Woody Paige: Manning family business designed for Drew Brees too Woody Paige The Denver Post October 28, 2012 The Manning family is to quarterbacking what Flying Wallenda is to trapezes, Kennedy to politics, Heinz to 57 Sauce, Rothschild to banking, Ford to cars, Marx to comedy, Osmond to candy-apple music. Patriarch Archie Manning played quarterback in the NFL for 11 years. Son Peyton Manning has returned for his 15th season, and younger brother Eli is a nine-year veteran. Combined, they have thrown for 110,235 yards and 735 touchdowns. And Drew Brees is virtually The Other Brother. "Let me tell you how that all went down," Elisha Archibald "Archie" Manning says when I ask about the family's relationship with Brees. "I was speaking at a banquet in Austin, Texas, and I presented a high school senior with the NFF scholar-athlete award." Archie is chairman of the board of the prestigious National Football Foundation. "The young man was Drew Brees," who led Westlake High School to a 28-0-1 record over two seasons and the Texas Class 5A championship. Brees went on to play at Purdue, "and used to show up and hang around the Colts' locker rooms after games, and we talked a lot more," Archie said. In Brees' senior season, he threw a 68-yard touchdown pass to upset Ohio State. His first phone call afterward was from the Colts' young quarterback — Peyton. Drew won the Maxwell Award, given to the nation's most outstanding player, in 2000. Peyton had won it in 1997. Eli would win it in 2003. Peyton and Drew finally would play against each other in an NFL classic the final week of the 2004 regular season. Brees, drafted in 2001 by San Diego, carried the Chargers to a 31-16 lead in the fourth quarter. But Manning brought the Colts back to a tie with his league-record 49th touchdown pass of the season — to Brandon Stokley. The Colts won on an overtime field goal. Brees got even the next season in Indianapolis with a 26-17 victory. In the last game, against the Broncos, Brees' shoulder was shredded and it seemed he would never play again. Although off- season surgery was successful, the Chargers turned to Philip Rivers, and Brees signed with the Saints — Archie's former team in the town where he and his wife, Olivia, still lived. "Drew called, and we reconnected," says Archie, who would recommend restaurants, barber shops and neighborhoods. "I was just trying to help him. Actually, Olivia did more for Drew's wife, Brittany, and I think they're still in the same exercise class." Brees bought an antebellum home off famed St. Charles Avenue near the Mannings' house in the Garden District, and "Cooper (Manning's eldest son) and his wife would go out to the movies with Drew and his wife." Cooper actually was the second Manning to play quarterback — in high school in New Orleans. But when Peyton joined the team as QB, Cooper switched to receiver, was an all-state selection and earned a scholarship to Ole Miss, where Archie was the famed quarterback from 1969-71. Before Cooper played at Mississippi, though, he was diagnosed with spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal cord. He had to give up football. After Hurricane Katrina struck Louisiana, the Manning brothers and Brees contributed money and time to relief efforts — and still do. When Brees began to play for the Saints, Archie would send messages of support to Drew. But when Drew played against Eli for the first time, Archie's text stated: "You're on your own this week, pal." For decades Archie was the city's favorite son. "Drew owns New Orleans. He doesn't need my advice anymore." Drew Brees and Peyton Manning would play each other in Super Bowl XLIV in South Florida, and there was speculation about whether Archie would cheer for his city and his pal, or his son. "It was hard, but there wasn't a choice," Archie says from the Florida panhandle, where he and Olivia are spending a few days. "You always pull for your children." Brees and the Saints prevailed when Peyton was intercepted late by Tracy Porter. "After a while, I got over the disappointment for Peyton, and I felt great for what Drew and the Saints accomplished." When the Saints and the Broncos play Sunday night, Archie picks kinship over friendship again. He has traveled to Denver for a couple of games, "but I've got to watch Eli and the Giants play the Cowboys on TV first, then Peyton and the Broncos against the Saints. That will be six hours of severe stress for me. When Eli and Peyton play at the same time, I have to watch split screen, but, at least, it's only three hours of stress." He has been thrilled about Peyton's comeback this season and the Broncos' comeback vs. the