Numbers Game: Newest Denver Broncos Jersey Assignments

Derek, Brock, and company can finally start feeling a little more “official.”

The newest members of the Denver Broncos – along with a few others – now have number assignments.  Below is the breakdown:

Drafted players

  • 95: DE Derek Wolfe
  • 6: QB Brock Osweiler
  • 34: RB Ronnie Hillman
  • 47: CB Omar Bolden
  • 64: OL Philip Blake
  • 70: DL Malik Jackson
  • 59: LB Danny Trevathan

Undrafted free agents

  • 8: WR Gerell Robinson
  • 19: WR Eric Page
  • 38: S Duke Ihenacho
  • 45: CB Coryell Judie
  • 46: LS Aaron Brewer
  • 48: LB Elliot Coffey
  • 49: LB Jerry Franklin
  • 57: LB Steven Johnson
  • 60: OL Mike Remmers
  • 62: OL Austin Wuebbels
  • 69: OL Wayne Tribue
  • 77: DL Jamie Blatnick
  • 86: TE Anthony Miller

As for the other number assignments, cornerback Tracy Porter will now wear No. 21. Tight end Jacob Tamme will wear 84, with fellow TE Cornelius Ingram moving to 82.

Defensive lineman Jeremy Beal will now wear 79, a number previously worn by Marcus Thomas, who is still with the team…for now.  (Writing, meet wall.)

Defensive lineman Sealver Siliga will wear No. 98.

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Denver Broncos Offseason Signings Update

Let’s revisit the Denver Broncos’ offseason transactions…

Signed Elsewhere

  • Brodrick Bunkley (DT) – Signed with New Orleans
  • Daniel Fells (TE) – Signed with New England
  • Derrick Harvey (DE) – Signed with Cincinnati
  • Spencer Larsen (FB) – Signed with New England
  • Brady Quinn (QB) – Signed with Kansas City
  • Dante Rosario (TE) – Signed with San Diego
  • Eddie Royal (WR) – Signed with San Diego
  • Jonathan Wilhite (CB) – Signed with Chicago

Re-signed by the Broncos

  • Lance Ball (RB)
  • Chris Clark (T)
  • Britton Colquitt (P)
  • Jason Hunter (DE)
  • Joe Mays (LB)
  • Matt Prater (K) – *Assigned franchise tag
  • Manny Ramirez (G)
  • Matthew Willis (WR)
  • Wesley Woodyard  (LB)

Broncos’ remaining unrestricted free agents

  • David Binn (LS)
  • Brian Dawkins (S)
  • Mario Haggan (LB)
  • Russ Hochstein (OL)
  • Marcus Thomas (DT)

Broncos’ free agent signings

  • Mike Adams (S) – from Cleveland
  • Justin Bannan (DT) – from St. Louis
  • Andre Caldwell (WR) – from Cincinnati
  • C.J. Davis (G) – from Carolina
  • Joel Dreessen (TE) – from Houston
  • Caleb Hanie (QB) – from Chicago
  • Jason Hill (WR) – from Jacksonville
  • Peyton Manning (QB) – from Indianapolis
  • Tracy Porter (CB) – from New Orleans
  • Brandon Stokley (WR) – from New York Giants
  • Jacob Tamme (TE) – from Indianapolis

Other

  • Andre Goodman (CB) – Released
  • Brian Iwuh (LB) – Retired
  • Ryan McBean (DT) – Contract tender rescinded

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Denver Dailies: Broncos Roundup (Thursday Edition)

Broncos’ 2012 schedule sprinkled with top quarterbacks - If there were a few sprinkles of doubt as to why the Broncos decided to aggressively pursue Peyton Manning in the free-agent market, the team’s 2012 schedule should blow them away.  Read more from the Denver Post >>>>

