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Showing posts with label Denver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denver. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Broncos 18, Dolphins 15 (OT): Tim Tebow Leads Denver Broncos Over Miami Dolphins

The Broncos’ coaching staff, which had made him the starter just two weeks ago, had so little confidence in him that through three quarters, he attempted just eight passes.

But with five minutes left and the Miami Dolphins playing prevent defense, Tebow turned into the player who inspires fans to erect billboards and opposing teams to honor him when he visits, rallying the Broncos to two touchdowns.

And when Denver lined up for the 2-point attempt that would send the game to overtime, it seemed that only the Dolphins had never seen highlights from Tebow’s Heisman Trophy-winning career. They had their defense spread across the field, leaving gaping holes between each player. Tebow took the snap and ran off right tackle, untouched, for the conversion.

From there, the result seemed a fait accompli. The Broncos won, 18-15, on Matt Prater’s 52-yard field goal, giving them their second victory of the season and sinking the Dolphins to 0-6.

After the game, to the delight of a few hundred University of Florida fans left on the field, Tebow came out of the locker room to greet some of his former college teammates. He had led them to a national championship on the same field, when his legend took flight. The Broncos got no greater clarity Sunday about who their quarterback of the future is.

But they do understand now the ineffable quality Tebow seems to summon when things appear bleakest, and why so many people clamor for Tebow to have a chance.

“There’s competitive greatness,” Denver Coach John Fox said. “Not everybody that plays in this league has it. It’s a great quality to have. We have a guy — No. 7 that I work with every day — he had it. He definitely had it.”

Comparing Tebow to the former Broncos great John Elway, who is Denver’s executive vice president for football operations, should delight the Broncos fans who had implored Fox to start Tebow after Kyle Orton faltered in the first month of the season.

But even the way the Broncos played in overtime summed up the difficult and delicate decision that Fox and the Broncos face with Tebow. They have made him the starter now because they must find out if he can be their quarterback of the future.

The concerns that led them to make Orton the starter for opening day, however, seem to be lingering. In overtime, Tebow did not throw a pass, as the Broncos essentially reapplied the training wheels they had left on him for most of the game.

After the game, Fox said bluntly that if Tebow had completed more than three of his first eight passes, maybe Denver would have had him throw more, because the situation became dire.

On the game’s final drive, which started at the Dolphins’ 36 after Denver recovered a fumble, the Broncos had Tebow hand off three times, signaling that they would rather take their chances with a long field-goal attempt from a kicker who had missed two shorter tries earlier in the game.

Other than the victory, the game might have been the worst-case situation for the Broncos. They fear that the Tebow on display for most of the game is the real one, a better runner than passer, and that he may never be the accurate pocket passer they crave. Broncos coaches were clearly spooked when, on the Broncos’ first drive of the game, they used something resembling the spread option that Tebow ran to such great success in college.

But on his first pass, under pressure, he was nearly intercepted. After that, the Broncos (2-4) seemed to travel back to the 1970s, calling for handoff after handoff.

In the first three quarters, Tebow completed 3 of 8 passes for 24 yards and was sacked four times. He looked so bad that it was reasonable to wonder if the Broncos would give him another start.

“As a football player, as an athlete, you can’t lose confidence in yourself — or you’ve lost already,” Tebow said.

In the fourth quarter, he was 10 of 19 for 137 yards and 2 touchdowns, and there is no way coaches can ignore his ability to steer a team to victory even if the road there is sometimes ugly. So the Tebow experiment will live on, charming fans, confusing coaches and making everyone else wonder if there might be a place for a very different kind of N.F.L. quarterback.

“I’ve just got to play better in the first three quarters,” Tebow said, “so we don’t have to make that comeback.”

The Broncos would love for it to be that easy.


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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Tim Tebow's First Start for Denver in Miami Commands Spotlight

(Reuters) - It says everything about Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow's stature that Sunday's game against the Miami Dolphins, featuring teams with a combined 1-9 record, is so anticipated simply because it is his first since being handed the starting job.

The former Heisman Trophy-winning leader of a great University of Florida team was named the new starting quarterback for the Broncos after replacing Kyle Orton against San Diego last week.

Coming into that game after the half, Tebow threw for 79 yards and a touchdown and rushed for 37 yards and another touchdown, providing instant energy that almost created a comeback win.

He is clean-cut, athletic and a practicing Christian -- all of which help his appeal -- but his popularity is also as much to do with his evident passion for the game, an approach that seems to be rooted in another era of American football.

Tebow started three games at the end of last season when the campaign was already well over for Denver and in various appearances in 12 NFL games he has passed for six touchdowns and run for seven.

Skeptics doubted whether Tebow had the ability to make the switch from the free-style, running and improvising approach he took, with spectacular results for the Florida Gators, to the more rigid, pocket-passing demands of the professional game.

However, it has been hard to judge when he has been restricted to cameo appearances.

"I believe that I've improved," Tebow told reporters this week. "Every day is a learning opportunity for me and I'm trying to get a little better every day.

"(I'm) constantly working on things, improving my decision making, my accuracy, my footwork and overall just leadership. Those are the main things I've been focusing on."

