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While Leinart sits looking for more money, Jay Cutler, who some believe is better, makes a fine start for Denver.
Cutler impressive, but Lions edge Broncos
NFL wire reports
DETROIT (Aug. 11, 2006) -- Rod Marinelli remembers scurrying along the sideline before The Star-Spangled Banner, making sure the Lions were standing and holding their helmets properly.
Before Marinelli knew it, his debut as a head coach at any level was over.
Each of the Lions' quarterbacks -- Jon Kitna, Dan Orlovsky and Josh McCown -- led scoring drives and Detroit's defense caused three turnovers in a 20-13 victory against the Denver Broncos.
"I love to win," said Marinelli, a former defensive line coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. "If we're playing marbles, I'm going to get you."
Third-string quarterback Bradlee Van Pelt drove Denver deep into Detroit territory in the final minute, but on a fourth-and-goal at the 9 his pass behind David Kircus was dropped.
"You couldn't have a better way to finish," Marinelli said. "I like pressure."
Kircus, a former Lions receiver competing for a spot on Denver's roster, had six catches for 76 yards and a score. But he only lamented his final opportunity.
"Any time you get a chance for the ball, have it touch your hand in the end zone on the last play of the game, it's heartbreaking when you don't bring it in," he said.
Even though his team lost, Broncos safety John Lynch was happy to see one of his former coaches get a chance to lead a team.
"This opportunity has been long overdue," Lynch said. "He was a defensive line coach with the Bucs, but he was more than that to guys on both sides of the ball. He's a special coach, and a great guy."
Damian Gregory (93) and Claude Harriott gang up on Denver's Bradlee Van Pelt. The Lions led 10-0 early in the second quarter and, after losing the lead, went back ahead 17-13 midway through the third. Artose Pinner's 2-yard run was the go-ahead score, set up by Mike Williams' 24-yard catch from McCown. After Denver's third turnover, Matt Prater's field goal early in the fourth quarter gave Detroit a 20-13 lead.
Jay Cutler had a solid debut for the Broncos. The 11th pick in the draft was 16-for-22 for 192 yards and a touchdown.
"He played well, executed the offense," Denver coach Mike Shanahan said. "Both teams were very vanilla in their approach, so you don't get too excited. But a guy's got to go out there and perform, and I thought he showed a lot of poise."
Both starting quarterbacks, Kitna and Denver's Jake Plummer, played only one series and each moved the ball about 60 yards.
Kitna, signed as a free agent to replace Joey Harrington, converted consecutive third downs with an 18-yard pass to Roy Williams and a 10-yard run to set up Jason Hanson's 36-yard field goal.
Plummer got the Broncos past midfield with a 16-yard pass to Darius Watts, then Mike Bell fumbled two plays later -- less than a week after the undrafted rookie moved past Tatum Bell and Ron Dayne to become the No. 1 running back.
"We didn't like the fumble, but that's typical of young guys in the NFL," Shanahan said. "It's similar to what Clinton Portis went through as a rookie. That's why you play those guys in these situations."
Marinelli said earlier in the week McCown would be the second quarterback to play, but Orlovsky took snaps after the coaching staff decided to change plans. The second-year pro made a 24-yard pass to Corey Bradford on his first play and ended his first possession with a good read and accurate toss to running back Arlen Harris for a 20-yard TD and a 10-0 lead.
Cutler took advantage of a turnover by threading a pass through a zone to Tony Scheffler for a 15-yard gain, which set up Jason Elam's 36-yard kick. With 44 seconds left in the half, Cutler threw three passes for 27 yards and Tatum Bell had a 15-yard run before Elam made another field goal to make it 10-6 at halftime.
Tatum Bell finished with 26 yards on five carries and Mike Bell had 20 yards on seven rushes.
Denver went ahead 13-10 early in the third quarter. Cutler looked right and threw left to a wide-open Kircus.
The Lions had 16 players inactive, including five starters on defense and two first-string linemen on offense.
Denver had seven inactives, including receivers Javon Walker (knee) and Rod Smith (hamstring), cornerback Champ Bailey -- coming off a season slowed by shoulder and hamstring injuries -- and defensive end Courtney Brown, whose latest knee surgery was Aug. 9.
GAME NOTES:
After an impressive training camp and one reception for 9 yards, Broncos rookie WR Brandon Marshall left the game in the first half with a strained right knee. Shanahan said he didn't think the injury was serious. Detroit TE Casey FitzSimmons, who had moved past Marcus Pollard on the depth chart, might be out for two weeks with an injured left wrist.
