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Posts Tagged ‘2007 season’

Painting the Roster By Numbers

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

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

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.”

Scheffler’s Big 3-0

April 13th, 2007 - 1:49am by AndrewOther posts by

Tony SchefflerIt had been three months since those who chronicle the Broncos’ exploits had seen Tony Scheffler walk into a room, and I, for one, was not expecting such an imposing figure to stroll through the door leading to the media room where he held a media briefing on Thursday afternoon.

Scheffler’s words would only confirm what his mere presence demonstrated — that he’d bulked up in the past three months, gaining an average of 10 pounds a month and going from a 235-pound rookie to a 265-pound beast through a simple regimen.

“A lot of eating,” Scheffler admitted. “Not too much running, just a lot of lifting and eating. In the summer I always trim down.”

Scheffler expects that he’ll drop between five and 10 pounds from his current weight; such loss will be a simple byproduct of on-field work in organized team activities and his four conditioning sessions per week. For now, though, his movement isn’t where he wants it to be.

“Right now I’m not as smooth in and out of my cuts as I was at 235 (pounds), but I think as the summer goes on, I’ll trim up,” he said.”

Scheffler also noted that his weight gain wasn’t by coaches’ edict; rather, it stemmed from a desire to play more than just on obvious passing downs.

“Hopefully I’ll maintain my speed, but at the same time I can get better in the run game so I can be out there every down. That’s my ultimate goal as a player in the NFL — to help this team every down.

“I don’t want to (just) go in on third down,” he added. “I want to take my career to the next level and help this team every down. Putting on the weight was my own decision. I need to maintain my speed and everything I had before.”

And at any size, he feels he’ll still see plenty of action on the field, even with prominent free-agent signee Daniel Graham among the cornucopia of players at his position.

“We obviously have a lot of weapons at tight end, so that’s something that’s naturally going to take place,” Scheffler said. “I’m sure there’ll be some two-tight end sets down the road.”

Click here to watch Scheffler’s interview.

Thoughts on the Schedule …

April 11th, 2007 - 5:35pm by AndrewOther posts by

Random thoughts on the schedule:

… Keep those bags packed in November and December. Six road games in eight weeks, although the Broncos got a break by not having more than two straight weeks on the road. The Jackonville Jaguars have to endure a three-week string of road contests;

… With so many road games in the final two months, a strong start could be vital to the Broncos’ chances. Three straight home games against San Diego, Pittsburgh and Green Bay also affords an opportunity for the Broncos to send a league-wide message, and to do so in front of their fans;

… The Broncos don’t face a team with a winning record in 2006 until visiting Indianapolis in Week 4, but don’t face an ’06 losing team from Week 2 (Raiders) through Week 9 (Lions). “It’s tough,” wide receiver/kickoff returner Quincy Morgan said. “I thought in this league when you don’t make the playoffs you’re supposed to get a weak schedule. But I guess we’re the Broncos, so they load us up with some pretty good teams.”

… The Christmas Eve game at San Diego is the first prime-time game on Dec. 24 in league annals. In past years, the league endeavored to ensure that teams completed their games before the evening hours of that day, when celebrations and services around the Christmas holiday typically commence.

“I can’t imagine how those guys feel that have kids and can’t be there when their kids wake up and open their presents,” Morgan said.

Throughout recent NFL history, the nighttime hours of Christmas Eve have gone largely untouched; the latest any team started a game on that day was at 4 p.m. local time — for a Panthers-Redskins game in Washington, D.C. in 1995. When Christmas Eve fell on a Monday in 1990, 1995 and 2001, then-MNF broadcaster ABC was given a Saturday night timeslot. Of course, that window now belongs to the NFL Network and its slate of Thursday-Saturday games.

For more on the schedule, read the story from the main site or watch Quincy Morgan’s Q&A about the schedule.

Mike Bell’s Numbers Game

April 4th, 2007 - 2:24am by AndrewOther posts by

Mike BellWhat’s in a number? If you’re Mike Bell and you’re about to take on the jersey of one of your childhood football heroes, it means asking for permission before you don it — even if that request ends up being via proxy.