NFL draft history lesson: Please be wary of workout wonders - NFL personnel executives watch prospects adorned in designer compression shorts and $200 running shoes shine in predraft workouts and wonder how their skills will translate to pro ball. They wonder if the 100-meter men can tackle, if the highest jumpers can catch and if those players’ wondrous athletic gifts mean they can play.  Read more from the Denver Post >>>>

Marcus Thomas, Denver Broncos aren’t in each other’s plans - Today’s questions about the Broncos come from Kurt Weber in Fullerton, Calif.  Q: Have the Broncos considered signing London Fletcher or Plaxico Burress? And why haven’t the Broncos re-signed defensive tackle Marcus Thomas?  Read more from the Denver Post >>>>

Manning ‘A Natural-Born Leader’ - Throughout his 13, going on 14, years in the league, Champ Bailey has seen his fair share of quarterbacks.  But he’s never practiced against a future Hall of Famer on a regular basis.  With Peyton Manning now his teammate with the Denver Broncos, Bailey has that chance. He described the opportunity with one word: challenging.  Read more from the Denver Broncos >>>>

Fox, Elway Talk Schedule - Minutes after the schedule was released, Head Coach John Fox went on NFL Network and Executive Vice President of Football Operations John Elway spoke with 850 KOA about the Broncos’ slate of games.  Below are the transcripts from those interviews.  Read more from Denver Broncos >>>>

Denver Broncos schedule analysis - Peyton Manning’s first game as the Broncos’ quarterback will be against the Pittsburgh Steelers, the same team that former Denver quarterback Tim Tebow beat in the playoffs in his second-to-last game with the team. The NFL will put Manning in the immediate spotlight — his Broncos debut and first game since the 2010 season will be on Sunday night in Week 1.  Read more form ESPN >>>>

NFL schedule: Broncos, Titans among teams that got hosed - The 2012 NFL schedule has been unveiled. Looking through the slates for all 32 teams, which organization was dealt the toughest hand?  Read more from NFL.com >>>>

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Denver Broncos Offseason Signings Update

Here are the latest Denver Broncos offseason roster moves:

Signed Elsewhere

  • Brodrick Bunkley (DT) – Signed with New Orleans
  • Daniel Fells (TE) – Signed with New England
  • Derrick Harvey (DE) – Signed with Cincinnati
  • Spencer Larsen (FB) – Signed with New England
  • Brady Quinn (QB) – Signed with Kansas City
  • Dante Rosario (TE) – Signed with San Diego
  • Eddie Royal (WR) – Signed with San Diego
  • Jonathan Wilhite (CB) – Signed with Chicago

Re-signed by the Broncos

  • Lance Ball (RB)
  • Britton Colquitt (P)
  • Jason Hunter (DE)
  • Joe Mays (LB)
  • Manny Ramirez (G)
  • Wesley Woodyard  (LB)

Broncos’ remaining unrestricted free agents

  • David Binn (LS)
  • Brian Dawkins (S)
  • Mario Haggan (LB)
  • Russ Hochstein (OL)
  • Marcus Thomas (DT)

Broncos’ free agent signings

  • Mike Adams (S) – from Cleveland
  • Andre Caldwell (WR) – from Cincinnati
  • C.J. Davis (G) – from Carolina
  • Joel Dreessen (TE) – from Houston
  • Caleb Hanie (QB) – from Chicago
  • Jason Hill (WR) – from Jacksonville
  • Peyton Manning (QB) – from Indianapolis
  • Tracy Porter (CB) – from New Orleans
  • Jacob Tamme (TE) – from Indianapolis

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Free Agent Update: Who’s Here and Who’s Gone

Ten days into free agency, here is an update on the Broncos’ UFAs who have signed elsewhere or have re-signed with the team.