From the pressbox at Invesco Mile High
There are no great surprises on the lineup card tonight. As expected, Javon Walker is in uniform. First-teamers Cecil Sapp, Gerard Warren and Courtney Brown are out as they have been all week; they will be replaced by Kyle Johnson, Demetrin Veal and Kenard Lang, respectively.
Rookie receivers Brandon Marshall and Domenik Hixon remain sidelined. So too are running back Ron Dayne and linebacker T.J. Hollowell. As for Ashley Lelie, his holdout extends into its fourth week.
*** Written at 6:31 MDT ***
"I love a rainy night ..." -- Eddie Rabbitt
So perhaps he only liked such evenings because a sunny day emerged in their aftermath. That won't do the Broncos much good tonight, as a late-afternoon drenching and showers that persisted into the evening brought out the ponchos and umbrellas.
The field has typically held its form well amidst conditions most foul, as it came through the October 2005 dousing during the Redskins game without a hitch. Nevertheless, the Broncos and Titans will surely be on guard for even the slightest increase in ankle injuries and other potential infirmities should the rain persist.
*** Written at 6:38 MDT ***
As though you could possibly care ...
Tonight's pre-game meal ... the "gourmet burger" with lettuce, tomato, cheese, ketchup and mustard from the "Mile High Grill" along the east club level. Burgers at this five-year-old facility have never failed to disappoint; the patties are grilled, and the utilization of a french roll instead of a sesame-seed bun provides a nice touch. Like the Broncos themselves, all I want tonight is an evening without any negative surprises, and this burger provides sufficient victuals in advance of kickoff, with its backyard-from-the-grill quality and just a wisp of pink in the beef. I'm not a big fan of cheddar cheese -- a slice of which was placed on the burger -- but it doesn't detract.
Also, for those of you visiting the stadium this year, there are two sizes of souvenir soda cups. The smaller one is opaquely-clear plastic with a rendering of the stadium; the larger ones are orange. I have wasted little time in adding them to a collection that has come to cost even more than a set of fine crystal drinkware.
*** Written at 6:48 p.m. MDT ***
Off we go. The offense was introduced individually on the scoreboard and over the public-address system, but they opted to come out as a unit.
The rain seems to have doused not only the field, but the the crowd. As usual, the game is sold out, but roughly half the seats still remain unoccupied as kickoff nears, although lengthy traffic queues on the I-25 offramps are still the norm.
Kickoff temperature is an October-like 63 degrees. Ah, Colorado. Where snow can fall in June and January's temperatures are often warmer than those in Florida.
Tennessee wins the toss by calling "heads." The Broncos are now 0-for-2 on preseason coin tosses.
*** Written at 7:04 p.m. MDT ***
Hells Bells by AC/DC as the kickoff nears. When did we get to Oakland? (It is, however, also the pre-game entry music for the North Carolina Tar Heels' football team.)
Paul Ernster starts the night with a 77-yard kickoff downed in the end zone.
*** Written at 7:05 p.m. MDT ***
Starting lineup tweaks: Domonique Foxworth for Champ Bailey and Nate Webster for Al Wilson. The third-and-12 nickel package sees the Broncos insert Elvis Dumervil at left and and Karl Paymah as the third cornerback; the Broncos use that formation to get to Billy Volek for a 7-yard Demetrin Veal sack.
And David Terrell handles the first punt return of the game.
*** Written at 7:09 p.m. MDT ***
Only one tight end in the starting lineup, and it's rookie Tony Scheffler split wide.
Kyle Johnson opens at fullback in front of tailback Mike Bell.
Javon Walker and Rod Smith are the starting receivers.
Broncos on the move on their first possession. At the Titans 33 now, but facing third-and-6 after an incompletion.
*** Written at 7:12 p.m. MDT ***
The Broncos went three-wide -- in a manner of speaking on third-and-6. Tony Scheffler splits wide; the two receivers are Walker and Todd Devoe.
With fourth-and-6 one play later, David Kircus enters the game, and he continues his gargantuan preseason, snaring a 16-yard reception and hanging on to the football even when he's creamed by Titans safety Lamont Thompson. Cold-cut trios for all, and the Broncos' first-team offense is in the red zone for the first time all preseason.
*** Written at 7:14 p.m. MDT ***
Mike Bell leapt to his first NFL touchdown to put the Broncos up 7-0, and proceeded to bring forth the answer to a $64,000 question. That, of course, being as follows: What will the Broncos use as their post-touchdown music with convicted pedophile Gary Glitter's Rock and Roll Part II out of the mix?
