Broncos' five-point plan

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Broncos reporter Mike Klis provides five goals for the Broncos in their preseason game tonight against the Packers at Invesco Field at Mile High:

1. Watch deep!

In losing 19-13 to the Packers in overtime last season, the Broncos gave up two touchdowns on long passes. One burned cornerback Champ Bailey, the other CB Dre Bly. The passes were thrown by a quarterback now known as Brett the Jet.

2. Stay healthy!

Assorted injuries happen in every game. May the Broncos suffer no more than the assorted muscle pulls in this one.

3. Play like it's your last game

For five Broncos players, this could be it as the first roster cuts will come during the weekend. It will also be the final preseason game for Broncos regulars.

4. A D-line sack or three

Packers QB Aaron Rodgers has been sacked a league-high six times in two preseason games. The Broncos' front four has two sacks (by Kenny Peterson and Elvis Dumervil) in two preseason games.

5. Keep Cutler's jersey clean

Broncos QB Jay Cutler has thrown 30 passes without getting sacked in two preseason games. The Packers' D has just one sack in two preseason games.


Another 5 from different reporter:




Five things to watch

1. Flip-flop. Thus far, it has been Broncos rookie left tackle Ryan Clady who has had to handle the defense's best pass rusher. But against the Packers, right tackle Ryan Harris will get the toughest assignment. Green Bay lines up its best rusher, Pro Bowl end Aaron Kampman, on the power side. It will be a quality test for Harris.

2. Join the club. Packers quarterbacks have been sacked nine times in two preseason games, and six times it was Aaron Rodgers who went down. The Broncos' rush still is a bit of an unknown until the game plans are in, but it has four sacks in two games, though only two of them are by defensive linemen.

3. Continue to look. The Broncos know they are going to be without Brandon Marshall to start the season. They also know Brandon Stokley is going to be productive in the slot on third down. But all that means is that somebody besides rookie Eddie Royal must produce out of their base formation, especially early in the season, when Royal figures to get extra attention from defenses in Marshall's absence.

4. Keep it up. The preseason passer rating of quarterback Jay Cutler, above, is a heady 110.7, and he is averaging 7.9 yards per attempt. In the regular season, 8.0 usually puts a quarterback among league leaders. He will face two veteran cornerbacks tonight, Charles Woodson and Al Harris.

5. Stay smooth. This will be the last work of the preseason for virtually all the team's starters, who are scheduled to play through halftime. There is some momentum to be had.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Packers get boost for preseason game in Denver
Jennings returns, but both teams will play with shuffled lines



DENVER -- Greg Jennings is returning to the Green Bay Packers' lineup and also to the scene of his signature NFL moment.The Packers will welcome back their star wide receiver tonight in Denver after he missed the team's first two preseason games with a sore knee. Jennings had one of his biggest moments of his career at Denver last season, catching an 82-yard touchdown pass from Brett Favre on the first play of overtime to power the Packers to a memorable 19-13 win.

It was the second-longest TD pass in NFL overtime history. On Nov. 10, 1985, Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Ron Jaworski and wide receiver Mike Quick combined on a 99-yard play.

"Last year was last year," Jennings said. "I'm pretty sure they're probably thinking about that and don't want that to happen again."

Green Bay running back Ryan Grant also burst onto the NFL scene in Denver last season, coming in when DeShawn Wynn went down early with an injured shoulder and gaining 104 yards on 22 carries, a prelude to his big runs and big bucks that were to come.

Grant is still nursing a sore hamstring, however, and isn't expected to play tonight.

The Broncos (1-1) will be without Tom Nalen again. Their stalwart center who has missed most of training camp was scheduled for surgery on his left knee, his second in 2? months, and his status for the season is up in the air, depending on what the surgeon finds.

If Nalen can't return quickly, theBroncos have a big decision to make about whether to add him to their 53-man roster because they're already planning to hold open a spot for rookie running back Ryan Torain, who will miss the first half of the season recovering from a broken elbow.

Denver will get cornerback Champ Bailey (hamstring) back in the lineup for his preseason debut against Green Bay.