Signed elsewhere

After one season with the Broncos, TE Daniel Fells signed with the Patriots. (courtesy Jeffrey Beall)

  • Brodrick Bunkley (DT) – Signed with New Orleans
  • Daniel Fells (TE) – Signed with New England
  • Spencer Larsen (FB) – Signed with New England
  • Brady Quinn (QB) – Signed with Kansas City
  • Dante Rosario (TE) – Signed with San Diego
  • Eddie Royal (WR) – Signed with San Diego

Re-signed by the Broncos

  • Joe Mays (LB)
  • Manny Ramirez (G)
  • Wesley Woodyard  (LB)
Denver’s remaining unrestricted free agents
  • David Binn (LS)
  • Brian Dawkins (S)
  • Mario Haggan (LB)
  • Derrick Harvey (DE)
  • Russ Hochstein (OL)
  • Jason Hunter (DE)
  • Marcus Thomas (DT)
  • Jonathan Wilhite (CB)
Broncos free agent signings not named Peyton Manning
  • Mike Adams (S) – from Cleveland
  • Andre Caldwell (WR) – from Cincinnati
  • C.J. Davis (G) – from Carolina (signed Feb. 15)
  • Joel Dreessen (TE) – from Houston
  • Jason Hill (WR) – from Jacksonville (signed Feb. 15)
  • Tracy Porter (CB) – from New Orleans
  • Jacob Tamme (TE) – from Indianapolis

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NFL Free Agency Begins

NFL free agency is now underway.  The following Broncos are unrestricted free agents:

*2011 statistics

David Binn (LS)

Brodrick Bunkley (DT)

  • 43 tackles

Brian Dawkins (S)

  •  51 tackles, 3 sacks, 1 forced fumble

Daniel Fells (TE)

  • 19 receptions, 256 yards, 3 touchdowns

Mario Haggan (LB)

  • 23 tackles, 1 interception

Derrick Harvey (DE)

  • 4 tackles

Russ Hochstein (OL)

Jason Hunter (DE)

  • 21 tackles, 1 sack, 1 forced fumble

Spencer Larsen (FB)

Joe Mays (LB)

  • 75 tackles

Brady Quinn (QB)

Manny Ramirez (G)

Dante Rosario (TE)

  • 7 receptions, 117 yards

Eddie Royal (WR)

  • 19 receptions, 155 yards, 1 touchdown

Marcus Thomas (DT)

  • 43 tackles

Jonathan Wilhite (CB)

  • 28 tackles, 2 sacks, 1 interception

Matthew Willis (WR)

  • 18 receptions, 267 yards, 1 touchdown

Wesley Woodyard (LB)

  • 97 tackles, 2 forced fumbles

The Broncos will likely target some aforementioned players for contact extensions, but let the rest test the free agent waters.  The Broncos offensive transactions could have a lot to do with a certain unemployed quarterback looking for work.  As for when that decision could come, we’re all on the clock…

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Broncos’ Offseason Evaluation Process Underway

The Denver Broncos front office and coaching staff are already in the midst of player evaluations, a process of deciding which free agents are priorities to re-sign, which players are tradable or releasable, and perhaps most importantly, which positions need more depth and/or talent.

For that, the Broncos need to look no further than the divisional round playoff game against the New England Patriots – 60 minutes of painful game film that answers the “Which positions do we need to focus on this offseason?” question.

Unlike the lockout-ridden offseason of 2011, the Broncos have the benefit of normalcy this time around.  Denver will certainly look for affordable, available veterans, or “valuable signings” as general manager Brian Xanders called them last month, to address particular positional needs, as well as the NFL Draft, something John Elway said must be treated as a can’t-miss situation for the team.

Defensive Linemen – The Broncos handling of this in 2011 is a classic example of why quantity does not equal quality.

Denver’s strategy was to sign or re-sign a slew of average players, overlooking the glaring need for a game-changer.  Thanks to season-ending injuries to Ty Warren and Kevin Vickerson, the Broncos relied on Brodrick Bunkley, Ryan McBean, Marcus Thomas, and Mitch Unrein.  No one was bad, but then again, no one provided the type of presence the Broncos need to avoid blowouts against elite offenses.  Bunkley was a pleasant surprise, and presumably is a priority for Denver to re-sign.  He, McBean, and Thomas are free agents.

