Posts Tagged ‘Paul Smith’

Training Camp Day 6: Morning Session

August 3rd, 2007 - 2:05pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Camp Day 6
The eyes couldn’t help but wander to the sidelines on Friday morning, as the roster of players missing from the session was as notable as those who remained on the field. Here’s a rundown:

… Head Coach Mike Shanahan said that Warrick Holdman was held at Sky Ridge Medical Center overnight and had some numbness on Friday morning. “The doctors thought that he would be released at 10 or 11 a.m. this morning,” Shanahan said …

… Guard Ben Hamilton “got dinged a little bit” on Thursday and was in uniform Friday, but did not take part in any of the team sessions. “Knowing Ben, he should be ready to go tomorrow,” Shanahan said …

… Javon Walker became the latest wide receiver to encounter an infirmity when he pulled up holding his upper left leg while running a pass route during two-minute drill work midway through the session. Walker remained on the field for two more snaps and then went to the sidelines. He did not return for the remainder of the day. “He got a little tightness,” Shanahan said. “I wasn’t sure if he cramped up, but he didn’t pull anything. It just got a little tight, so we kept him out.” …

… Wide receiver remains the hardest-hit unit of the Broncos. Brandon Stokley sat out with a right thigh injury, Glenn Martinez missed a second consecutive day of work with a thigh injury, while Marquay McDaniel’s absence extended to three days due to a strained hamstring. By the end of practice Friday morning, the Broncos only had five healthy wide receivers — Quincy Morgan, Domenik Hixon, David Terrell, Brian Clark and David Kircus — and Hixon missed an afternoon practice this week with a separated shoulder. The absences, however, did not greatly affect the practice pattern.

“Sometimes, when you’re going three-wide or four-wide, you can’t do it, so you put a tight end in there, and you still get the same work done from a defensive perspective and you’re really running the same plays from an offensive perspective,” Shanahan said. “It’s just a different person playing that position, but you should be able to get the same amount of work done.”

Perhaps the primary beneficiary of that has been tight end Nate Jackson, who was a wide receiver before switching positions in 2005.

“He’s been very consistent and he’s gotten better in the blocking game and obviously he’s made some big-time catches,” Shanahan said. “He’s looked very good.”

… Tight end was another compromised position, with Chad Mustard and Teyo Johnson both sitting out with right hamstring and left calf injuries, respectively. They joined Tony Scheffler on the sidelines; he’s been on the physically-unable-to-perform list since the start of training camp …

… Fulback Paul Smith also sat out with a groin injury …

… There was good news for the Broncos on the injury front. Defensive tackles Marcus Thomas and Sam Adams returned to action after missing Thursday’s work with right calf and right knee injuries, respectively. Adams said the knee “felt like a million bucks” following the practice.

NOTES FROM THE MORNING:

POINTS OF EMPHASIS: The Broncos continued to work on their hurry-up offense, giving the offense a minute on the clock and the ball at the 50-yard line, with the task being to get into field-goal range. The first-team offense succeeded, thanks mainly to a 14-yard Jay Cutler-to-Brian Clark connection. Jason Elam subsequently drilled a 46-yard field goal. The second-team offense turned the ball over on downs after getting into a fourth-and-15 situation … The special teams also got in some work on field goals, although two Elam attempts slammed into an upright.

WHO’S WHERE? Jimmy Kennedy spelled Gerard Warren in the base defensive package for a few series, but Warren had the balance of the work with the first team. The remainder of the base first-unit line remained unchanged, with Warren and Kennedy joined by Sam Adams at tackle and ends Ebenezer Ekuban and John Engelberger … Nate Webster was back at strongside linebacker … The second-team base defense included three rookies: ends Tim Crowder and Jarvis Moss and tackle Marcus Thomas. Amon Gordon rounded out the quartet … Steve Cargile rotated in for Curome Cox with the second unit during the first period of team drills … With Hamilton injured, Chris Myers took his spot at left guard with the first team … Domonique Foxworth spelled Dre’ Bly for a few plays on the first unit in team drills.

ALMOST, BUT NOT QUITE: Jeff Shoate continued to show aggression in his coverage, getting his hands on consecutive passes during team work. Unfortunately for the three-year veteran, he could not hang on to either toss. “I’m focusing on the defense, I’m doing so well with that, I need to put the effort into finishing the play off too,” Shoate said. “I’m definitely pleased with my play, because I’m in position to make the plays. That’s the hardest part of this game, being in position, knowing what you’re doing, and not letting the offense make the play. For me it’s just finishing the play off, making that big play for the defense and for the team to win it in the end, but I’m definitely happy with my play right now.”

