HOUSTON (12-3) At INDIANAPOLIS (10-5)
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NFL Capsule: Texans at Colts (The Associated Press)
HOUSTON (12-3) At INDIANAPOLIS (10-5)
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NFL Capsule: Texans at Colts (The Associated Press)
Today’s question about the Broncos comes from Dan Distler in Joplin, Mo.:Q: I have two questions that are related.
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Veterans like Peyton Manning, Elvis Dumervil keep Broncos in check
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns quarterbacks Brandon Weeden and Colt McCoy are not practicing again because of shoulder injuries.
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Weeden, McCoy still sidelined for Browns (The Associated Press)
Dec 27 (Reuters) – The National Football League (NFL) regular season is poised for wild finish on Sunday with five teams scrambling for two playoff spots and others looking for an edge as they prepare to launch their Super Bowl bids. Much of the drama will center around the NFC East where the Washington Redskins (9-6), Dallas Cowboys (8-7) and New York Giants (8-7) will stage a battle royale for the division crown with a ticket to the post-season going to the survivor. The key match-up comes in the final game of the regular season, a primetime showdown between the Redskins and Cowboys in the …
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PREVIEW-NFL-Redskins and Cowboys take season down to wire (Reuters)
Quarterbacks have owned the MVP award in recent years, but Adrian Peterson dserves to buck that trend.
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Fox: Handing out the big end-of-season awards
For the second consecutive week, New York Jets head coach Rex Ryan has named a new starting quarterback. For the second consecutive week, Ryan has announced someone other than Tim Tebow, instead naming Mark Sanchez the starting quarterback for the regular season finale against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday. Last week, Ryan replaced an ineffective Mark Sanchez with 2011 seventh round pick Greg McElroy, bypassing Tebow, who the team had acquired from the Denver Broncos last March in exchange for 2012 fourth- and sixth-round picks and an agreement to repay $2.53 million of a salary advance that the Broncos had paid Tebow in 2011. McElroy completed 14-of-24 pass attempts for 185 yards with an interception and was sacked an alarming 11 times while playing in 58 of the team’s 61 offensive snaps during a 27-17 loss to the San Diego Chargers. Sanchez and Tebow were active, but did not play as the club used wide receiver Jeremy Kerley in a “Wildcat” role that was supposed to be filled by Tebow, who according to ESPN New York, refused to participate in those plays after being passed over for the starting role. According to Ryan, McElroy was lifting weights this morning when he began experiencing headaches. While being checked out by the team’s medical staff, McElroy disclosed that he had experienced concussion symptoms after the loss to the Chargers, but that he had not told anyone about them. “Look, I admire Greg’s courage and everything else. You have to be truthful — and I think that’s the lesson learned here — with the medical staff,” said Ryan. “The fact that he really wanted to play, I understand the competitive side of Greg and all that, but the most important thing’s the health of the players. Obviously, I just feel fortunate that something like this showed up without him going out there again and putting himself in harm’s way.”
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Jets bypass Tim Tebow (again), will start Mark Sanchez in season finale (Shutdown Corner)
In another year, in another set of circumstances, sitting in another spot in the standings, Jamaal Charles would be an MVP candidate.
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Chiefs’ Jamaal Charles an industrial-sized headache for Broncos
Defensive Ends Made it: J.J. Watt, Houston Texans/Cameron Wake, Miami Dolphins/Elvis Dumervil, Denver Broncos Should have made it: Muhammad Wilkerson, New York Jets/Corey Liuget, San Diego Chargers We won’t quibble with positions on defense — with so many players playing so many different positions these days, it’s tough to know where to place people. Watt plays tackle when the Texans shift to their dime defense, for example. But if we’re sticking to defensive end in any scheme, we’ll endorse the notion that Wilkerson should find a place somewhere in this group. He ranks second behind Watt in Pro Football Focus’ ratings among 3-4 defensive ends, and only Watt has more stops at his position. You want another guy who bats passes around? Liuget, lost in San Diego’s season, has eight of those himself, seven sacks, and 20 quarterback hurries. Defensive Tackles Made it: Geno Atkins, Cincinnati Bengals/Vince Wilfork, New England Patriots/Haloti Ngata, Baltimore Ravens Should have made it: These guys, but… The Buffalo Bills’ front four has been an unquestioned disappointment, but Kyle Williams has been the exception there. Once again, Williams has played beyond his peers. Outside Linebackers Made it: Von Miller, Denver Broncos/Tamba Hali, Kansas City Chiefs/Robert Mathis, Indianapolis Colts Should have made it: These guys. Miller and Hali are sure things, and Mathis has had a very good year in a different defense. Inside Linebackers Made it: Jerod Mayo, New England Patriots/Derrick Johnson, Kansas City Chiefs Should have made it: These guys. As we go over the Pro Bowl rosters, it starts to seem as if there are fewer really glaring omissions. This is another case in which the AFC’s two best players at the position made the cut.
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AFC Pro Bowl Snubs: The Defense (Shutdown Corner)
Browns quarterbacks Brandon Weeden and Colt McCoy are not practicing again because of shoulder injuries.