After yielding his No. 20 to new acquisition Travis Henry, Bell didn’t have many options for his new number, but No. 30 — which has not been worn in the regular season since Terrell Davis’ retirement — was available. (Santonio Beard wore it in the offseason and training camp in 2004.)

Jersey No. 30 in Denver doesn’t quite possess the lineage of, say, No. 44 at Syracuse, which has belonged to Jim Brown, Ernie Davis and Broncos Ring of Famer Floyd Little, among others. It is, however, important to Bell, even though it is still merely stitching on a shirt.

“It means a lot,” Bell said, adding, “I think people place too much significance on it because a number is not going to make me play any better, but I did grow up watching him, and it basically completes what I wanted to do. It is special to me, but it’s not going to mean anything if I don’t go out there and perform.”

ON THE SCHEDULE: Don’t look for the schedule to be released this week. The NFL Network programming schedule once had the show penciled in for Thursday, but now the channel plans to air NFL Films programming in that afternoon time slot. If previous years’ trends hold true, the schedule will be released sometime this month before the draft.

Dre’ Bly: The Family Man

April 2nd, 2007 - 3:30pm by AndrewOther posts by

Dre’ Bly used his first press conference as a member of the Broncos to emphatically deny the rumors that spoke of displeasure with his trade to the Broncos, putting him two time zones away from his home in the Hampton Roads area of southeast Virginia.

“First, let me say nobody ever heard me say anything,” Bly said. “I didn’t come to the media; I didn’t talk. Whenever an individual has a chance to go home, to be near your family, it’s definitely something to look forward to. But I’m grateful to be a Denver Bronco, (to be with a team that) has a lot of success (and) great tradition. Everything is in the past.”

“The last four years have been a struggle, being in Detroit and not winning. Having a chance to come to a playoff-caliber team, it’s something that every player dreams of and wants to be in. I’m glad to be here.”

Sure, the call of home tugs at Bly’s heart, as it would almost any man at some point in his life. But the fact that he signed a multi-year contract showed his willingness to embrace life along the Front Range. So too did the fact that his wife Kristyn spent Monday house-hunting in the Denver area.

“My wife felt good about Denver,” Bly said. “It wasn’t that I didn’t want to come here. Every man would love the opportunity to go home. I told Coach Shanahan you have great tradition here (and it’s a) great opporutnity. My thing was our stability. I’d be able to move my family down here. Every individual. I can’t be without my family, three boys and a daughter. For Dre’ Bly to be the Dre’ Bly he’s been the last eight years, I need my family with me.”

(On a personal note, I love it when players speak of themselves in the third person. It’s oddly entertaining. Makes me think of Jimmy from a sixth-season episode of Seinfeld — “Jimmy’s might have a compound fracture! Jimmy’s going into shock!” — and George Costanza’s unwitting mimickry of him: “It’s the Kung Pao. George likes his chicken spicy.”)

OK, back on track.

You can watch Bly’s press conference in Real or Windows Media.

Another Opening Day

April 2nd, 2007 - 9:04am by AndrewOther posts by

For the last few years, Opening Day means more than just baseball in Denver. It means the day when Broncos players turn the page and move forward for the upcoming season.

This is, in many ways, the real beginning of the year. Not in July, when training camp commences. Not in August, when the preseason opens. Nor is it September, after the primary roster has been pared down to 53 players.

Of course, unlike in those instances, the Broncos’ opening day will happen behind closed doors. The workouts are held in private. There’ll be no cameras watching, which has been the case the last few offseasons. The click-click of shutters will be replaced by the bark of strength and conditioning coach Rich Tuten, who for most of the next four months will have the Broncos players almost completely under his jurisdiction.

That doesn’t mean we won’t see them — in fact, this is the day when we begin sitting down with the players, to tell you their stories, which you’ll I know, I know, this means that some days you’ll click on the Web site, see a picture of an unfamiliar face and think, “Who is this guy, and why is he on the front of the site?” That’s precisely the point. You might ask, “Who is this guy?” We’ll give you the answer.

We’ve been busy, and we’ll continue to stay that way. For while today is opening day, and while many players haven’t been here often in the last three months, there has been — and will continue to be — no such thing as an offseason.

Upstairs, Downstairs

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

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

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.