Daily Archives: November 3rd, 2012

Brandon Stokley Cringes A Bit At Miracle Catch

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) – Cincinnati Bengals coach Marvin Lewis isn’t the only one haunted by the “Immaculate Deflection.” So is Brandon Stokley , the wide receiver who caught the batted ball and raced 87 yards for the score with 11 seconds left, giving Denver an improbable 12-7 win at Cincinnati in the 2009 opener. Lewis, whose Bengals (3-4) host the Broncos (4-3) Sunday, said, “Brandon runs through my mind all the time.” Stokley said he, too, has bad dreams about that play in which he cradled cornerback Leon Hall ‘s deflection at midfield and outraced linebacker Dhani Jones into the end zone. It was the longest winning play from scrimmage in the final minute of a game in NFL history. When Jones started to pull up, Stokley had the presence of mind to tick an extra four seconds off the clock by veering right and running parallel to the goal line for several strides before stepping into the end zone. Although Stokley was lauded as a heady veteran for the savvy move, he admitted this week that he’d do things differently today. “I just kind of saw that nobody was behind me chasing me. I saw a guy kind of give up on it. I knew there wasn’t a lot of time left, so I thought why not try to run some time off?” Stokley said. “And then the next day, I kind of started having nightmares about it: What if I’d have gotten caught? What if I had fumbled? What if somebody would have hit me? I think next time I’ll probably just get in the end zone.” The “Immaculate Deflection,” as it was immediately dubbed, sparked the Broncos to a 6-0 start that season. “Well, we got lucky, plain and simple,” Champ Bailey said of that outlandish touchdown, which came after the Bengals had gone up 7-6 on Cedric Benson’s 1-yard TD run with 38 seconds left. “Stokley, he’s a crafty vet. He just made a play. He was in the right place at the right time.” If his eyes had deceived him, however, or he flubbed the football somehow before scoring, Stokley would have been more like Leon Lett and not like Don Beebe, the protagonists in the famous Super Bowl play in which the Buffalo Bills wide receiver knocked away the ball from the Dallas Cowboys lineman as he prematurely celebrated a touchdown return two decades ago. “I just thought it was kind of smart to waste some time,” Stokley said. “But crazy things happen.” Stokley saved the ball and gloves, which he has in his home office in Castle Rock, Colo., along with a couple of photos of him and his teammates celebrating the implausible touchdown. All winter, that might as well have been a shrine to Stokley’s career, which he figured was over after a thigh injury led to his release from the New York Giants after two games and just one catch last season. Peyton Manning changed all that this spring. The four-time MVP was preparing for his comeback after missing all of last season with a nerve injury in his neck and he needed some targets to throw to as he worked his way back. He dialed up Austin Collie , Dallas Clark and Stokley, whom he played with in Indy from 2003-06, and invited them to his workouts at Duke University, where he was throwing under the tutelage of his college offensive coordinator, Blue Devils coach David Cutcliffe. Manning promised them Duke-North Carolina tickets, but only if they worked out all three days with him. “Easy sell. I mean, Duke-Carolina is a bucket-list thing for a lot of them,” Manning said. “But that was the deal: It was all three days. It wasn’t half a day here, or I can’t go Friday, it was, you had to throw Thursday, Friday and Saturday for tickets to the Saturday night game.” Stokley began the three-day workout with no idea how he’d hold up and ended it thinking he might just have a 14th NFL season left in him. “I hadn’t run in 3 1/2 months really. So, I didn’t know how my quad was going to do, how I was going to feel,” Stokley said. “So, I definitely wasn’t running full speed that first day because that was a big perk for me. I’m a big Duke basketball fan and so to be able to go to that game was something special.” The last thing he wanted was to pull a hammy or tweak his damaged thigh and find himself on a flight home before ever getting inside Cameron Indoor Stadium. But after that first day, he felt fine and then he really turned it loose. “I guess rest was better than rehab,” said Stokley, who had abandoned his rehabilitation just before Christmas after seeing no progress. Stokley said he felt so good after that weekend – Duke’s 88-70 loss to North Carolina notwithstanding – that he began to contemplate his own comeback. And yet, he had gnawing doubts: “Was it just the competitor in me thinking I could still do it when I really can’t?” he wondered. And who would want him anyway? “You don’t get a lot of people wanting a 36-year-old receiver that played in two games the year before,” he reasoned. After signing with the Broncos, however, Manning went to bat for his buddy. “I talked to Denver – well, I showed them some film – I said, `You ought to consider bringing him in and working him out, at least,’” Manning recalled. Stokley impressed the Broncos, too, and they signed him to a one-year deal. The “Slot Machine” is paying off once again. Stokley has 21 catches for 235 yards and three touchdowns, and along with former Colts tight end Jacob Tamme , has helped bring along Manning’s other targets in Denver. “I’m certainly glad he’s here,” Manning said. “He’s been a big part of our team this year.” They actually owe each other a debt of gratitude. “I know if he wasn’t here, I probably wouldn’t have gotten the opportunity to be here,” Stokley said. “He’s done a lot for my career in Indy and to give me the opportunity to play here.” Another case of being in the right place at the right time, just like he was on that sunny day in Cincinnati four years ago. – By Arnie Stapleton, AP Sports Writer (© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Brandon Stokley Cringes A Bit At Miracle Catch