"Champ's in good shape. Champ's had a good week. There's been no setback and he's practiced every day. So, I'm sure he's looking forward to playing his first game," Broncos coach Mike Shanahan said.

Bailey's presence will surely provide more of a test for Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who struggled at San Francisco last week after a fairly sharp outing in his debut against Cincinnati.

Rodgers took the blame for some mental mistakes, including holding on to the ball too long against a heavy pass rush, but he didn't get enough help from wide receivers who struggled to hang on to the ball and an offensive line that allowed four sacks.

"We're not putting extra pressure on ourselves, but we definitely want to get some momentum going into the season," Rodgers said.

Now that Favre's monthlong unretirement saga has been resolved, instability on the interior has been the biggest problem for the Packers' offense in camp.

With starting center Scott Wells fighting lower back injuries, Jason Spitz is likely to play center. Spitz is generally considered the team's best guard, although he has shuffled between the left and right side throughout camp as the Packers sort through a handful of options at the other guard spot. With Spitz at center, the Packers are likely to start rookie Josh Sitton at right guard and Daryn Colledge at left guard.

The Broncos also have reshuffled their line. With Nalen out, not a single incumbent starter is back from last year.

Still, Cutler has yet to be sacked, and he's completed 24-of-30 passes for 237 yards and a TD.

Denver has some experience in the interior line with free agent Casey Wiegmann, who's entering his 13th NFL season, replacing Nalen, and Ben Hamilton and Chris Kuper at guard. At tackle, the Broncos are young, with first-rounder Ryan Clady protecting Cutler's blind side and second-year pro Ryan Harris on the right side. Harris was flagged four times in the exhibition opener.

"It's a learning experience. They're going to have some tough games. But they're excellent athletes. And they're great competitors. And they're learning every day on the job," Shanahan said.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Green Bay Roster analysis: Thin at defensive tackle, rich at linebacker

Last year at this time, the Green Bay Packers had unusually good depth at defensive tackle but were weak at backup linebacker.


A year later, it?s the opposite. The Packers? trade of Corey Williams and Justin Harrell?s back injury have been major factors in the depletion at defensive tackle.

The signing of Brandon Chillar, plus the ascending play of young linebackers Desmond Bishop and Abdul Hodge, have made for a linebacker corps that might warrant keeping as many as seven players for the first time since 2000.

General Manager Ted Thompson has betrayed no concerns about defensive tackle, but the strength of the defense last season was its ability to rotate solid defensive tackles and keep them fresh for an entire game. It has to be the Packers? biggest concern heading into the final two weeks of training camp, especially with one of their best defensive tackles, Ryan Pickett, likely to miss all of training camp because of a hamstring injury.

Thompson?s actions will tell more than his words, and this could be a position he tries to improve with a trade or perhaps a pickup on final cuts, though defensive tackles of any quality rarely get released ? they?re too hard to find.

After keeping an extra sixth defensive tackle last season because of the quality, the Packers might drop down to four at final cuts this season if Harrell is on the physically-unable-to-perform list, which appears likely, and none of the three players fighting for the last spot at defensive tackle ? Daniel Muir, Alfred Malone and Conrad Bolston ? elevates his play in the final two preseason games.

Following is a position-by-position look at the Packers? roster with the cut from 80 players to 75 coming Tuesday and the reduction to the regular-season limit of 53 looming four days later on Aug. 30.

Defensive line (9 or 10 players)

# Locks: DE Aaron Kampman, DT Ryan Pickett, DE-DT Cullen Jenkins, DT Johnny Jolly, DE-DT Michael Montgomery, DE Jeremy Thompson, DE Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila, DT Colin Cole, DE Jason Hunter.

# On the bubble: DT Justin Harrell, DT Daniel Muir, DT Alfred Malone.

# Long shots: DT Conrad Bolston, DT Rodney Allen.

# Comment: Harrell?s back injury, which required surgery in April, has created major problems at defensive tackle. He?s on the PUP list and appears likely to remain there at the start of the season, so he won?t be eligible to return until after the sixth game. The Packers are saying he should be able to play this year, but that?s not a given.

