May 13, 2012

Philip Blake

I should have OK'd this with you first G, but I was reading IAOFM and decided I wanted to post about our new #64 (the year I was born). Sorry if you had something already done on him. I can always take it down if you did.

I like who we drafted this year and where we are headed as a team right now because of something we haven't had in many years, the foresight of drafting starters of the future. One of our picks I'm excited about is exactly that, a future starter.

Taken at pick #108 in the fourth round by Denver, Phillip Blake played right tackle at Baylor when Broncos J.D. Walton was handling the center duties for the team. After Walton was drafted in the third round by Denver in 2010, Blake took over at center and was a second-team All-Big 12 pick by the Associated Press in 2010 and a first-team All-Big 12 selection in 2011. Will he take over at center again for Walton? Probably not this year. Was he drafted as a RT then, allowing Franklin to move inside? No. Even though he played there in college, he does not have the measurables (Combine numbers are a height of 6-2 1/4, 312 lb and 32-inch arms) or technique to be a starter there at the NFL level.

Doc at IAOFM is someone whom I respect greatly as a football guru. Especially on his analysis of the OL. Here is his take on Blake.

"Blake is highly effective if he gets his hands into a defender's numbers. If he fails to, he can be pushed backward. He is capable of re-anchoring, but he has to learn to maximize his technique - he's powerful, but he has 32-inch arms. That's somewhat short for the NFL, but it's hardly the kiss of death. Former Bronco Kory Lichtensteiger is still playing center for Washington, and his arms are only 30 3/8 inches long. Blake is fine there. As far as his ability to re-anchor, that Blake can squat 635 lbs says volumes about his potential ability there. This seems like a mantra of late, but it's also true that he needs to learn to drive from his core muscles. He's a solid run blocker, but pass protection is probably his forte. As noted, he's got a strong bubble and anchors very well - when he's pushed backwards, he's usually able to re-anchor, or he was at the college level. He's not the quickest player, but he does have a nice first step. If he uses it to fire into the defender using his core muscles he's very effective. When he fails to drive his hips, he can be redirected. He does stay low in short-yardage situations, but he doesn't have a history of pushing the pile as effectively as you'd think that he's capable of doing - whatever his age, he's mostly just lacking in pro-level training, conditioning, and the coaching of technique. When Blake's technique is on, he's a very effective player. When it's not, he loses battles more often."

"There’s one thing about Blake that’s been debated in the reporting - he was dunned in his scouting reports as far as pulling goes, and he was criticized as having slow feet. I haven’t seen that - actually, he seems fairly smooth when pulling. It’s fair to say, though, that he sometimes struggles to find and maintain his target on the second level. Part of that is that he was in an up-tempo system at Baylor that didn’t suit him as well as it might. He does have a nice shotgun snap, and seems to have no trouble with the QB under center, either. The basics are there - skill, versatility, toughness, a willingness to be coached, and the raw power to turn into a quality NFL starter. Despite having already finished his degree in sociology that summer, Blake decided to return to Baylor to develop his game before moving to the NFL. It was a good decision. To finish off his final season, Blake played an essential role for a Baylor Bears offensive unit that piled up 777 yards of total offense and posted 67 points in Baylor's Alamo Bowl victory over Washington. It was a game worth coming back for. Returning for an additional season after graduation permitted Blake to focus more intently on his football skills, and it shows. His invites to both the Senior Bowl and Combine were a testament to his hard work and intensity.

Blake is older than all of our current starting offensive linemen except Chris Kuper.  However, he does have six years of collegiate football experience, and that's going to help. He scored a 35 on the Wonderlic, and John Elway is impressed with his intelligence and football IQ, which is a requirement at center. Kuper is said to be recovering well from his gruesome injury. If he can return with the same capabilities as before is a big question mark. Blake would be able to start in Kupe's place until he is fully recovered if need be. Even if Blake doesn't start as a rookie, he is a starter in training. He'll push the guards and push Walton at center during TC to be at the top of their game.

Blake is strictly to be considered as a interior OL backup at this point with huge potential to become a high quality starter if someone should go down like Kuper did last year. Something we very much needed IMO. Huge improvement over Hochstein.

Quick Bio
Blake started all 38 games he played in at Baylor – twelve at right offensive tackle and 26 at center…During that time, his total of 254 knockdown blocks and 48 touchdown-resulting blocks were the most for any interior blocker (guard and center) in the big Twelve Conference ranks…Along with Regina defensive tackle Akeem Hicks, Blake might hold the rare distinction among 2012 NFL Draft prospects for being the only players taken in the NFL phase that also were selected in the Canadian Football League Draft (Blake was the 23rd overall choice by the Montreal Alouettes in the 2011 CFL Draft).

AGILITY TESTS
5.25 in the 40-yard dash…1.79 10-yard dash…2.90 20-yard dash…4.65 20-yard shuttle…7.86 three-cone drill…29 ½-inch vertical jump…8’9” broad jump…Bench pressed 225 pounds 22 times…635-pound squat…31 7/8-inch arm length…9 ¾- inch hands…78 ¼-inch wingspan.

HIGH SCHOOL
Blake graduated from Father Henry Carr Catholic Secondary School in Etobicoke, Ontario in 2005…Later played football as a center at Champlain Regional College in Lennoxville, Quebec, where he was a teammate of former Baylor linebacker Fred Plesius.

PERSONAL
Graduated from Baylor in August, 2011 with a degree in Sociology…Son of the late Llewellyn Blake and Patricia Blake…Selected 23rd overall in 2011 Canadian Football League Draft by Montreal Alouettes…Born Philip Anthony Blake on 11/27/85, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

May 11, 2012

Rookie Bio - Derek Wolfe

Derek J. Wolfe was born February. 24, 1990 in Lisbon, Ohio and is the son of Dennis Wolfe. He is 22 years old and is believed to currently reside with his grandmother, Kim Wolfe. Derek is from a rural town called Negley, Ohio a town which is close to Pennsylvania. His hometown of Negley, Ohio, is 1 mile from Pennsylvania, 10 miles from West Virginia and about 40 minutes from Pittsburgh. Wolfe never was a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and said he can't wait to play Pittsburgh on Sept. 9. He is the first Beaver Local graduate to get drafted and the first Mahoning Valley native selected this year.

