Skip to main content

Vote for the Broncos’ all-time team

I was just gonna write about this on Twitter, but didn’t know if anyone would see it. (Does anyone read that?) The Broncos are letting you pick your 50th anniversary Broncos team on their website, and it’s AWESOME. (Thanks, Lindsay.)

Some of the choices are great. Because I know Elway’s going to win at quarterback, I was tempted to vote for Frank Tripucka (whose No. 18 is one of the team’s three retired jerseys), or maybe Jake Plummer. And now that I know that the all-time team is going to be honored at a Broncos’ game this year, I really, really hope Jay Cutler wins it. But, in the end, I decided I’d rather be part of the 96.2% or whatever who go with Elway.

Some positions are really, really hard, because we’re so loaded. It’s funny that the Broncos spent the first part of the decade looking for the next Steve Atwater, who was just one in a long tradition of great Denver safeties (Dennis Smith, Billy Thompson, Austin Gonsulin). Leaving Smith off was tough, but I literally had to vote for Atwater (they show you some highlights before you see the candidates, and you can guess which Atwater hit made the reel) and Tyrone Braxton has always been a favorite of mine, the undersized, supposedly-slow D-back who was terrific in pass coverage.

We’ve had enough memorable linebackers that I would have gone with a 3-4 lineup, personally, though you don’t get the choice. I thought Simon Fletcher and Rich “Tombstone” Jackson had to be my bookends on the defensive line, but Rulon Jones caught my eye.

On the offensive side of the ball, running back is surprisingly tough even without Howard Griffith or the Human Bowling Ball, but T.D. and Floyd Little (his No. 44 joins 18 & 7, if you’re wondering) are the safe picks. Wide receiver is really, really difficult. I ended up going with Ed McCaffrey opposite Rod Smith but I think that’s going to keep me up nights, especially since I think they’re both gonna win, too. Lionel Taylor was the first pro receiver ever to catch one hundred passes in a season and Haven Moses was huge in bringing us to our first Super Bowl.

Anyway, if you like the Broncos, you have to try it!


The rest of my team: Shannon Sharpe (duh), a line of Gary Zimmerman-Mark Schlereth-Tom Nalen-Keith Bishop-Tony Jones, Louis Wright and Champ Bailey on the corners, with Trevor Pryce and Rubin Carter attacking in front of Randy Gradishar, Tom Jackson and Karl Mecklenburg. Jason Elam and Mike Horan are my kicking team, and Rick Upchurch edged the terrific Darrien Gordon as a return man.

Comments

John said…
This is totally awesome! I had some of the same internal debates you had, but this is how I came down:

QB: John Elway
RB: Terrell Davis and Floyd Little
WR: Rod Smith and Floyd Little (with Ed McCaffrey and Haven "Holding it like a loaf of bread" Moses as a close 3-4)
TE: Shannon Sharpe
OL: Tony Jones-Mark Schelereth-Tom Nalen-Keith Bishop-Gary Zimmerman

DE: Simon Fletcher and Rulon Jones (because I actually met him)
DT: Trevor Pryce and Rubin Carter
CB: Champ Bailey and Louis Wright
LB: Randy Gradishar, Tom Jackson, Karl Mecklenburg
S: Steve Atwater and Dennis Smith

K: Jason Elam
P: Mike Horan
KR: Rick Upchurch
Mike said…
Nice lineup. (I'll assume you meant Lionel Taylor as the other receiver, right?) To be honest going with Smith over Braxton seems kinda like the right pick, though both he and Atwater are run-stoppers. I went with Rich Jackson because Dr. Z always mentioned him as a Bronco who deserved to be in the Hall of Fame over other guys, but I met Jones, too, and you gotta go for the Mormon sometimes.
John said…
Yeah, I did mean Lionel Taylor as the other WR. And as much as I have always liked Tyrone Braxton, I had to give it to Dennis Smith (who I also always liked).

I did play the Mormon card to go for Rulon Jones - although I didn't play it for Paul Howard at OG. But then again, Paul Howard never rode in Old Reliable to Youth Conference . . .

Popular posts from this blog

The Mitchell Report

It came out today, and you may have already looked at it. If not, you can download it as a pdf all over the place, including from ESPN.com . Anyway, the big name named in it was Roger Clemens. That's what we've been waiting all this time for? I don't even know what to say, because this is like the least-surprising report of all time. I hate the gotcha crap that goes on when stuff like this happens. You know, the know-it-alls who say how obvious it was that Clemens had been cheating for years—hey, just look at his age! (Did these people say this so confidently  before Clemens was named? No. And have they ever heard of Nolan Ryan?) But seriously. He's huge, he put really big numbers for a really long time, and he's considered this super-intense jerk—basically, he's Barry Bonds on the mound. Setting aside the moral issues of steroid use (and believe me, I'm against it), I was hoping for some entertainment out of today's revelations, and I was sorely dis...

The Top Dozen Pro Quarterbacks

With the NFL season over, it’s time for year two of my annual quarterback rankings . Actually, last year the list was of quarterbacks I’d take over Jake Plummer. Since such a list this year would be at least a novella, I’ve changed it to the top twelve quarterbacks. This list is intended to be the best quarterbacks as of today and/or next season. Thus, it won’t correspond perfectly with, say, my list of the best young quarterbacks . Vince Young’s completion percentage, for example, will count against him more here. That said, some predictions are still involved. (For example, will Jake Delhomme and Ben Roethlisberger bounce back?) The winners: 12. Philip Rivers, San Diego. Rivers may deserve a higher spot on this list. I’m just trying not to get too carried away. On the plus side, he’s on a fine team (if they have coaches next year) and has a fantastic arm. On the downside, he’s young and was nothing special in the playoffs. So there’s a chance he won’t be quite so good next year, tho...

Who cares?

So we finally got done with the NBA playoffs after nearly two months of stretched-out play, and tomorrow's the draft. I really couldn't care less. I'm so burned out on the sport. Sadly, there's nothing else going on worth mentioning, so we might as well get into it. (Yes, baseball, Pugs, but I haven't really started following that this year yet, sorry.) Would the NFL hold its draft five days after the Super Bowl? Of course not, and not just because the league doesn't want to distract from the highlight of its annual calendar, the Pro Bowl. Of course, the NBA's situation is a little different. College play ended two and a half months ago, and the teams want to get draftees ready for the all-important summer league play (because the kind of guys that need the summer league always end up players). Not that when college basketball is over is relevant, anyway-the league is overrun by a bunch of high school players "just months removed from their prom" (...