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Posts Tagged ‘Paul Ernster’

Ernster Waived Wednesday Morning

December 26th, 2007 - 9:48am by AndrewOther posts by

As quickly as Paul Ernster returned to the Broncos, he finds himself outside of the locker room once again.

Denver waived the punter and kickoff specialist Wednesday morning, barely 36 hours after he struggled in the loss to San Diego.

Ernster’s night started badly, as he shanked a 17-yard punt that flew out of bounds at the Denver 44-yard-line, setting the Chargers up in excellent field position for their first touchdown. His second punt covered 59 yards after it bounced and was downed at the San Diego 1, but his final three punts traveled 33, 38 and 31 yards.

“One little thing and it goes to hell,” Ernster said in the moments after the 23-3 loss at Qualcomm Stadium.

“My timing was off. Punting is all timing. It was off tonight. The whole country saw that. I’ve just got to come back and work hard.

“Hopefully I’ll be here this week and get a chance to prove myself again, because you all have seen me punt. You know that’s not like me. I’ll get back and work hard and come out next week and show them that it was a fluke.”

But after being waived Wednesday, next week won’t be in the cards for the third-year product of Northern Arizona.

Mid-Week Notes: Sauerbrun Aftermath; Gold, Graham Sidelined

December 19th, 2007 - 3:52pm by AndrewOther posts by

The Three Kickers

As Paul Ernster returned to the Broncos and Matt Prater got his first kicking work in Wednesday, increasing the Broncos’ complement of kicking specialists to a trio, one question lingered — a query that would be rapidly answered at Head Coach Mike Shanahan’s press conference:

What was the reason for Todd Sauerbrun’s release?

Was it because of matters away from Dove Valley or his performance on the field, with his struggles in getting kickoffs inside the Houston 10-yard-line at Reliant Stadium six days earlier?

According to Shanahan, the decision was entirely because of what happened on Dec. 7 as he was arrested for simple assault on a taxicab driver, and not because of anything on the field.

“I told Todd if he had any problems that he was going to be released,” Shanahan said Wednesday in the opening moments of his press conference. “I wasn’t really going to share that with you, but I decided to after he came out and made a couple of comments yesterday.

Click to continue reading “Mid-Week Notes: Sauerbrun Aftermath; Gold, Graham Sidelined”

The Newest Bronco: Matt Prater

December 19th, 2007 - 11:58am by AndrewOther posts by

Matt Prater

For the first time since September 2005, the Broncos have three kicking specialists on the 53-man roster.

Joining Jason Elam and Paul Ernster for practice on Wednesday morning was Central Florida alumnus Matt Prater, who was signed off the Miami Dolphins’ practice squad.

Prater kicked for the Atlanta Falcons in Weeks 1 and 2, and while his leg was strong, he struggled with accuracy. Three of his four kickoffs went for touchbacks and he averaged 71.3 yards per kickoff, but he was 1-of-4 on his field-goal attempts, making one from 45 yards away but missing from 26, 43 and 44 yards before being released.

Prater joined Miami’s practice squad last month.

Prater is the third member of a growing UCF alumni society on the Broncos’ roster, joining Brandon Marshall and Paul Carrington. All were seniors on the 2005 team that turned a winless finish the year before into a Hawaii Bowl bid.

Denver still has one vacancy on its practice squad after its decision to promote Roderick Rogers to the 53-man roster Tuesday.

Sauerbrun Out; Ernster Back; Ferguson to IR

December 18th, 2007 - 4:01pm by AndrewOther posts by

Another Tuesday brings more moves … including a seismic change on special teams.

Out is Todd Sauerbrun and in is Paul Ernster, marking a reversal of the decision made in August when the Broncos opted for the 13-year veteran Sauerbrun over the 2005 seventh-round draft pick who had held down the punting and kickoff duties throughout 2005 following Sauerbrun’s suspension for violation of the league’s substance-abuse policy.

The Broncos also placed Nick Ferguson on injured reserve, promoted safety Roderick Rogers from the practice squad, and waived safety Marviel Underwood.

Sauerbrun’s gross punting average of 46.8 yards ranked second in the AFC behind Oakland’s Shane Lechler and fifth in the NFL overall. However, his net punting average of 36.1 yards was 10th in the conference and 21st in the league. His discrepancy between gross and net averages of 10.7 yards was also the highest in the league.

