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Published on 08/01/2009 at Sat Aug 01 17:00.
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Always good to see #24 back out on the field (Josh Temple/BroncoTalk)

Always good to see #24 back out on the field.

Denver Broncos training camp… news and notes from the 8/1 practice.

Attendance

Brandon Marshall returned to the field, looking sharp. Still no rookies, but the three players who missed Day 1 on the PUP list, Champ Bailey, Renaldo Hill, and Marcus Thomas finally took the field, while Jarvis Moss and Vernon Fox missed the day’s session (the latter due to injury, the former due to idiocy). Nic Clemons was carted off the field near the end of practice after he suffered a left knee injury. Tim Crowder had a close call after a helmet-to-helmet hit with Peyton Hillis. The DE/OLB lay face-down on grass for a solid two minutes before getting up and rubbing his neck. Luckily he finished practice without another issue, participating in the contract drills to boot.

Practice was very physical today, even moreso than yesterday, with full contact drills followed by intense 11-on-11 team skirmishes. What’s more, the session went long again, finishing a full 30 minutes after the scheduled time. They ran two-minute and field goal drills to end practice, and points were hard to come by. Full offense/defense scouting report after the jump.

Offense

Brandon Marshall also returned to practice today (Josh Temple/BroncoTalk).

Brandon Marshall also returned to practice today (Josh Temple/BroncoTalk).

The offenses went through formations to start practice. I found it very interesting that, just as the session timed out, the Broncos threw in a little Wildcat, with Chris Simms lining up wide. The session ended just before they ran this play, so I didn’t see who received the snap, but it was a glimpse at some of the creative offenses McDaniels will employ.

Running backs ran pass drills; I saw Hillis and Ryan Torain both make beautiful, over-the-shoulder catches in the corner of the endzone. Hillis later showed his power by nearly knocking Crowder out of the practice in one-on-one tackle drills. One of Crowder’s teammates got revenge shortly thereafter.

In DB coverage drills, several of our wideouts showed that they simply cannot be covered one-on-one. Eddie Royal made a nice sideline tiptoe catch, burning the likes of Andre Goodman with a nice stutter-step. Later, Marshall had another impressive show-off play, making a one-armed (left armed) grab in somewhat tight coverage over D.J. Johnson, then took it to another gear to the endzone. The guy is a freak of nature.

Later, Jabar Gaffney beat rookie Darcel McBath cleanly and was also heading to the end zone. The rookie didn’t quit though; right as Gaffney was crossing the touchdown marker, McBath caught up to the veteran and hit the ball out of his hand. I was right there, but it was so close I couldn’t honestly make a call either way. Send that one to the Replay Booth.

The starting offensive line is the same from last year. They all look great; the right side may even be edging out the left in the run blocking department. Today’s second team, from left to right, is Polumbus, McChesney, Lichtensteiger, Olsen, and Gorin. The third team is Oldenburg, Erickson, Schleuter, Murray and Bryant. Some of the offensive linemen helped the DL with their pass rushing drills; Lichtensteiger showed some quick footwork and Clady continued to dominate anyone who crossed his path, but check the defense section of this report for more details on those drills.

Finally, team drills. The 11-on-11’s took place on the far field from the media (closer to the fans), so apologies for not being able to see everything as well. The offense made a few plays, but overall they looked particularly bad, especially at the quarterback situation. McDaniels said he was not worried about the deep ball (Kyle Orton threw too long bomb interceptions); well, I am. Somewhat. A long ball in practice is a long ball in practice, but I still want to see better execution and decision-making from our signal caller.

Speaking of calling signals: a botched snap between Schleuter and rookie QB Tom Brandstater led to the duo doing their walk of shame. Laps around the practice field.

Defense

A young fan welcome Brian Dawkins to Denver Saturday at training camp.  Attendance for the afternoon practice was even higher than Friday's opener.  (Josh Temple/BroncoTalk)

A young fan welcome Brian Dawkins to Denver Saturday at training camp. Attendance for the afternoon practice was even higher than Friday's opener. (Josh Temple/BroncoTalk)

Between full team drills, one-on-one tackling and coverage exercises and a pyramid of individual drills, the defense got worked today. At one point the linebackers and defensive linemen were split into three squads, running hurdles, loose ball, and dummy drills and rotating briskly at the sound of the whistle. They’re getting these puppies in shape.