The early answer? Let's Go Crazy by Prince, last heard repeatedly in a sports vein during the NHL's "Cup Crazy" mid-1990s ad campaign. Maybe it's the dampness in the air, maybe it's because this is the preseason, but it didn't seem to leave many fans dancing.
And as I'm typing, Ernster just blasted another 77-yard kickoff.
*** Written at 7:20 p.m. MDT ***
After two sacks on its first appearance, the defense continued its splendid start by coaxing an errant Billy Volek pass that Nick Ferguson intercepted. Once again, the Broncos did it without resorting to a blitz. They did bring eight men near line of scrimmage, but dropped their DBs -- including Ferguson, crouched low at the line of scrimmage -- and linebackers at the snap. Pressure was beginning to mount from the edge when Volek released the pass, which Ferguson procured at the Titans 44.
Meanwhile, Tatum Bell comes in for the second possession after seeing a little action on the first drive; his initial carry picks up nine yards.
*** Written at 7:27 p.m. MDT ***
It was fourth-and-one. The Broncos had gained just one yard on the previous two plays.
Time to get nasty -- Jack Nasty.
I just like typing that -- "Jack Nasty" -- and knowing I can get away with it. After all, it is the name of Nate Jackson's band -- or at least his musical alter ego in said musical ensemble.;
Jackson -- who has written his share of copy for this fair Web site over the years -- and Plummer perfectly executed a bootleg pass, turning the short-yardage situation into a gorgeous 35-yard touchdown pass as the Broncos' dominant first-quarter continued. Thirteen points in 60 minutes last week, 14 in 12 tonight. That's progress.
And because we're keeping track, the post-score song was That's the Way I Like It by K.C. and the Sunshine Band. That's a little better -- uh-huh, uh-huh -- although still in the retro vein.
And Ernster's third first-quarter kickoff wasn't up to his previous standards tonight. It "only" went 76 yards. All hell's breaking loose now, as Veal and Kenard Lang collapsed the pocket following the touchback to get a third Broncos sack tonight.
*** Written at 7:40 p.m. MDT ***
So there goes the shutout. Rob Bironas' field goal puts the Titans on the board.
The first-teamers evidently have some more work left; with 13 plays and two touchdowns under their belt on offense, they're back for a third possession, and Plummer wastes little time turning to old standby Rod Smith for 17 yards.
Mike Bell is handling the running chores this time out after Tatum Bell took the reins on the last possession. But his three-yard, first-and-10 run from the Denver 37 results in a clipping infraction on Matt Lepsis, sending them back into first-and-25.
It's second-and-13 after Mike Bell runs over Chris Hope en route to a 12-yard gain -- he plowed directly into the Titans' first-team strong safety and worked for an extra three yards. An illegal-contact penalty gets the Broncos a first down one snap later.
*** Written at 7:52 p.m. MDT ***
Is Mike Bell explosive? He just answered that question by following Kyle Johnson and Cooper Carlisle for a 34-yard sprint to the Titans 19.
Two plays later, Smith is at the 1-yard line with a 12-yard reception. For the record, that was play No. 20.
*** Written at 7:55 p.m. MDT ***
Persistence paid off for Mike Bell, as a third goal-line run was the charm, giving the Broncos their second fourth-down touchdown of the night.
Preseason or not, that's impressive. How many times can you recall a team getting fourth-and-1 touchdowns on back-to-back possessions? Although the Broncos surely would have liked to have seen the younger Bell find the end zone on his second-down flying leap -- which was rudely rebuffed by Tennessee's Jared Clauss -- he stayed in the game and found success two carries later.
Oh, and the touchdown music this time was "Because We Can" by Fatboy Slim. I'm suddenly in the mood for a Coors Light.
*** Written at 8:01 p.m. MDT ***
Tracking the kickoffs: Ernster sails this one 70 yards. 77, 77, 76 and 70 for the night with two touchbacks.
Tracking the music -- the techno version of Hey Baby. All of a sudden I feel as though I'm watching the Rhein Fire or Frankfurt Galaxy.
*** Written at 8:03 p.m. MDT
Vince Young's first possession of the night for the Titans will surely make the people who brought the Texas Longhorns banner behind the Tennessee sideline happy; he found Bo Scaife -- a local yokel from Mullen High School -- for a first down, although an incompletion to Scaife ended the drive on downs.
It's worth noting that the drive saw the Broncos combine elements of their first and second teams -- with a first-team defensive line and backups at the other spots.
*** Written at 8:10 p.m. MDT ***
One of the loudest roars of the night greets the announcement of Jay Cutler's name. One of the loudest groans of the night heralded his first pass, which was knocked down at the line of scrimmage.