Click to continue reading “Sauerbrun Out; Ernster Back; Ferguson to IR”

Ernster, Lang: “Friends of the Program”

August 29th, 2007 - 10:45am by AndrewOther posts by

I first learned about Paul Ernster through a Google search.

It was the seventh round of the 2005 draft. The Broncos had just selected Ernster, a player of whom my knowledge was limited. He wasn’t at the Scouting Combine, and I don’t follow Big Sky Conference football (sorry, all you fans of Montana, Weber State, Portland State and Northern Colorado, but my antenna points south and east), so I was completely unaware of the exploits of this multipurpose kicking specialist from Northern Arizona.

I hopped onto Google, since the media relations department would have him on speakerphone in a few minutes for an interview, and I wanted to ask an educated question or two. I wanted stats, pictures, newspaper articles — anything, really, to clue us in on the newest Bronco’s background.

What I found was a college project.

As it turned out, Ernster was quite the Web guru, designing and maintaining sites for his alma mater, Northern Arizona University. The college-project site was something of a joke; he had to create a fictional background story about himself, so he described himself a preteen genius who was abducted and forced into a Japanese biotechnology weapon development program at the age of 12.

Upon reading this, my eyes bulged. I didn’t realize the story was fabrication, I simply furrowed my brow and asked, “Who the hell is this guy?”

Turned out, it was a guy looking for a good grade.

“I just put a bunch of stuff on that would catch someone’s eye,” he later said. “I got an ‘A.’”

But what was real — besides his grade — was his work for the university, which he likely would have continued had the Broncos not called him on draft weekend, something he admitted was unexpected.

“I’d probably still be programming right now if I didn’t get a shot with the Broncos,” he said.

We would talk shop regularly, since he actually understood what I was talking about when it came to the back end of the Web site. Frankly, he probably knew more than I did about how things would work in the network of connections and servers like the ones that power DenverBroncos.com. Most of my knowledge of the Web is straight-up HTML, going back to ancient college days (well, ancient by Internet standards) 13 years ago when I began writing in HTML code and first became absorbed in the Internet.

And you saw Ernster’s name on this site fairly regularly in Q&As and stories. He always had time for a conversation and an interview, and was one of the friendliest people to pass through here. In his time with the Broncos, Ernster was — as we like to say around here — a “friend of the program.” ^^

So too was Kenard Lang. But he was a friend of anyone in the laptop-and-notepad set. Always loquacious, occasionally outrageous, caustically blunt and capable of answering any question in a manner you could not have imagined. He didn’t speak the King’s English, per se, but his sentiments were as clear as the skies often are above Dove Valley.

Lang, as a Bronco, was not just a friend of our program, but of every program that aired focusing upon the Broncos — beginning with his first interview, when he spoke of all his fellow ex-Browns who left for Denver a year before he did.

“I’m just like that little kid trying to chase that school bus going down the street,” Lang said. “I saw them going and I was like, ‘Oh, why are you leaving?’”

Lang, Ernster and eight others were waived Tuesday. One of them, Teyo Johnson, could be back on injured reserve; he, like Lang and Ernster and Quentin Harris and some of the others who were released, was a “friend of the program.” With nearly all of them, if you do a Google search, you might find something from our site that tells their story — from how Quentin Harris spent his time out of football in 2006 to David Kircus’ work at Subway (which would eventually take on a life of its own after the piece ran) to Demetrin Veal’s world travels to David Terrell comparing himself to Terrell Owens, Keyshawn Johnson and Randy Moss.

The players waived Tuesday might not have shown enough to be on the 53-man roster this year. But their stories — unusual, head-scratching, hilarious and thought-provoking — remain. And hopefully that’s what we gave these guys — a little something more on Google for people to learn about them as they take their next steps, wherever they may lead.

^^ — Yes, for some reason, Kyle Sonneman and I are both fans of the film Blue Chips, which combines balsa-wood line readings from Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway, Shaquille “Kazaam” O’Neal and Matt “Whatever Happened to Him?” Nover with Nick Nolte channeling Bobby Knight, an over-the-top performance from the late J.T. Walsh and, of course, the appearance of one of America’s finest living thespians, Ed O’Neill. (Sonneman just chimed in to say that O’Neill is “the greatest actor of our generation.”)

