re: DenverPost.....
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Backfield looks bruised
Three games into season, Droughns' role with Broncos likely to grow
A team rich in running backs is starting to run low on them.
Broncos running back Clinton Portis has bruised ribs or a bruised sternum or both, and did not finish either of Denver's past two games.
Fullback Mike Anderson underwent a magnetic resonance imaging test on his right knee Tuesday, and after the exam, reported, "I'm OK."
Rookie running back Quentin Griffin, recovering from a hairline foot fracture he suffered on the opening day of training camp, did not make his NFL debut until Monday night, when the Broncos beat the Oakland Raiders 31-10.
The Broncos' healthiest back is fullback Reuben Droughns, who has a healthy appetite to carry the football Sunday against the Detroit Lions, the team that declined to renew his contract after he started three games for them in 2001.
"I'll be really motivated for this game," said Droughns, who signed with Denver in April 2002. "I'm real anxious to go against them. I can't wait to face them.
"I've been waiting for two years now to get the opportunity just to show them, 'You guys made a mistake."'
Asked why Detroit decided not to bring him back after it invested a third-round pick in him during the 2000 draft, Droughns replied: "They said I didn't have enough shiftiness. They said they were looking for a scatback. So now I just have to show them what they're missing."
As the Broncos' third option at running back, Droughns could get the chance. But so could Griffin, who in his NFL debut carried the football seven times for 26 yards and caught one pass for six. Griffin is the latest Broncos chosen one.
In 1999, Denver drafted running back Olandis Gary, who now plays for the Lions. The next year, the Broncos drafted Anderson and watched him run away with the NFL's offensive rookie of the year award.
With Denver's backfield ailing and a monster-sized game looming Oct. 5 against the Kansas City Chiefs, Griffin and Droughns could receive more work.
"Hopefully I can get the ball," said Droughns, who did not have any carries Monday night. "If they give me the opportunity, I'll be able to handle it just as well as (Griffin) can. Obviously you saw the spark that he brought into the game Monday night.
"With our offense, you really don't have a true running back or a fullback. We're just all tailbacks out there in the backfield. You can just throw any of us back there, and we can all get the job done."
Anderson is thankful it looks as though he'll have that chance sooner rather than later. When he caught a 6-yard, fourth-quarter pass Monday night, he fell backward, but his right knee did not.
Initially, trainers feared Anderson had torn his anterior cruciate or medial collateral ligament - injuries that could have sidelined the fullback indefinitely. But an MRI revealed no significant damage, and Anderson said he should be ready to play Sunday against the Lions.
The incident frightened Anderson in a way he could not have predicted. When trainers rushed to his side at the 29-yard line, they exhorted him to relax.
"I had to calm down," said Anderson, who had a game-high 14 carries for a game-high 70 yards against the Raiders. "That scared me; that really scared me. It got planted, and it didn't give. You don't want that to happen, ever."
Though Denver's backs are ailing, the Broncos know the situation could be worse. After today's practice for the Detroit game, the Broncos should have a better feel for which backs will be in their backfield Sunday.
The Lions will not have any sympathy for the Broncos. They have considerable injury problems, especially at cornerback.
Former starting left cornerback Andre Goodman suffered a dislocated left shoulder Sunday and will miss the rest of the season. Detroit already was without its No. 3 and No. 4 cornerbacks, Chris Cash and Chris Watson, who suffered season-ending injuries during the preseason.
Also, Lions return specialist Eddie Drummond will miss at least two weeks because of ligament damage in his right knee and a sprained right ankle. Quarterback Joey Harrington suffered a dislocated index finger on his right hand. And guard Ray Brown (torn pectoral), tight end Mikhael Ricks (foot and knee) and wide receiver Shawn Jefferson (ribs) left Sunday's game versus Minnesota.
"We've got to find a way to healthy up," Lions coach Steve Mariucci said this week