San Diego Chargers vs. the Denver Broncos - Offense
The Denver offense really begins with the offensive line. The chief addition was Ryan Clady at left tackle and he has been amazing with just a half sack notched against him all year. Ben Hamilton at left Guard is also good; and an unsung hero of their line is Casey Wiegmann who bottled up the Jets nose tackle Kris Jenkins and Jamal Williams mentioned as being Pro Bowl worthy. Considering he was originally back up for Tom Nalen, he has done extremely well.
Cutler is really the pacing item on this offense. When he is on, the Broncos rack up the yards and points. The problem is that turnovers; both by him and receivers have often dug holes too deep for a defense that is thin to begin with. He has put up over 4200 yards passing with 24 passing touchdowns; but he has 16 interceptions to go with them. He has thrown even more that ought to have been picked but were just flat out dropped by secondaries. He has the habit of locking down on his receiver and forcing balls in to Marshall his favorite target. He also sometimes has the appearance that the load of being 'the guy' is too heavy for him in some games. Even so his line on the year is impressive:
Brandon Marshall is the number one wideout and he is excellent. He has had an unfortunate tendency to drop passes which might be related to some severed nerves that occurred in the off season from horseplay. He has the ability to make yards after the catch and absolutely ate up Antonio Cromartie the last time these two offenses met back in September. In addition to the drops he has three lost fumbles that go along with striving for those YAC. I would suspect that Marshall will see a lot more of Jammer and Cromartie will take on Eddie Royal who has made a lot of noise for a rookie receiver and looks like he could make 1,000 yards as well. The Chargers have done better covering over the middle the last three games; but covering Tony Scheffler, Denver's excellent receiving tight end is going to be crucial to containing this offense; in fact it may end up being the key to the game.
Brandon Marshall
Eddie Royal
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San Diego Chargers lose to the Denver Broncos in a Shootout
While I'm still trying to get over the Bolts losing, this was a great game to watch. My favorite pregame prediction was two thirds right, the sky is still blue and the earth is still spinning, but best of all we are going to have some barn burners to watch as this season careens along. This game had great offensive play from both sides; both teams have worries about how much give there was in their defenses. Rivers and Cutler both looked like elite QBs absolutely dissecting the opposition defense; a small grain of salt as defenses usually take a few weeks to sharpen up. From the Chargers perspective you have to love their ability to come back from big deficits, there certainly is no give in the offense. Unfortunately there was nothing but give on the defense; the secondary was in tatters; Cromartie may have had one of the all time bad games. Not only did he get burned, but was penalized countless times, clearly they just got into his head. While the Chargers defense put together some good stops in the second half, when the heat was on they melted for a second straight week.
Darren Sproles doing his thing.
At the end of the game Ed Hochuli whistled the play dead, killing a Cutler fumble at the ten yard line instead of allowing the Charger fumble recovery. There was no doubt that the Zebras made huge errors; but there is just no way you can give up a TD and the two to follow and say the Bolts didn't have their chances to stop it. It was a pity that bad calls marred what was otherwise a terrific game between two great offenses. Still, I'm going to be sticking pins in my Ed Hochuli doll for some time to come. His quote after the game went like this:
"The ruling on the field was that it was an incomplete pass. We went to replay; it should have been ruled fumble. By rule, by the instant replay rules, on that particular play where there's a pass/fumble, a quarterback pass/fumble the rules do not permit you to give the ball to the other team. All we can do to fix it is put the ball at the spot that it hit the ground, which is why we moved it back to the 10-yard line and the down counts and it becomes third down.''
Pretty dry stuff, I would have liked to see him do a 'mea culpa maxima'; wallow on his belly like a lizard and plead for forgiveness.
Even from a game like this there were a number of positive signs. This offense can light it up; even with a hobbled LT. LT was clearly still bothered by his toe, averaging just 2.5 yards per carry, but when they could get Sproles running in space he just ate up a very quick Denver defense. He returned one kickoff for the TD going 103 yards, but also busted two other runs, one for a TD, the other called back for a holding call on Chambers.
Phillip Rivers looked completely healthy and played flawlessly under pressure. He did everything necessary to win, throwing long TD's, making crucial third down conversions; his knee appears completely healed. Antonio Gates looked to be his old self, and Chambers was just a monster on the field with 4 catchs for 83 yards and two TDs, one of them he just torched Champ Bailey.
You have to credit Denver's offense, but there is no getting around the fact that there was no pressure whatever on Cutler. Two sacks in two weeks, coupled with a -1 on the turnover ratio is just not going to cut it. This is a game where folks may argue that the Chargers are banged up, but on defense the only player out that they are going to get back this year is Cooper; clearly Merriman's absence leaves a hole that has yet to be filled. Cottrell may end up being forced to blitzing and taking risks more often, as the defense stands now it is the death of a thousand cuts. The rookie Cason continues to impress with some great tackling and a key interception; Jammer also looked good, but Cromartie was just eaten alive by Brandon Marshall; and then tacked bone headed penalties on to boot.
This is a team that has the look so far of the Chargers of old where they are going to have to see if they can put up points faster than they give them up. I do still believe in the talent on defense, but until they find a way to pressure the QB they are going to be giving up territory faster than the French army. Next week they face a revamped Jets team on Monday night, they do not look to me as fierce as they first two opponents turned out to be.
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On Deck: Broncos on Offense
Last year Denver could only produce six points against the Chargers defense, this year could be very different. The Denver Broncos look to have a first class offense this season. With Jay Cutler's diagnosis of and treatment for diabetes, he appears to have regained his lost weight, and his zip. Coupled with Brandon Marshall at wide receiver and rookie standout Eddie Royal, he looks poised to have a breakout year. The Denver offensive line has been bolstered with first round draft pick Ryan Clady, but will be without Pro Bowl center Tom Nalen who is out with an injury. Clady has performed well in preseason, but with just a few rough spots. Denver's offense dominated Dallas' defense in the preseason, and just last night completely dismantled the Oakland Raiders; that without star Brandon Marshall who was suspended. Marshall will be back for the game against the Chargers next weekend.
Bronco tight end, Tony Scheffler performed admirably last year, in this offense he could also be a breakthrough candidate. In the preseason, Denver improved their pass protection with their retooled offensive line. The Broncos' zone run blocking is usually terrific. The one question mark is the quality of their running backs, Selvin Young did well last year, but it's a big question if he can hold up as the primary back. Andre Hall and Michael Pittman are their other tailbacks, neither have been dominant in preseason and they are very thin here after Torraine went down in camp. The old saw is that the Broncos can plug anyone in at RB and have them gain 1,000 yards, that just may be tested this season. Peyton Hillis has taken over as their starting fullback, and has paved the way for college stars McFadden and Felix Jones. How he fell to the seventh round of the draft is a mystery to me.
In 2007 the Denver offense ranked about tenth in most categories, except for points scored where they fell to twenty first. This was the result of too many turnovers as well as not converting in the red zone. To excel this year Denver need only maintain their performance from last year, but punch the ball into the endzone and, obviously, hang on to the darn thing.
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