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Posts Tagged ‘Defense’

Season Review: Sam Brandon

January 18th, 2007 - 11:04pm by AndrewOther posts by

Sam BrandonThrough the first seven games of the year, the Broncos defense had been blessed with relatively good health; aside from defensive end Courtney Brown’s knee problems that ended his season before it began, Denver’s defenders had only missed a game here and there.

Then came a game that would claim a multitude of Broncos to the bane of a footballer’s existence. One by one, Brandon, Ebenezer Ekuban, Patrick Chukwurah, Ian Gold, Nick Ferguson, John Lynch and Darrent Williams all hobbled from the field during a Nov. 5 win at Pittsburgh.

“I don’t think I can ever remember losing as many guys on one side of the football,” Head Coach Mike Shanahan said.

All but Brandon would be back within two games. The fifth-year safety, however, left Heinz Field on the back of a cart after colliding with Demetrin Veal during the fourth quarter.

“You could see it happen right in front of you,” Shanahan said the day after the injury. “It was just a freak injury and it’s really a shame, because he (had) really been playing well.”

“I felt the play, so I know what happened,” Brandon said at the time. “I could feel it. It was pretty painful.”

For the Broncos, it forced them to recalibrate their secondary. Curome Cox rose into Brandon’s “big-nickel” role, and then became a starter when Ferguson’s season ended two weeks later with a knee injury. By December, Domonique Foxworth was starting at strong safety, with Cox seeing substantial action as a fifth defensive back. They held their own.

But for Brandon, the injury was a crushing blow to what had been a promising season. A year earlier, his coaches concocted the “big nickel,” bringing the safety Brandon in as a fifth defensive back rather than using a third cornerback as is the standard for nickel packages. The strategy worked to perfection as the scheme helped defuse some star tight ends like San Diego’s Antonio Gates and Kansas City’s Tony Gonzalez.

Brandon’s first three NFL seasons witnessed him alternately gaining and losing traction in his bid for playing time; the “big nickel” offered him a clearly defined role, which he embraced this season.

“It’s mine, really. That’s what I want to say,” Brandon said in training camp. “I feel like it’s mine, so I’m real comfortable.”

Whether Brandon finds that comfort level upon his return is unknown, simply by the nature of the injury he incurred. Some players with surgically repaired ACLs regain their previous capabilities almost as soon as they step onto the field, as wide receiver Javon Walker and Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer did this past season. Others can take a year longer to regain their form, like Baltimore Ravens running back Jamal Lewis.

There’s no way of knowing until the contact work of training camp arrives in just over six months.

FINAL ANALYSIS: Finished the season with 15 total tackles — nine solo and six assists … In that fateful Steelers game, Brandon filled in for an injured Nick Ferguson and logged three tackles while forcing two fumbles (one on special teams ) … No tight ends scored touchdowns against the Broncos during the eight games in which Brandon played. (Antonio Gates’ two touchdowns against the Broncos at San Diego in December were the only ones by any tight ends against Denver all year.)

NEXT: Linebacker Keith Burns.

Season Review: Champ Bailey

January 15th, 2007 - 11:53pm by AndrewOther posts by

It’s been nearly three years since the trade that brought Champ Bailey to Denver as part of a deal that shipped Clinton Portis to the Washington Redskins in what was the NFL’s first trade of current Pro Bowlers in three decades, and for the Broncos, the verdict couldn’t be much better.

While Portis was prolific in orange and blue, the Broncos got a player that has become the league’s best at his position. Three seasons in Denver … three Pro Bowl bids … three first-team All-Pro selections … and more interceptions than anyone else in the sport in those years, with 21, some three better than the second-best on the list (Jacksonville’s Rashean Mathis).

Twenty-one interceptions in a league increasingly geared towards low-risk, precision passing is an impressive total under any circumstance. But when factoring teams’ general resistance to throwing in his direction, it becomes downright remarkable.

“Everyone tries to never allow him to have an impact on the game,” safety John Lynch said. “Then he finds a way each and every day to have an impact on the game.”

“Sooner or later they’re going to quit throwing in his direction,” Head Coach Mike Shanahan said. “I wouldn’t advise throwing over there, but it’s really amazing when you look at the percentage of balls that have been thrown in his direction how many he has come up with. It’s a credit to his preparation and obviously the type of athlete he is.”

Bailey’s athleticism caused the Broncos to take a look at him on offense during his first Denver training camp and again early in the regular season that followed. And while he still speaks of a desire to try his skills on offense, he still managed to get his hands on the football more than any other defensive back in the game this season.

It wasn’t enough to earn him plaudits as the league’s defensive player of the year. It was enough for his teammates to sternly advocate his selection for the award — with none doing so more passionately than offensive captain Rod Smith.

