Archive for April, 2007

Day 2 — Just One Pick

April 29th, 2007 - 12:16pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

It was supposed to be a quiet morning at Dove Valley, with the Broncos not expected to go on the clock until the sixth round.

But at 10:19 a.m., the facility burst into motion with the news that the Broncos had moved into the No. 121 slot, placing them back into the fourth round and allowing them to take defensive tackle Marcus Thomas from the University of Florida.

The pick — which originally belonged to the Broncos but was sent to Atlanta and then on to Minnesota — gives the Broncos three defensive linemen in their four picks — which will be all the Broncos have unless they trade back into the last three rounds. Denver dealt its sixth- and seventh-round selections this year and a third-rounder next year to the Vikings in exchange for the No. 121 selection.

UPDATE — 11:44 A.M. MDT:

With the Broncos’ draft over unless they trade back into the later rounds, Head Coach Mike Shanahan offered some thoughts about the pick of Marcus Thomas, whom he referred to as a “natural leader.”

“We research people,” Shanahan said. “I’ve got a good gut feeling about Marcus.

“We just couldn’t pass it up … I was trying to get that pick from the latter part of the third round to the fourth round.”

Shanahan was later asked about the picks the Broncos surrendered to select Thomas, and was specifically queried about whether the three selections — including a 2008 third-round pick — was a “steep price” to pay.

“Not if you have him ranked as a first-round pick, it’s certainly not a steep price to pay. If he’s not with our program, it’s a steep price.

“I really think if he would have played this year he would have been drafted early in the first round, maybe in the second. But all that doesn’t matter right now.”

UPDATE — 12:15 P.M. MDT:

Jarvis Moss on Marcus Thomas: “Hands down, he was the best player on our national-championship football team this past year.”

The Draft Blog — Part 2

April 28th, 2007 - 6:58pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

More occasional draft-day thoughts as I have time to drop by:.

4:11 P.M. MDT: Overheard here in the DenverBroncos.com conference room: “I don’t know if I even feel comfortable typing ‘pelvic bone infection.’”

4:18 P.M. MDT: Longest first round ever. Good God.

4:25 P.M. MDT: As for Jarvis Moss’ number, well, there’s only two numbers not taken in the 90s — 95 and 96, the latter of which was recently vacated by Michael Myers. Moss had No. 94 at Florida.

5:54 P.M. MDT: The second round isn’t motoring along as much as it’s lumbering. At this pace, the third round will not begin until around 7:20 p.m. MDT. This is threatening to become the longest first day in NFL annals.

5:56 P.M. MDT: “We never give Mountain time,” Chris Berman says as he announces that the draft will move to ESPN2 at 6 p.m MDT … making this one of the rare times I’ve heard a broadcaster give Mountain Time on a national telecast in the last 15 years. About time the forgotten time zone we call home was acknowledged.

6:57 P.M. MDT: An interesting contrast among the players the Broncos have selected so far. Moss started 13 games in his years at Florida and never started before his senior year. Crowder, on the other hand, became a starter as a freshman and closed his career with 47 consecutive starts. The two also were key parts of the last two national championship teams.

The Draft Blog — Part 1

April 28th, 2007 - 1:21pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

9:50 A.M. MST: We’ve been at the facility for just under an hour now.

9:52 A.M. MST: To the paramecia at Radio City Music Hall who are booing as Michael Vick and DeAngelo Hall are introduced — there can sometimes be a time and a place to boo players; it’s part of pro sports. But during a tribute to the victims of the massacre on the Virginia Tech campus is neither. Shame on you.

9:57 A.M. MST: Stunning development — ESPN’s Ed Werder is NOT in Dallas! He just doesn’t look the same without a galaxy of blue stars behind him.

9:58 A.M. MST: Sal Paolantonio checks in from Tampa wearing a tie that bears a shade of orange eerily familiar to the one on the Bucs’ uniforms from 1976-1996. Ah, Florida orange … the color of the Sundays from my youth.

9:59 A.M. MST: There’s not a Super Bowl ring out there pricier than the watch that Adrian Peterson is brandishing. As site contributor Kyle Sonneman said, “That’s rented, not bought.”

10:01 A.M. MST: Am I watching the draft or an episode of 24?

10:08 A.M. MST: Are we going to put a team on the clock today?