Chargers. "When Peyton was going through everything, I didn't say much," Archie said. "I just listened, like a father does. He wondered if he could play at the highest level again. ... He's proven it to everybody he can. "I don't think people realize that the team was basically starting over this year. Foxy (John Fox) was there last year, but Peyton came in this year; they got a new coordinator in Jack Del Rio, and they changed offenses, and they started with a difficult schedule. But they certainly hit their stride in that second half (against the Chargers). They'll get a tough one against Drew." There were no supporting texts to Brees last week, only to Peyton. "I've got another one of these coming up." The Saints play the Giants on Dec. 9. Archie read my column a week ago suggesting that Peyton and Eli could be playing against each other in the Super Bowl in, of all places, New Orleans. "I thought: "Wouldn't that be something?' " he said. "I was talking to Fran Tarkenton a couple of days ago, and he's also predicting the Broncos and the Giants" in The Big Game in The Big Easy. That would be the severest stress. Archie, Cooper and Drew could carpool to the game. Kickin' it with Kiz: Peyton Manning gets Thanksgiving dinner invite Mark Kiszla The Denver Post October 28, 2012 Just win, Peyton. Kiz, aren't you being unduly harsh on Mr. Peyton Manning for his social skills? Good grief! He was hired to win football games for the Broncos, not teach Sunday school, walk your dog and be a scoutmaster. Leave him alone and let him win games. He can call bingo sessions at the old folks' home during the offseason. Don, an "old folk" myself Kiz:When it comes to opening doors for ladies, signing autographs or using his salad fork, Mr. Manning needs no advice from the sloths here at Kickin' It Headquarters. But anybody who has spent 10 minutes around Manning notices he's more comfortable with old acquaintances than his new surroundings. And that's kind of cool, really. Who knew a Hall of Fame quarterback could be a little shy? To that end, I'd like to invite Manning to Thanksgiving dinner. Heck, we'll even let him be the all-time QB at the annual touch football game, a classic affair in which a torn hammy on a bootleg caused me to fall like a freshly cut Christmas tree and be loaded prone in the back of a station wagon to go home and eat my candied yams while standing, because it hurt too much to sit. Good times! Expletives deleted. You are a miserable piece of shoelace, Kiszla. Leave suspended Broncos linebacker D.J. Williams the heck alone and get on with your worthless life. We all make mistakes. This junk you spew makes me sick to my stomach. I seriously question: Why exactly is it you have a job? Give some young nerd a shot. How long have you been a journalist? Go write about the Rockies, clown. Demitri, Dyme Lyfer Kiz: This morning, boys and girls, we learned why Al Gore invented the Internet: to improve human understanding and promote peace throughout the World Wide Web. (By the way, the language of Demitri's e-mail was altered ever so slightly, just in case his pastor wanted to read it aloud in church.) Culture clubbed. CU football does lack homegrown talent. The Buffaloes have not pursued the state of Colorado like they should. In turn, a talent like Kenny Bell, who I played against, and Heisman Trophy candidate Collin Klein escaped out of state. At the time of their recruitment, the Buffs were in the same conference as Nebraska and Kansas State, which makes it even tougher to stomach. The lack of talent going to Colorado football programs is not necessarily just because of coaches, but rather the culture players are brought up in. Parents no longer preach loyalty. Whether that is the fault of the college or the student, a disconnect exists. Richard, Boulder Kiz: In the Sagarin computer rankings that have long been a staple at USA Today, the Buffs would be ranked 10th this week in the Colonial Athletic Association, a Division I-AA football conference that includes Delaware, Old Dominion and Towson as members. And you're telling me local preps couldn't help CU? Piggyback on the farm. After continually watching former Colorado players excel in other major-league baseball cities, might I suggest the team slogan for next season: America's Farm Team. Tony, Broomfield Kiz: It's a good thing the Rockies PR department has such a fine sense of humor. Otherwise, the fellows in charge of drawing a smiley face on a downtrodden franchise might treat you as an outcast and talk bad behind your back. (Not that it could ever actually happen in an organization based on do-unto-others principles, of course.) Brassy