“Definitely. No doubt,” Smith said when asked whether Bailey should have won the award that eventually went to Miami’s Jason Taylor. “Just look at what he does on the football field — he can shut a whole side down. When you have a team that doesn’t even look at throwing the football over there — and then when they do it, (it’s) by mistake — he ends up taking it back the other way.

“I mean, I’ve never played with a better football player, I don’t believe. I played with John Elway, and he’s a legend, he’s great, (so) I’ll exclude him. But everybody else I’ve ever played with, I’ve never seen anybody else like him. I call him ‘The Jedi,’ actually. I think he’s Yoda’s son because he knows where the hell the ball’s going before they even throw it, and he just runs over there and I’m like, ‘Dude, that’s not your guy.’

“Honestly, I really appreciate the opportunity to get to play with that kind of greatness. He’s not good, by no means; he passed good a long time ago, before he ever came to the Broncos. The people who vote on that (defensive player of the year) — I don’t know who votes.

“I don’t know if you have a vote (I don’t, sadly), but you’ve got to look at all the things he does for our football team and how he can take another team and make them change everything they do. That, to me, is the defensive player of the year, and at the same time, he’s turned games around and helped us win games very quickly. Like I say, he’s an amazing athlete, and he’s a great person, just the character of Champ is probably more impressive than his athletic ability, and he’s probably got more athletic ability than pretty much anybody on this planet. I just hope he gets what’s due to him, because he’s worked his butt off and he deserves it.”

FINAL ANALYSIS: Tied for the league’s lead in interceptions (10) … Played in all 16 games for the seventh time in eight NFL seasons; a nagging hamstring injury was the culprit in the only two games he ever sat out, both of which came in 2005 … Credited with 98 total tackles, 14 better than his previous career standard of 84 established in 2002 with the Redskins and matched two years later … His fumble recovery against Cincinnati on Dec. 24 was his first since joining the Broncos … Broke up a career-high 30 passes.

NEXT: Tailback Mike Bell.

Bates: A Coach Beloved By His Players

January 11th, 2007 - 11:50am by AndrewOther posts by

According to recent reports from ESPN’s Chris Mortensen, if Jason Taylor and Zach Thomas had their way, Jim Bates would not be the Broncos’ newest assistant coach — he’d be their head coach in Miami.

Such campaigning says a lot about Bates — but they’re far from the only ones to want the veteran of 37 sideline seasons to practice his trade in their midst. Similar calls went out from the Miami Dolphins’ locker room when the then-interim head coach interviewed for the position just hours after a résumé-burnishing win over the New England Patriots. Miami, however, opted for Nick Saban over Bates, and South Florida is still lamenting how that choice turned out.

But here’s what Bates’ charges said about him in December 2004:

Then-quarterback A.J. Feeley, who started down the stretch under Bates: “If you ask everybody around this locker room he’s a guy you want to play for and a guy you want to earn his respect. As a coach, that’s what you want, a group of guys that want to play for you. He’s got my nod.”

Tight end Randy McMichael: “People say we’re a different team under him, and it’s true. I will play for that man anywhere, any day of the week.”

A year later, when Bates was in Green Bay and head coach Mike Sherman was dismissed, players again openly campaigned for Bates to become the team’s head coach.

“I thought he did a great job with the defense and I would love it if Coach Bates got the job,” Packers nose tackle Grady Jackson told the Appleton Post-Crescent last year. “The players really respond to him.”

“Players really love Coach Bates and he has a way of getting the most out of them,” Green Bay tight end Donald Lee also told the Post-Cresent as the Packers conducted their search for a head coach. “He was like that in Miami and he was like that here. There’s no question he’ll make a great head coach somewhere. Hopefully, it’d be here.”

Time will tell how Bates does in Denver. But a good indication of how he’ll fare rests in how so many of his players thought the best course for their team’s future was to have the 60-year-old coach shepherd them through what changes awaited.

Change on the Defense

January 9th, 2007 - 11:45am by AndrewOther posts by

A major change is in the offing as the offseason dawns, as Larry Coyer is no longer the Broncos’ defensive coordinator after four years in the position that saw the Broncos reach significant peaks and valleys on the defensive side of the line of scrimmage.

During this past season, the Broncos began the year by becoming the first team in 64 years to go through the first 11 quarters of the season without allowing a touchdown, and then closed the year by allowing at least 20 points in five straight games beginning with Seattle’s 23-point output on Dec. 3 and ending with San Francisco’s 26-point tally on New Year’s Eve. That marked the first time since Weeks 10-16 of the 2000 season that the Broncos had allowed at least 20 points in five or more consecutive games.