ACCURATE ASSESSMENT

Now he has been named as a starter, with all that entails in terms of preparation, and is up against a winless Dolphins team, there is a chance to assess more accurately whether the clean-cut, all-American boy has the right stuff for the NFL.

Such was Tebow's popularity at Gainesville, the Northern Florida campus town where he played, that thousands of Gator fans are expected to take the five-hour drive south to Miami for the game.

Many of those fans have already been encouraged by the Dolphins, who had already deemed Sunday's game an appreciation day for the 2008 national-championship winning Florida team that Tebow led.

It will be a strange atmosphere in the Miami stadium with so many fans rooting for the opposition quarterback -- as well as the inevitable mass media attention that follows Tebow.

Not that Tebow is likely to be fazed by the occasion.

"Something I learned in my freshman year at Florida is to only worry about what I can control because if you worry about the rest of it it's honestly going to give you a lot of anxiety and it won't help you at all," he said.

"That's kind of been my philosophy and kind of stuck to it."

Elsewhere the league's only unbeaten team, Super Bowl champions the Green Bay Packers, are at the Minnesota Vikings in one of the league's sharpest rivalries.

The New Orleans Saints hope to bounce back from last week's loss at Tampa when they host the winless Indianapolis Colts, who are suffering a nightmare season without their starting quarterback Peyton Manning.

(Editing by Mark Lamport-Stokes)


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Friday, October 14, 2011

Would Schefter's trades benefit Denver?

Thursday on SportsCenter, Adam Schefter looked at some trades that he thinks makes sense before Tuesday’s trading deadline. However, Schefter made a point of saying that he doesn’t expect these trades to go down.

They are simply trades he thinks should happen.

He proposed an intriguing deal that would send Brian Dawkins back to Philadelphia. Schefter suggests the 1-4 Broncos deal linebacker D.J. Williams and Dawkins to the Eagles -- who are the biggest disappointment in the NFL at 1-4 -- for a third-round pick.

The Eagles need linebacking help and Williams would be an upgrade. Bringing back Dawkins -- one of the most popular Eagles’ players in history -- would be a sign of good faith to a fan base that is up in arms because of the Eagles’ poor start. Dawkins departed the Eagles for Denver as a free agent in 2009.

Wesley Woodyard was a tackling machine this season when he replaced an injured Williams and Dawkins likely won’t be back next season. The Broncos are all about the future, so adding a solid draft pick could be intriguing.

Still, as Schefter said, this deal was formed in his mind, not in the front office of either team.

Schefter also proposed that Denver trade quarterback Kyle Orton -- who was replaced by Tim Tebow this week as Denver’s starter -- to Miami for a fifth-round pick. I’m all for it. I think Denver should part ways with Orton now. Of course, the Broncos almost traded Orton to the Dolphins right after the lockout ended. He is a free agent after the season. Ironically, the Dolphins host the Broncos in the first game after the trade deadline on Oct. 23.


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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Gridiron Gab Week Fifteen Preview – Denver at Oakland

59-14.  It’s there in front of everyone, the thorough whooping that the Oakland Raiders gave the Donkeys last time they played.  It started the downfall of the Donkeys and their eventual firing of their head coach, and gave the Raiders momentum for their first 3 game winning streak in nearly a decade.  The Raiders have already seen the Chargers win and will know if the Chiefs will have won or lost before they play.  Will they meet expectation and steam roll the Donkeys, or continue their up-and-down season by playing down to the level of the Donkeys?  Let’s review how they win…

Give DMC the Ball 25 times

He is 2nd behind Arian Foster for all purpose yards even though he missed 2 games.  He ran all around the Donkeys the last time they played.  If the Raiders are 8-5 instead of 6-7, he is in the MVP conversation.  The Donkeys gave Tim Hightower a career game and did not play with any passion for their interim head coach.  Get DMC the ball 25 times, screens, draws, wildcat, it doesn’t matter how.  Let him touch and see him go.

Shut down Moreno

New coach is the RB coach.  Think he’ll try  to establish the run?  With Orton hurting, Tebow possibly playing significant time, they are going to try to establish Knowshown Moreno all day.  The Raiders run d gave up big plays last week (2 runs accounted for 100 of the Jaguars 234 rushing yards), they are going to have to play their lanes and control the line of scrimmage.

Leave the Champ Alone

A pick 6, any turnover at all, can quickly give the Donkeys momentum.  Don’t tempt fate, get the run game going, use your FB and TE’s to get into the middle of the field, and then use play-action pass to get the ball down the field.  But do not, do not, make it a point to test Champ Bailey.  Let him rot in the Broncos secondary.

Get the Snowball Effect Going Quickly

Rain is on the horizon for the Sunday, so that means a game that didn’t sell out will most likely have even a few less fans.  The Raiders have to go into this game right off the bat for the kill, because they will not have a large home-field advantage.  Get on the Donkeys from the get go, if Captain Virgin (Tebow) starts, just go on the attack.