10:09 A.M. MST: Oh, hosanna! “The 2007 NFL Draft is now open,” declares Goodell. I guess he’s no Mike Shanahan, who showed up for his press conference yesterday precisely at noon.

10:17 A.M. MST: The Raiders have had nearly four months to make their decision … and now they’ve gobbled up seven and a half minutes of their allotment. Cripes, how long does it take?

10:20 A.M. MST: All that for a pick that surprises few who observe the draft … as the Raiders select JaMarcus Russell. Somewhere, a certain All-Pro cornerback who devours young passers as afternoon snacks is smiling.

10:21 A.M. MST: Whoa — Elway comparisons for a rookie who hasn’t taken an NFL snap? Settle down, Chris Berman … Russell needs to throw at least a couple of pro passes first.

10:28 A.M. MST: “Brian Kelly is not happy in Tampa,” says Keyshawn Johnson, a man who knows all about malcontentment on Florida’s west coast.

10:30 A.M. MST: Make that four wide receivers in five first rounds, as the Lions take Georgia Tech wide receiver Calvin Johnson. The fans at Ford Field erupt. Can you blame them? This is a fellow who shredded the top-ranked defense in college football last year, sprinting through Virginia Tech for a pair of touchdowns en route to an early-season win that ended up swinging the ACC’s Coastal Division race to the Ramblin’ Wreck.

10:42 A.M. MST: We’re averaging about 10 minutes, 20 seconds per pick now that the Browns have selected Wisconsin’s Joe Thomas, a selection met with 15 seconds of silence from ESPN’s otherwise talkative armada of correspondents.

10:45 A.M. MST: How giddy must Charlie Frye be right now? And what do the Bucs do here? Jeff Garcia, whom they signed in March probably has no more than two or three years, max, in him, and they already have young quarterbacks with starting experience in Chris Simms and Bruce Gradkowski.

10:54 A.M. MST: Gaines Adams looks good in orange. Too bad for him the Bucs wear red now.

11:03 A.M. MST: Brady Quinn has a bemused smile on his face. We are averaging 10 minutes, 36 seconds per pick, so if the pace continues, we will see the Broncos go on the clock at 1:22 p.m. MST.

11:07 A.M. MST: Speaking of average times, Rachel Nichols blinks, on average, once every eight seconds.

11:14 A.M. MST: Well, it would seem LaRon Landry is the pick here, although the Redskins seem determined to milk their moment until the final seconds. Tick, tick, tick …

11:16 A.M. MST: Well, at least the Landry brothers will be close to each other; elder brother Dawan starts at safety for Baltimore.

11:25 A.M. MST: Are those purple and yellow M&Ms on the Vikings draft table? Did someone have to manually expunge the brown M&Ms from the jar? Did you ever think you’d hear Steve Spurrier saying, “Click! Clack!” Are they actually running this T.J. Houshmanzadeh fantasy-football commercial for a second consecutive year? Are the mispronunciations of his surname actually still funny on some planet? Perhaps this one?

11:30 A.M. MST: Steve Young: “That pick gets the Minnesota Vikings out of the top 10 next year.” We shall see about that.

11:38 A.M. MST: Of all the draft mouthpieces on air, none is having a better day than ESPN’s Michael Smith, who successfully called the Arizona pick of Levi Brown and Atlanta’s selection of defensive end Jamaal Anderson, meaning that new Falcons head coach Bobby Petrino opted not to reunite with his standout defensive tackle at Louisville, Amobi Okoye.

11:47 A.M. MST: Might the Disney suits be a tad angry at Steve Young referencing a reality program that is not aired on the ABC/Disney family of networks?

11:50 A.M. MST: Mel Kiper’s face looks like Jon Gruden’s. My jaw hasn’t yet returned to its normal position. Our first true draft stunner has arrived, and Brady Quinn has officially become the face of this year’s draft.

11:58 A.M. MST: This is SportsCenter just had its best spot in years with the David Ortiz/Wally the Green Monster commercial.

12 P.M. MST: With Quinn dropping, ESPN just showed the montage of quarterback campouts in the green room. That’s just twisting the knife in the poor lad’s back.

12:01 P.M. MST: How many Facebook and MySpace searches for Quinn’s girlfriend, Lindy Slinger, have been made in the past 35 minutes? The over-under is 18,000.

