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Posts Tagged ‘Gerard Warren’

Everyday Evaluation on the D-Line

August 22nd, 2007 - 5:16pm by AndrewOther posts by

John Browning

With John Browning making his practice debut Wednesday afternoon, the defensive line remained the focal point as the Broncos moved a day closer to what could well be a revealing preseason game against Cleveland on Saturday night.

But how much that game shows about Browning remains to be seen. It has been nearly 20 months since he played in a regular-season game, and after leaving the Chiefs with an injury settlement on Sept. 30 of last year after suffering a back injury, it has been nearly 11 months since he had a team to call his own. Wednesday afternoon represented his first session, and his coaches were pleased with his work, although there’s little that could be gauged from a practice that took place just hours after his signing.

“For what we did today, he looked like he did just fine,” defensive line coach Bill Johnson said. “But it takes time. We’ll get him some game time and see how it goes. It’s hard to tell after one practice when you’re in a game-week situation, but, he did show some striking ability and some firmness in there, and that’s a good start.”

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Preseason Doesn’t Count, But it Matters

August 21st, 2007 - 4:47pm by domonique_foxworthOther posts by

Well, I’ll start by thanking everybody. Week after week we set a new record. We’ve reached 53 responses, which eclipsed last week’s 48. I read them all, as usual, and I appreciate the support.

I guess a good place to start is probably the Dallas game. It was pretty funny — well, not funny.  Funny’s not the word. But after practice on Monday I went down to the Boys and Girls Club just to hang out a little bit, and that’s supposed to be a safe place, but it really is not for me.

All the kids had a lot of jokes and questions like, “So why’d you guys lose?” and questions that I can’t answer. I slipped on one play and a couple of guys asked me, “Why’d you slip?” I really don’t know what to answer to that. There’s really no good answer. It’s a pretty simple, yet complicated question. I slipped because it was slippery.

But it was good to see them, and as far as the game goes, it was really disappointing. We can make a thousand excuses, but you don’t get to this level making excuses and you can’t win as many games and go as far as we want this team to go making excuses.

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Warren Dealt to Oakland

August 20th, 2007 - 8:44am by AndrewOther posts by

A week after leaving defensive tackle Gerard Warren off the road trips to San Francisco and Dallas, the Broncos traded the seventh-year veteran defensive tackle to the Oakland Raiders for an undisclosed draft pick.

The trade ends a two-year stint that began two years ago when the Broncos received the 2001 first-round pick from the Cleveland Browns in exchange for a fourth-round selection in the 2005 draft.

Until the last week, Warren had been running with the first team at Broncos training camp and was coming off two seasons in which he started all 31 games in which he played, logging 93 tackles and 5.5 sacks over his two years with Denver.

The trade with the arch-rival Raiders is rare. The Broncos’ 2007 media guide lists no trades with the Raiders since 1993, when they still called Los Angeles home. In that swap, the Broncos acquired a third-round pick in exchange for running back Gaston Green.

Also of note … even after the last week, Warren remained atop the depth chart at the right defensive tackle slot. The name right behind his at the position was fellow University of Florida product Marcus Thomas, whom the team selected in the fourth round of the April NFL Draft after making a deal with the Minnesota Vikings to acquire the selection.

Bigger — and Better?

June 8th, 2007 - 12:42pm by AndrewOther posts by

When Jim Bates first addressed Denver-area media after becoming assistant head coach/defense, he sounded a little like Tim “The Tool Man” Taylor when discussing his plans for the defensive line.

“More power,” Bates said.

“There won’t be as much movement up and down the line of scrimmage. We will play with much more power up front, taking on blocks and being much squarer than in the past.”

And he wanted that power — and bulk to go with it — up the middle.

“We were able to manage with 290, 285-pound defensive tackles, but it makes the defense work a lot better if we have big guys up the middle,” he said at the time.
Jimmy Kennedy
So in the last four days, the Broncos have signed Sam Adams and traded for Jimmy Kennedy. Adams arrived in Denver weighing 345 pounds; Kennedy checked in at 325 last year for the St. Louis Rams, when he started all 16 games at nose tackle — marking the first time in an injury-hindered career that he has started an entire season. Size-wise, Gerard Warren fits nicely alongside Kennedy and Adams; the seventh-year player is listed at 325 pounds.