At 21, Hillman Has Many To Learn From On Broncos

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) – Between Peyton Manning and Willis McGahee , the Broncos have a quarter century of experience in their starting backfield. Rookie running back Ronnie Hillman , the NFL’s youngest player, is barely old enough to buy his teammates a drink. Hillman, who will be 21 years, 1 month, 21 days old when Denver plays at Cincinnati on Sunday, is soaking up knowledge from the veterans on a daily basis. As the lessons sink in, it’s not surprising his role with the Broncos is expanding, as well. Last week against the Saints, Hillman had his biggest day. Spelling the man who has become his mentor, McGahee, the Broncos rookie was on the field for 27 plays, carried the ball on 14 of them and gained 86 yards. “He’s a young player who’s getting better every week,” Broncos offensive coordinator Mike McCoy said. “He’s fortunate to watch Willis every day. He’s got a good role model.” The Broncos (4-3) have been taking it slow with their rookie third-round draft pick, as he learns the subtleties of NFL blocking schemes and gets used to the grind of playing a longer schedule in a league that’s, well, slightly more physical than what he went against during his two seasons at San Diego State. Like most rookie running backs, Hillman has gone through his share of growing pains as he figures out how to protect the two most important things on the field – the ball and the quarterback. Those issues, plus a hamstring injury that cost him playing time in the preseason, relegated him to the inactive list the first two weeks and held him to a total of 17 carries in his first four games on the active roster, seven of which came in the second half of a blowout win over Oakland. Slowly, though, he is finding his way onto the field – his time there directly related to his ability to understand the blocking schemes. “I’m pretty sure of it. They just want to get more comfortable with me in there in case a team decides to blitz,” Hillman said. Over the past month, Hillman has vaulted up the depth chart from the Broncos’ fourth running back to No. 2, leapfrogging Lance Ball and 2009 first-round draft pick Knowshon Moreno , who lost a fumble in Week 2 against Atlanta and hasn’t been on the active roster since. At 5-foot-10, 190 pounds, Hillman has more flat-out speed and elusiveness than McGahee. McCoy said he doesn’t use the backup so much as a “change of pace guy,” as an option for when McGahee needs a rest. Unspoken in all this is that the Broncos are ramping things up for Hillman at the midseason point – a point at which a 31-year-old back such as McGahee, second-oldest starting running back in the league, could become more vulnerable. “Being a running back, you’re going to get beat up as the year goes on. That’s why it’s nice to have a couple backs who can stay in the flow of the game if you need a break here or there,” McCoy said. Last week against New Orleans, Hillman had seven of Denver’s 20 carries in the first half and another seven in the second half. His season-high 31-yard gain in the third quarter essentially summed up all his potential and his downside in one play. He found a big hole in the left side of the Saints defense and was accelerating in the open field, but a New Orleans defender was able to punch the ball out because Hillman was holding it a bit loosely. The fumble went out of bounds – no damage done – and the Broncos scored a touchdown on the drive. Hillman learned his lesson; he’s been learning a lot from his teammates, including Manning. “You’ve got to have accountability when you play with him,” Hillman said. “You’ve got to know what you did wrong and you’ve got to actually be on your `A’ game at all times. He kind of helps you out but most of the time it’s on you. So, you have to grow up a lot faster than if I was with somebody else.” Says receiver Brandon Stokley , who has played five of his 15 NFL seasons alongside Manning: “You can imagine a 20-year-old trying to come into this type of situation. I think he’s done a great job and I think he’ll continually improve and get better just as the game kind of slows down for him. I couldn’t imagine being that age and doing what he’s doing right now.” Hillman said all the time he’s spending with the veterans does, indeed, make him better. He also knows there’s not much time for learning curves when he’s playing with 30-something veterans in search of Super Bowl rings. “They expect me to come here like I’m 25 and a vet,” Hillman said. Notes: QB Peyton Manning earned AFC Offensive Player of the Month honors, the fifth time he’s received the award. Only Patriots QB Tom Brady has more, with six. Manning completed 77 of 104 passes for 951 yards with nine touchdowns with one interception in three games in October. … The Broncos are 1-11 in their last 12 games in which they’ve traveled two or more time zones to the east (11 in the Eastern time zone, one in London). For the second straight season, coach John Fox is bringing the team east two days before the game to try to get acclimated to the time change. “I love it. Wish I could do it every week. Home games, as well,” said Broncos CB Champ Bailey . … Fox said doctors have regulated CB Tracy Porter ‘s medicine to control seizures and he was cleared for full practice Thursday. Porter hasn’t played since Nov. 7. – By Eddie Pells, AP National Writer (© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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At 21, Hillman Has Many To Learn From On Broncos

ESPN experts predict Broncos-Bengals

In the video, Mark Schlereth and Eric Mangini make their predictions for the Broncos at the Bengals. Here’s what the other ESPN experts are predictin…

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ESPN experts predict Broncos-Bengals

Mailbag: DHB’s season

Weekend mail call: Ron from Petersburg., Va., wants to know why Oakland quarterback Carson Palmer and receiver Darrius Heyward-Bey aren’t having a gr…

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Broncos – Bengals Injury Report: Tracy Porter Out, Four Others Probable for Sunday

By Rich Kurtzman