12:05 P.M. MST: There are seven of us based here in the conference room, and each of us has placed a name by our initials denoting who each of us believes will be the Broncos’ first-round pick. With the Texans’ selection of Amobi Okoye, video maven Chris Hall and publications majordomo J. Michael Moore have dropped out of the running. (And for the record, nothing more valuable than bragging rights are at stake.)

12:14 P.M. MST: Nobody’s touched that ham sandwich on the table where Brady Quinn once sat. If Quinn or any draft picks want to kill some time, do what I did while I was waiting for some of the draft-prospect video to encode over the last few weeks — conduct random You Tube searches. I recommend looking up Mr. Belvedere and the theme to One Day at a Time.

12:20 P.M. MST: San Francisco takes Patrick Willis. For the last time ever, I will say, “What you talkin’ bout, Willis?” in reference to the Ole Miss linebacker, but will add, “What you talkin’ bout, everyone!”

12:44 P.M. MST: Finally, the magic word: “Trade!” And with that, the first appearance of Gene Washington, patron saint of the second round, who announces a deal between the Jets and Panthers. Leon Hall or Darrelle Revis, perhaps?

1 P.M. MST: Revis goes to the Jets, and Lawrence Timmons goes to the Steelers. Another member of the communications concern here in Denver drops out of the draft-pick-prediction scrum, leaving myself, Kyle Sonneman and media relations staffer Dave Gaylinn.

1:05 P.M. MST: Keyshawn Johnson just suggested the Packers pick Dwayne Bowe to help “move it (the team) into the next millennium.” The franchise’s not even a century old and Johnson’s talking about them hitting Futurama territory!

1:17 P.M. MST: Regarding ESPN’s 24-style draft promos: I don’t think I’d want to be a fan of a team who puts the name of a player’s college on a Post-It note beside his name on the wall. Sounds like the purported draft preprations of the New York Titans, which supposedly involved Harry Wismer var addthis_pub = 'denverbroncos'; var addthis_language = 'en';var addthis_options = 'email, favorites, digg, delicious, myspace, google, facebook, reddit, live, more';

The NFL’s Christmas Morning

April 28th, 2007 - 4:02am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Welcome to Christmas morning, NFL-style.

I’ve long believed that draft day was the NFL’s answer to the gift-giving tenet of the holiday, when coaches, scouts, personnel executives and fans bolt to the tree — or in this case, the television set — to find out what Santa Claus dropped underneath the adorned branches. The anticipation towards Christmas and the draft just might exceed the moment itself.

The difference, however, is that you don’t know how the gifts will work out. Sure, a sixth-round pick about whom you don’t know much might elicit the same reaction as crew socks. But imagine if there was a possibility that those humdrum socks could transmogrify into a PlayStation 3. That’s what the draft can do; that heretofore anonymous mid-to-low-round selection can turn into Terrell Davis, Shannon Sharpe or Karl Mecklenburg.

And befitting a kid on Christmas morning, I can’t sleep.

The draft begins at 10 a.m. MST, and for the first time in the televised era of the draft, we won’t be treated to a distinctively nasal tone imparting the selections. Gone are the unmistakable voices of Pete Rozelle and recently retired Paul Tagliabue; in are the smooth, measured tones of new Commissioner Roger Goodell.

But that’s cosmetic and relatively irrelevant. For the Broncos, this could be a day to change the course of the next few years. Last year certainly provided such a crucial flashpoint with the trade up to pick Jay Cutler and the deal to acquire Javon Walker; those two acquisitions established perhaps the two most crucial tenets of the team’s passing game for the next few years.

If the Broncos hold on to their pick, they will turn in the draft card no later than 3:15 p.m. MDT, assuming everyone in front of them takes the allotted 15 minutes. A more realistic guess, however, is that the Broncos will select somewhere around 1:40 p.m., assuming a few teams are quick to pick.

Denver’s picks are as follows:

Round 1: No. 21 overall
Round 2: No. 56 overall
Round 3: Nos. 70 and 86 overall
Round 6: Nos. 176 and 198 overall
Round 7: No. 233 overall

Nothing says change like the draft, and few junctures in recent league history have seen more alterations than the last 10 months.

There’s the new commissioner. A tougher discipline policy. A new generation of quarterbacks, including Cutler. Cripes, even the hoary, tradition-bound Steelers just introduced an as-yet-unnamed mascot, and he looks nothing like the grime-coated, Western-Pa., salt-of-the-earth steelworkers we saw in All the Right Moves, Slap Shot and any number of 1980s Budweiser commercials.