Date of birth: (1990-02-24) February 24, 1990 (age 22)
Place of birth: Lisbon, Ohio
Height: 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Weight: 295 lb (134 kg), it has been mentioned anywhere from 284 to 300 pounds.

Derek graduated with an Academic Major in Criminal Justice.

Growing up
The Broncos' newest defensive tackle has a story made for the movies. Not quite as extreme as that of Michael Oher, the homeless kid who became an offensive tackle for the Baltimore Ravens and inspired the movie The Blind Side, but pretty close.

Derek Wolfe doesn't remember being homeless, exactly. He does remember staying at various friends' houses growing up in Lisbon, Ohio. The closest he came to family were the sisters of his stepfather, not blood relatives but women who helped out when they could. He remembers one of them providing Christmas presents when he was little.

"I've never met my real father," Wolfe told the Cincinnati Enquirer last summer as he prepared for his senior season at the University of Cincinnati. "I couldn't even tell you his name."

That fact contributed to his estrangement from his mother. "My mom just won't tell me anything about him," he said then. "I guarantee he doesn't even know I exist. I've given my mom chances and chances and chances, but she obviously has some issues.

"I lived with my mother only when she was married to my stepfather. My mother married him when I was only about three months old, but after they got divorced, I moved out and lived with him. My stepfather and I got along well when I was young, and even after he got divorced from my mom, but when he got remarried, that's when everything fell apart."

Wolfe's best friend was a kid named Logan Hoppel. "His family told me if I ever needed a place to stay, I could stay with them."

When he found himself a child on his own, he took the Hoppels up on their offer. For the rest of his childhood, he stayed with various friends. Getting him to adulthood became sort of a community project. He credits "the whole town" for helping raise him as a teenager.

"That's who I was raised by, is my friends," Wolfe told DP Saturday just after his introductory press conference at Dove Valley. "I have great friends. They're like brothers to me. Anytime I needed advice or needed some structure, they gave it to me. I can't pick one out. I have a lot of friends, a lot of families. I've got two aunts that helped me a lot. There's a ton of families that helped me; my whole town."

As it happened, Hoppel had an older cousin, Adam, who ended up playing football at the University of Cincinnati. Wolfe didn't know it at the time, but the generosity of his friend's family had set him on a career path.

"My childhood, it was what it was, and it formed me into the man I am today," Wolfe said less than 24 hours after the Broncos made the 6-foot-5-inch, 300-pound defensive tackle their first pick in the 2012 draft, No. 36 overall.

"It's never where you start, it's always where you finish. Just like the draft. I may not have been a first-round pick, but I was their first pick. Now I've got to live up to that. I'm happy about it. I could dwell on the past if I wanted to, but what is that going to do? Just forgive and forget. That's the way I like to look at it. If you sit around worrying about things, it's just going to tear you down and tear you apart."

As far back as he can remember, football was his escape from a life that was hard and frustrating in almost every other area. When asked when he started playing, he knew exactly.

"I was seven. I liked to watch Reggie White. Don't tell Mr. Elway this, but I liked Brett Favre. I wanted to be a quarterback and a defensive end. So that's what I did. I played quarterback and defensive end my first year. Then they moved me to running back. I played running back until I got to like eighth grade or something.

"I actually cried when Elway beat us. Wait, I can't say 'us' anymore. When we beat them. I was going to write hate mail to Mr. Elway because I was so upset. I told him that upstairs, too. I said, 'You made me cry when I was eight years old.' He just laughed at me and said, 'Well, welcome to the good side.'"

It didn't take Wolfe long to realize that playing football was what he wanted to do. His only other sport was wrestling, and he wrestled mainly to achieve better body control for football.

"When I was a junior in high school, I was like, 'I want to play this forever; I don't ever want to stop,'" he said. "Once I really started focusing on players and what to do, I started watching guys like J.J. Watt, guys like Justin Smith, just those guys that played every snap like it's their last. Those are the guys I watched."

Which is exactly what the Broncos saw in him -- a motor that never stops. Some scouts have issues with him, which is why it was something of a surprise when the Broncos took him ahead of better-known defensive linemen such as Kendall Reyes of Connecticut, Jerel Worthy of Michigan State and Devon Still of Penn State. Not athletic enough, some say. Doesn't deal well with double teams. Short arms.

The Broncos love his fire, his will to compete.

"On some testing things we do, he's a high character guy and a guy that I think will bring a great attitude to our defense," coach John Fox said.

"His background, you can see it in the way he plays," Elway said.

"He's really hungry," Fox added.

"And that's what makes him the player that he is," Elway said. "And that's why he'll make us hungry on defense and he's going to rub off on a lot of guys because he's got a motor that doesn't stop."

A year ago, Wolfe almost made what he calls now "the worst decision of my life." He nearly left school a year early to enter the draft, mainly to get a paycheck and escape poverty. He remembers sitting on his bed staring at seven dollars, all the money he had in the world.

"It was just like a breaking point," he explained. "I was hungry. I was a month late on rent. Thank God one of my best friend's mom owned the house we were staying at. I was just looking at it, like, 'Seven bucks? Come on.' I always have somebody I can go to, I'm never going to be without, but it's like, when is enough enough? I'm tired of asking for things, you know? I'm tired of having to go ask my friend. It's demoralizing when you have to do that because I'm a very private person. I don't like asking for anything. So it hurts when you have to do stuff like that. I was just tired of it."

Cincinnati football coach Butch Jones used the most practical of arguments to change his mind: He told him he'd be costing himself a bundle by coming out early.

"I decided I came this far, why stop now?" Wolfe said. "Why cut it short? Why not just ride it out? I can do one more year, grinding and eating nothing but what they give me, basically. It all worked out." By returning to school for 2011, he significantly boosted his draft stock and secured future earnings.

Adam Hoppel, whom he followed to the University of Cincinnati, was signed to the Cleveland Browns' practice squad for a while but never played in a regular season game. Wolfe, the kid his family took in, now has a chance to compete for a starting job on the Broncos' defensive line. How his skills play out remains to be seen, but he will never need motivation.

"If you could see my area, it's dead," Wolfe said. "There's not a lot going on. I was on my own for a little while and I didn't have anything. That's the best way I can say it. Growing up, I didn't have anything. It was hard to get cleats sometimes. It was hard to get wrestling shoes. It was hard to do anything. You had to fight for everything you had. That's why I fight so hard. I'll play this game as long as I possibly can because it's my escape from what's really going on."

