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Posts Tagged ‘Uniform’

Painting the Roster By Numbers

April 19th, 2007 - 1:12am by AndrewOther posts by

Earlier this month, we learned that Travis Henry had successfully pried No. 20 away from fellow running back Mike Bell, moving the second-year back to No. 30, a jersey last donned for a regular-season game by Terrell Davis.

The rest of the numbers game is coming into focus, as well, with many new Broncos grabbing their digits for the upcoming season. Grab your scorecards, and let’s go:

Darrell Hackney, QB: He’ll wear No. 4, which he donned at at UAB.

Brandon Stokley, WR: The Broncos issued him No. 14. He has never worn a number outside of the 80s in his NFL career until now, but wore this number to great acclaim back at Louisiana-Lafayette. It was retired from UL-L annals after he completed his four years there with 241 receptions for 3,702 yards and 25 touchdowns while becoming the first player in Division I-A annals to average 100 receiving yards per game for his career.

Glenn Martinez, WR: Will wear No. 17. He wore No. 87 for the Rhein Fire in 2005 and Nos. 12 and 84 for the Detroit Lions in recent years.

Paul Smith, FB: Will wear No. 26. He’s been all over the map, donning jersey No. 27 in San Francisco, 40 in Detroit and 31 in St. Louis.

Troy Fleming, FB: Jersey number 35. He donned 44 with the Tennessee Titans and had No. 27 at the University of Tennessee.

Eric Hill, CB: Jersey number 36. He had Nos. 14 and 37 for the Colts earlier in his career, but that belongs to fellow Colorado State alumnus Cecil Sapp. Hill wore No. 38 for the Carolina Panthers on their practice squad last year and donned No. 26 for the Hamburg Sea Devils in 2006. Back at CSU, he played wide receiver and wore No. 7.

Eddie Moore, LB: Will wear No. 51, donned by Keith Burns the last two years. Moore wore No. 58 in his four years with the Miami Dolphins — three of which were under Broncos assistant head coach Jim Bates — and was No. 37 in your program at the University of Tennessee.

Montrae Holland, OL: Will wear No. 70 after donning No. 61 for his entire New Orleans Saints career. He also wore No. 61 at Florida State.

Carlos Hall, DE: Will wear No. 98 in Denver; he had No. 92 in Kansas City and No. 97 in Tennessee.

Alvin McKinley, DT: Issued No. 99. He had No. 97 for most of his years in Cleveland, although he started there with No. 70. He also wore No. 97 at Mississippi State.

Some players have not yet been issued numbers: tight end Daniel Graham, punter Eddie Johnson, quarterback Patrick Ramsey, offensive tackle Jacob Rogers and three NFL Europa allocations: tight end Teyo Johnson, guard Kevin McAlmont and cornerback Lamont Reid. On Graham, it’s worth noting that there is only one number in the 80s currently open (81).

Wrapping Up Week 6 …

October 16th, 2006 - 5:39am by AndrewOther posts by

Let’s wrap this up. The press box is empty, save for one nocturnal soul, and we’re back in the locker room at Broncos headquarters at 11:30 a.m. MDT to go foraging for some day-after-game nuggets of knowledge from the players.

Some final points:

  • Denver is 4-1 for the fifth straight year. The Broncos would make it to 5-1 in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
  • This is Denver’s fourth winning streak of at least four games in the last two years. The Broncos had two five-game winning streaks (one included the playoff win over New England) that bracketed a four-game midseason run last year.
  • The Broncos’ home regular-season winning streak of 13 games is the longest in the league, one ahead of Seattle, which was on the road Sunday for a 30-28 win at St. Louis.

Click to continue reading “Wrapping Up Week 6 …”

Broncos-Raiders: Pregame Notes

October 15th, 2006 - 4:59pm by AndrewOther posts by

As though Head Coach Mike Shanahan needed more evidence to support his facts about the recent success of 0-4 teams in their fifth game, the early afternoon games brought these results to remind all about the danger that a winless team poses:

  • Tampa Bay 14, Cincinnati 13
  • Tennessee 25, Washington 22
  • Detroit 20, Buffalo 17

Of course, the latter two results involved teams that had gotten to 0-5 before turning it around, but the point of Shanahan’s statistical emphasis this week remains clear: winless teams are not to be taken lightly, no matter how lopsided some of their losses have been.

“He only brought it up once; it doesn’t take but one time to get the point across,” He did a good job of letting us know what the history is of 0-4 teams. I think that is good, because it increases our awareness of what can happen. We don’t want that to happen.”

The Broncos had many reasons to take the Raiders seriously heading into tonight. The record of winless teams in their fifth game — now up to 16-10 since 1999 after the Bucs’ win. The rivalry with the Raiders and its historic tendency to produce unpredictable results. Both of those actually favored the Broncos seven years ago in Oakland, when the 0-4 Broncos turned back the Raiders 16-13 one week after Terrell Davis suffered the knee injury that would change his career forever.

Now, with the results earlier today, they’ve got another.

Other early pre-game tidbits as scattered players begin warming up on the field:

… The blue pants are back for a curtain call, six days after the Broncos brandished them against Baltimore. Denver is 2-1 in the blue pants in the regular season, but has never worn them outside of Monday Night Football until today.

… A contrast in defensive coordinators: Oakland’s Rob Ryan is animated, often gesturing wildly on the sidelines to get points across to his charges. Denver’s Larry Coyer is quiet; he sits in the booth, calls plays from above and lets his position coaches handle the sideline work. One can’t argue with either method, as these are two of the league’s better defenses in many key indicators.

Coyer prefers the view from up top.

“It’s a calmer, quieter situation and I’m able to put down information that may help (the players),” he said. “Sometimes on the sideline you get caught up with the emotion and you become emotional and you’re not coaching properly. My job is to see and make corrections and do the things we need to do to win, and their job is to play. My job is to stay out of their way and help them.”

Broncos-Ravens: Pre-game Notes

October 9th, 2006 - 6:15pm by AndrewOther posts by


A last wave of pre-game notes:

  • It’s official — the blue-on-blue, monochromatic look is in play for the Broncos tonight.
  • Terrell Suggs and Todd Heap were both questionable for the game, but are each in the lineup as the Ravens announced no changes in the starting lineup.
  • Courtney Brown, listed as doubtful, is among the eight Broncos inactives, joining wide receiver Todd Devoe, safety Hamza Abdullah, running back Cedric Cobbs, linebacker Nate Webster, offensive linemen Chris Kuper and Adam Meadows and tight end Nate Jackson.

Click to continue reading “Broncos-Ravens: Pre-game Notes”

I’m Thinking of Something Blue …

October 9th, 2006 - 4:42pm by AndrewOther posts by

The blues are back, apparently.

As scattered Broncos began to take the field for some running over two hours prior to tonight’s kickoff, they wore something that they haven’t worn on game day in nearly three years — blue pants. The return of Monday Night Football obviously brought back the blues, which were last seen on a chilly, foggy Monday night three years ago when the Broncos lost 30-26 to the Patriots.

Denver also wore them in September 2003 for a Monday night game against Oakland; Denver won that won 31-10. The Broncos also wore the blues in the 1997 preseason before they were consigned to the bottom of the closet for the six years that followed.

The tarpaulin was removed from the field at about 3:30 p.m. MDT. Drizzle and occasional rain showers have fallen in Denver for most of the day, with temperatures holding in the 40s. A forecast temperature drop into the 30s is expected to turn the precipitation into a rain/snow mix by early in the game.