Posts Tagged ‘Curome Cox’

Out of the Woods…

November 13th, 2007 - 11:33am by domonique_foxworthOther posts by domonique_foxworth

We win!

Me and my main man Hamza Abdullah filled in at safety. Hamza is definitely one of my closest friends on the team. I’ve talked about him a lot on the blog before and how he’s a very good young safety. We were able to start together at safety for the Kansas City game, and all week practicing together we just had a great time. We had fun communicating and making plays all week during practice. It was a whole lot of fun, and then of course the game was even more fun. There’s definitely something special about playing and performing with somebody that you have a pretty good friendship with. While you’re on the field you feel really close to everybody out there and you want everybody to do well, but there’s something different about being out there with guys that you really care about. I think the people in the secondary, we all really care about each other and we’re close friends.

It was just a great performance by the team overall, and there were some great plays in the secondary. There were a bunch of interceptions, and unfortunately I was not able to get one, but it doesn’t really matter. We won. That’s all that matters, because we are now winners. I like being a winner. Being a loser stinks. I don’t think I want to be a loser anymore. I’d like to win a lot more games.

Click to continue reading “Out of the Woods…”

Clark, Gordon and Cox Released

November 6th, 2007 - 3:43pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Denver’s players got the day off on Tuesday, but three of them will not be back at practice when Wednesday arrives, as the Broncos released wide receiver Brian Clark, defensive back Curome Cox and defensive tackle Amon Gordon.

Gordon had tumbled down the depth chart in recent weeks. After becoming a first-teamer in the preseason and starting the first three regular-season games, he was deactivated for four of thes next five contests, including all three after the Week 6 bye last month. Gordon logged five tackles in games against the Bills and Jaguars and ended up with 16 total tackles in his four games this year, but did not log a sack.

Clark, meanwhile, was waived for the second time this season. The team placed him on waivers on Sept. 29 — one day before the Colts game — then brought him back on Oct. 2 when it waived Domenik Hixon. Clark then played in each of the next four games, catching four passes for 23 yards and returning three kickoffs for 70 yards. He did, however, fumble twice — once on a kickoff return against San Diego and again while stretching out to try and score a last-minute touchdown in Sunday’s loss to the Detroit Lions.

Cox, meanwhile, was inactive for the first time this season on Sunday at Detroit. He played in 36 games — starting five — over the last three years for the Broncos, logging 26 total tackles, a pair of interceptions, two fumble recoveries and 10 passes defensed.

Denver also moved defensive end Jarvis Moss to injured reserve; he fractured his right fibula and tore ankle ligaments in practice last week.

The Broncos filled the roster vacancies by signing wide receiver Taylor Jacobs, a former No. 2 pick of the Washington Redskins in 2003, and three defensive ends — ex-Atlanta Falcons Josh Mallard and Paul Carrington and Larry Birdine, who was most recently on the Titans’ practice squad.

Carrington was waived from the Falcons on Sept. 1, while Mallard was waived from there on Oct. 13. Both Carrington and Mallard played last year in Atlanta under current Broncos defensive-line coach Bill Johnson.

Broncos-Lions: Pregame Notes

November 4th, 2007 - 10:06am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

The Broncos will have to make do without safety John Lynch.

After being limited in practice on Thursday and Friday as he recovered from the pinched nerve he incurred against Green Bay last Monday, Lynch was one of the eight players scratched for today’s game against the Detroit Lions.

Joining Lynch on the sidelines will be fullback/running back Mike Bell, safety Curome Cox, defensive tackle Amon Gordon, guard Isaac Snell, tight end Chad Mustard, wide receiver Javon Walker and defensive end Jarvis Moss, whose season ended last Thursday when he fractured his fibula and tore ankle ligaments in practice. However, he has not yet been moved to injured reserve.

Hamza Abdullah, meanwhile, will make his return to the lineup after missing the last five games with a strained hip flexor. With Cox inactive, Abdullah is one of three pure safeties active for the game, joining Nick Ferguson and Steve Cargile. Cornerback Domonique Foxworth, however, is expected to see substantial action back at safety, as he did last week following Lynch’s injury and back in December 2006 when Ferguson was lost for the season.