High School
Wolfe attended Beaver Local High School in Lisbon, Ohio. At Beaver Local High School, Derek was a three-year letter winner on the defensive line. He finished the 2007 season with Associated Press Division III All-Ohio first-team defense plaudits and registered 78 tackles and seven sacks to earn All-Ohio Valley Athletic Conference first team. He also got recognized with all-Eastern District honors following his senior season. He notched 205 career stops for the Beavers and was coached by Rich Wright.

Coming out of High School he was considered only a two-star recruit by Rivals.com. Either way Wolfe was a standout at Beaver Local High School and is the only player in the school's history ever to be drafted by the NFL.

College
Derek decided to attain the University of Cincinnati.

His first season in 2008 he earned time in seven games at backup defensive tackle as a true freshman. He totaled three tackles, one each against Eastern Kentucky, at Marshall, and vs. Syracuse and recorded his first career sack on the final play of the game against Syracuse in the home finale, setting off UC's BIG EAST Championship celebration.

He had a much more productive year in 2009. He made 13 starts at defensive tackle and finished with 41 tackles, including eight tackles for a loss and added five sacks, a forced fumble and recovery, and a quarterback hurry. He recorded a pair of tackles against Southeast Missouri State. He added another three stops, a tackle for a loss, and a half sack at Oregon State and set a career high with eight tackles against Fresno State. He tallied five tackles along with two sacks at Miami (OH) and added two tackles and a half sack at USF. He recorded five tackles and a sack against Louisville and forced a fumble and recovered it and had two tackles at Syracuse. He tallied two stops and a quarterback hurry against Connecticut and finished with four tackles, including one for a loss against West Virginia. He tallied three solo stops against Illinois and finished with five tackles, including 1.5 for a loss, and a sack at Pittsburgh.

2010 was a dismal year for the Cincinnati team and they finished with a record of 4-8 on the season. Not much of note happened for Derek over the course of this year. He tied for the team high tackle count with eight tackles in the opener at Fresno State and also had a sack and tackle for a loss. He had a total of 48 tackles on the year with 3 sacks and 6.5 tackles for loss.

2011 was the year that Derek shined. He was named The Big East Co-Defensive Player of the Year and a First-Team All-Big East selection at defensive tackle. He was named to five All-America teams and a Second-Team All-America selection at DT by the Associated Press and Scout.com. He earned a Third Team All-America nod from Phil Steele Magazines and also a second-team honoree by SI.com and Yahoo! Sports. He led the BIG EAST and ranked fifth in the NCAA FBS, averaging 1.65 tackles for a loss per game and was third in the league averaging nearly a sack per contest. He finished the year with 21.5 tackles for a loss and 9.5 sacks and sits in fourth place on the UC career sacks list with 19.5 and 10th place on the UC career tackles for loss list with 37.0. He tallied 70 tackles, including 31 solo stops along with six QB hurries, a pair of forced fumbles and two fumble recoveries. He had three double-digit tackle games, including a career-high 11 stops against Louisville. He had a career best five tackles for a loss and 2.5 sacks against Connecticut and was named the College Football Performance Awards National Performer of the Week following that game.

He had three solo stops, a sack and a forced fumble in the opener against Austin Peay and had four tackles and a fumble recovery at Tennessee. He totalled three tackles and a sack against Akron and finished with three stops and a sack against NC State. He had six stops on the road at Miami (OH) and tallied 11 tackles, three for a loss, a sack and a pair of QB hurries against Louisville tallied two stops and a fumble recovery at USF. He had five stops and two sacks at Pittsburgh and finished with five tackles, 2.5 tackles for a loss, a QB hurry and a pass break up against West Virginia. He rung up 10 stops at Rutgers and had a pair of tackles and two QB hurries at Syracuse. He tallied 10 stops, five tackles for a loss and 2.5 sacks against Connecticut and finished with six tackles, including five solos and 2.0 tackles for a loss in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl against Vanderbilt. The Bearcats were one of the most improved defenses in the nation in 2011, leading the NCAA FBS in tackles for a loss (8.62), ranking second in sacks (3.46), sixth in rushing defense (96.23) and 20th in scoring defense (20.31). He also was the co-winner of the John Pease Most Outstanding Defensive Lineman Award.

In total Wolfe played four years (2008-2011) at Cininnati. He accumulated 162 total tackles, 37 tackles for loss, and 19.5 sacks during his tenure.

NFL Draft
One of the strongest interior defensive linemen in college, Wolfe has really come into his own, growing from a 250-pound prep linebacker/tight end into a physical, aggressive 286-pound versatile performer with the pass rushing promise teams look for in a quality edge performer for a 3-4 alignment, along with the sudden quickness and power to split double-teams to neutralize the inside running game.

For a player of his size, Wolfe is quite agile and nimble on the way to wreaking havoc in the opponents’ backfields. He is one of the quicker interior linemen in the collegiate ranks, recently clocking 5.01 seconds in the 40-yard dash. He also is a force to be reckoned with in the trenches, thanks to his impressive wingspan (80 3/8-inch width), massive hands (10 3/4- inch width) and outstanding core strength, recognized as he was named the All-American Strength and Conditioning Athlete of the Year by the NSCA (National Strength and Conditioning Association) in April 2011.

While the Bearcats finished 61st in the nation in rush defense (143.77 yards per game) during Wolfe’s first season as a starter in 2009, they improved to 39th in the NCAA for 2010 (135.42 yards per game). During Wolfe’s 2011 All-American season, Cincinnati ranked sixth nationally (96.23 yards per game) in the category.

Played in the 2012 Senior Bowl and participated in the NFL Scouting Combine.

Derek was a slow riser on draft boards and was hit with criticism about not being athletic enough to play the position or at least be an early round pick after the combine. But Derek showed up on tape and teams bought into his work ethic, motor, intelligence and pass rushing skills which moved him up draft boards. To the point he was rated above much other notable players and could have been an late first round pick.

The Broncos managed to snatch him at the 36# position in the second round of the 2012 NFL draft.

Some future NFL players spend the final days before the draft touring New York City, buying new suits or planning lavish parties.

Derek Wolfe's pre-draft routine was far less glamorous.