offer. And today's parting shot is from one American with the heart and courage to do something more than gripe about the unemployment rate in this country: Congratulations to the Rockies for adding to their deep roster of savvy baseball executives with the hiring of Mark Wiley as director of pitching operations. As throwing additional front-office bodies seems to be the solution to all organizational woes, I'd like to put my name in the hat for the following positions: special assistant to the vice president of base running, assistant VP of hitting the cutoff man, executive fungo coordinator, assistant general manager in charge of spitting and scratching (major leagues) and nachos guru. Would you mind putting in a good word for me? Pookie, Arvada Klis: NFL remains most unpredictable of the major sports Mike Klis The Denver Post October 28, 2012 About all we know of the 2012 NFL season is this: We don't know a thing. There have been 62 games decided by one score (eight points) or less, the most through Week 7 of any NFL season. "You never know, because there are no cupcakes in the NFL," Broncos coach John Fox has said in so many words roughly a dozen times in the past two years and again last week. The two prohibitive preseason favorites, the New England Patriots and Green Bay Packers, both started 3-3. "It's fascinating. Bruce Arians was sitting there saying, 'We're in this thing,' " said former general manager Charley Casserly. Arians is the interim coach of the Indianapolis Colts, who entered this season with the longest Super Bowl odds. The Colts are 3-3. "He's right," Casserly said. We're supposed to believe in the 6-0 Atlanta Falcons even though they are 0-3 in the postseason the past four years. We're supposed to believe in the Houston Texans even though the next playoff game quarterback Matt Schaub plays will be his first. No one in the Rocky Mountains wants to believe the Chicago Bears will reach the Super Bowl with Jay Cutler and Brandon Marshall. Few people anywhere else believe the Baltimore Ravens can get there without Ray Lewis. Blame all this uncertainty and mediocrity on the New York Giants. They won the Super Bowl last season and now everybody wants to finish 9-7. "We still have half the season to go, but so far there's not much separation," Casserly said. "I think it's just one of those years where the system is working. The system of the salary cap and free agency was supposed to create this." Payday coming. Contract negotiations between the Broncos and Ryan Clady didn't work out in July. Clady, though, is positioning himself well for the next bargaining round. According to Stats Inc., Clady is one of four offensive tackles who have both started every game and not allowed a sack. The others are Houston's Duane Brown and the New York Giants' tandem of Will Beatty and Shawn Locklear. Clady also has just one holding penalty this year. Standing tall. So why has the New Orleans Saints' Drew Brees become arguably the greatest 6-foot-and-under quarterback in NFL history? "He has such a high release," said Broncos linebacker Keith Brooking, who played eight games against Brees from 2006-10. "He releases the ball from where a 6-5 guy might throw it. I don't know how tall he is, but he's tall enough." Joe Montana was 6-2. Otto Graham and Bart Starr were 6-1. Brees' competition for all-time best 6-foot-and-under quarterbacks is Sid Luckman and Michael Vick. Luckman won back-to-back NFL championships in 1940 and 1941. Brees only has one title (2009), but we'll give him the edge because he attempts 45.5 passes per game while Luckman averaged 145.3 pass attempts per season. Different era. Former linebacker Bill Romanowski said last week that when he started his career with the San Francisco 49ers, special-teams players would receive gifts such as Walkmans and TVs for big hits. Keep in mind the rookie Romanowski played for the legendary Bill Walsh, who was in his final year of coaching, and then for George Seifert, who was in his first year as head coach. The 49ers won the Super Bowl in each of Romanowski's first two seasons. He wound up winning two more with the Broncos. "There wasn't a quarterback I played against that I didn't want to knock out of the game," Romanowski said. "In every single game that I played, never did I not have that goal. "I wasn't trying to break his neck. I'm not trying to tear out his knee. There's this whole thing about hitting 'em hard enough where you knock them silly. For so many years, getting the (crap) knocked out of you was just part of the game. Give 'em some smelling salts. I saw stars every single game I've ever played in. I just wanted the opposing