Detroit’s inactives players included running back Tatum Bell, whom the Lions acquired from Denver in the Dre’ Bly trade eight months ago. Joining him are cornerbacks Dovonte Edwards and Tony Beckham, guards Blaine Saipia and Manny Ramirez, defensive ends Ikaika Alama-Francis and Kalimba Edwards and quarterback Dan Orlovsky, who is in uniform per the NFL’s rules regarding third quarterbacks.

Kids Camps, More Writing and a Trip to the Mountains…

June 19th, 2007 - 10:30am by domonique_foxworthOther posts by domonique_foxworth

Went back to the DC/Virginia/Maryland area this past weekend for Curome Cox — my college teammate and current teammate. He had his first annual free camp for the Curome Cox Foundation. There were about 350 kids there — it was amazing. Had a lot of big sponsors. Some other players went out there. Brian Clark came out. Madieu Williams from the Bengals, another college teammate of ours, was there. Demetrin Veal and Elvis Dumervil were there and a couple of other players.

We had a really good time with the camp and we spoke to the kids at the end about the general things that you speak to kids about — teamwork, dedication, hard work, school and all these things and how you need to have priorities and football is not always the number one priority at that age.

Click to continue reading “Kids Camps, More Writing and a Trip to the Mountains…”

OTA Day 9: Sam Brandon, Notes, Photos

May 30th, 2007 - 6:16pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Sam Brandon
The ninth OTA session ended just after midday Wednesday, and Sam Brandon’s teammates had all left for the locker room, to lift weights or to scarf down some lunch at the team’s cafeteria. Brandon, however, was going nowhere except back and forth, backpedaling, sprinting forward and moving laterally.

Just over six months after surgery to repair torn anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments, along with a microfracture procedure to help strengthen the knee.

Although he takes the field with his teammates at team camp, Brandon is still in the rehabilitation process. He can take part in individual and installation work but not in the team segments of the OTAs. His time to work, therefore, comes later as he builds up strength in his knee.

“This is my daily routine until I can transition back into doing on-the-field football stuff like everybody else is doing right now,” Brandon said. “It’s going well.”

Brandon is working to be ready by the start of training camp, although he couldn’t set a precise date to his expected return.

“I don’t know if there’s a target date,” Brandon said, “because a couple of weeks ago I went out and had a little bit of swelling, so I eased off. I just hope the swelling continues to stay down and that I can get stronger — which is the key, getting stronger in the weight room, to keep getting strength in my leg, my quad and my calf so it will reduce pressure on my knee.”

The swelling has gone down, and Brandon moved about the field smoothly on Wednesday. However, as he moves, the condition of his knee still weighs upon his mind.

“If you feel anything, your train of thought goes, ‘Oh my gosh,’” Brandon acknowledges. “But most of the time I can just go out there and it feels pretty smooth. It’s just once in while where you feel that tweak and you go, ‘Oh my gosh.’ But it feels really good.”

Sam Brandon
Sam Brandon
Sam Brandon
Sam Brandon
Sam Brandon
Sam Brandon
More notes:

… Cecil Sapp’s primary position has been fullback for the last three years, but as the Broncos progress through OTAs, they’re using him as a running back. Wednesday, he lined up as a deep setback behind Kyle Johnson — the man with whom Sapp waged a spirited battle for the first-team fullback role last year. “They always told me to keep my mind open about playing tailback, and now I just have to learn both positions,” Sapp said. “I’ve been doing it ever since I transformed to fullback. Now, they really want me to play tailback. Hopefully I take this opportunity and run with it.” …

… Champ Bailey intercepted a pass for a second day in a row, nabbing a Patrick Ramsey toss that glanced off the hand of David Kircus …

… Brandon Marshall watched the practice in sweats, joining fellow receivers Glenn Martinez, Rod Smith and Brandon Stokley in the present-but-not-in-uniform category. Stokley jogged around the fields throughout the early stages of work, but also did some sprinting as he continues his recovery from Achilles tendon surgery …

… Curome Cox earned notice from assistant head coach Jim Bates after acrobatically swatting away a Cutler bullet to Stephen Alexander. “Hell of a play,” Bates said as he high-fived the defensive back.

More to come tomorrow; until then, adios.