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Brandon Weeden and Colt McCoy not practicing for Cleveland Browns
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) – They are 16-point favorites against a team tied for the worst record in the league. With each and every victory over the span of a 10-game winning streak, their once-narrow path to the Super Bowl has grown as wide as an eight-lane highway. But think you’ll catch the Denver Broncos looking past the Kansas City Chiefs this week? Don’t bet on it. If the Broncos have taken even a moment to think “big picture” this season – or think about anything beyond their next opponent – they’ve done a great job hiding it. “As soon as you start thinking about the Super Bowl, you get beat so fast and you’re going to be back at home before you know it,” free safety Rahim Moore said. From the free safety to the head coach to Peyton Manning to the 53rd man on the roster, this has been the theme all year – think about next Sunday, think about getting better every week, and let the future take care of itself. Boring? Yes. Predictable? Absolutely. Effective? You bet. And nobody has stuck to the script better in 2012 than the Denver Broncos. “We’re focused on trying to get better,” Manning said. “I think we’ve done a good job with that all season, just taking it one week at a time. I know it’s a boring cliche, but I think coach (John) Fox has preached it. I think our team has bought into it, and I feel like we’ll do the same this week.” Whether they acknowledge it or not, the playoff picture has been looking prettier every week for the Broncos (12-3). By topping Kansas City and extending their winning streak to 11, which would be the second longest in franchise history, they would wrap up a first-round bye. If they win and the Houston Texans lose to Indianapolis, the Broncos would be the top-seeded team in the AFC. The experts in Las Vegas aren’t even waiting for Sunday’s game to express their feelings. The Broncos, at 4-1, are now the favorite to win the Super Bowl, followed by New England at 5-1 and Green Bay at 6-1. They have come by that status honestly, winning their last 10 games by an average score of 31-17 and making most of those wins as predictable as the well-worn quotes about taking things one game at a time that they serve up on a daily basis. “I grew up around San Diego and went to the horse track a lot,” Fox said. “There were a lot of favorites and it didn’t work out that way a lot of times. You’ve got to earn this between the lines and it won’t affect our attitude or mindset moving forward.” Now, just because they don’t get ahead of themselves this isn’t to say the Broncos are completely devoid of personality. Manning has a wry sense of humor and, when he’s up to it, can be introspective; last Sunday he spoke in depth about his comeback road this season, insisting that despite the year he’s having, he is not the same as he was in his prime. Von Miller likes to dance after his sacks – all 17 1/2 of them. Champ Bailey is almost always as thoughtful during an interview as he is good in one-on-one coverage. Maybe it’s because of well-respected, focused leaders such as Manning and Bailey that there are no troublemakers in the locker room, nobody serving up bulletin-board material and, for the most part, no complainers, save cornerback Tracy Porter , whose tweets about lack of playing time earlier this month were quickly and quietly tamped down by the team. All of which keeps the focus on football, and the Broncos are perfecting the art of the easy win. Home or road, tough opponent or not, Denver’s wins have looked very similar week after week: They take a two- or three-touchdown lead and coast to a relatively easy win, yet still sprinkle in enough mistakes to keep the day-after film session interesting. Bugaboos from last week’s 34-12 win over Cleveland: Penalties. The Broncos committed 11 of them, a season high. Ball security. Broncos punt returners Trindon Holliday and Jim Leonhard bobbled one ball apiece but didn’t lose either. Interceptions. Bad communication between Manning and Knowshon Moreno caused a second-quarter turnover against Cleveland – Denver’s first inside the opponent’s 10-yard line this season. “You get concerned with everything,” Fox said. “The bottom line, as I mentioned yesterday, it’s all about winning. You strive for perfection but they’re never perfect.” Even while he’s having what will, statistically, wind up as one of his top three seasons as a pro – 103.7 passer rating, 34 touchdown passes and 4,355 yards – Manning never walks off the field satisfied. That sets the tone for the entire team. “I think we’ve made some strides each week,” he said. “I still have to admit that it’s not going to be an offense that’s been together for five years. It’s not going to look like that because we haven’t. We’ve only been together for however many weeks, so we’ve tried to improve each week, but a lot of things just take time. We’re trying to do the best we can in this limited amount of time.” So far, that’s been very good. Lest the Broncos get complacent, especially with what looks like an overmatched opponent coming into Denver on Sunday, Fox can always pull out a number of well-worn bromides to keep his players’ attention. -”On any given Sunday.” (Yes, he really says that.) -”The other team gets paid, too.” (A ready-made answer for any of Denver’s shortcomings, which were more pronounced when the Broncos were 2-3 earlier this season.) -”We don’t look at the record, we look at the tape.” (An easy one this week, because Kansas City’s 2-13 record looks much less impressive than its toughly fought 17-9 loss to Denver did last month.) “Does that translate to wins?” Fox said of his way of keeping the players focused on the task at hand. “Well, it has for us lately, and we’ll see next week.” NOTES : KR Holliday (ankle), CB Porter and OL Chris Kuper (ankle, headaches) all missed practice Wednesday. … Fox is going for his 100th win as a head coach in what will be his 500th overall game as a college and NFL coach. … RB Knowshon Moreno is averaging 3.9 yards a carry on 124 carries this season and the Broncos are ranked 25th in the league in average yards per rushing attempt. 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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Broncos Stay Bland But Focused