Pickett (hamstring) is on PUP but should be ready for the regular-season opener at the latest. Even then, he won?t have much stamina early. Jolly faces a possible suspension for his summer arrest for possessing at least 200 grams of codeine in a cough syrup, but it appears he can postpone a trial until after the season if it goes that far.

Muir?s play has slipped after he made the team last year as an undrafted rookie. He missed part of the offseason because of a pectoral injury and hasn?t been as explosive or effective. Malone has been more stout in the middle of the line and might be ahead of Muir, but there?s at least a chance neither will make the team, depending on their play the final two preseason games.

Montgomery, a defensive end by trade, has been active as an occasional inside rusher on passing downs, but hasn?t made any plays in that role. Thompson is a raw fourth-round draft pick who could develop into a decent pass-rush threat before the season is finished.

Linebackers (6 or 7)

# Locks: Nick Barnett, A.J. Hawk, Brady Poppinga, Brandon Chillar.

# On the bubble: Tracy White, Desmond Bishop, Abdul Hodge.

# Long shots: Spencer Havner, Danny Lansanah.

# Comment: The improving Poppinga held off Chillar for the starting job at strong-side linebacker. The other major story is the play of Bishop and Hodge. Last year, White was the No. 4 linebacker, but this year, he?s probably the seventh best behind Chillar, Bishop and Hodge. But White will be especially hard to cut because he?s perhaps the best special-teams player on the roster. Bishop?s and Hodge?s primary position is middle linebacker, but the Packers at least have to consider keeping both considering their play in camp. Bishop made big gains in the offseason workout program and has transferred them to the field, where he plays faster and has been better in pass coverage than Hodge. Throw in Bishop?s special-teams play, and he?s slightly ahead. But Hodge is running much better this season after having patellar-tendon surgery last year, and he?s made a strong pitch for a roster spot with his powerful striking ability and physical play in the run game.

Defensive backs (9 or 10)

# Locks: CB Charles Woodson, CB Al Harris, S Nick Collins, S Atari Bigby, CB Tramon Williams, S Aaron Rouse, CB Patrick Lee, CB Will Blackmon.

# On the bubble: CB Jarrett Bush, S Charlie Peprah, S Tyrone Culver.

# Long shots: CB Joe Porter, CB Scorpio Babers.

# Comment: Williams has locked up the No. 3 cornerback job. Last year, the Packers kept six cornerbacks but might keep only five this season because Bush hasn?t improved in his third year. Though Bush has solid size (6-0, 200 pounds) and good athletic ability, something is missing, whether it be instincts or simply the ability to play the ball.

Blackmon is developing more slowly than the Packers predicted, but he also missed extensive time the last two years because of injuries. Lee is a second-round pick who was only a one-year starter at Auburn and is being developed for the future. Peprah was ahead for the No. 4 safety job before missing the first two preseason games because of a hamstring injury. He might be the team?s smoothest safety and can play some cornerback ? he played that position two years at Alabama ? but will miss tonight?s game. He has to get on the field next week to beat out Culver, who excels at quarterbacking the defense from the secondary.
Quarterbacks (2 or 3)

# Locks: Aaron Rodgers, Brian Brohm.

# On the bubble: Matt Flynn.

# Comment: Flynn is giving Brohm a run for the backup job, but it?s far from clear that either will be ready to be a No. 2 quarterback ? like many rookies at this position, both have had major ups and downs in their first training camp. Coach Mike McCarthy has called their development a camplong project and been steadfast he?s comfortable with two rookies to back up Rodgers, but the Packers will be watching the waiver wires closely at final cuts. If they pick up a veteran, they?d have to cut the seventh-round pick Flynn.
Running backs (5 or 6)

# Locks: Ryan Grant, Brandon Jackson.

# Good bets: Korey Hall.

# On the bubble: Vernand Morency, Noah Herron, John Kuhn, Kregg Lumpkin.

# Long shots: DeShawn Wynn, Corey White, Ryan Powdrell.

# Comment: It?s a close call between Morency and Herron for the No. 3 halfback job. Morency is a more explosive runner and excellent in blitz pickup, but even though he?s been healthy, his patellar-tendon problems from last year could be a concern. Herron is as assignment-sure as they come. Lumpkin has made strides in camp and can?t be discounted if the team keeps four halfbacks, though he appears more likely headed for the practice squad.