Shoate was nevertheless frustated after the second near miss; he kicked the ball about 15 yards back to the line of scrimmage in frustration. Nick Ferguson, meanwhile, tossed a helmet from the sidelines.

STANDOUT PLAYS: Kennedy got a hand on one of Patrick Ramsey’s passes; the play ended incomplete after Ramsey spiked the errant football to the ground … Jay Cutler and Javon Walker hooked up on a gorgeous pass that was reminiscent of their touchdown connection against the Bengals last Christmas Eve; Walker got past Champ Bailey to make the play … Andre Hall continued to show some burst, particularly on receptions. He had one play where he took a short pass in the backfield from Preston Parsons, eluded Demetrin Veal and shot upfield … Nate Jackson made several fine catches during team and seven-on-seven work … Hamza Abdullah burst into the backfield on a safety blitz for what would have been a sack in a game situation. “Way to come off that edge right there,” exhorted assistant head coach Jim Bates, adding counsel that Abdullah needed to lower his shoulder … Dre’ Bly intercepted a pass intended for David Kircus in one-on-one work.

Photo time:
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Special teams this afternoon. Until the next post, vaya con Dios.

OTA Day 10: Notes, Photos and Eddie Moore

May 31st, 2007 - 2:40pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

OTA Day 10
Approximately two months remain between today’s OTA workout — the 10th of 14 this year — and the start of training camp, but the sprint for positions is already underway, as the linebackers have learned.

While the weakside and middle linebacker slots are set in the grasp of Ian Gold and D.J. Williams, respectively, the strongside duties await someone to grasp them, and so far, Eddie Moore has made the first big push, working his way into first-team work throughout team camp.

“When we first met, Coach (Jim Bates said), ‘No one has a position locked in except Ian and D.J. Everything else is free and open.’”

Moore has walked through that open door, using his reunion with Bates — under whom he played for three seasons with the Miami Dolphins — as a catapult into an opportunity.

“It couldn’t have worked out any better,” Moore said. “It’s straight competition across the board. The best man will get the job.

Microfracture surgery kept Moore sidelined last fall, and he spent the season completing his undergraduate studies at the University of Tennessee. But Moore is healthy now — and so too seems to be his career after a year away.

More notes …

… Wide receivers Brandon Marshall, Glenn Martinez, Brandon Stokley and Rod Smith remained out of uniform …

… Tight end Tony Scheffler took in the session. He underwent surgery for a fractured bone in his left foot last week and is now on crutches, with a boot protecting his injured foot …

… Domenik Hixon turned in perhaps the catch of the day with a tightrope grab of a short Jay Cutler pass while falling out of bounds …

… Special teams has been a point of emphasis. The team worked on punts on Tuesday and Wednesday and turned to field goals on Thursday, with Jason Elam making his first on-field appearance of the week to date …

… And without further ado, some photos:

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OTA Day 11 wraps up the week’s work on Friday … see you then.

OTA Day 1: First Glimpse

May 16th, 2007 - 12:03pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

Well, the 10-minute viewing period has come and gone, and the team now goes through its workouts behind closed gates while we await their opening in time for post-practice interviews.

A few notable items:

OTA Day 1

… That, of course, is the decal on the back of each helmet to memorialize cornerback Darrent Williams and running back Damien Nash. It was placed on every player’s helmet that I could see …

… Rookies Jarvis Moss and Tim Crowder were second in line on the outside at defensive end in warmups; Marcus Thomas was third in line at tackle in his new No. 77 jersey …

… The pre-calisthenic breakdown, handled for the last few years by middle linebacker Al Wilson, was chaired by the man who is expected to be his successor in the middle, fourth-year veteran D.J. Williams. He handed the spotlight to first-round pick Jarvis Moss, whose jig was met with jeers, causing Williams to turn to wideout David Kircus, whose gyrations found more mass approval among his teammates …

Click to continue reading “OTA Day 1: First Glimpse”

Sundquist on the Three Signings

March 5th, 2007 - 11:02pm by AndrewOther posts by Andrew

SundquistMonday was as busy a day as one can recall for the Broncos in free agency, with three signings — unrestricted free agents Montrae Holland and Paul Smith and street free agent Travis Henry all signing deals with the Broncos.