Now, if you try and fit each of the Broncos’ defensive tackles into a large box, you’ll have room to spare in some instances. Returning tackle Demetrin Veal is 288 pounds, while fourth-round draft pick Marcus Thomas is 296 pounds and free-agent pickup Alvin McKinley is 294.

But the trend of this week is unmistakable. The Broncos haven’t been averse to having such massive tackles over the years — just not necessarily two of them on the field at the same time, as you can see with the season-opening, starting defensive-tackle couplings of recent years:

2006: Gerard Warren 325 lbs., Michael Myers 300 lbs.
Average: 312.5 lbs.

2005: Gerard Warren 325 lbs., Michael Myers 300 lbs.
Average: 312.5 lbs.

2004: Mario Fatafehi 300 lbs., Trevor Pryce 295 lbs.
Average: 297.5 lbs.

2003: Darius Holland 330 lbs., Monsanto Pope 300 lbs.
Average: 315.0 lbs.

2002: Chester McGlockton 334 lbs., Lional Dalton 309 lbs.
Average: 321.5 lbs.

If the Broncos start some combination of Kennedy, Warren and Adams, it would give them their heaviest defensive-tackle combination in recent memory, and what Bates surely hopes would be an effective one.

“It always starts up the middle,” Bates said. “and if you’re good in the run defense up the middle, it makes your whole team better.”

AND ONE MORE THING …

There’s a few number changes on the roster today. Adams now has No. 95, which had belonged to Jarvis Moss, who moves to No. 94, his number at the University of Florida. Amon Gordon, who previously donned No. 94, will now take the No. 63 jersey that Adams so snugly wore in the last three days of OTAs.

OTA Day 13: The Answers Are Blowin’ in the Wind

June 6th, 2007 - 3:31pm by AndrewOther posts by

OTA Day 12
What turned out to be a slight groin injury has left Brandon Marshall sidelined throughout much of team camp. But Wednesday’s OTA closed with Marshall working out under the close watch of assistant athletic trainer Corey Oshikoya, practicing his lateral movement while tethered to the goal post.

A day earlier, it was fellow wide receiver Glenn Martinez who moved back and forth across the field.
Brandon Marshall
Brandon Marshall
Brandon Marshall
On the practice field, the story of the day was the weather.

Usually, practicing outside to prepare for the elements entails working out on a chilly day or with snowflakes falling. However, such meteorologically challenging workouts don’t usually take place until November or December.

That was not the case on Wednesday, as sustained winds of 32 miles per hour buffeted the Broncos, sending footballs flying all over creation and wide of their targets.

“Sometimes you’d see the ball go to the left goal post and it would go far wide right and almost in the parking lot,” defensive end Kenard Lang said.

Although the stiff breezes wreaked havoc with the field-goal attempts of Brandon Pace and Jason Elam — as well as the passes of Denver’s four quarterbacks — some tosses remained on the money, most spectacularly being a deep, 50-yard pass up the right sideline from Darrell Hackney to David Kircus during one-on-one drills.

Other notes …

… Jeff Shoate intercepted one of Jay Cutler’s passes in one-on-one work …

… Champ Bailey and Domonique Foxworth exchanged jerseys during the practice …

… And courtesy of J. Michael Moore, some more photos:
OTA Day 13
OTA Day 13
OTA Day 13
OTA Day 13
OTA Day 13
OTA Day 13
And in honor of Bob Barker’s last day in The Price Is Right‘s studios, I’ll sign off by reminding you to help control the pet population; have your pets spayed or neutered.

Sam Adams: Broncos Get Their Big Guy

June 4th, 2007 - 11:41am by AndrewOther posts by

Live from the 19th hole at the Mike Shanahan Golf Classic, where I unexpectedly found a wireless Internet connection that is functional, if balky …

… As for the news of the day, the Broncos finally got their beefy veteran defensive tackle.

Back in March, the team executed a trade with the Miami Dolphins for Dan Wilkinson, but the 14-year veteran of multiple teams opted not to join the Broncos, rendering the swap null and void. Two and a half months after the deal hit the compost heap, the Broncos got a player at the same position, of nearly the same massive dimensions and with a strikingly similar résumé — 14-year veteran, 1994 first-round pick, peripatetic career.