Less than 48 hours before the Broncos made his NFL dreams come true, Wolfe found himself in a pig stall, shoveling manure.

"Most guys don't live on a farm and don't have all the little things that have to get done," Wolfe said. "It humbles you and helps you remember where you came from."

Wolfe arrived back in Negley, Ohio, a tiny rural town just a mile from the Pennsylvania border, last week to spend time with the Hoppels, friends who became his family after a turbulent childhood. The draft party, the catered meals and the fanfare, though, would have to wait. If Wolfe was back home at the farm, then that meant there was work to do.

"It's helped develop a toughness and a work ethic," Wolfe said. "Waking up early has never been a problem because you had to wake up early before school to get things done. I ruined a lot of good pairs of shoes by being in my school clothes already and then finding something else to get done, so I did it."

The Broncos shouldn't have to worry about effort when it comes to Wolfe, the defensive tackle they selected with their first pick, at No. 36.

"The thing that really stuck out to us on film was the way that he plays the game. He's relentless, and he'll be able to set the tone for us on the defensive side," Broncos executive vice president John Elway said. "That combination of want-to and athletic ability he has, we're thrilled to get him where we did at 36."

Nearly 60 people showed up to the Hoppel house for Wolfe's NFL draft parties, one Thursday and one Friday. Each person emotionally invested in Wolfe's life. Not a single person there was biologically related to him, yet Wolfe considers many of them family.

"I've got so many moms and dads. I'm luckier than anybody," Wolfe said. "The town, my friends — I've got some great, great friends that care about me, want nothing but the best for me and would never put me in harm's way."

Wolfe has been estranged from his mother for years and severed all contact with her during his sophomore year at the University of Cincinnati. He never met his biological father and no longer has a relationship with his stepfather, who is divorced from his mother.

"She had some alcohol problems, and my stepdad had his own priorities," Wolfe said. "I didn't just cut her out. I gave her chances. It wasn't like one drastic decision. I gave her chances. It sucked when it was going on, but it formed me and shaped me to who I am. I can't dwell on the past, so I try to just forgive and forget."

Wolfe went to live with the family of his best friend, Logan Hoppel, full time when he was 15. It started with sleepovers before weekend wrestling tournaments, and eventually, Kris Hoppel told Wolfe he had a permanent place to stay.

Wolfe admits he was "kind of a punk" when he was a teenager, but living with the the Hoppel family — Kris, her husband Mike, their two sons and daughter — helped "shape my morals," he said.

"Any kid gets upset and frustrated, but it's one of those things where you know you're a good person inside, you just need adults to tell you you're special," Kris Hoppel said. "Just because you had a bad home life, it doesn't mean you can't be a successful adult. I just think (the Broncos are) getting a person that is hungry to be successful in life. He is going to do absolutely everything they tell him to do. He won't ever do anything to mess that up for himself."

Wolfe nearly declared for the NFL draft last year. Cincinnati had won only four games in 2010, and Wolfe was nearly broke.

"I was going to sign the papers, and I was going to leave without telling anybody. I was sick of it. I was sick of being broke. But then I thought, I've been playing this since I was 7 years old. Why sell myself short?"

He chose to return to Cincinnati and racked up 9 1/2 sacks and earned Big East co-defensive player of the year honors. He lined up at defensive end and defensive tackle, sometimes on the same defensive series.

"If there was a critical down, Derek Wolfe was in there, because you want him on the field," said Steve Stripling, Cincinnati's associate head coach and defensive line coach.


Though Wolfe said Saturday he expected to wind up on a team that plays a 3-4 defense, not a 4-3 like the Broncos, Denver could wind up moving him around, much the same way Cincinnati did, Stripling said.

And even if Wolfe needs to make adjustments for the NFL game, Stripling predicted it wouldn't be a difficult transition for Wolfe, whom he described as "extremely intelligent" and "mature."

"He's kind of had to scrap for everything his whole life, so he's very, very motivated about football. He understands that's his pathway," Stripling said.

The Beaver Local faithful were not the only ones who were anticipating this year's NFL Draft.

Beaver Local hosted a quad track meet against local opponents Edison, Oak Glen and Wellsville. The meet featured some of the top athletes around, however, these high school athletes had to share the spotlight with a former high school athlete from the area. Before, during and after the meet one of the main topics of discussion was the future of Derek Wolfe, a 2008 Beaver Local graduate.

Wolfe, who played college football at the University of Cincinnati, was expected to be selected in the 2012 NFL Draft, however, no one knew exactly when Wolfe would receive the all important phone call.

After the conclusion of the meet, those in attendance headed home to watch the draft hoping to hear Wolfe's name called.

The wait would end up carrying over into Friday. After much speculation and 35 previous selections, Wolfe was drafted with the fourth pick in the second round by the Denver Broncos.

Edison boys and girls head coach Jamie Evans coached against Wolfe.

"That would be awesome," he said about Wolfe getting selected in the draft. "I was talking to one of the other coaches the other day. When Derek was in high school, I was coaching high school football at Edison, and I just remember him pulling around the end on a couple of plays and just completely enveloping a couple of our kids.

"I will be proud when he is drafted, and I'm not even from up here. To have a professional athlete from Edison, that would be an amazing thing, so that is something to really look forward to."

Oak Glen boys head coach Rance Everly said he was looking forward to being able to go home and watch the draft.

"I'm excited myself to go home and watch the draft to be honest with you," he said.

Everly added having a player from the local area selected in the draft is a big deal.

"It is always great," he said. "Anytime we get kids from the local area to get into pro sports like that, it is always exciting. I always root for every kid in the area. It's very, very exciting."

"It's definitely difficult. First, you have got to work your way through high school and get yourself in college. Then, you just have to really prepare yourself. Some kids are good at it. Some are better than others, but he has done a great job."

Wellsville boys head coach Randy Thrasher said people all over the local area were excited about Wolfe.

"That would be fabulous," he said about Wolfe getting picked. "That would be fabulous for somebody five miles from Wellsville to get picked in the NFL Draft and to go watch them on Sundays. It would be great. I'm looking forward to it."

"It's a big deal for everybody. I work at Homer Laughlin in Newell, and the people in West Virginia are talking about it, 'the Wolfe kid, he is going to get drafted.' They all talk about it. It is exciting. It is."