The Donkeys remember the 59 point thrashing and will come into this game motivated, but then again they have only won once since the Raiders game.  The Raiders have dominated the AFC West, and I don’t see how the Donkeys win this game unless…as I said earlier this week, if Tom Cable loses this game, he won’t be back next year.  So the unless… is if he doesn’t get them motivated to play this game.  Will they?

Raiders 33 Broncos 17


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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Gridiron Gab Week Fourteen Preview – Denver at Arizona

Season Records:

Cardinals: 3-9, 4th in NFC West, Last Week: L vs. St. Louis, 19-6

Broncos: 3-9, 4th in AFC West, Last Week: L @ Kansas City, 10-6

Gametime:

Sunday, December 12, 4:15 p.m. EST., University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, AZ

Two Franchises nearing the End of Two Nightmare Seasons:

The Cardinals continue their dissapointing season by hosting the Denver Broncos, who are dealing with their own issues. Denver’s former head coach, Josh McDaniels, was fired on Monday. Like Arizona, the Broncos are in the midst of the team’s worst slide in quite a while. McDaniels left Denver with a total 11-17 record and a bevy of off-field complications, including a number of trades that didn’t quite work out for the Broncos such as letting Petyon Hillis ship off for Cleveland. Oh yeah, then there’s the whole Spygate II videotaping scandal. McDaniels was replaced on an interim basis by running backs coach Eric Studesville. It’s reported that Studesville will have his chance to stay on full-time.

While Arizona won’t be making a change at head coach, there have of course been other personnel moves in anticipation of this week’s game. Obviously, Max Hall has been placed on injury reserve due to a left shoulder injury he suffered while relieving Derek Anderson last week against the Rams. In his place, the Cardinals signed Richard Bartel, 27, who served as Daunte Culpepper’s backup for the Mountain Lions of the UFL. Bartel spent the pre-season with the Washington Redskins, but was among the final cuts made before the regular season started. Bartel’s history includes playing for Southern Methodist University in 2003 before transferring to Tarleton State University for his final two seasons where he completed 161 of 276 passes for 2,033 yards with 16 TDs and 5 INTs. He has never appeared in an NFL game, yet.

On Monday,Whisenhunt addressed what he’s learned from this season and whether he still agrees with his decision to part ways with Matt Leinart. Here’s what he had to say:

That’s the thing to talk about now (but) when we made the decision at the time, we did what we felt was best for our team and best for our future going forward. Obviously it is easy to second-guess now because it hasn’t worked out the way any of us had hoped or thought it was going to. I can’t go back and say now you would do anything differently because the dynamic is different now (compared to) then when we were making the decisions.

The decision to make now is whether to go with Bartel or Skelton. According to the Cardinals’ official website, the starting job for Sunday will be determined based on an open competition between rookie John Skelton and Bartel. Derek Anderson hasn’t passed his concussion tests so he is a non factor this week. When asked if Bartel is honestly in the mix to start, Ken Whisenhunt replied, “I think he has to be. Even if John is the guy, he could go one play and get hurt and (Bartel) would be in there playing.”

Although Whisenhunt doesn’t want to second guess anything, that’s all that Cardinals fans can really do as we take on the Broncos with a 3-9 record in the worst division in the NFL. With no shot at the playoffs, the Cardinals are simply treading water at this point.


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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Chargers race past Denver 35-14 to move to .500


It may have started slow for the Chargers at home on Monday night, but once they got into rhythm, the team found their legs and let Philip Rivers’ arm do the talking.

In the end, the Pro Bowl QB threw for four touchdowns, as the Chargers beat up their division rivals 35-14 to stay in contention in the AFC West.

Rivers went 15-of-24 for 233 yards and one interception while Mike Tolbert added 25 carries for 111 yards and a score for the Chargers (5-5), who moved back to .500 with a three-game winning streak.

“We have a bunch of resilient, tough guys on this team that never flinch, never blink,” said Rivers. “This is a pretty good win we put together today. In all three phases of the game, we played great tonight.”

The win puts the Chargers into second in the division with the Raiders, one game back of the Chiefs for first.

“That was the most complete game we’ve had this season,” said head coach Norv Turner. “But we don’t have any time to rest. We have a short week and we have to get ready to start on Wednesday and travel on Friday. We have to keep the momentum we have going here.”

Patrick Crayton had three catches for 105 yards and a score, but left the game after his touchdown with an injured left wrist. Darren Sproles added five catches for 60 yards with a touchdown.

Kyle Orton was 24-for-38 with 217 yards, one touchdown and one interception for the Broncos (3-7), who started fast with a six play drive for a score, but never got back that momentum as they continued to flounder at the bottom of the division.

Knowshon Moreno had 13 carries for 58 yards and a score while Brandon Lloyd finished with six catches for 78 yards and a touchdown in the loss, as Denver fell to 1-4 on the road this season.

“We don’t have any crystal ball and can’t predict what anybody else is going to do,” said Denver head coach Josh McDaniels. “There is still a lot of football left to play and we can control what we do.”

The Chargers have another big showdown on Sunday night, as they take the Colts on the road in a game they need to have to keep pace in the West.


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