Latest Denver Broncos Stories
Posted: Nov 15th 2009 10:00PM ET by Nancy Gay (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Chargers, Eagles, AFC West

SAN DIEGO --
LaDainian Tomlinson's blessings simply flowed on Sunday. Two hours before his
San Diego Chargers claimed a share of first place in the AFC West with a 31-23 victory over the Philadelphia
Eagles, the
NFL's No. 3 all-time touchdown king received a gift from his wife, LaTorsha.
Tomlinson found it in front of his locker at Qualcomm Stadium, a decorative purple bag -- "TCU colors," he explained later -- tied with a bow. The attached note implored "Please Open Immediately - LaTorsha." Inside was a box, and what it contained was a pregnancy test. A positive test.
"My wife is pregnant," an emotional Tomlinson announced on a day when one of the NFL's greatest running backs reached two significant milestones: His season-high 96 yards on 24 carries pushed him past Thurman Thomas and Franco Harris for 12th place on the NFL's all-time rushing list with 12,145 yards.
Posted: Nov 15th 2009 4:10PM ET by Chris Burke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Redskins, NFL Injuries

Denver led Washington 17-14 when
Chris Simms replaced
Kyle Orton at quarterback, after Orton injured his ankle on the final offensive play of the first half. The
Broncos picked up just three first downs the rest of the game, and the
Redskins rallied for a 27-17 victory.
Simms, seeing his first meaningful action since suffering a serious spleen injury in 2006, completed just 3 of 13 passes and threw a very costly interception.
Denver has now lost three straight games since starting the season 6-0.
Posted: Nov 10th 2009 2:40AM ET by Nancy Gay (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Steelers

DENVER -- Maybe it took two quarters of getting acclimated to the Denver altitude, or perhaps the rust of a bye week left the
Pittsburgh Steelers a bit sluggish out of the gate Monday night. But when the Steelers' defense and quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger hit the field re-energized in the second half of what became a lopsided AFC battle against the Broncos, they hardly let the home team touch the football.
Roethlisberger threw three second-half touchdowns, the Steelers defense forced two of
Kyle Orton's three interceptions, and Pittsburgh played its most complete 30 minutes of football this season, ultimately rolling to a 28-10 victory over the Broncos at a stunned Invesco Field.
Posted: Nov 10th 2009 1:55AM ET by Nancy Gay (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Steelers

DENVER --
Pittsburgh Steelers safety
Ryan Clark wasn't happy with coach Mike Tomlin's decision to deactivate him for Monday night's key AFC showdown against the
Denver Broncos. So his team tried to alleviate some of the conflict Clark may have felt as a spectator.
The Steelers defense forced three
Kyle Orton interceptions and Clark's replacement at free safety,
Tyrone Carter, got two of them. Carter returned one of his picks 48 yards for a second-quarter touchdown, and Pittsburgh dominated the suddenly vulnerable Broncos, 28-10, at Invesco Field at Mile High.
Tomlin, whose team improved to 6-2, made the call to keep Clark in street clothes, mindful of the defensive back's previous medical emergency in the altitude in Denver two years ago. Clark has a rare form of sickle-cell trait that is aggravated by altitude.
Posted: Nov 9th 2009 7:20PM ET by Chris Burke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Steelers, NFL Live Blogging

The surprising
Denver Broncos already have wins over Dallas, New England and San Diego. So the question remains: How many more times do the surprising AFC West leaders have to prove themselves?
At least once more, it seems. After falling back to Earth with a 30-7 loss at Baltimore last week, the
Broncos -- with San Diego closing fast in the standings -- host the defending Super Bowl champion
Steelers on Monday night. Come enjoy the ballgame with us in our live chat. Festivities begin at 8:15 PM.
Posted: Nov 9th 2009 4:45PM ET by Chris Burke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Steelers, FanHouse Previews