Though he is a fan of West Virginia, Everly followed Wolfe's career at Cincinnati.

"With him being in the Big East, I am a WVU fan so I followed him when WVU has played them," he said. "I have tried to follow his career with being local here, and he has done well for himself. I am happy for him."

Athletes throughout the area have been inspired by Wolfe.

"It definitely gives kids motivation because we don't have a ton of people around here that get to the pros, but when there is somebody and the kids know the name it is exciting for them," Everly said. "They talk about it a little bit, and they say, 'If he can do it, I can do it as well. I just have to work as hard if not harder than he worked.'"

Future
The future looks bright for Wolfe. He joins a veteran group of players, some who have played on a few of the best defenses of the last decade. Wolfe will start off in the rotation and will need to develop into a three down player but with his character and work ethic Wolfe will be a NFL player for a long time. I look forward to seeing Wolfe join the pass rushing duo of Von Doom and I fear for opposing Quarterbacks. Here comes the Orange Crush! ~ Aussie.

References: 850koa, Review Online

May 7, 2012

Broncos Fire General Manager Brian Xanders

Executive Vice President of Football Operations John Elway released a statement as the Broncos and former General Manager Brian Xanders have parted ways.

The Broncos have confirmed that GM Brian Xanders is out in Denver. Mike Klis of the Denver Post first reported the news that the Broncos and Xanders have "mutually decided to part ways."

"It was tough because I have a great deal of respect for Brian as a football man but also as a person," Elway told Klis. "Even more so as a person. He was very helpful to me in this first year getting acclimated back to the NFL. I owe him a lot. Just from the conversation we had, we just thought for his career and for the Broncos we felt that now was the best time to go a different way."

"Brian deserves a tremendous amount of credit and recognition for the contributions he made to the Broncos during his four years with the organization," Executive Vice President of Football Operations John Elway said in a statement. "His hard work and dedication played a major role in the recent success of our team, most notably last season’s division title and playoff win.

"Brian and I had a very productive conversation earlier today. Although it was an extremely difficult decision, it became clear that it was best for both the Broncos and Brian to part ways. I believe a change to the structure of our football operations will be mutually beneficial, allowing the department to improve its efficiency while affording Brian the opportunity to continue his promising career with another NFL team."

It can be called anything they want, but Xanders is being fired. Hired in 2008 by Mike Shanahan, Xanders survived two regime changes. Josh McDaniels named him GM in 2009, but he never had e final say authority on the roster under Shanahan, Josh McDaniels, or John Elway.

"Brian has a great heart and is a loyal guy. He's the type of guy who would give you the shoe off his foot. This is the worst part of this business," Elway said.

Elway systematically changed the team's front office structure this offseason. He promoted Matt Russell from director of college scouting to director of player personnel. He hired Mike Sullivan to be in charge of contract negotiations. Xanders was left without a role worthy of the GM title.

There is no word as yet regarding any replacement of Xanders and I doubt there will be one. "It is a streamline; we're not adding anybody," Elway said.

If anything, it is surprising Xanders lasted so long. Most personnel men in similar positions do not survive coaching changes. Xanders' track record was spotty. The last draft under Mike Shanahan was not strong. Xanders and McDaniels' first draft together was disastrous. Things improved dramatically in 2010-2011, but it's unclear how big a role Xanders played in the draft picks.

"John and I had a lengthy conversation today and we mutually decided to part ways for the best interest of my career aspirations," Xanders said. "I appreciated everything that Pat Bowlen has done for the Broncos and for bringing me here in 2008. It was great working with Coach John Fox. I'm telling you, he's a great coach to work with. And it was great working with John Elway."

Xanders started his term in Denver as an Assistant GM in 2008 under Mike Shanahan When Shanahan was fired, Brian replaced him as the GM under Josh McDaniels.

Xanders entered his 19th NFL season and fourth as the general manager of the Broncos in 2012. Prior to his time with Denver, he spent 14 years with the Atlanta Falcons in a variety of coaching, player personnel and football operations positions. He was a member of Atlanta's defensive coaching staff during the club's run to its first-ever Super Bowl berth (XXXIII).

The Broncos are further removing themselves from any part of past regimes. Clearly they are becoming John Elway's team once again.

Elway said the decision was a tough one.

"My responsibility to the Broncos and our fans is to build a championship football team," Elway said. "The setup we have throughout every phase of our football operations will better position us for success going forward.

"Making a change with someone of Brian’s caliber is not easy. I thank him for everything he did for the Broncos and wish him all the best as he continues his career."

I find this to be a very surprising release. Is this Elway and X-man not seeing eye to eye. Punishment for a poor draft or something else. This story may be more juicy than it should be. Either way we are going forward as Elway's team. No more EFX, just EF ~ Aussie.

April 30, 2012

2012 NFL Draft Recap and Thoughts - UDFAs - Competition Winner

The 2012 NFL draft has come to a close and the Broncos have made seven selections in total. As the offseason whines down and before we gear up again for training camp we will be taking a deeper look at each player and what he brings to the team. But for now here are my thoughts on the players and what transpired in the draft.

Rd Pick Player Position - School Notes
2 4 (36) Derek Wolfe DT - Cincinnati via TB (w/ #101 for #31 and #126)
2 25 (57) Brock Osweiler QB - Arizona State
3 4 (67) Ronnie Hillman RB - San Diego State via CLE (for #87 and #120)
4 6 (101) Omar Bolden DB - Arizona State via TB (w/ #36 for #31 and #126)
4 13 (108) Philip Blake OL - Baylor via NYJ (Tim Tebow)
5 2 (137) Malik Jackson DE - Tennessee via STL (Brandon Lloyd)
6 18 (188) Danny Trevathan LB - Kentucky via NYJ (Tebow)


36 Derek Wolfe
Derek was one of the players that I reviewed at the start of the month as apart of the Defensive Tackle Prospects that I looked at. Here is what I had to say about him at the time: "Wolfe would be an UT. He has a long frame. He could get bigger in the legs and arms. Displays good foot work. He is Ok off the snap but gets a little upright. He is solid against the run but disappears when doubled. He is not very disruptive and affecting the pocket. Has a good motor.

When you start getting down into these guys they are all development prospects. Wolfe is no expection, he has a good frame and some tools to work with but I think he lacks the athleticism to play under tackle. I saw nothing special to warrant a 2nd or even 3rd round pick. I would have him in the fourth with a possible starter potential most likely a rotation guy though."

