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Posts Tagged ‘Fullbacks’

Through the Roster: Mike Bell

February 6th, 2008 - 5:39pm by AndrewOther posts by

Mike Bell

When you’ve waited over two months to carry the football, and when you’ve been in a sweatsuit during six of the previous seven games, the one thing you can’t do is fumble. when you finally get the football.

Lamentably for Mike Bell, that’s precisely what happened in Week 12 at Chicago’s Soldier Field, and the bobble confirmed what was apparent — that a dream season as a rookie had morphed into a nightmare in Year Two.

The feel-good story that defined his 2006 success as an undrafted rookie belonged to Selvin Young a year later — that of the undrafted, overlooked draft prospect who played like a first-day selection.

Click to continue reading “Through the Roster: Mike Bell”

Blog Bonus: Thump Belton

June 18th, 2007 - 8:55am by AndrewOther posts by

For those of you in the “Free Thump Belton” movement — which made it into the fullback’s Wikipedia entry — this blog entry’s for you:

Keith “Thump” Belton leads the life that few fans understand, but many players know innately — the life of a player scratching to find a semi-permanent place on an NFL team’s roster, a life that comes with the potential for great success, but a distinct lack of job security.

While he’s been a part of the Broncos since they signed him to their practice squad last December, it’s the day he was cut by the Chicago Bears that remains etched in scarlet on his mental calendar.

“September 2. That was the best day of my life and the worst day of my life,” Belton recalled.

“I kind of saw the writing on the wall. I did the best I could, but when I got that phone call from Coach (Lovie) Smith, that was the first time I’d cried in a long time. My grandmother had passed, my grandfather — a lot of people had passed (away) and I hadn’t dropped a tear, but that was like I lost a child, almost, because I hold the game so close to me, and that time from April until I got released was one of the lowest points of my life, because I (thought), ‘I’m not getting the opportunity; I’m not getting the reps; I don’t know what to do. There wasn’t anything I could do.

“When they released me for the last time, I sat there and put my head down and cried, because it was like, ‘What more could I have done to keep this from happening?’ But at the same time, by me being in Chicago, I did build a stronger relationship with my faith, and I did believe it was going to work out, one way or another.”

But it was Belton’s summertime reconnection with his Christian faith last year and his eventual landing in Denver which led him to dub it the best day of his life.

And although his given name is Keith, you can call him “Thump.” Virtually everyone on the Broncos does, “except the strength coach,” he says. Belton has answered to “Thump” since his infancy, and while he notes that the origin of his nickname has changed from time to time with the stories his parents have shared with him, it has become his identity among his nearest and dearest.

“My mom would never call me Keith because it’s my father’s name,” he said. “I don’t think she’s ever called me Keith in my whole life. Her, my family — all call me ‘Thump.’”

By any name, Belton carries a story that’s common, but his has its own unique twist. After being cut by the Bears, he went back home to Charlotte, N.C. to work as a substitute teacher and assistant football coach. It was work he handled well — one of his players, Daryl Vereen, led the Charlotte area in rushing yardage and signed to play at the University of Tennessee.

But Belton sees college-football coaching in his distant future. For now, it’s making it as a player and supporting his growing family that stand as his peak priorities.

Working Hard; Reflecting Back

April 10th, 2007 - 1:39am by AndrewOther posts by

One week into offseason conditioning, it’s definitely the former for the Broncos who reconvened at Dove Valley for the workouts that commenced on April 9.

“I think it’s the same stuff, just more of it,” fullback Kyle Johnson said after completing his Monday session. “I’ve really got to give him (stength and conditioning coach Rich Tuten) credit where credit is due.

“He does incorporate a lot of the things that they teach you to do over the years, all your football training, incorporating that, conditioning, plyometrics, speed training, ball training. He has a nice varied program. It’s quality. It’s just hard.”

But at the same time, the sweat and toil is welcome after a three-month period unlike any endured by an NFL team in recent memory. The deaths of Darrent Williams and Damien Nash hit Johnson hard, though he acknowledges that others in the locker room probably endure more pain and grieving that himself.

“Certain guys who were closer to them, it’s affected them more, and when you see them, you can tell,” Johnson said. “It depends on how intense your relationships were with both of those guys.

“We talk about D-Nash; we talk about D-Will, because they’re not forgotten and they’re still in our hearts and minds,” he added. “But … we’re not talking about what happened, we’re talking about remembering them. At least that’s what I’ve done.”

Johnson heard the news of Nash’s death while on vacation in Europe, which offered him a chance to pause and turn over some thoughts in his always-active mind.

“You ended up with a little more time to reflect and understand that as important and significant as this game is in every aspect of our lives, it is a job and a game at the end of the day, and life itself is more important,” Johnson said. “So I thought that not playing football and not being around each other for a while might have been the best thing — and now being back together should be something that’s beneficial for us to continue the healing process.”

And sometimes the hardest of work can be a soothing emotional balm when it’s needed most.

Season Review: Kyle Johnson

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

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.