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Posts Tagged ‘Jason Elam’

O Captain! My Captain!

September 7th, 2007 - 1:43pm by AndrewOther posts by

For what seems like the entire history of sport, when there have been teams, there have been captains. But until now, only hockey had a formal on-uniform designation for the honor, with one player on each team wearing the captain’s “C” and two others with the assistant captain’s “A.”

There is a logistical reason why the NHL clearly delineates its captains; these players are the only ones who may discuss rules issues with the on-ice officials. In soccer, the captain is usually the player who is the primary conduit between the sideline manager and the other 10 players on the field.

In the NFL, it’s a little different. The quarterback is the one who commands the huddle by sharing the playcall, but for many years, he received the actual play selection from another player who rotated into the lineup, or via hand signals from the coaches on the sideline. The captain’s only formalized duty is ceremonial — to walk to midfield for the pregame coin toss.

The captain’s role won’t change, but the way the NFL denotes it will, as the NFL follows the NHL and scattered other teams in other sports (like the Boston Red Sox with Jason Varitek) by incorporating captain’s patches on its uniforms. According to UniWatch blog majordomo Paul Lukas, only three teams have designated their captains with uniform patches, lettering or insignia prior to this year: the 1983 Cowboys, the 1992 Chargers and the 1994 Patriots.

Now, everyone will have this:

“The league wanted (the patch),” Head Coach Mike Shanahan said, “and we will obviously do that.”

On the Broncos, the men wearing the patch will be …

Offense: Jay Cutler, Tom Nalen.

Defense: Champ Bailey, John Lynch.

Special Teams: Chosen game by game; this week, it’s Jason Elam.

“That is always a tremendous honor,” said Lynch, who has been one of the team’s captains in each of his four Broncos campaigns. “I don’t care how many years you played in the league; to me, it’s the greatest honor you can have, for your teammates to say, ‘We want you to represent us and be one of our leaders.’

“It’s a great honor.”

It’s also quite signifcant for Cutler, who was elected by his teammates in spite of only having five career starts to his name.

“It gives you an idea what the team thinks of him,” Shanahan said. “This is totally a team selection. The coaches have nothing to do with it. It’s strictly among the players and who they see as their leader.”

Sign Off Ideas, Roster Cuts, and Me as a Wide Receiver?

August 28th, 2007 - 3:14pm by domonique_foxworthOther posts by

To start off with, I’ll be at the Helio store at 4 o’clock on Saturday just doing autograph stuff there, so if anybody wants to come meet up, I would love to meet some of the blog people. I met some of the people on the blog at camp and it’s pretty cool. I like to be able to put a face with the screen name.

About the sign offs, I thought there were some really good ones, really good examples of funny sign offs and some good ideas. One of them that I thought was funny because I’m a fan of “Anchorman” was #80fan’s, “Stay classy, Denver.” I don’t know if I could use it though.  It doesn’t fit my personality, but it was funny. It got a good laugh out of me.

And also, micahpexa’s suggestion to use “All ready” in remembrance of D-Will, which I thought was a great idea. It’s taken on so many different meanings and it keeps D-Will a part of our team and a part of this blog, so I think I like that one also.

Broncobacker12 suggested that I use a different quote each week, inspiring, insightful, motivating, those type of things or whatever type of mood I’m in, which I thought was a great idea, except for the fact that then I have to research some sort of quote every week. So I think we’re going to go with a mixture of all the ideas. I might throw an “All ready” in there every now and then or a “Stay classy,” and if I’m in the mood, a college frame of mind where I feel like researching and finding some good quote, then I’ll throw one of those in there every now and then.

Click to continue reading “Sign Off Ideas, Roster Cuts, and Me as a Wide Receiver?”

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.

OTA Day 7: Notes and Photos

May 24th, 2007 - 12:20pm by AndrewOther posts by

OTA Day 7
Why open with a skyline shot? Because by any measurement, the conditions in the Mile High City for the final session of Quarterback Camp were glorious, even if the mercury was slow to rise, giving the Broncos their chilliest OTA so far this year.

The Broncos began their session about an hour early, and stepped onto the field Thursday morning to witness a dazzlingly clear sky — but also 48-degree weather.

“This is (like) the middle of Christmastime in Jacksonville,” said defensive tackle and Sunshine State product Marcus Thomas. “But I like it out here. I’m really enjoying myself. I like the weather. I still haven’t gotten to see snow yet, so I’m looking forward to that.”

OTA Day 7
A bigger deal at first for Thomas was his adjustment to the altitude, but that didn’t prove as problematic as he expected.

“It’s a heck of a lot better (now) than the first day,” Thomas said. “People told me it would take two or three weeks, but I think in the first three days I was pretty much set.”

Click to continue reading “OTA Day 7: Notes and Photos”

Season Review: Jason Elam

February 11th, 2007 - 10:58pm by AndrewOther posts by

Jason ElamThe three kickers with the highest field-goal success percentages in 2006 were conspicuous by their absence from the Pro Bowl rosters this past weekend. That group included Jason Elam, who finished the season just two-tenths of a percentage point behind Baltimore’s Matt Stover for the best field-goal season in the league this year. In third place was New Orleans’ John Carney.

That means the league’s three most accurate kickers are 39, 36 and 42 years of age. Elam is the junior member of that trio, but the success of his elder contemporaries — combined with the 2006 return of Morten Andersen, who merely drilled 87 percent of his field-goal attempts, his highest ratio in 21 years — shows that Elam’s future could be lengthy indeed, even as his 15th season approaches, and in spite of the fact that his full-time kickoff days are almost certainly in his rear-view mirror for good.