That was my initial assessment of Wolfe but it should be noted I can only see so much film on a guy and those games he may have been having an off day. I was honest I did not see anything that made me sit up and take notice. But from a production stand point Wolfe was probably the top interior pass rusher (other than Fletcher Cox) left in the draft. There were 3 maybe 4 guys that have shown good production rushing the pass from an interior position in the whole draft. I also think Wolfe's character played a large part in his drafting, the work ethic and passion is clear to see. Some have questioned whether this was a 'reach' and I would tend to agree with that group but Wolfe said he had 'a lot' of contact with the Ravens and was pissed when they didn't take him in the first. He truly believes he has the talent to be a first round pick. It was probable the Ravens intended to take Wolfe at 35# but when Upshaw dropped they had to pounce. Leaving Wolfe to go to the Broncos. For that matter he probably was rated quite high on draft boards around the league.

Wolfe will see time early with the Broncos in the rotation but I doubt he starts off as a three down player. He will see most of his time on passing downs where he will put his pass rushing skills to good use. Wolfe brings youth and talent to a very old position and should be a regular for many years to come.

It will be always unknown whether the Broncos were targeting Doug Martin or not at 31 but we still got a solid player in the end.


57 Brock Osweiler
This year I did not review any Quarterbacks but I will not lie and say I didn't look at any. There were two Quarterbacks that I watched a bit of tape on to get an idea of their talent and both had been linked to the Broncos. They were Nick Foles and Brock Osweiler. What little I did see of Brock I liked. I thought he moved well for a big man, had decent vision of the field and of course that cannon arm. At times I do think he struggled with pressure and his release can be a little slow but he has 3 maybe 4 years to work on it behind Manning. I don't expect Manning to 'mentor' Brock at all, he has more important things to do. But what Brock needs to learn from him is his habits, how to read defenses and breakdown film. Then work on his techniques both passing the ball and his footwork. Plus learn that playbook from cover to cover (or screen to screen on the tablet). Then be ready when your number is called.

I do really like Brock's potential and that he is insurance but I question doing it now. The convention wisdom is we could have drafted a QB in next years or the year afters draft. But 'Franchise QBs' don't grow on trees no matter what the Browns or Raiders think. The fact Brock is a good friend of Jack Elway should have made this connection quite obvious but I missed it with everything else that goes on in draft world.

The one person I do feel sorry for is Princess. We have gone from having one of the best looking QB corps to Peyton 'Long Neck' Manning and Brock 'Giant' Osweiler. Hopefully Adam Weber with his golden surfer boy locks can make the team to bring up the 'hottest rating' of our QBs.

67 Ronnie Hillman
A surprise pick for me considering the number of Running Back prospects I looked at this year. I think I missed him because there were just so many smaller backs to look at in this years draft plus he was projected much later than where he was.

From what little I have seen of Hillman I know he has speed, lots of speed and is very elusive. It should be noted that he didn't play behind the greatest offensive line which struggled against better competition. Also he has added a decent amount of bulk since the end of the college season. How much I don't know. But I have seen him make guys miss, is quick and drives his legs. I am very interested to see what Hillman can do on third down. The comparisons to Marshall Faulk don't hurt either.

101 Omar Bolden
Bolden is another guy I over looked and mainly because of the injuries. When healthy he was really fast, maybe not Devin Hester/Chris Johnson fast but still more than fast enough. He has everything you look for in a corner, size, speed and talent. This pick will all be about health. If healthy Bolden good do anything.

108 Philip Blake
The center from Baylor...where have I heard that before. Blake is a tough mauler that can play any of the interior positions and provides great depth. Blake is a very smart player, he scored a 35 on the wonderlic at the combine. Plus he is very strong and has a powerful lower half. The one down side I see with Blake is his age, turning 27 this year is not something you like. That means he has missed at least 4 years of being in the NFL. But hey sometimes that happens, Blake needs to show up and learn the offensive quickly if he wants to start.

Do I think he beats out JD? I don't think so. Their paths crossed out Baylor and Blake had to play RT because JD was at center. This will be an interesting battle in training camp.

137 Malik Jackson
Jackson is a guy I did scout and here is what I said: "He has a huge frame, I love his size. He may be better as a UT in the 4-3. he has pretty good footwork. His torso is huge. Shows good hustle on plays and a great motor. I thought he showed good strength fighting against the OL. He is fast off the snap and can get around the edge. He needs work on his run defense. He played UT and DE in college. Surprisingly how fast he is at covering ground and I love that he is versatile. I think he is strong enough to play inside or out in the NFL he just needs to have better pad level. Really surprised people are down on this guy. Seems like a great kid.

I was really surprised with Jackson. I love the versatility and potential he has. If he is still there in the later round this kid could be a steal. With more strength training and technique coaching he could be a starter someday and will play early in a rotation. I really want this guy on our team."

I still feel the exact same why about Jackson. He does need to get stronger. He was 284 at the combine after playing at 266 in college. I think if he can get to 290 and keep the weight on plus build strength he could be a starter in a few years. I love the size and potential, great pick.

188 Danny Trevathan
Trevathan was my favorite prospect from the draft and for me is the reason I look at prospects. At the time going through the Linebackers none of them stood out to me, Tank was aggressive but meh and Linebacker is my favorite position, so I was disappointed. Danny was the last linebacker I looked at out of the group and picture my frame of mind. Bored and wanted to get this over with. Then I put on the tape, he made me sit up and sit on the edge of my chair. He was just a tackling machine. He sniffs the plays out quickly and navigates through traffic amazingly. I thoroughly enjoyed watching Danny he is what I said at the time: "He could get bigger and probably needs to if he wants to play in the NFL. He lacks some muscle in his lower half. He looks tiny on tape (must have put on weight for the combine, he was 220-225 in college I think). He needs to get better in coverage but he is one of the better backers I have seen doing it. He is an Ok blitzer. He has great vision for the ball carrier, always knows where the ball is. He is an excellent tackler, maybe the best wrap up guy from this group. He struggles with offensive linemen blocks. He has had great production and is a tackling machine. He finds his way through traffic easily. He is always activity, he has a great motor.

