Matt Lepsis, and other re-signings and contract extensions happe
ned in February. In this particular year, we didn’t have a lot of those particular situations, which allowed us to, I think, get a little more aggressive with looking outside and bringing in (players). We said last year we were going to tweak a few things; we were going to stay status quo, we were happy with what we saw coming out of that 13-3 year, and that didn’t get it done last year, so you have to make changes. You have to stay aggressive, and you have to do the things that you think are going to get you back and put you in those opportunities where you can compete for a Super Bowl and I think we’ve done that in our preparation and evaluation of these players. It started with the reserve/future contract guys, some of the people that we’re bringing in here, that have no notoriety and not a lot of pomp and circumstance. Those guys — I think there’s some football players in that group that will make that final 53. That was just as important.

DAVID KIRCUS, NICK FERGUSON, GUYS LIKE THAT.
Yeah, and you’re also constantly dealing with a trade aspect, trying to improve your position, acquiring players that you might not otherwise be able to draft at that particular position that are veteran players, and then you get into this market in unrestricted free agency, and that will go for the next few more days, and we’ll keep an eye on it a little bit. It will slow down.

AND THAT COMES ON THE HEELS OF A WEEKEND THAT WAS LIKE THE MID-1990S, WHERE TEAMS SPENT A LOT ON THE OPENING WEEKEND.
Yeah. Then, the last phase is the draft, and we’re excited about having four first-day picks and really feel like there’s going to be an opportunity to get some “impact” type guys, and by then, the offseason program will have started. We’ll get a chance to see some of these guys that we have added, and we’ll get ready for camps in the summer. I’m very, very pleased with how things have gone so far, and it’s been a team effort with the coaching staff, the scouting staff and the personnel that have put all this together to make sure that when the players come in, that they have a good visit, understand what we’re all about and that when they leave here, they’ve had all their questions answered, and they have a good feel whether they can fit or not, and then it’s up to myself and Mike Bluem to try to put together the best financial package and sort them out.

Season Review: David Kircus

March 5th, 2007 - 3:20am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

David KircusThe receiver nicknamed “Circus” certainly lived up to the moniker on his celebrations last year — particularly after scoring a touchdown in his preseason return to his hometown of Detroit.

While Kircus didn’t have many catches — nine for 187 yards — his pace was the best, as his per-catch average of 20.8 yards led the team.

Where Kircus might be best positioned to make an impact for 2007 is on special teams. The untimely death of Darrent Williams left a vacancy at punt returner, and Kircus showed flashes of brilliance in his brief forays into the return game last year, with a 14.3-yard average on six punt runbacks, including a 42-yard return at Oakland on Nov. 12.

Even if the Broncos don’t acquire a receiver or receivers in the draft or free agency, Kircus will have a more crowded wideout field in which he must compete this year with Domenik Hixon set to enter the fray. Hixon, one of the Broncos’ fourth-round picks last year, missed all of the offseason camps and the entire season with a foot injury incurred during workouts leading up to the draft last year, but is fully recovered now.

FINAL ANALYSIS: Had at least one catch in seven of the Broncos’ 16 games … Now has a 20.9-yards-per-catch average for his career.

NEXT: Offensive lineman Chris Kuper.

Season Review: Kyle Johnson

March 4th, 2007 - 11:49pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Kyle JohnsonAfter being the clear first-team fullback through the back half of the 2004 season and into 2005, Johnson had to share fullback responsibilities with Cecil Sapp, who started once while Johnson started seven times.

While Sapp had 47 more yards from scrimmage than Johnson, boasting a 114-67 advantage, it was Johnson who accounted for the only touchdown from a Broncos fullback last year — and it proved to be significant, as it was the game-winning score on a fourth-and-goal pass at Oakland.

Johnson is eligible for restricted free agency; a team must be willing to surrender a fifth-round pick — and have the Broncos opt not to match their contract offer — in order to pry the Syracuse alumnus away from the only team for which he has played a regular-season snap.

FINAL ANALYSIS: His career touchdowns-to-touches rate remains impressive, with one score for every 4.7 times he’s touched the football in his four-season career … An ankle injury kept him sidelined for two games in 2006 … Started in Weeks 2, 5, 8, 13, 14, 15 and 17.

NEXT: Wide receiver David Kircus.