So how do you feel about the move, and what do you feel might be next? Discuss below …

Defense’s Place in History

October 25th, 2006 - 1:20am by AndrewOther posts by

In 1978, the structure of passing football changed forever. Offensive players were allowed to extend their arms and open their hands on pass blocking. Defenders could no longer contact and impede receivers once they got more than five yards clear of the line of scrimmage. And to make sure that these tweaks were enforced, a seventh official — the side judge — was added to the on-field arbiting crew.

Why is that significant? Because until this year, no team since those rules changes were instituted has ever allowed fewer than eight points a game in their opening six games of the season.

With just 7.3 points permitted per game, the Broncos have the best such average after six games since the 1977 “Grits Blitz” Atlanta Falcons.

Click to continue reading “Defense’s Place in History”

Back to Lake Erie: Kenard Lang

October 22nd, 2006 - 11:45am by AndrewOther posts by

Greetings from the Cleveland Browns Stadium press box, where we look out over a field that was once fully blanketed by a massive orange tarpaulin, but is now being gradually revealed as the 6800-plus square-foot covering is removed piece-by-piece by a staff of 20.

The game might not be a homecoming for the former Browns-turned-Broncos, but it is at the very least a return to the old workplace, and for Gerard Warren, that meant exchanging greetings with stadium security personnel as he walked to the Denver locker room.


Warren played four seasons in Cleveland. Defensive end Kenard Lang played just as many, joining the Browns in 2002 and remaining there until after last season — when he played outside linebacker as he attempted to adapt to a 3-4 scheme.

That makes him the only one of the Broncos’ six former Browns on the 53-man roster to have shared a locker room with running back Reuben Droughns after he was traded from Denver to Cleveland.

Click to continue reading “Back to Lake Erie: Kenard Lang”

Back to Lake Erie: Michael Myers

October 22nd, 2006 - 1:51am by AndrewOther posts by

Between now and game time, I’ll use this space to focus on each of the six former Browns on the 53-man roster who will return to Cleveland this Sunday.

Like Chad Mustard — the last entry in this blog mini-series — Michael Myers doesn’t hold the Browns any ill will. If anything, the disruptive defensive tackle owes the Browns a measure of gratitude for procuring him.

“They came in and gave me a chance when Dallas didn’t want me,” Myers recalled. “So I thank them for that.”

Click to continue reading “Back to Lake Erie: Michael Myers”

Wrapping Up Week 6 …

October 16th, 2006 - 5:39am by AndrewOther posts by

Let’s wrap this up. The press box is empty, save for one nocturnal soul, and we’re back in the locker room at Broncos headquarters at 11:30 a.m. MDT to go foraging for some day-after-game nuggets of knowledge from the players.

Some final points:

  • Denver is 4-1 for the fifth straight year. The Broncos would make it to 5-1 in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
  • This is Denver’s fourth winning streak of at least four games in the last two years. The Broncos had two five-game winning streaks (one included the playoff win over New England) that bracketed a four-game midseason run last year.
  • The Broncos’ home regular-season winning streak of 13 games is the longest in the league, one ahead of Seattle, which was on the road Sunday for a 30-28 win at St. Louis.

Click to continue reading “Wrapping Up Week 6 …”

An End to the Waiting for Peterson

October 12th, 2006 - 8:20pm by AndrewOther posts by

Kenny Peterson had only been out of the NFL for a month, but the ennui of lacking a team was already beginning to set in as he worked out on his own in Columbus, Ohio.

“I go from playing football my whole life, ever since I was six, to not playing,” the defensive lineman and newest Bronco said. “Sitting and watching on TV. You think about playing fantasy football, stuff like that. That’s the rough part.”

For most of us, fantasy football is as close as we’ll come to the real thing on the professional level. For Peterson, it was a fate to be avoided at all costs — at least for now, when he’s still only in his late 20s, his fourth year as a professional and, he hopes, with some more productive NFL seasons still in his future.

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Lynch: Doing OK, Back at Practice

October 11th, 2006 - 9:18pm by AndrewOther posts by

“I’m okay, I’m okay,” John Lynch insisted as he sat on the bench during the fourth quarter Monday night, a small armada of medical personnel standing within two feet of his face after he absorbed a helmet-rattling shot from Baltimore’s Keydrick Vincent.

He was okay, as it turned out. A Tuesday MRI revealed no damage to his neck, and he practiced Wednesday. He did land on the injury report, but is listed as “probable.”

But on Monday night, he was a little out of sorts. Not because of the hit — which brought a gasp to everyone in the stadium and among Broncos fans in the television audience who were aware of the neck problems that hindered Lynch in his final season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and helped lead to their decision to release him in March 2004.

No, something was missing as he sat on the bench.

“I was looking for my helmet,” Lynch said. “They were hiding it from me.”

Click to continue reading “Lynch: Doing OK, Back at Practice”