team to see bigger stars." Let's just say it would not have been easy for Romo to have played in today's Roger Goodell-governed game. All in the family. Saints interim head coach Joe Vitt, on Adam Gase, who is married to Vitt's daughter, Jennifer, and is the Broncos quarterbacks coach for Peyton Manning: "I couldn't be prouder of Adam," Vitt said of his son-in-law. "No. 1, Adam's a great husband. No. 2, he's a great father. And No. 3, he's been a great friend to me. And all that being said now, Adam can't throw and I can't tackle. This is a player's game. I look forward to seeing him Sunday night." The best compliment there was No. 1. I never heard my father-in-law say I was a great husband. Spotlight on ... Vincent Jackson, WR, Tampa Bay When: Played Thursday night at Minnesota. Will play next Sunday at Oakland. What's up: After abusing the New Orleans Saints' secondary last weekend and picking up two big first-down catches in Thursday's win at Minnesota, Jackson ranks sixth in the NFL in receiving yards (592) even though he's tied for 34th in receptions (29). His 21.6-yards-per-catch average leads the league among receivers with at least 15 catches. Not that this is anything new. Jackson has averaged 17.9 yards per catch in his eight-year career, the first seven with San Diego. He ranked sixth in yards per catch in 2011, fifth in 2009 and fourth in 2008. Background: Jackson was an A student when he graduated from Widefield High School near Colorado Springs in 2001. He had 52 catches for 697 yards and 13 touchdowns as a senior. He played basketball and football at Northern Colorado. He led the Bears' basketball team with averages of 13.6 points and 3.1 assists as a sophomore. He was a terrific punt returner as a freshman. In his final two years at UNC, he averaged 73 catches, 1,422 yards and 16 touchdowns. He was selected by the Chargers late in the second round of the 2005 draft. He became a free agent in March and signed a five-year, $55.55 million contract with the Tampa Bay Bucs. Klis' take: It's mind-boggling how much offensive talent Chargers general manager A.J. Smith has let get away to free agency. Drew Brees, Michael Turner, Darren Sproles and Jackson lead the list. Jackson is proof that receivers have a longer learning curve than NFL players at other positions. He had only three catches as a rookie in 2005 and 27 in his second year. He still doesn't have a 70-catch season, but is a heavy-damage receiver. THREE UP 1. Bears: Allowing an NFL-low 13 points per game. 2. Packers: Randall Cobb is more than a kick returner: 15 catches, 191 yards, two touchdowns past two games. 3. Saints:Darren Sproles swarmed past three games — a scary thought for the Broncos, who have struggled to catch him. THREE DOWN 1. Panthers: DeAngelo Williams and Jonathan Stewart averaging a combined 65 yards rushing per game. 2. Bengals: Andy Dalton has thrown six interceptions during three-game losing skid. 3. Chiefs: Maybe Brady Quinn and home game against the Raiders can jump-start this disappointing team. Slash threats There are great passers, receivers, rushers and returners. But the NFL has a select group of players who are multiple threats. The league's top "slash" players through Week 7: 1. Robert Griffin III, QB, Redskins Not only is the rookie third in passing rating (101.8), he's 13th in rushing with 468 yards. 2. Percy Harvin, WR, Vikings Besides 535 yards and a TD on kickoff returns, he leads the NFL with 60 catches and is second with 667 receiving yards. 3. Darren Sproles, RB, Saints Running the ball is the least of what he does. Has 854 combined yards through receiving (267, three touchdowns), rushing (118) and returning (469). 4. Randall Cobb, WR, Packers He is still a top returner (574 yards, one touchdown) but now is a quality receiver (37 catches, 435 yards, three TDs). That's 1,009 combined yards. 5. Ray Rice, RB, Ravens Ninth in rushing with 524 yards and the top receiver among every-down backs with 242 yards on 27 catches. 