The
Denver Broncos, the 2009 NFL season's early Cinderella story, ran out of magic in a 30-7 Week 8 shellacking at Baltimore. Now, despite their 6-1 record and first-place standing in the AFC West, folks are wondering(again) if the Broncos' hot start was just a mirage.
The Chargers, fresh off a win over the Giants on Sunday, are finally making some noise in the division. Denver also made what could be seen as a desperation move this week, signing 35-year-old cornerback
Ty Law after the Ravens'
Joe Flacco had a field day against the Broncos' secondary.
Denver is even a home underdog Monday night as Pittsburgh comes in -- but the Steelers have issues of their own. Despite a four-game winning streak, the defending Super Bowl champs have plenty of question marks. They'll enter the Mile High City a game behind Cincinnati in the AFC North, and with a still clunky-at-times offense and banged-up defense.
Posted: Nov 7th 2009 12:25PM ET by Chris Burke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, NFL Free Agency

In a move that came a bit out of the blue, the
Broncos waived 24-year-old cornerback
Jack Williams and signed 14-year vet Ty Law.
Denver rookie head coach Josh McDaniels didn't mess around after Baltimore shredded Denver 30-7 last week -- the Broncos' first loss of the year.
Ravens quarterback
Joe Flacco went 20 of 25 through the air in that game, and
as Jeff Legwold of the Denver Post points out, 12 of 15 against Denver's nickel defense.
McDaniels said Saturday that he hopes Law can play Monday night when Denver hosts Pittsburgh.
Posted: Oct 22nd 2009 2:45PM ET by JJ Cooper (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Chiefs, Atlanta Falcons, Packers, Panthers, Steelers, NFL Analysis
As we have done since the FanHouse began, I'll be taking a look every week at some aspect of line play. You can read more features in the series here. Check back every Thursday for a new Between The Lines.If you're a reasonably diligent football fan, it's pretty easy to follow which running backs, quarterbacks and wide receivers are living up to their reputations -- you just check the stats. It's not as easy, but you can also get a pretty good sense of which pass rushers are having big years, by checking out the sacks.
But when it comes to evaluating offensive linemen, it's a lot tougher to know which blockers are starring and which ones are living off reputation.
After logging 401 sacks this season, it's time to start diving into the numbers to try to get a better sense of who has stood out this year.
Posted: Oct 21st 2009 9:05PM ET by Nancy Gay (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, AFC West, NFL Coaching, FanHouse Exclusive, NFL Analysis

SAN DIEGO -- Outside linebacker
Elvis Dumervil set aside any doubts that the 2009
Broncos' astonishing turnaround isn't legitimate on Monday night when he leveled
Chargers quarterback
Philip Rivers a second time in the contest, helping punctuate a 34-23 division victory that gave undefeated Denver a stranglehold on the AFC West.
With that, Dumervil had his
NFL-leading 10th sack, putting him on pace to surpass Michael Strahan's single-season record of 22 1/2.
"It's hard to get to 10 [sacks]," said Dumervil, who was surrounded in the crowded visitors' locker room at Qualcomm Stadium by teammates hooting and calling him the next Strahan. "Every sack guy knows it's hard to get to double digits.
"But this ... it's a new team, a new regime, and everything is new. We're just trying to innovate. We're trying to build a brand of football here, what we want to be as the
Denver Broncos."
Posted: Oct 20th 2009 1:00PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Broncos, Buccaneers, Chargers, Jaguars, Panthers, Rams, NFL Referees
Zebra Report is FanHouse's analysis of actual NFL rules and how they are to be applied ... because most fans think they could do a better job than the NFL officials, yet definitely could not. Click here for an introduction as to how we do things. I'll agree with the defenders of
Dante Wesley on one front, but just one: he hasn't made a career out of being a dirty player. Sunday, though, he was. What Wesley did, whether intentional or not, was one of the most egregious things I've ever seen done on a football field. Honestly, I didn't even think I'd have to cover it for Zebra Report, but I've seen so many absolutely appalling arguments in
defense of Wesley on comment boards across the internet, that I feel I have to. It's simply mind-boggling (and, as a football fan, a bit embarrassing) that some people seriously think his hit was, or should have been, legal.