But that’s neither here nor there.

The hours until the draft are dwindling. The storylines will be manifold. It’s time to stop speculating and start unwrapping.

Fridays with Johnny

April 27th, 2007 - 3:28pm by MilesOther posts by Miles

Not to be confused with the smash hit book, or the after school special-ish Tuesdays with Morrie, last Friday I spent most of the day with John Lynch (Don’t call him Johnny — it just made sense for the title). We made visits to three elementary schools along with the Western Dairy Council to promote healthy and nutritious eating.

Click to continue reading “Fridays with Johnny”

Live from the Pre-Draft Press Conference

April 27th, 2007 - 12:33pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Bon giorno from the media room here at Dove Valley, a four-sided enclosure that, for all practical purposes has been my home for the past few days in preparation for the draft. We’re here awaiting the first pre-draft press conference of the Mike Shanahan era, which is also his first presser of any ilk since the season-wrap session back in February.

Today’s session is mandated by the league; every team must now hold a pre-draft session; the Broncos were one of the few teams that did not have a pre-draft media briefing last year.

12:00 P.M. Punctual, as always.

12:01 P.M. Says it’s “sometimes” a little more difficult to move back in the draft than to move up … Also says that even though the team doesn’t pick on day 2 until the sixth round, the pick “isn’t a whole lot different” than the one in the fifth that was dealt to Detroit.

12:02 P.M. When asked whether there’s a chance they’ll move up, Shanahan plays his cards close to the vest, but says that the team “will not move up just to move up.”

12:03 P.M. On middle linebacker: “The opportunity to put D.J. in the middle — we’d like to do that,” he said. Says that the new defensive scheme involves more man-to-man coverage than in the past.

12:04 P.M. Says Williams “fits the middle linebacker mold pretty easily” and that it will be “natural for him to make that transition.” … “I’ll be surprised if he doesn’t step up.”

12:05 P.M. In his first public comments on Al Wilson since the release, says the decision was “tough,” and that he doesn’t know if Wilson will play again. Shanahan declined to go into detail about whether the move was based more on the salary cap, the condition of Wilson’s neck or his performance. “I would never go into detail which one it was,” Shanahan said.

12:07 P.M. On returns, says that Brandon Marshall will have the chance to compete for duties there.

12:08 P.M. Back to the draft; Shanahan says that safety, wide receiver and defensive line are each “deeper than it his been.”

12:09 P.M. Says that according to the doctors, Brandon Stokley will be ready by the start of training camp.

12:10 P.M. On Javon Walker: “I don’t know if you ever get over it … But Javon’s been working extremely hard in the offseason program … He’s leading the pack; he’s doing great … He’s looking extremely good right now; his attitude is great and hopefully he keeps on getting better.

12:11 P.M. Need versus best available player in the draft. “I think everybody looks at need first … I think a lot of times people will reach for a guy because of need and it comes back to haunt them. There’s a fine line as to what you want to do.”

12:11 P.M. On Georgia Tech’s Calvin Johnson: “He has all the things you look for … extremely bright … just a class act.”

12:12 P.M. On the offseason so far: Says he thought the team needed to address tight end and running back depth and did so with Daniel Graham and Travis Henry … Says that a veteran backup quarterback was essential … On Montrae Holland: “Here’s a guy that I thought the world of when he was with New Orleans … When he did start (there) I was very impressed. It’s hard to find those guys early in the draft and in the middle rounds.”

12:14 P.M. Says that Alvin McKinley can swing around to both tackle and end, and that defensive tackles Amon Gordon and Antwon Burton fit the new defensive scheme better than they did the one utilized last year.

12:15 P.M. D-line depth: “I think we’ve got a little bit more depth there than people think.”

12:18 P.M. On the draft board, “character has always been a big issue,” Shanahan said. “That does not mean that guys are not still on the bubble.”

12:19 P.M. Acknowledges that character did impact the placement of some players on his team’s draft board, but he obviously chose not to specify for whom this was the case.

12:21 P.M. On the contract extension he signed earlier this month: “It’s a great honor … How many times does a coach have a chance to spend 17 years with one team? It just doesn’t happen nowadays.”

12:24 P.M. On taking chances with draft picks. “I’m a risk taker; there’s no question about that. I love to gamble. But you’ve got to be educated … You’ve got to research, find out what makes them tick.”