Wynn?s most recent injury, a sprained ankle, probably has blown his chance of making the team, considering his long history of missing practices and games dating to college. He left the preseason opener and hasn?t practiced or played since.
Tight ends (2 or 3)

# Locks: Donald Lee, Jermichael Finley.

# On the bubble: Tory Humphrey, Joey Haynos.

# Comment: The Packers have stayed much longer with Humphrey than they would with most injured players near the bottom of the roster, but they like his talent enough to give him every chance to show he can get healthy and help them. He?s back from an Achilles tendon injury that sidelined him last week and will need to do something in the final two preseason games to win a spot. The 6-8 Haynos has been a nice surprise who?s shown decent mobility for his size as well as good hands. He could make the team if Humphrey doesn?t come through, though he?s more likely a practice-squad candidate because the Packers could add someone from the waiver wire at final cuts or early in the season. Finley, a fourth-round pick, has impressive natural talent running and catching, but he?s extremely young (21) and raw for a possible No. 2 tight end.
Wide receiver (5 or 6)

# Locks: Donald Driver, Greg Jennings, James Jones, Jordy Nelson, Ruvell Martin.

# On the bubble: Brett Swain.

# Long shots: Taj Smith, Johnny Quinn, Chris Francies, Jake Allen.

# Comment: Probably the team?s best position for quality of depth, beginning with starters Driver and Jennings. Jones has built on a solid rookie year to easily hold the No. 3 receiving job, and Martin?s continual improvement makes him a sure bet to make the team. He?s also a favorite target of Rodgers because of their extensive work together on scout team the past two years. Nelson, the Packers? top draft pick this year, has been fine but is in a major fight for playing time.

Swain looked good in the offseason then seemed overwhelmed when the pads when on ? he had a rough time getting off jams at the line and dropped a surprising number of passes the first three weeks of camp. But this past week he suddenly looked much sharper running routes and catching the ball while playing mostly on the scout team. The Packers will have trouble justifying keeping the seventh-round pick on the final 53 unless he does something spectacular in the final two weeks, but he?s a practice-squad prospect worth watching.
Offensive line (9 or 10)

# Locks: T Chad Clifton, T Mark Tauscher, G-C Jason Spitz, C Scott Wells, G Josh Sitton, G-T Daryn Colledge, G-T Allen Barbre.

# On the bubble: G-T Tony Moll, T Breno Giacomini, C-G Junius Coston.

# Long shots: T Orrin Thompson, G Ryan Keenan, C-G Brennan Carvalho, G-T Ryan Considine.

# Comment: Wells? lower-back injury and the uneven play of the young guards have made the middle of the line an issue as camp winds down. Sitton is ahead of Barbre and College for the starting guard job opposite Spitz because he?s bigger and more stout at 317 pounds, and he has a major mean streak. However, Barbre has been good in one-on-one pass-blocking drills and is more athletic. Though Barbre didn?t make the major jump the Packers thought he might, his play hasn?t been much, if at all, behind Sitton?s. Sitton?s long look in the starting lineup might mean the Packers prefer the bigger player to give the run game more power potential, especially late in the season when the weather turns bad. With Wells out and Spitz at center, Colledge looks like he?ll start at left guard tonight, but Barbre is in the running there if Sitton doesn?t show improvement at right guard. Colledge has played both guards and left tackle, so he?s beginning to look like a utility man.