*** Written at 8:11 p.m. MDT ***
A change in quarterbacks meant no change in results, as Jay Cutler picked up where Plummer left off, with a scoring strike to Tony Scheffler capping an eight-play, 65-yard drive that was aided by three Tennessee penalties for 29 yards.
Ernster's ensuing kickoff went 61 yards. His kickoffs to the south end zone have averaged 65.5 yards; his boomers to the north end zone have traveled an average of 76.7, although there appears to be no discernible wind, at least none showing up on the streamers atop the uprights.
More evidence of some kind of breeze being in the air: Tennessee's Craig Hentrich -- punting to the north end zone -- just slammed a punt 70 yards for a touchback.
*** Written at 8:27 p.m. MDT ***
I'm ashamed to admit that I missed the song that played after Scheffler's touchdown. Maybe it's because I couldn't get past my hysterics over the constant mispronunciation of the rookie tight end's last name by the press-box public address announcer, who bafflingly kept saying "Schaefer."
And speaking of the one beer to have when you're having more than one, the halftime bratwursts are being served, so I shall return after my intermission gorging.
*** Written at 8:32 p.m. MDT ***
Good bratwurst. Makes me want to sing like a young Rainier Wolfcastle:
"Mein bratwurst has a first name; it's 'F-R-I-T-Z;'
"Mein bratwurst has a second name; it's S-C-H-N-A-C-K-E-N-P-F-E-F-F-E-R-H-A-U-S-E-N."
Titans to kick off starting the second half.
*** Written at 8:44 p.m. MDT ***
Jay Cutler's two-for-three on his drives when it comes to finding the end zone. The Broncos are five-for-six. And Damien Nash, who was cut by the Titans earlier in training camp, has his first touchdown in blue and orange -- and, significantly, was the third running back in for the Broncos, entering the game ahead of Cedric Cobbs.
*** Written at 8:50 p.m. MDT ***
Batting around and back at the top of the order: That's the Way I Like It by K.C. and the Sunshine Band follows Nash's score.
*** Written at 8:52 p.m. MDT ***
After giving a shout-out to media-relations training-camp intern Brad Gee for bringing me a diet soda last week, I have now been offered drinks by both Gee and DenverBroncos's own Don "The Ninja" Schwartz, so I thank both for the offers, although my cup runneth over with soda.
*** Written at 8:55 p.m. MDT ***
The third quarter had belonged to Damien Nash; he had 71 yards on 13 carries -- a tally that included a touchdown. He seemed determined to shown his former team exactly what they missed out upon when they cut him.
But after a one-yard run, he was clobbered amidst a thicket of linemen for both teams. He arose and moved gingerly off the field after he had his left knee bent a tad awkwardly.
Two plays later, the Broncos' drive ended on downs -- marking the first time a drive fell short of a scoring opportunity tonight.
*** Written at 9:14 p.m. MDT ***
Time to head down to get ready for the postgame. It's 35-3. I'll be back with a quick wrap after I return from the locker room.
*** Written at 9:23 p.m. MDT ***
Okay, I'm back. Closing out the press box here -- well, I should say that I'll be closing it out whenever I'm done. What did we learn Saturday night?
* That the Broncos' running game appears as potent as ever, with Mike Bell, Cedric Cobbs and Damien Nash each averaging over five yards per carry. Tatum Bell's average is 4.2, as he hasn't made the kind of gamebreaking run of 30 or more yards that became his hallmark in 2005. * That Jay Cutler can be efficient two weeks in a row; * That Jake Plummer looks to be in regular-season form after amassing a stat line that led to a 154.7 passer rating. * That David Kircus can not only make the spectacular catch, but the tough one, as evidenced by the hit he absorbed after making a clutch fourth-down grab on the Broncos' first possession; * That there was, according to Paul Ernster, a wind above the uprights that was blowing from south to north, resulting in lengthier kickoffs to the closed end of the stadium than the open one; * That Champ Bailey and Al Wilson missed the game because they broke curfew; * That Hamza Abdullah had some rotten luck; he forced a fumble and intercepted a pass but had both plays go for naught because the fumble -- by No. 3 overall pick Vince Young -- was recovered by the quarterback himself for a touchdown, while the interception was negated by a penalty. Nevertheless, his ballhawking play -- he did intercept two passes in Friday morning's helmet-less, padless session -- proved worthy of some high praise that John Lynch heaped upon him after a practice midway through training camp.
The Broncos are back on the practice field Monday. Our daily coverage of all things Broncos will resume then.
And if you read this far, yes, that's several minutes of your life that you're never getting back. Hope you found it at least somewhat entertaining and plausibly informative.
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