Priority No. 1: improving the Broncos defensive line. (personal photo)

Secondary – The Broncos focused on bolstering their safety corps in last year’s NFL Draft, taking Rahim Moore and Quinton Carter.  Moore began the season as starter, but a series of missed tackles, bad coverage, and apparent on-field confusion led to his benching.

Carter gladly assumed Moore’s role, and like Moore, seemed at times to regress during the game.  Not coincidentally, the Broncos young secondary folded without Brian Dawkins’ in-game leadership.  Whether mentor Dawkins returns or not, Denver’s young safeties must develop a firmer understanding of their roles on the field, and find the confidence execute their assignments.  At the end of the season Carter’s game began showing some promise, but the pressure is officially on Moore as he was the top safety drafted in 2011, and has yet to show any sign of that pick being warranted.

The cornerback position is a more pressing concern.  Champ Bailey is a shutdown cornerback, and the entire league knows that. What’s the easiest way to take a shutdown cornerback out of a game?  Don’t throw to his receiver.  That’s as good as done for teams with multiple receiving threats.  We’re also very much in the territory where it’s time to discuss how much longer Bailey will not only be around, but be the dominant player he’s been all these years.

Andre Goodman was routinely outplayed this season.  He’s also deep into a career.  Chris Harris shows promise, and could very likely assume the mantle of starting cornerback.  Still, assuming Bailey has three strong years left the Broncos must find and develop new talent at corner. Two receiver sets are becoming rare so a strong rotation of coverage players is basically mandatory.

Running Back – Unofficially, the Knowshon Moreno experiment is officially over.  When healthy Moreno has been a back stuck in limbo: not strong or balanced enough to go inside, yet not quite quick enough to work outside.  The Broncos need a consistent and reliable running back, especially in John Fox’s ground-oriented, two-back system.  Moreno’s lack of durability and inability to be an impact player rule him out of this discussion.

Willis McGahee turned out to be the back the Broncos needed, but he also turned 30 during the regular season.  McGahee had his best rushing year since 2007 – third best in his career.  Lance Ball is a dependable role player, but not a breakaway-style rusher.

McGahee handled the bulk of Denver’s running duties, but he needs a cohort, a younger, speedier, flashier cohort.

Wide Receiver – Wait, isn’t Tim Tebow still quarterback?

Why yes he is, but Tebow plans to dedicate much of his offseason working on his football mechanics, notably his passing.  Tebow knows he must improve his passing efficiency.  The Broncos have an eclectic receiving corps, minus the true speedster.

Demaryius Thomas is the physical receiver. Eric Decker is the slot receiver.  Eddie Royal, who is a free agent, is the role player, and Matthew Willis is the understudy.  Thomas must pick up where he left off.  Eric Decker must attend the Brandon Stokley school of creating separation, and bring Royal and Willis with him.

We expect more passing from Tim Tebow in 2012. Might as well give him another receiving threat. (personal photo)

Aside from a handful of truly elite wide receivers (the Calvin Johnsons of the NFL), there is a surplus of talented veterans available for the Broncos’ choosing.  Bring in an experienced wide receiver with good hands and fast legs, and let’s see how Tebow responds with a spread out offense.

Offensive Line – Apart from late in the season when injuries caught up with the Denver offensive line (i.e. the grotesque Chris Kuper injury in Week 17), this was arguably one of the strongest units in the league.  It’s also the second youngest offensive line in the NFL.  It never hurts to have depth on the line, but given the past season’s performance, there isn’t much need to build here.