Sam Adams has donned many jerseys, and the Broncos will be his sixth team. After spending the 1994-99 seasons with the Seattle Seahawks, he had a two-year stay in Baltimore, played one season in Oakland, toiled for the Buffalo Bills for three years and then one year — 2006 — with the Cincinnati Bengals. (With a name like “Sam Adams,” it’s surprising he hasn’t been a Patriot.)

At 6-foot-3 and 350 pounds, he can still clog run lanes. At 33 years of age (he turns 34 later this month), he remains durable, having started all 16 games for the Bengals last year, when he notched 25 tackles (12 solo), two sacks for eight yards and a pass defensed. He was also a Pro Bowler as recently as 2004, which represented his third trip to the NFL’s annual all-star game.

The impact of this move on the Broncos’ D-line will bear itself out over the next couple of months. Gerard Warren and Demetrin Veal have been the primary D-tackle tandem throughout team camp so far, with March signee Alvin McKinley rotating in from the second team and rookie Marcus Thomas working his way up from the third unit.

Also worth noting about Adams is that he is already a professional sports team owner. He founded and runs the Everett (Wash.) Hawks of arenafootball2, the Arena Football League’s developmental circuit.

Broncos-Colts Pregame Notes: Warren, Kuper, Morgan Inactive

October 29th, 2006 - 1:09pm by AndrewOther posts by

Lots of news as the inactives are passed out:

  • Cross Chris Kuper off the list of possibilities on the offensive line today; he is once again inactive. Meanwhile, tackle Adam Meadows — signed in the preseason to bolster depth at the position — is among the 45 active players for the first time this season. Erik Pears, last week’s left-tackle fill-in, is also active.
  • No Bob Sanders for Indy; he’s out. Former Michigan standout Marlin Jackson will shift over from cornerback to take his place. Dylan Gandy will also replace Ryan Lilja at left guard for the Colts.
  • Defensive tackle Gerard Warren will not play, one week after spraining his right big toe at Cleveland. He practiced Friday, but ultimately the Broncos opted to hold him out. Demetrin Veal played in his place last week and also handled those duties in the preseason when Warren dislocated his left big toe.
  • Kickoff returner Quincy Morgan is inactive after handling those duties for the past four games. Meanwhile, rookie Brian Clark — promoted from the practice squad six days ago — is among the active players. Clark was the Broncos’ leading kickoff returner in the preseason.
  • Denver’s other inactive players include wide receiver Todd Devoe, safety Hamza Abdullah, linebacker Nate Webster and tight end Nate Jackson.
  • The Broncos are back to their usual home uniforms — blue jerseys with white pants, last seen during the 9-6 win over Kansas City on Sept. 17.

Warren Practices; Status a Game-Time Decision

October 27th, 2006 - 3:46pm by AndrewOther posts by

The news was good for Gerard Warren — he made it through the entire practice Friday afternoon.

But Head Coach Mike Shanahan does not know whether the sixth-year defensive tackle will play. His status on the injury report remains unchanged; he’s listed as questionable.

“I’ll get a chance to look at film and see how he did, and then we’ll make a decision on game day in which direction we’ll go,” Shanahan said.

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Warren’s Injury: ‘I Have to Fight Through It’

October 27th, 2006 - 1:47am by AndrewOther posts by

As a small horde of inquisitors cleared one by one away from Gerard Warren’s locker, I stayed behind, wanting to get a couple of more questions in as the sixth-year defensive tackle held court.

He’d already talked about how whether he could practice Friday would help determine whether he could play on Sunday. But I wanted to know whether Warren felt pain whenever he took a step.

“I feel pain thinking about taking a step,” he said.

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Back to Lake Erie: Gerard Warren

October 19th, 2006 - 4:17am by AndrewOther posts by

Over the next three days, 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. We start with defensive tackle Gerard Warren.

Even if Gerard Warren were to say anything that would end up being posted on the wall of the Browns’ locker room, he doesn’t think it would mean much.

“Bulletin-board material — what is it worth? To me, really, nothing,” Warren said. “Guys do a lot of talking, but you’ve got to get on the field and back it up on Sunday.”

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