But the play most observers will remember from Elam’s 2006 season was the one where a kick was bypassed — and his left hamstring was pulled as a result.

“Rainbow Right” was in the Broncos’ arsenal for 12 seasons heading into the Week 13 Sunday Night Football game against Seattle. The Broncos had worked on the play during the week preceding the game and in the final seconds of the first half, Elam saw the chance to make it work.

“I didn’t think (Head Coach Mike Shanahan) would ever, ever run it,” Elam said. “He told me during the week, ‘You can’t pull a hamstring on this.’ He was like a prophet on it. But I walked up to him and said, ‘This is a perfect chance for Rainbow Right … and he said, ‘OK, let’s do it.’”

Elam got the first down and got hurt, but also rebounded nicely, connecting on a 41-yard field-goal attempt seconds later and hitting all nine of his field-goal tries that followed in December.

Sure, there might not have been a pot of gold for Elam at the end of that “Rainbow.” But after drilling a career-high 93.1 percent of his field-goal attempts in 2006, it seems his career arc is nowhere close to its end.

FINAL ANALYSIS: Extended his league record of consecutive 100-point seasons to 14 with a 115-point campaign … Hit 77.7 percent of his attempts from beyond 40 yards (seven out of nine) after connecting on just 58.8 percent of those kicks in 2005 (10 of 17) … Is now ninth all-time in points with 1,672. He needs 28 to surpass Jan Stenerud (1,699), 40 to move ahead of Nick Lowery (1,711) and 65 to overtake Norm Johnson (1,736). Moving past them would move Elam into sixth, where he would trail Morten Andersen (now at 2,445 points), Gary Anderson, George Blanda and active players John Carney and Matt Stover, assuming they return to build off their tallies of 1,749 and 1,715 points, respectively.

NEXT: Defensive end John Engelberger.

A Defiant Kicker

December 11th, 2006 - 1:20pm by AndrewOther posts by

It was the longest-tenured Bronco who was perhaps the most defiant Sunday.

When Jason Elam speaks publicly, he does so with the crisp eloquence you would expect from someone who makes his living talking to people — a minister, perhaps, or a politician. His convictions arise in the content of his speech, not in the tone of his voice, which is calm: never raised, never on the attack or defensive, simply cool and rational.

Combine that with his experience, and his words seem to issue a clarion call to his teammates — and certainly one that goes against the momentum that rides against the Broncos now that they are saddled with a four-game losing streak.

“I really think we’re going to get in the playoffs; I really do. I think we’re going to go 3-0 here,” he said. “That’s my mindset, and I think that’s everybody’s mindset.”

As though he could sense the disbelief in his inquistors late Sunday afternoon, he reaffirmed his point.

“I’m serious. I think we’re going to get in.

“There’s going to be a lot of people outside the locker room bashing us. We’ve just got to keep our heads up and stay together,” he later added. “We have to go 3-0, so every game’s going to be a playoff game. We know we can’t lose any of them and I don’t think we will.”

Time will tell whether Elam possessed keen foresight.

Mustard Set to Go; Wilson ‘50-50′

December 8th, 2006 - 5:05pm by AndrewOther posts by

Chad MustardJason Elam says he’s playing Sunday. Al Wilson says he’s “50-50,” befitting a player who is listed as questionable on the injury report for Sunday’s game, although he has made it through all three practices this week.

There is no such question for Chad Mustard; he’s listed as probable and made it through all practices this week, even though he admitted that the shoulder he injured on his second catch at Kansas City 15 days ago remains “a little sore.”

Sitting out last weekend helped — although he didn’t know he’d be scatched until Sunday.

“It was kind of a last-minute decision,” Mustard said. “You just try to go with what the coaches say, you’ve got to be ready no matter what the circumstance. I found out Sunday morning and they told me right before the game.”

But Mustard now feels it was the best decision.

“I got an extra couple of days over the weekend where I can rest it and let it heal and get it back to normal,” Mustard said. “That’s definitely an advantage.

“(The shoulder) is doing well. I’m cleared to practice and play and everything.”

Not Exactly Over the ‘Rainbow’

December 4th, 2006 - 7:33am by AndrewOther posts by

It was the call for which Jason Elam had waited for over a decade.

“About 12 years,” Elam said. “I didn’t think (Head Coach Mike Shanahan) would ever, ever run it.”

But a fake-field goal that saw him sprint around right end late in the first half left the Broncos’ long-time placekicker hobbling with a pulled hamstring, which didn’t prevent him from hitting a fourth-quarter extra point but was also not fully tested by a second-half field goal try.

“When he kicked that extra point, it looked like he didn’t have a lot of ‘umph,’” Shanahan said. “Mentally, he was there, but I’m not sure if he was there physically.”

“It was tightening up over the course of time, but you’ve got to suck it up,” Elam added.

What got him to that point was a late first-half run that got the Broncos a first down — but did not have the intended result, which was for Elam to dash into the end zone for a touchdown.

“I walked up to (Shanahan) and said, ‘This is a perfect chance for Rainbow Right — that’s what we call it — and he said, ‘OK, let’s do it,’” Elam said.

There was just one catch.

“(Shanahan) told me during the week, ‘You can’t pull a hamstring on this.’ He was like a prophet on it,” Elam recalled. “At halftime, he said, ‘You can’t call your own play and get hurt.’”

Elam considered himself fortunate to incur the injury in his left leg.

“Fortunately it’s my non-kicking leg,” Elam said. “I anticipate being completely fine for next week.”