Until next time … vaya con Dios.

Ernster Among Tuesday Departures

August 28th, 2007 - 2:33pm by AndrewOther posts by

Earlier in the morning, I wrote about the preseason numbers comparison between punters Paul Ernster and Todd Sauerbrun.

Bad timing.

By the time the Broncos took the field Tuesday, Ernster was not present. Nor was safety and fellow special-teamer Quentin Harris, as they joined eight other non-injured players who missed both practices the last two days.

“Paul’s worked extremely hard and hopefully he’ll catch on with another team,” Head Coach Mike Shanahan said. “Theres not very many people that can both kick off and punt, so he brings a lot to the table.”

Ernster’s departure leaves Todd Sauerbrun to handle punts and kickoffs.

“I’m just happy with the way it turned out and I’m thankful for the opportunity Mike Shanahan and Scott O’Brien gave me,” Sauerbrun said. I’m very appreciative and I’m going to do the best to make the most of it.”

Click to continue reading “Ernster Among Tuesday Departures”

Stats Pause: Punts, Kickoffs and a Quarterback

August 28th, 2007 - 9:22am by AndrewOther posts by

Bon giorno from Colorado with a couple of statistical nuggets that I was going to get to last night before I got detoured into some behind-the-scenes site work …

TALKING PUNTERS: We touched upon the punting/kickoff competition in the Saturday night pregame entry, and here’s how Paul Ernster and Todd Sauerbrun now stand statistically with one game remaining:

KICKOFFS:

AVERAGE LENGTH: Ernster 72.4 yards, Sauerbrun 69.5 yards (note — I counted the actual distance of Ernster’s game-opening wallop against Cleveland, which was approximately 85 yards, as it landed five yards behind the touchline in the back of the end zone).
TOUCHBACK PERCENTAGE: Ernster 50.0 percent, Sauerbrun 50.0 percent.
AVERAGE DRIVE-START POSITION AFTER KICKOFFS: Ernster DEN 25.5; Sauerbrun DEN 26.0.
SHORTEST KICKOFFS: Ernster 63 yards, Sauerbrun 61 yards.

Click to continue reading “Stats Pause: Punts, Kickoffs and a Quarterback”

Broncos-Browns: Pregame Notes

August 25th, 2007 - 4:39pm by AndrewOther posts by

Welcome, wilkommen and bienvenue from the press box at INVESCO Field at Mile High, where I am sitting in my usual seat, high above the seven-yard-line at the north end of the stadium, the same vantage as I have enjoyed for the last five years.

Once again, the storylines leading into this game revolve around who is and who is not expected to play. So let’s recap the last few days in that regard.

RUNNING BACKS: Travis Henry, Mike Bell and Andre Hall will not play, leaving the running chores to Cecil Sapp, Selvin Young and the recently signed Cedric Cobbs.

OFFENSIVE LINE: Adam Meadows, Ryan Harris and Ben Hamilton did not practice throughout the week and will not play tonight. Matt Lepsis did practice and is expected to play throughout the first team’s work.

WIDE RECEIVERS: Brandon Stokley was in uniform each day this week after missing the previous two weeks. Brandon Marshall also took part in work throughout the week. Rod Smith remains on the physically unable to perform list.

DEFENSIVE LINE: With Ebenezer Ekuban injured, the Broncos signed John Browning, late of the Kansas City Chiefs. Assistant head coach Jim Bates said that Browning will work at tackle; he saw action at tackle and end during his 11 Chiefs seasons. Tim Crowder was not in uniform this week and will not play tonight.

With all the injuries at running back and on the defensive line, it seems as though some competitions have been lost in the shuffle — including the one at punter between incumbent Paul Ernster and 2005 returnee Todd Sauerbrun.

Sauerbrun has six punts and four kickoffs; Ernster has four punts and five kickoffs. Here’s how they stack up:

KICKOFFS:

AVERAGE LENGTH: Ernster 70.8 yards, Sauerbrun 68.0 yards.
TOUCHBACK PERCENTAGE: Ernster 40.0 percent, Sauerbrun 25.0 percent.
AVERAGE DRIVE-START POSITION AFTER KICKOFFS: Ernster DEN 27.4; Sauerbrun DEN 29.0.
SHORTEST KICKOFFS: Ernster 63 yards, Sauerbrun 61 yards.