Danny is the one guy I want to draft, above all others. He could be the Wesley Woodyard of this draft. If he makes it deep into the fifth or sixth round you have to pick him. He provides depth at ILB and WLB and could be a special teams ace for years. Develop him for a few years and grow his body and I think he could be a starter in the NFL.

After going through the linebackers up to Danny there wasn't a guy that stood out to me and said 'Draft me'. Tank Carder is probably the only early round guy I would look at because I like his intensity and he can fill that SLB spot which is vacant."

I have really high hopes for Danny, I think he can be something special. If he can keep his weight and get to 240 then build a heap of strength I can envision him starting at ILB. Danny Trevathan 6' 237 pounds, Jon Beason 6' 237 pounds, just saying.

Grade
I think the Broncos did a fantastic job getting the guys they wanted and moving around the board. Yes they probably gave up a little value but when your Superbowl favorites teams ain't going to want to trade with you much. I don't think they really reached on a guy, this is how they had them graded and went after them. There is also the thinking that the Broncos didn't get 'impact players'. But if you look at Aussie's Mock draft and my roster breakdown there are not many holes to fill and draftees ain't going to take the spots of veteran starts. I think they filled out the roster and added quality depth across the board. I would give them a B for this job.

Undrafted Free Agents
The Broncos managed to sign 13 UDFAs, they are as follows.

Steven Johnson, LB Kansas
Jamie Blatnick, DE Oklahoma St.
Mike Remmers, OT Oregon St.
Elliot Coffey, LB Baylor
Duke Ihenacho, S San Jose St.
Gerell Robinson, WR Arizona St.
Austin Wuebbels, G Missouri
Wayne Tribue, G Temple
Anthony Miller, TE, Cal
Coryell Judie, CB Texas A&M
Aaron Brewer, Longsnapper San Diego St.
Jerry Franklin, LB Arkansas
Eric Page, WR Toledo

It was interesting to note we signed so many LBs from the group and most are smaller guys. The one guy that I loved we signed was Coryell Judie. I thought we would draft this guy and I think he will be very hard to cut in the preseason.

Draft Competition - Broncos Blog Draft Guru

The results were very close and I think will be controversial when you review them. From the second part of the competition only Jazzy scored some points. The results are in the table below.

PersonTotal Score
Digger38
Jazzy35
Aussie17


That means for the Broncos Blog Draft Guru for the 2012-13 season...Digger is the BBDG! Congratulations.


Full breakdown of the results are in the comments. Any issues or complements hit us up in the comments ~ Aussie.

April 28, 2012

2012 NFL Draft - Day 3 - Round 4-7

Before looking at what is coming today let's recap what happened yesterday in round two and three.

Round Two
Rams - Brian Quick
Colts - Coby Fleener
Ravens (From Vikings) - Courtney Upshaw
Broncos (From Buccaneers) - Derek Wolfe
Browns - Mitchell Schwartz
Jaguars - Andre Branch
Rams (From Redskins) - Janoris Jenkins
Panthers - Amini Silatolu
Bills - Cordy Glenn
Dolphins - Jonathan Martin
Jets (From Seahawks) - Stephen Hill
Chiefs - Jeff Allen
Bears (From Cowboys through Rams) - Alshon Jeffery
Eagles - Mychal Kendricks
Seahawks (From Jets) - Bobby Wagner
Patriots (From Raiders) - Tavon Wilson
Chargers - Kendall Reyes
Rams (From Bears) - Isaiah Pead
Packers (From Cardinals through Eagles) - Jerel Worthy
Titans - Zach Brown
Bengals - Devon Still
Lions - Ryan Broyles
Falcons - Peter Konz
Steelers - Mike Adams
Broncos - Brock Osweiler
Buccaneers (From Texans) - Lavonte David
Eagles (From Packers) - Vinny Curry
Ravens - Kelechi Osemele
49ers - LaMichael James
Packers (From Patriots) - Casey Hayward
Giants - Rueben Randle

Round Three
Colts - Dwayne Allen
Rams - Trumaine Johnson
Vikings - Josh Robinson
Broncos (From Browns) - Ronnie Hillman
Texans (From Buccaneers) - Devier Posey
Bills (From Redskins) T.J Graham
Jaguars - Bryan Anger
Redskins (From Bills) - Josh LeRibeus
Dolphins - Olivier Vernon
Chargers (From Panthers through Bears and Dolphins) - Brandon Taylor
Chiefs - Donald Stephenson
Seahawks - Russell Wilson
Texans (From Eagles) - Brandon Brooks
Jets - Demario Davis
Dolphins (From Chargers) - Michael Egnew
Bears - Brandon Hardin
Cardinals - Jamell Fleming
Cowboys - Tyrone Crawford
Titans - Mike Martin
Bengals - Mohamed Sanu
Ravens (From Falcons) - Bernard Pierce
Lions - Dwight Bentley
Steelers - Sean Spence
Browns (From Broncos) - John Hughes
Eagles (From Texans) - Nick Foles
Saints - Akiem Hicks
Patriots (From Packers) - Jake Bequette
Falcons (From Ravens) - Lamar Holmes
Colts (From 49ers) - T.Y Hilton
Bengals (From Patriots) - Brandon Thompson
Giants - Jayron Hosley
Raiders (Compensatory selection) - Tony Bergstrom

Day two of the draft was just as interesting as the first. The Broncos again sent fans back to the drawing board and scratching their heads. The Broncos made three picks today and one trade. They selected a DT, QB and RB. The players that were selected by the Broncos were Derek Wofle, Brock Osweiler and Ronnie Hillman. To select Hillman they had to trade up in the third round. They moved from the back end of the round to the front trading with the Browns to do so, we gave up a 4th in the process. We will have more on the draftees in the coming weeks.

For now here is some comments from a number of people....