Each fills at least a potential need. Holland brings an option at guard, where starter Cooper Carlisle is an unrestricted free agent. Smith provides special-teams help and depth at fullback, a position that has both Cecil Sapp and Kyle Johnson on the restricted free-agent market.

The signing of Henry, meanwhile, brings the Broncos a 1,000-yard runner just three days after they finalized the trade of last fall’s 1,000-yarder, Tatum Bell, to the Detroit Lions.

When Monday’s deals were complete, General Manager Ted Sundquist talked about what transpired. Excerpts are and will be in stories elsewhere on DenverBroncos.com, and, obviously, Sundquist wouldn’t get into potential signings or further players that he has targeted, but he did speak at length about the acquisitions, and about where the team stands as of four days into the league year.

Below is a transcript of what Sundquist had to say Monday night.

MONTRAE HOLLAND — WHAT CAN HE BRING TO THE TABLE THAT PERHAPS WASN’T THERE BEFORE?
With regards to Montrae Holland, you’ve got a guy that’s been a former starter, that is maybe out of the normal parameters of what people think we might be looking for at guard. He’s a bigger, stouter guy — a little more powerful. He has an excellent ability to sit down in pass protection and really keep the pocket from bowing in the middle. He is athletic for a guy who’s a 320-pounder. He moves well and I think he can execute what we’re trying to do in the run game. But definitely he’s a powerful guy at the point (of attack) in trying to root people out. He has starting experience, and with the possibility of having the right guard position open going into training camp, he’s going to bring some excellent competition there and hopefully can have an opportunity to be the starter.

HOLLAND’S PLAYING TIME DECREASED LAST YEAR. WAS HE CAUGHT IN A CHANGE IN PHILOSOPHY AND SCHEME LAST YEAR?
I couldn’t really answer why they didn’t play him last year.

PAUL SMITH, WHAT DOES HE PROVIDE?
Well, Paul Smith has been an outstanding special-teams player over the course of his career to this point. But certainly I think he was wanting to put himself into a position where he could contribute even more on the field from the fullback position. He’s athletic. I think he’s got good hands, which is important for our fullbacks, being able to slip out in the flat, catch passes at the goal line and things like that. Certainly that athleticism transfers to his ability to get up into the line of scrimmage and put body on body in regards to linebackers. We just liked what we saw with his competitiveness and certainly his production on special teams. With our new special-teams coordinator, Scott O’Brien, he puts a premium on that and this is a guy who’s really been a core guy for the Rams last year on that side of the ball. He was wanting to expand his role, and we’re going to give him that opportunity.

DID SCOTT O’BRIEN RECOMMEND HIM TO YOU?
Well, the scouts did, too.

AND, OF COURSE, TRAVIS HENRY — WERE YOU ANTICIPATING HIM HITTING THE MARKET ON SATURDAY?
Well, Travis Henry, from my understanding, was the MVP of the Titans last year. Obviously, a lot was said about Vince Young and his rookie season and making the Pro Bowl, but I think a lot of people — coaches, scouts, football people — will tell you that a lot of things that Vince was able to do was because of the threat from the run game that Travis gave. As far as the surprise of them letting him go, they’ve got a new general manager (Mike Reinfeldt), and he may have come in with a different philosophy, and certainly Travis may have been looking out there for a different opportunity that brought him more than what the Titans were. Only he can answer that. The great thing was that we were prepared when he did hit the market, and we were ready to go and got him in there that evening after we saw that he’d been released.

DID HENRY VISIT ANYWHERE ELSE AFTER COMING TO DENVER?
No. He visited here, and then, in speaking with his agent, they were supposedly in communication with a number of teams — Green Bay, Oakland — but he came in here and we were able to kind of sell him on a number of things. First his fit in this scheme, and how we thought his skills would contribute to that. Secondly, the fact that he would be competing for a Super Bowl every year. I mean, that’s what we’re about — trying to get there. Third, the intangibles. Everybody that’s in the organization, from the people in the personnel office, to the people downstairs, to dealing with you guys. He was very impressed with that. It was just a matter of pounding out the contract, and we were able to do that. We kept him overnight and got it finished.

DID PURSUING HIM CAUSE ANY CHANGES IN SALARY CAP MANAGEMENT IN REGARDS TO PLAYERS YOU WILL PURSUE, OR ARE THINGS RIGHT ON TRACK?
Right on plan. Right on schedule. I’m very pleased with where we’re at right now, with still more to come. Henry’s (contract) was one that you had to prepare for. Again, you asked me earlier, was I surprised that he got let go — not surprised, but when he did get let go, then it was in the plans, but you kind of had to shift some things to make sure that you finished it off. We were able to do that without really upsetting the apple cart on the things that we wanted to do, and we were able to get it done.