Service and Community

May 15th, 2007 - 9:10am by domonique_foxworthOther posts by domonique_foxworth

I’ve done a lot of community stuff this past week. I went to the Boys and Girls Club Gala on Saturday. It was an amazing experience. It was just amazing to hear how much promise the kids have. And how much the money and time that’s contributed actually goes to use, because sometimes you feel like when you’re giving to charities you don’t know what really happens.

But just seeing the kids who received awards give speeches and then they had dances and performances and they just lit up. That was just a great experience on Saturday.

Click to continue reading “Service and Community”

Season Review: Curome Cox

February 5th, 2007 - 2:50am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Curome CoxCurome Cox came to the Broncos in 2004 as a cornerback looking to make himself valuable on the Broncos’ practice squad. He left the 2006 season having established himself as a crucial part of the team, with the ability to not only play cornerback and safety, but status as one of the key members of the special-teams units, as well.

Injuries in the secondary — specifically to safeties Nick Ferguson and Sam Brandon — forced Cox into the starting lineup in November alongside John Lynch at safety. His work there was the culmination of something that began out of necessity during the 2005 training camp, when injuries drained the Broncos’ safety complement and forced Cox into temporary duty at the slot. His work there was so solid that the Broncos learned they had their answer to a utility infielder in baseball.

Cox grew in the year and a half that followed — mainly because there was no other option.

“Being around a group of guys like Nick (Ferguson), John (Lynch) and Champ (Bailey), there’s no way it can get worse — you’ve got to get better, especially with the coaching staff we have,” he said in November. “So I always feel like I’m steadily improving.”

When Brandon and Ferguson were injured at Pittsburgh in Week 8, Cox had perhaps his finest sequence to date, recovering a Hines Ward fumble near the goal line and intercepting Ben Roethlisberger to allow Denver to hang on for their first-ever win at Heinz Field. Cox’s duties that day were unexpected, but he was nonetheless prepared.

“Coach (Bob) Slowik and (Head) Coach (Mike) Shanahan always tell us, ‘Mental reps at all times,’” Cox said. “There’s certain situations where the guys don’t even get reps in practice, but because you prepare yourself and study just as well as the starters, you’re ready to go in and not get beat.”

Maintaining that diligence is crucial if Cox is to continue his growth.

FINAL ANALYSIS: Led the Broncos with 15 special-teams tackles … Four of his five career starts came this past season … Has been active for every game since the Broncos promoted him from the practice squad prior to a Week 4 game at Jacksonville during the 2005 season.

NEXT: Quarterback Jay Cutler.

AND ONE MORE THING … Yes, it’s always fun to channel Comic Book Guy, the Simpsons character with the three-word catchphrase “Worst … episode … ever.” But only when it’s accurate. The Kansas City Star’s Jason Whitlock opens his postgame tome from Super Bowl XLI as follows: “Worst. Super Bowl. Ever.” Come again? This wasn’t even the worst Super Bowl of this decade. Give me Sunday’s big plays and detours into sloppiness over the desultory 34-7 Ravens romp over the Giants in the XXXVth edition of the season-ending carnival. The only fun in that game was sitting behind none other than Mr. Did-You-Ever Notice, a.k.a. 60 Minutes essayist Andy Rooney, in the auxiliary media section. I wasn’t sure which part of the experience dismayed him more — the fact that his beloved Giants had such a lousy day or that he was within earshot of a fusillade of f-bombs fired by a media member sitting down the row from me.

Coyer: ‘Complete Faith’ in Curome Cox

November 22nd, 2006 - 5:08am by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Curome CoxTwo weeks ago, the value of preparation bore fruit for the Broncos — and for then-backup safety Curome Cox.

During that win at Pittsburgh, injuries besieged the Broncos’ safety corps, taking out Nick Ferguson and Sam Brandon first and then eventually removing John Lynch from the field for the game’s final moments. With Hamza Abdullah inactive that day, only Curome Cox was there to provide depth.

All Cox did was recover a fumble in Denver’s end zone and intercept a Ben Roethlisberger pass to close out the Steelers’ final drive, giving Denver the breathing room it needed to escape with a 31-20 win.

Click to continue reading “Coyer: ‘Complete Faith’ in Curome Cox”