"I’m just absolutely completely ecstatic to be a Denver Bronco. It’s a dream come true. I absolutely can’t wait to get to Denver, and can’t wait to get to work and give everything I have to that organization." One of the newest Denver Broncos, quarterback Brock Osweiler, in his post-pick press conference

"I think Derek is a guy that plays a five-technique end as well as three-technique defensive tackle. He’s got good length, good speed for that length—6’5, 300 lbs. He’s got the frame to get bigger. Very, very productive as far as creating havoc for the quarterback; he does a great job with his hands, snatching off things. He’s the most productive guy stat-wise of all the tackles in the draft. He’s got a great motor. There are some testing things we do, he’s a high character guy and [we are adding] a great attitude to our defense." Denver Broncos head coach John Fox on one of the newest Broncos, DT Derek Wolfe

Julius Thomas ‏ (@Julius_Thomas): Congrats to all my new teammates. Special day for em. #BroncosNation
Robert Ayers (@1_900_ayersjr): I just watched Hillman’s combine footage and looked up his stats on NFL.com EXPLOSIVE!! And has great hands.. #greatpick
Robert Ayers (@1_900_ayersjr): Bronco Nation welcome the “Giant Gunslinger” from the desert @BrockOsweiler Glad to have ya big guy..
Robert Ayers (@1_900_ayersjr): Welcome to the Denver Broncos D-Line Derek Wolfe… Glad to have ya big dawg.. #letdowork
I just think Ayers was happy we didn't take a DE.
Von Miller ‏ (@MillerLite40): I’m loving what we’re doing in the draft!!! Brock Osweiler was a beast at ASU!!!!!!!
Chris Harris‏ (@CHarris_25): I’m liking the pick Derek Wolfe

Today there a numerous quality players still available to be selected over the next four rounds. I am feeling an OL, DT maybe LB and WR with the picks we have left. We also could be looking for another back, if so it may be the end for Knowshon. We could possibly trade him for an late round pick.

The remaining picks that we have are:

4 - 6 (101) - via TB (w/ #36 for #31 and #126)
4 - 13 (108) - via NYJ (Tim Tebow)
5 - 2 (137) - via STL (Brandon Lloyd)
6 - 18 (188) - via NYJ (Tebow)

Another interesting day of drafting ahead and hopefully we can continue to build this team.

April 27, 2012

2012 NFL Draft - Day 2 - Round 2-3

First recapping what happened yesterday. Below is the selections by all the teams in the first round.

Colts - Andrew Luck QB
Redskins - Robert Griffin III QB
Browns - Trent Richardson RB
Vikings - Matt Kalil OT
Jaguars - Justin Blackmon WR
Cowboys - Morris Claiborne CB
Buccaneers - Mark Barron SS
Dolphins - Ryan Tannehill QB
Panthers - Luke Kuechly ILB
Bills - Stephon Gilmore CB
Chiefs - Dontari Poe DT
Eagles - Fletcher Cox DT
Cardinals - Michael Floyd WR
Rams - Michael Brockers DT
Seahawks - Bruce Irvin DE
Jets - Quinton Coples DE
Bengals - Dre Kirkpatrick CB
Chargers - Melvin Ingram DE
Bears - Shea McClellin DE
Titans - Kendall Wright WR
Patriots - Chandler Jones DE
Browns - Brandon Weeden QB
Lions - Riley Reiff OT
Steelers - David DeCastro G
Patriots - Dont'a Hightower ILB
Texans - Whitney Mercilus DE
Bengals - Kevin Zeitler G
Packers - Nick Perry DE
Vikings - Harrison Smith FS
49ers - A.J. Jenkins WR
Buccaneers - Doug Martin RB
Giants - David Wilson RB

This was a very interesting round with lots of excitement. There were a number of 'reaches' in the draft so far. Poe, Irvin and Weeden all went earlier than they probably should have but we will see. Just be glad Pete Carroll isn't running our team. Chandler Jones went to the Patriots, I think that is a great spot for him, I just hope they don't try and play him at OLB.

There were numerous trades throughout the draft, the Browns, Jags, Patriots and Cowboys traded up among others. The Broncos were one of the teams trading down doing so twice. First with the Patriots from 25# to 31# and picking up a fourth round pick in the process. The Patriots took Hightower at 25#. The way I see this is the Broncos had limited options here. They didn't want to reach for a guy but wanted to move back and the Patriots may have been one of the few trade partners (who else would want to trade to that spot?). Plus the pick itself Hightower would have been stupid for the Broncos. He has slow lateral movement and is a banger. There is no way he would have succeed in a 4-3. With the Pats he will play well.

The next trade happened when the Buccaneers moved from 36# to 31#. The Broncos changed fourth round picks with them and made up 25 spots in the fourth round. The value isn't great and we could possibly have got more or this could have been the best offer available. Either way we are still in a good position to pick good players. Also of note Elway said that the Bucs did not tell him they were taking Martin. Secretly I think he was pissed.

That leaves us with the following picks:

SECOND ROUND:
#36(4) From Tampa Bay
#57(25) Own Pick

THIRD ROUND:
#87(25) Own Pick

FOURTH ROUND:
#101 (6) From Tampa Bay
#108 (13) From N.Y. Jets
#120 (25) Own Pick

FIFTH:
#137 (2) From St. Louis

SIXTH:
#188 (18) From N.Y. Jets

Elway said this among other things at his press conference: "Well, we didn’t get any better yet but we will tomorrow. When we looked at where we were, obviously we had some guys targeted that didn’t quite make it to us in 25, so we had some opportunities to move back with New England to pick up a fourth. We liked that, thought that was great. Then, when we had a chance to move back from 31 to 36 with Tampa again, our board looked the same. We thought we’d be able to get the same people at 36 that we could at 31—or have the same pool of players there at 36 as we did at 31. By doing that we moved up 25 spots to the top of the fourth, which we really believe this is a deep draft. It’s not real thick at the top, but it’s pretty deep through the middle rounds. We thought by adding another good pick it gives us more options going into tomorrow. Plus we’ll still be able to get the same people that we had targeted that made it to us at 25 at 36. We’re excited about the day. Obviously it’s a little bit of a downer when you don’t have a new player. But, we’re excited about where we sit and the next two days are going to be exciting."

Competition Update
I have graded the first part of the draft competition. I will probably award a few extra points later based on trades but at the moment out in front is Digger on 35 followed closely by Jazzy with 30 points and in a distant third myself on 15 points. I will say this, I changed my submission just before the draft started and could account for 15 missed points based on those changes. The Browns trade threw me, screw you Browns! Either way I think that was a fairly solid effort by us but there is still room for improvement (since the first section is scored out of 160). Tomorrow will Digger rein supreme or will Jazzy catch him and take the lead. Or the distant underdog rise from the ashes to take victory? Find out tomorrow as the draft moves into the second day and hopefully we get some new Broncos ~ Aussie.