PUNTS:

AVERAGE LENGTH: Sauerbrun 42.5 yards, Ernster 42.3 yards.
NET AVERAGE: Ernster 42.3, Sauerbrun 39.0.
PUNTS INSIDE THE 20: Ernster 3, Sauerbrun 0.
SHORTEST PUNTS: Ernster 33 yards, Sauerbrun 15.

Sauerbrun has been listed as the first-teamer on the depth chart, with Ernster as the No. 2 punter and kickoff man, but the two have alternated punts and kickoffs the last two weeks. Tonight could prove illuminating for the comppetition between the two.

Season Review: Paul Ernster

February 14th, 2007 - 1:40am by AndrewOther posts by

Paul ErnsterPaul Ernster’s season began under the shroud of an unknown future — unknown, at least, beyond the first four games of the regular season in which he was penciled to fill in for suspended punter Todd Sauerbrun.

It ended with Ernster finishing 22nd in the league in net punting average and 28th in gross average … but also with a higher single-season touchback percentage on kickoffs than any Bronco since kickoffs were moved back to the 30-yard-line in 1993.

That was the most promising statistic for Ernster in what amounted to his first full NFL season after a one-game-and-to-the-practice-squad-and-then-on-to-injured-reserve oddity of a month that was September 2005. That month commenced with a place on the 53-man roster and ended with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his kicking leg.

It might have been worse had it been his plant leg.

“It really would have caused me a lot of trouble, but with the right leg, you’re really just snapping it through,” the right-footer said.

Ernster recovered, of course, and then went through a season that took an unusual trajectory — first with Sauerbrun’s suspension giving him an opportunity, then earning the job after dropping three of four punts inside the Baltimore 20-yard-line on Monday Night Football and eventually garnering the Sunday Night Football spotlight in Week 13 after meandering onto the field without his helmet.

“I’ve never been that big of a bonehead before, especially in front of such a large audience,” he said afterwards.

“When I ran off the field, (Head) Coach (Mike) Shanahan looked at me (as if to say), ‘What’s wrong with you, man? What are you doing?’ I felt like an idiot.”

That night, though, he had one of his better games of the year, notching a net punting average of 38.7 yards, his fourth-best of the year. More games like that might make Ernster a happy idiot — and could make the Broncos’ special teams a tad more stable after going through three punters in the season and a half before Ernster got the job.

FINAL ANALYSIS: This was just Ernster’s second full season as a punter; he didn’t take up full-time punting duties until his senior year at Northern Arizona University … Opponents averaged 6.9 yards per return of Ernster’s punts; that figure ranked fifth in the NFL and third in the AFC behind Cincinnati’s Kyle Larson and Pittsburgh’s Chris Gardocki … Ernster’s gross average of 41.7 yards and his net of 36.6 yards were 2.1 and 1.4 yards lower, respectively, than Sauerbrun’s averages in 2005. But Ernster’s ’06 net was 5.9 yards beyond Sauerbrun’s net average during his two regular-season games with the New England Patriots late this past campaign.

NEXT: Safety Nick Ferguson.

Ernster’s Helmet Madness: ‘I Felt Like an Idiot’

December 6th, 2006 - 3:20am by AndrewOther posts by

Paul Ernster recounted the tale of his Sunday night traipse into forgetfulness with the self-deprecating chuckles and smiles of a man who’d long since learned not to take himself with the dour demeanor of an undertaker at work.

“I’ve never been that big of a bonehead before, especially in front of such a large audience,” he said.

Of course, he didn’t lose his head; just his helmet — and only for a couple of seconds. But since his U-turn to the bench was captured by one of the many NBC cameras on hand Sunday evening, the incident worked its way into national note, from the game broadcast itself to repeated mentions on ESPN’s SportsCenter the following day.

“My agent made me watch it a couple of times, because he wanted me to relive it,” Ernster said. “He made a funny comment; he said, ‘You should contact Southwest (Airlines) and make one of those ‘Want to get away?’ commercials. I think that would be pretty funny.”

Click to continue reading “Ernster’s Helmet Madness: ‘I Felt Like an Idiot’”