Giacomini, a sixth-round pick, has made major strides at right tackle, where early in camp defensive ends Jason Hunter and Michael Montgomery took turns abusing him as the converted tight end adjusted to the Packers? blocking techniques. But the past two weeks, Giacomini has been increasingly stout and might win a roster spot. Moll has been incredibly up and down, looking slow on some snaps in one-on-one drills and playing tough and strong on others. He?s played every position on the line except center, so his versatility as a backup is his selling point.
Specialists

# Locks: K Mason Crosby, P Jon Ryan.

# Good bet: LS J.J. Jansen.

# Comment: Crosby?s nearly error-free camp suggests he?s on his way to becoming one of the NFL?s top kickers. Ryan has had more shanks than you?d expect from a third-year pro and still hits the occasional long but low hang-time punt, but he?s still improving and has noteworthy talent because of his strong kicking leg. The undrafted rookie Jansen out of Notre Dame has done nothing to suggest he won?t have a long NFL career.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Packers : 5 things to watch in Friday night's game


1. The most compelling storyline, as it will be for at least the first half of the season, is Aaron Rodgers? play at quarterback. After a solid opener against Cincinnati, Rodgers had a much rougher time against San Francisco last week. He didn?t get good pass protection against the 49ers? 3-4 defense and was the victim of big drops by Donald Driver and Donald Lee, but Rodgers also held the ball too long on several occasions and failed to cut his losses with check downs to the running backs. No doubt coach Mike McCarthy was hammering on those points all week. Rodgers will play into the third quarter, so he?ll get plenty of opportunity to put points on the board and show some growth.


2. The middle of the Packers? offensive line was a borderline disaster last week against San Francisco, but some of that probably was because center Scott Wells struggled because of a lower-back injury. He?ll miss this week. Jason Spitz had an especially rough night at left guard, but will be back at center in place of Wells. Still, he?s not the main concern, considering he?s generally played well for more than a year. The question is whether rookie Josh Sitton will show enough to warrant keeping him in the starting lineup at right guard. He played better last week than in the opener against Cincinnati, and he?ll get a good, long look with the starters tonight. If he struggles again, keep an eye on how Allen Barbre performs at left guard ? Daryn Colledge probably will start there, but Barbre has been ahead of him for most of camp. If Sitton isn?t ready to start, Barbre might be next in line.

3. The Packers are down two key defensive tackles because of injuries ? Ryan Pickett (hamstring) and Justin Harrell (back) ? and are looking for someone to play well enough at that position to keep behind Johnny Jolly, Colin Cole and end-tackle Cullen Jenkins. Daniel Muir has been a disappointment after a strong camp last year, and Alfred Malone has been OK, but neither is a given to make the team. Both should get plenty of playing time with the starting defense ? Muir is No. 95, Malone No. 98 ? and their performances will be critical to their chances of winning a roster spot and providing some help at a precariously thin position.

4. The Packers held on to backup tight end Tory Humphrey this year even though he missed the final seven games of 2006 and all of last season because of injuries. After he missed last week?s game because of a sore Achilles tendon, Humphrey is down to crunch time. Though at 6-2 he?s short for a tight end, he knows the offense and has impressive speed and receiving skills, which is why the Packers have waited on him. They think he?s can help them if he?s healthy, but he hasn?t done much in camp. He needs to make a couple plays and get through the final two weeks of camp without missing any time to stick on the final roster.

5. Last week, rookie receiver Jordy Nelson had kickoff returns of 56 and 58 yards, which puts him in the running for one of the two starting kickoff-return jobs. Will Blackmon and Tramon Williams, the top holdovers from last year, hold those starting jobs, but Nelson should get a chance or two against Denver?s starting kickoff-cover unit. Another big return could land him a spot as a first-teamer.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Distinct sense of urgency
Team views Denver as a must-win game



Green Bay - Thousands of Green Bay Packers fans are and probably will remain incensed about management's decision to trade Brett Favre. Some are looking for reasons to dump on the Packers any way they can.Green Bay's 0-2 start under Aaron Rodgers has provided some ammunition. Another defeat, against the Denver Broncos on Friday night, might very well lead to a fourth setback next week against the Tennessee Titans, who unlike most teams don't treat the finale as a throwaway.