Tight End – Thanks to Jimmy Graham, Rob Gronkowski, and Aaron Hernandez, tight ends are that shiny new toy that every team wants this offseason.  Historically, tight ends are like TVs.  For the most part the ones you have get the job done well enough, but then you see one that has all kinds of fun features, looks great, and possesses all the latest technology and you start thinking, “We need THAT!”  Before Graham and Gronkowski, it was Gates and Clark, and Gonzalez and Sharpe before that.  Commentary on unwarranted hype aside, Denver has big question marks at tight end.  Daniel Fells played well for the most part but isn’t built to be the receiving threat of those mentioned above.  Julius Thomas was supposed to be that threat, but may not be able to block or stay healthy long enough to become a presence on the field.  That leaves Dante Rosario and Virgil Green.  Both saw playing time.  Green was more the blocker and Rosario the receiving threat.  In this case though the old adage appears true: If you have four tight ends, you have none.

Quarterback – Wait, isn’t Tim Tebow still quarterback?

It’s only a matter of time before free agent backup Brady Quinn signs elsewhere, leaving just Tebow and practice squad quarterback Adam Weber on the roster.  The Broncos have made it no secret they will bring in other quarterbacks, and all must be willing to compete with Tebow.

Some veteran quarterbacks may scoff at the prospect of squaring off with the man behind Tebowmania, which is why pursuing this position could prove delicate.  Denver will likely find some younger NFL backups with limited experience – Sports Illustrated’s Chris Burke suspects a guy like Tampa Bay’s Josh Johnson is a good candidate – along with some older journeymen eager for another chance.

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Defensive Starters Return to Practice; Sunday Status Unknown

The Denver Broncos – at least the defensive players – are on the mend just in time for Sunday’s game against the Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers.

Elvis Dumervil was one of four defensive players back at practice Wednesday. (personal photo)

Cornerback Champ Bailey, defensive end Elvis Dumervil, linebacker D.J. Williams, and defensive tackle Marcus Thomas returned to practice Wednesday.  John Fox provided this understatement of the day to The Denver Post:

“You feel a little more comfortable in the fight when you have all your troops with you. They were a welcome addition, for sure.”

Bailey and Dumervil, recovering from hamstring and shoulder injuries, respectively, haven’t played since the Broncos’ season opener against Oakland.  Williams suffered an elbow injury in the preseason and hasn’t played yet, neither has Thomas, who was first sidelined with a strained pectoral and is now dealing with a groin injury.

The team is hopeful all four will suit up Sunday at Lambeau Field, but no decisions will be made until later this week.

Three offensive players have been ruled out: wide receivers Eddie Royal (groin) and Demaryius Thomas  (broken finger) and tight end Julius Thomas (ankle).

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“Best-Case Scenario” Puts Warren’s Return at 3-4 Months

DT Ty Warren is out at least three months with a triceps injury. (personal photo)

Broncos defensive tackle Ty Warren is recovering from surgery to repair a partially torn triceps tendon.

Warren suffered the injury last Monday in practice, the same day fellow starting DT Marcus Thomas strained a pectoral muscle. Thomas could return in time for Denver’s season opener September 12, but Warren’s recovery will take months.  Coach John Fox told The Denver Post a best-case scenario return is three to four months:

“Everyone heals differently, plus they have to stay in shape and all those things they have to do to be able to come back and play football,” Fox said after practice. “It’ll be week to week.”

The Broncos signed Warren August 2 after his release by New England.  The 30-year-old missed the entire 2010 season with a hip injury.

Kevin Vickerson and Brodrick Bunkley are now the team’s starting defensive tackles.  The Broncos have no plans to put Warren on season-ending injured reserved, just in case he does return late-season.

Jarmon on the move?

It looks like the Broncos may add another DT without searching the waiver wire.  Defensive end Jeremy Jarmon is practicing from the tackle position, and he’s perfectly okay with the idea:

“With my technique and my explosion, it’ll be a good fit for me.”

Roster Move

Broncos tight end Richard Quinn officially cleared waivers and been placed on the team’s injured reserve list.