1,000-YARDER ON THE MARKET FROM THE PREVIOUS SEASON — DOESN’T HAPPEN TOO OFTEN.
Yeah. He runs with authority, and I’ve been saying that for quite a while now — that we’re trying to get our running game back to a point where we’re running with some authority. You’ve got fourth-quarter leads in four games — especially at home — and you need to close an opponent out, and guys like Travis Henry have that ability to close a team out in the fourth quarter. Certainly as you look back at last season, you win three or four of those games where you’ve got leads at home — if you protect them with a good running game, like we did in those Super Bowl years, now you’re 12-4 or 13-3, and you’re talking about hosting a playoff game — and we’re right back to where we were a year ago when we were talking about all this.

WHAT’S INTERESTING TO ME IS HOW THE RUNNING GAME WAS IN THE TOP QUARTER OF THE LEAGUE LAST YEAR, YET THE PERCEPTION IN THIS BUILDING SEEMS TO BE THAT IT WAS A DISAPPOINTMENT.
Again, I’ve used the adjective “authoritative” in talking to our scouts and to Coach Shanahan and to prospective candidates for that position. Getting more authoritative in the way we attack a defense. You can churn up a lot of yardage, but if you’re not making third-and-1 or first-and-goal — sometimes a 1-yard run is as important as a 60-yard run. Certainly, we think that Travis, with the way he’s built and his power — I mean, fans are going to love this guy. I don’t know if they’ve had a chance to see any clips of him with Tennessee, but this guy runs with power.

I REMEMBER SEEING CLIPS OF HIM BACK IN HIGH SCHOOL IN FROSTPROOF, FLA. — HE RAN THAT WAY BACK THEN.
Yeah. He may have one of the best stiff-arms I’ve ever seen.

THIS WRAPS UP A BUSY DAY — BUSIER IN FREE AGENCY THAN ANY ONE DAY IN RECENT YEARS?
Yeah, but I think the thing fans have to remember is that there are some years when free agency is going to be all about retaining your team, signing your young players — guys that you drafted that are in the last year of their deal. And we had to do that last year. It was like, “Well, the Broncos didn’t delve into free agency.” Well, actually, we did. We signed Matt Lepsis, and other re-signings and contract extensions happe
ned in February. In this particular year, we didn’t have a lot of those particular situations, which allowed us to, I think, get a little more aggressive with looking outside and bringing in (players). We said last year we were going to tweak a few things; we were going to stay status quo, we were happy with what we saw coming out of that 13-3 year, and that didn’t get it done last year, so you have to make changes. You have to stay aggressive, and you have to do the things that you think are going to get you back and put you in those opportunities where you can compete for a Super Bowl and I think we’ve done that in our preparation and evaluation of these players. It started with the reserve/future contract guys, some of the people that we’re bringing in here, that have no notoriety and not a lot of pomp and circumstance. Those guys — I think there’s some football players in that group that will make that final 53. That was just as important.

DAVID KIRCUS, NICK FERGUSON, GUYS LIKE THAT.
Yeah, and you’re also constantly dealing with a trade aspect, trying to improve your position, acquiring players that you might not otherwise be able to draft at that particular position that are veteran players, and then you get into this market in unrestricted free agency, and that will go for the next few more days, and we’ll keep an eye on it a little bit. It will slow down.

AND THAT COMES ON THE HEELS OF A WEEKEND THAT WAS LIKE THE MID-1990S, WHERE TEAMS SPENT A LOT ON THE OPENING WEEKEND.
Yeah. Then, the last phase is the draft, and we’re excited about having four first-day picks and really feel like there’s going to be an opportunity to get some “impact” type guys, and by then, the offseason program will have started. We’ll get a chance to see some of these guys that we have added, and we’ll get ready for camps in the summer. I’m very, very pleased with how things have gone so far, and it’s been a team effort with the coaching staff, the scouting staff and the personnel that have put all this together to make sure that when the players come in, that they have a good visit, understand what we’re all about and that when they leave here, they’ve had all their questions answered, and they have a good feel whether they can fit or not, and then it’s up to myself and Mike Bluem to try to put together the best financial package and sort them out.