12:26 P.M. On JaMarcus Russell: “Until the guy plays at the pro level, you really don’t know … Everything is not just based on talent. There are so many things that are involved … He’s a big human being.”

12:27 P.M. When asked about Florida defensive end Jarvis Moss, he jokingly replies, “Horrible,” his smile demonstrating his choice to decline comment about specific players. Some mock drafts have the Broncos selecting Moss with the No. 21 pick.

12:30 P.M. On pre-draft trade rumors, he says he has not talked to the Houston Texans and that he hasn’t spoken with the Detroit Lions since one week after the Scouting Combine … “It’s amazing to me what they find out.” …

12:30 P.M. Said that the Broncos had a deal done with the Lions to get the No. 2 pick when he talked with them after the Combine, but that the Lions declined to make the swap. “That happens all the time. The only reason I mention that is because it’s been talked about.”

12:33 P.M. Says that the status of wide receiver Brandon Marshall is unaffected by his arrest last month, but of the league’s new personal-conduct policy, says: “It makes people accountable for their actions,” Shanahan said. “I just think it’s good for the league. It’s the image we’d like to portray.” Specifically addresses Travis Henry and Todd Sauerbrun’s issues, saying, “These guys know one time, they’re gone. No second chances.”

A Quiet End to a Boisterous Tenure

April 24th, 2007 - 5:52pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

The official release of Al Wilson was documented quietly. Not even a press release was issued, since Wilson himself held a press conference on April 13 to share the news that the Broncos had parted ways with him after eight seasons — five of which saw him make the Pro Bowl.

With the NFL and Broncos buzzing with pre-draft preparations, the official release of Wilson was an unusually inaudible coda to a tenure defined by loud, impassioned invective in the huddle and open-field hits that elicited roars that spoke even more forcefully than any of his speeches to teammates.

But what I’ll remember about Wilson as a Bronco has nothing to do with his actions on the field. It’s two sights.

The first one is something visible to anyone scooting south along the long spaghetti strand of asphalt known as Interstate 25 — an often-displayed banner of Wilson, covering nearly the entire height of the INVESCO Field at Mile High facade, promoting prostate-cancer screening and awareness. Wherever he goes, it’s hard to imagine that his fundraising commitment to fighting that disease will continue; it is personal — far more so than any insult an opponent could hurl in his direction on the field.

The second is an SUV slowing down along the side of a suburban Arapahoe County road. My car wouldn’t start, and with the office within (lengthy) walking distance, I needed to make it into work, so I grabbed my three bags — carrying two laptops and a video camera — and started hoofing it to the office, hauling enough gear to where it appeared I was camping in the foothills.

Halfway to the office, a black SUV pulls over and its passenger-side window drops.

“Need a ride, man?” says a smiling, familiar face from behind the wheel.

He didn’t have to do that. I was halfway to work, and, frankly, I could have used the exercise anyhow. But that’s just the kind of person Wilson is — and why his teammates lamented his potential — and now official — departure throughout the month.

I’m sure that Wilson’s locker-room mates saw many more examples of the character that rested beneath the tough, plain-spoken facade — and his credentials as a leader are certainly unquestioned after he spoke at the funerals of Darrent Williams and Damien Nash.

But for me, Wilson will always be the helpful fellow who gave me a ride to work. And if I didn’t thank you properly at the time, Al, I hope this suffices.

Hello, Interweb!

April 19th, 2007 - 5:54pm by MilesOther posts by Miles

That’s right, as the most technologically advanced horse around (take that, Trojans) I’m the first NFL mascot to blog.

Really though, when they told me I needed to blog, i thought it was some college party trick or rite of passage.  When I found out all I had to do was type what was in my head, I thought, “*tumbleweed*.” Then I thought, “I can do that!”

Well, months later after extensive training — and many failed HTML classes — I’m now a proud member of the blogosphere! (How am i doing with the nerd jargon?)

Click to continue reading “Hello, Interweb!”

Painting the Roster By Numbers

April 19th, 2007 - 1:12am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Earlier this month, we learned that Travis Henry had successfully pried No. 20 away from fellow running back Mike Bell, moving the second-year back to No. 30, a jersey last donned for a regular-season game by Terrell Davis.

The rest of the numbers game is coming into focus, as well, with many new Broncos grabbing their digits for the upcoming season. Grab your scorecards, and let’s go:

Darrell Hackney, QB: He’ll wear No. 4, which he donned at at UAB.