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Preseason Game 2: Buffalo Bills at Denver Broncos

TV Coverage (MT)

6:00 p.m.  KUSA – Pregame Special

6:35 p.m. KUSA – Kickoff

Much like their home stadium, the Denver Broncos continue their transformation Saturday night against Buffalo.  It’s the first home preseason game for Denver in 2011, marking the first game as Sports Authority Field at Mile.

Unlike Denver’s other preseason opponents (Dallas, Seattle, and Arizona), the Broncos will face Buffalo in the regular season, a Christmas Eve showdown at Ralph Wilson Stadium.

Who’s Number 2?

We know Kyle Orton gets the start for Denver, but which quarterback replaces him: Tim Tebow or Brady Quinn?  As I wrote Friday, Tebow is still No. 2 on the depth chart, but Quinn has demonstrated all those qualities to suggest he finally “gets it.”

Fox said the QB lineup is a “game-time decision.”  If Quinn becomes the second Broncos quarterback to enter this game, expect that to spark some serious speculation about Tebow’s role this season.  Personally, I’m curious to see what Quinn can do with Denver’s second-team.  That’s not an endorsement of any quarterback over the other, but rather an idle musing.

We’ve heard a lot about a full and open competition, but giving Quinn the second crack at running the offense absolutely signals he’s at least caught up to Tebow.  With two games left in the preseason, all momentum would be with Quinn, and that could imply the Broncos are making Tebow more of a “boutique” threat instead of a legitimate contender to run the offense.

Buffalo at a glance

The Bills finished 2010 with a 4-12 record, tying Denver and Cincinnati for worst in the AFC.   Similar to Denver, Buffalo dropped its preseason opener, 10-3 at Chicago.  The Bills struggled on offense, continuing a theme from last season (17.7 ppg – 25th in NFL).  Now without top offensive threat WR Lee Evans, who was traded August 12 to Baltimore, the Bills will rely on a relatively unheralded cast of players for point production.  Ryan Fitzpatrick was a 3,000-yard passer in 2010, finishing the season with a respectable QB rating of 81.8.

Will the Broncos rue the day? 

Yes, if Bills rookie DE/DT Marcell Dareus has his way.

Bills rookie Marcell Dareus is none too pleased the Broncos drafted Von Miller instead. (personal photo)

The former Alabama standout was widely rumored to be Broncos’ second overall pick in the 2011 NFL Draft – up until draft day.  Instead, the Broncos selected LB Von Miller, pushing Dareus down to No. 3.   In the weeks following the draft, the snubbed Dareus vowed revenge against Denver, saying in a radio interview:

“Denver, I’ll get a chance to play them in the regular season and I’m going to make it hell for them every time I play against them.”

Dareus gets two chances this season.  Last week, the rookie sacked Bears QB Jay Cutler on the opening drive.

Denver’s DT Injury Bug

Dareus may not even need to be on the opposing sideline at Sports Authority Field to get vengeance for his perceived draft sub.  Given Denver’s past week, maybe, just maybe, there are some secretly wishing the Broncos drafted Dareus after all.

Both of Denver’s starting defensive tackles, Ty Warren and Marcus Thomas, are out with injuries– injuries that happened on the same day within minutes of each other.  Warren, the offseason pickup from New England, will undergo surgery Tuesday on a partially torn triceps.  He’s out a minimum of three months, but the Broncos haven’t ruled out a late-season return.  Thomas is out for the remainder of the preseason with a pectoral injury.  He could return for the regular season opener against Oakland.

Kevin Vickerson and newcomer Brodrick Bunkely must now step up.  We’ll get our first look tonight at how much the Broncos will miss Warren and Thomas – if at all.

First-Team Playing Time

After seeing just a series apiece, head coach John Fox said Friday Denver’s first-team offense and defense will play into the second quarter.  Fox told The Denver Post:

“Exactly how far, I don’t know yet. Depends on how the game goes.”

I See, I Tweet

Interested in my game-time observations and insights? Follow DHF on Twitter.

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