Sunday, March 23, 2008

Elam goes to the Falcons

This weekend brought sad news for Denver Broncos fans: Jason Elam, the team's long-time kicker and one of the few remaining links to the franchise's Super Bowl championship teams, has signed a four-year, $9 million deal with the Atlanta Falcons.

The article at the link points out one cool fact I'd either missed or forgotten: as of last season, Elam has played in more games than any other player in Broncos history.

Two of Elam's performances stand out in my mind. The first, of course, was his 63-yard field goal during the Broncos' dominant 1998 season. The Broncos were playing the Jacksonville Jaguars, their hated rivals who'd ended their season prematurely in 1996. Yes, the Broncos got sweet revenge in the playoffs in 1997 with a 25-point victory, but the Jaguars were still despised in Denver, and the game was almost Raiders week-like in its buildup, at least for me.

Man, that was one of the most memorable regular season games ever. It was the seventh of the season, a game in which Denver ran its record to 7-0 and in which eventual MVP Terrell Davis crossed the 1,000-yard threshold. But anyway, right before halftime, the Broncos took a delay-of-game penalty, moved back five yards, and gave Elam a shot at immortality.

The kick was true, right down the middle, and probably would have gone in from a few more yards...not that it needed to be any longer to impress. Tremendous and, I should point out, slightly longer than Tom Dempsey's original 63-yarder.

Perhaps even more crucial was Elam's performance in the AFC Championship game against the New York Jets that year. The Broncos were favored in the windy home game, but the Jets took a 10-0 lead early in the second half. John Elway got off to something of a rough start, but I'm pretty sure Vinny Testaverde started off 13-for-13 or something. Just ridiculous. Anyway, following New York's touchdown was the memorable play in which Ed McCaffrey and Rod Smith lined up on the opposite ends of the field from which they were supposed to, followed by Elway's frantic flip-flop signal to them to switch their routes, followed by a 47-yard bomb to McCaffrey. After a touchdown pass to Howard Griffith, Elam kicked off, the ball bounced around, and the Broncos fell on it: it was the longest onside kick I'd ever seen.

On that possession and the next, Elam hit two clutch field goals to regain the lead, and he added another in the fourth. I remember his two field goals not for their distance (though 44 and 48-yard kicks are nice indeed), but because Elam said after the game that he had actually had to aim outside of the uprights and let the wind do the rest. In Elway's last home game, the Broncos were lucky to have a kicker so smart.

Obviously Elam has slipped over the years; his record kick was almost ten years ago, after all, and the Broncos have brought in various kickoff specialists in recent seasons to protect his aging right leg. But he's been rock-solid at a position where shakiness can submarine a team, and he's been incredibly clutch for years and years. It was clear that Elam would be moving on soon anyway, but it's always sad to see a great Bronco go.

8 comments:

John said...

This is a sad day for Broncos fans everywhere, because Elam was the consummate Bronco - a solid team player who got it done every game with little fanfare.

I can see why we let him go - he has dropped off ever since he broke his back, and even more precipitously in recent years. And Atlanta makes sense as a destination for him - I mean, for how many years did Morten Andersen hang on to his career by kicking field goals in the Atlanta dome?

So is our next move to cut Rod Smith so we can eliminate every last vestige of Super Bowl prowess?

Mike said...

Don't forget Tom Nalen! And maybe it's just Tom Nalen...don't know how I missed this, but I'm worried about Rod now.

Another point: we have a game at Atlanta this season (don't think the schedule's finalized, but the opponents are), and it would almost be cool to see Elam beat us in that one. Or, better yet, hit a 54-yarder to force overtime, when the Broncos then take over.

And you make a great point about the dome.

John said...

I didn't see that about Rod Smith either. Does this mean we are bringing Ricky Nattiel back to play across from Brandon Marshall? Or is Marshall already serving his DUI sentence? This could get ugly.

And didn't we bring in some free agent O lineman to compete with Nalen? Casey Wiegmann or some journeyman like that?

Mike said...

Wow, didn't see that either. While Wiegmann was well-regarded a few years ago, if we brought him in to take over for Tom Nalen now I'm just going to curl up and cry. The Rocky Mountain News says he'll be a backup center and possibly guard, thankfully.

John said...

Ans I misspoke about Marshall: according to the Denver Post, he isn't serving time yet. Apparently, he slipped on a McDonald's bag and fell through a tv, severing nerves and an artery in his arm. It is great to hear that our wide receiver corps is so sure footed.

David said...

sad sad day. elam was so reliable. i'm sure he'll continue to do well enough that we'll miss him.

i predict bad things for our kickers.

Mike said...

David: my thoughts exactly. How many teams have we watched struggle while sifting through free agent kickers week after week? I seem to remember it basically submarining one recent 49ers season.

On the other hand, we went Karlis, Treadwell, Elam, all of whom were solid, and maybe it is much easier kicking at altitude. Still, I wonder: is Ola Kimrin available?

David said...

ernster's always available for a recycle.

we should've drafted mason crosby. that guy could've been the next elway.

in a kicker, sort of way.