Brandon Stokley, WR: The Broncos issued him No. 14. He has never worn a number outside of the 80s in his NFL career until now, but wore this number to great acclaim back at Louisiana-Lafayette. It was retired from UL-L annals after he completed his four years there with 241 receptions for 3,702 yards and 25 touchdowns while becoming the first player in Division I-A annals to average 100 receiving yards per game for his career.

Glenn Martinez, WR: Will wear No. 17. He wore No. 87 for the Rhein Fire in 2005 and Nos. 12 and 84 for the Detroit Lions in recent years.

Paul Smith, FB: Will wear No. 26. He’s been all over the map, donning jersey No. 27 in San Francisco, 40 in Detroit and 31 in St. Louis.

Troy Fleming, FB: Jersey number 35. He donned 44 with the Tennessee Titans and had No. 27 at the University of Tennessee.

Eric Hill, CB: Jersey number 36. He had Nos. 14 and 37 for the Colts earlier in his career, but that belongs to fellow Colorado State alumnus Cecil Sapp. Hill wore No. 38 for the Carolina Panthers on their practice squad last year and donned No. 26 for the Hamburg Sea Devils in 2006. Back at CSU, he played wide receiver and wore No. 7.

Eddie Moore, LB: Will wear No. 51, donned by Keith Burns the last two years. Moore wore No. 58 in his four years with the Miami Dolphins — three of which were under Broncos assistant head coach Jim Bates — and was No. 37 in your program at the University of Tennessee.

Montrae Holland, OL: Will wear No. 70 after donning No. 61 for his entire New Orleans Saints career. He also wore No. 61 at Florida State.

Carlos Hall, DE: Will wear No. 98 in Denver; he had No. 92 in Kansas City and No. 97 in Tennessee.

Alvin McKinley, DT: Issued No. 99. He had No. 97 for most of his years in Cleveland, although he started there with No. 70. He also wore No. 97 at Mississippi State.

Some players have not yet been issued numbers: tight end Daniel Graham, punter Eddie Johnson, quarterback Patrick Ramsey, offensive tackle Jacob Rogers and three NFL Europa allocations: tight end Teyo Johnson, guard Kevin McAlmont and cornerback Lamont Reid. On Graham, it’s worth noting that there is only one number in the 80s currently open (81).

Wilson’s Fill-In as Defensive Leader?

April 17th, 2007 - 12:29am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

In an offseason of change on the defense, John Lynch faces another one in this, his 15th offseason.

The defensive scheme is different, although his first glance at what exists reveals a system that he admitted Monday reminds him of what he ran during his years with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. But without team captain Al Wilson — and with linebacker Keith Burns headed for the sidelines as an assistant coach and Jake Plummer in retirement — the Broncos’ returning captains corps includes just Lynch and Rod Smith, although safety Nick Ferguson has been a special-teams captain.

Leadership, though, is about more than what would be indicated by a “C” on the jersey if the NFL ever decided to go NHL-style with the designation.

“You can’t have enough good leaders, so when people say that one guy was the leader of the team, that’s not necessarily accurate — particularly on the good teams,” Lynch said. “I think it takes a lot of great leaders, and that’s where we’re fortunate here. We’ve got a lot of guys who spent a lot of years in the league. We’ve got young guys like Jay Cutler that are going to have to step into leadership roles, but there’s plenty of leadership here.”

So where does one turn for leadership? Lynch — who as a team leader is rarely shy about pressing a button to ignite a flame or two — offered some names as candidates — linebackers D.J. Williams and Ian Gold and defensive linemen Kenard Lang and Ebenezer Ekuban, among others, who include …

“Champ Bailey’s not a big rah-rah guy, but just by his example, the way he goes out and prepares every week, that’s leadership,” Lynch said.

But even by the admission of the No. 1 Bronco, fully replacing Wilson is no guarantee.

“I don’t look at it as trying to replace Al because Al had a lot of unique qualities as well as talent,” President/CEO Pat Bowlen told The Denver Post. “But this kind of thing is not new to my business. If we’re lucky enough to get a player with the same unique qualities as Al, hallelujah.”

“Do you ever replace a guy like Al? I don’t know,” Lynch said. ” All that he brought to us in his play and his leadership, that’d be difficult to do, but you just trust in your organization, making the decision and having an idea of how they’re going to try to replace him.”