If the Packers were to finish 0-4, it would mark just the third time in club history in which they lost every exhibition game. The pro-Favre faction would be crowing, the pro-Rodgers crowd might be back-tracking and the confidence of a young team could be threatened.

A month from now, few will remember what happens in Denver. Meaningless game or not, let's just say the Packers understand that in order to get people off their backs they will have to look sharp in the Mile High city.

"We need to lead the whole game, and we've got to win," wide receiver Donald Driver said. "We were a roller-coaster on Family Night, we played well against Cincinnati and we're back down in the dungeon now. We've got two preseason games to take hold of business."

Under coach Mike McCarthy, the Packers are 3-7 in exhibitions. Perhaps his poorest performance of the 10 was the 34-6 defeat on Saturday night in San Francisco.

McCarthy allowed that he didn't have the team prepared for the 49ers and that "we will get that done this week."

Starting Monday, the Packers worked almost exclusively against schemes employed by the Broncos. Like most coaches, McCarthy counts the third exhibition as a dress rehearsal for the regular season. He displayed little levity this week.

"We want to win every game, preseason or not," said Mike Stock, the special teams coach. "But there's a pride factor compared to how we played last week."

There's an old maxim in the National Football League that any team can win any exhibition game if it's sufficiently motivated to do so. Certainly the Packers have motivation, but the Broncos should be at least equally prepared and maybe as inspired.

Coming off an excellent performance Saturday in a 23-13 victory over Dallas, Denver is 1-1. Coach Mike Shanahan plans to play most of his starters into the third quarter, as does McCarthy. But unlike McCarthy, who in the past has played his No. 1's for about a quarter in the finale, Shanahan won't even use starters next week.

The Broncos will be without three injured starters on offense, but their No. 1 defense will line up intact.

Bob Slowik, the Broncos' first-year defensive coordinator, went blitz-crazy in the summer of 2004 when he was coordinating for the Packers. Maybe Slowik will attack Rodgers after viewing what damage the 49ers caused, but in the first two games he hasn't brought much pressure.

"We're not putting pressure on ourselves, but we definitely want to get some momentum going into the season," said Rodgers. "There's only one way to go after last week. We've got to get into a rhythm and get some points on the board."

The Packers rank 31st in scoring with 23 points, three more than St. Louis. Their point differential of minus-31 ranks last in the NFL.

New England, Cleveland, Chicago, Atlanta and Dallas fill out the ranks of the winless.

"Dallas is 0-2," cornerback Will Blackmon said. "Do you think they're concerned? But, in our case, it's new. The Brett era is gone. We've got the Aaron era. Everyone is still feeling each other out. People here need something to go off of."

Although the Packers have been playing in the NFL since 1921, they've played three or more exhibition games in 69 years. Their 0-3 starts were 1946, '52, '83, '87 and '93. The only years when they lost every exhibition game were '46 (0-3) and '87 (0-4).

The '87 season was Forrest Gregg's fourth as coach in Green Bay. The lowlight that summer was a 33-0 loss to Washington in which the crowd at Camp Randall Stadium offered mock cheers when the Packers finally made a first down on their 10th possession.

Afterward, Gregg apologized to the fans.

"I can't ever remember being this disgusted," said Gregg. "I thought we were way past that childish mediocrity. I was embarrassed that a team I'm supposed to be coaching would show up like that."

Nowadays, most coaches seek to hide their emotions in press conferences. Beyond closed doors, however, little has changed.

McCarthy has barked to his players that the 49ers' showing was unacceptable and it's time to get with the program.

"You can't just go into the regular season and think you're going to flip a switch," tackle Mark Tauscher said. "This team needs to start kind of getting moving offensively."

For his part, general manager Ted Thompson viewed the Denver game basically as just another opportunity to evaluate players on what he regards as a confident team.

"Oh and 3 in the pre-season could mean something, could not mean something," cornerback Charles Woodson said. "The focus is to play well, of course. Not to look like we did last week.

"But the focus is going to be on Sept. 8. Our first few games are tough games. I think that will be the biggest test for the team, rather than if we were to go 0-3 in preseason."
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top