The tackling drills were fascinating to watch. Linebackers were assigned to tackle running backs and tight ends in space, with full, slam-to-the-grass contact permitted. It started with a resounding victory for the offense, as Daniel Graham simply leveled ILB Andra Davis, putting him to the floor. After Crowder went down, D.J. Williams whiffed completely on a tackle and the defense was starting to look suspect. That’s when Elvis Dumervil put a number on the very guy who hit Crowder, Peyton Hillis. The defense seemed to pick it up thereafter, but it’s surpising to see the littlest guy make the biggest impact. As they say, it’s not the size of the dog in the fight…

The coverage drills were equally fascinating. Josh Bell had textbook coverage on Brandon Lloyd, breaking up what would have been a touchdown. I mentioned the DBs getting beat by the likes of Marshall, Royal and Gaffney, but the defense also made some plays. Champ Bailey did his thing – no one got past him, although one undrafted rookie did actually catch a ball in front of him. David Bruton looks good in coverage; he’s been outshined by McBath a bit so it was good to see him looking solid in one-on-ones.

The d-linemen had their physical, individual drills as well, lining up against a row of three offensive linemen, one at a time, with the goal to reach the quarterback before the whistle. Pass rushing drills. Linebackers joined in the fun. None of the DL blew me away during this drill, but the most consistent and most impressive guy was Kenny Peterson. He put every offensive lineman on roller skates and even knocked down one of his opposing linemen. I liked what I saw from OLB Darrell Reid – the kid has POWER, when he lowered his shoulders and engaged his blocker, you heard the pads smack every single time. Not a ton of speed there, though. Nic Clemons, who would later get carted off the field, struggled in this drill, while Ryan McBean looked sloppy. Carlton Powell had probably the single most dominating run of this drill, completely destroying rookie C Schleuter. Nice to see Powell finally out there, taking names. Rulon Davis has also looked good if not great in every practice. He was consistently close in this drill. I’m starting to pull for this kid.

I also want to point out something about Ronald Fields – this guy is being groomed to be the starter, whether he likes it or not. The coaches can say “every position is up for grabs” all they want, but the truth of the matter is that Fields is the guy, and the coaches know it. Every time he lines up for a drill, every time he faces an opponent, every time he hits a dummy bag, the coaches talk to him about what he did right and did wrong, sometimes for several minutes. No one else is getting this sort of individual attention.

With the offense looking horrible on the 11-on-11 drills, chalk that up for a victory to the defense. Again, I wasn’t in sight of a lot of it, but I will say that the secondary looks good. Brian Dawkins might be the fastest guy out there; he certainly doesn’t look 36 years old. The secondary had a couple of interceptions on team drills and broke up several passes, including several breakups against The Beast himself, Brandon Marshall (both times with double coverage). CB Tony Jones had an interception that would have gone back for a touchdown.

The second-team defense got called out for too few men in the huddle: laps around the field, with the coach even

Special Teams

Matt Prater was right about 70-80% for the day, both in team drills and individual work. He missed his first two team drill kicks – both from decent distances – before making the rest (I think). He did hit a nice one from beyond 60 yards in individual work.

Royal had a punt return for a touchdown (after a very bad punt).

Two-a-days tomorrow, with a short afternoon practice (moved to 4:45 pm – special teams?). See you out there!

  • Michael C

    I must say, your coverage of the broncos camp is much better than any other for any team. Keep up the good stories. Go Broncos!

  • broncoNM

    Im glad to see that KP is staying consistant… i really think he has potential to be a solid DE. I hope fields worksout. Im hoping him, powell and thomas can combine to make one decent DT. Still like to see thomas at DE if fields becomes a fix at DT? looks like our strenths and weaknessess are as clear as they ever were… WR’s, O-line, DB’s are our upside while the D-line, QB’s, and LB’s still need work. How is doomer looking? I do like what i have been reading about the tempo of camp so far… its seems like the intensity is very high and every minute is being used to work these guys… the atmosphere sounds great.

  • MIAbronco

    1st. whats chris baker look like, i think he could be a nt of the future.
    2nd. is royal running as the #2 or the #3 slot receiver?
    3rd. my name is andrew walter/micheal vick, could I start at qb for this broncos team?

  • jim riley

    leave marshall alone and let him consentrate on football. I agree with getting rid of shanahan. His favorite comment was “we were not ready.” His job was to get ready to play ball. He was good but I feel he felt his past record was a ticket for a free ride.

  • Kawike

    Thanks for the coverage, Kyle.

  • Truman

    This coverage is fantastic! Better than any news source.