6. Cam Newton, QB, Panthers Not nearly as productive in Year 2 as in his rookie season but still averaging 231 passing yards and 45.5 rushing yards per game. Saints vs. Broncos: Brees and Manning a classic mile-high showdown Mike Klis The Denver Post October 28, 2012 Let's go back a little more than five years and revisit the Great Quarterback Debate. It was February 2007, and Peyton Manning was in Miami getting ready to play in his first Super Bowl. The next week, Drew Brees was in Honolulu preparing to play in his second Pro Bowl. It was in the midst of a time when the NFL's best quarterback topic was but a two-man competition. "There's no doubt, Peyton and Tom Brady are at the top," Brees told The Denver Post then. "I feel like there's no reason I can't be among those guys, but at this point, if you look at what they've accomplished, not only statistically but in number of wins, that's what you strive for." Now, let's advance the Great Quarterback Debate to Sunday night at Sports Authority Field at Mile High. Brees is here getting ready to lead the New Orleans Saints against Manning and the Broncos. In the five years since Brees himself anointed Manning and Brady as the best, the Saints quarterback has done everything he can to make it a three-man race. And a case can be made that Brees is at the top of the list. Brady missed all but one quarter of 2008 with a knee injury. Manning missed all of 2011 with a neck injury. Brees, meanwhile, has stayed healthy to become the most prolific passer in the NFL, throwing for a staggering 30,491 yards over the past 6½ years, an average of 4,783 yards per season. Last year, he broke Dan Marino's league season yardage record, which had stood for 27 seasons. A few weeks ago, Brees broke Johnny Unitas' record for most consecutive games with a touchdown pass, which held for 52 years. "If you want to talk about who's the best in the league, you could argue that he's the best," Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey said of Brees. "Nobody's really done what he's done." After throwing for a record 5,476 yards in 2011, Brees is on pace for nearly 5,600 yards passing this season. And only the Broncos can stop Brees from a touchdown pass that would give him 300 in his career, tying him with John Elway for sixth place all time, while also extending his consecutive touchdown record to 50 games. "A season record is one thing," Manning said. "But any records that span over three or four years tell you what a consistent player he's been since he's gotten there. Obviously, that offense is based around him and they've just kind of flourished and gotten better and better every year." Along with all his gaudy stats — maybe even topping them — is how Brees outdueled Manning in Super Bowl XLIV after the 2009 season. Manning played well in that game for Indianapolis, but Brees seemingly had the ball in his hands the entire middle two quarters. Perhaps sensing the urgency to keep up, Manning forced a slant throw in the fourth quarter that Saints (now Broncos) cornerback Tracy Porter picked off and returned for a game-clinching touchdown. For the first time since Brees was named the MVP of that Super Bowl, he and Manning meet again. Would Brees admit that for this game he deserves to be considered in the Brady-Manning pantheon of NFL greats? "I still think those guys are the standard," Brees said. "And I say that because they've done it so consistently for so long. Certainly, they're not only going to go down as the best of our generation but two of the best of all time." And then Brees brought in a fourth quarterback to the discussion. "Look at what Aaron Rodgers has done in the last three years," Brees said. "That's been pretty impressive." Indeed, Rodgers led Green Bay to the Super Bowl title after the 2010 season, then a 15-1 record while posting the all-time best passer rating last season, and is on a roll this year, having thrown nine touchdown passes against zero interceptions in his past two games. Then there are youngsters such as Robert Griffin III and Cam Newton, dual-threat quarterbacks who bring an extraordinary amount of athleticism to the position. "There's lots of guys that if you look at it, study a little bit, you say, 'Man, how are they doing that so well?' " Brees said. "I want some of that, whatever they're doing. I've got to figure that out." Over the past month, as Brees was assaulting some of the NFL's most familiar records, as Rodgers was taking the quarterback position to another stratosphere, as RGIII's image was exploding into living rooms across the NFL landscape, Manning and Brady haven't exactly been shabby. Manning is on a four-game stretch in which he has thrown 11 touchdown passes against just one pick while averaging 328.5 yards passing per game. Overall, Brady, Manning and his younger brother, Eli Manning, are tied for second in the league with an average of 301 yards passing yards per game. Brees ranks first by nearly half a football field, with 350 yards per game. "When it's all said and done — and hopefully I can play this game for as long as I can ..." Brees said. "But at the end of the day, I would love to be considered in that category." Saints at Broncos: Five things to watch. Jeff Legwold The Denver Post October 28, 2012 1. Keep Drew Brees from breezing through D Despite all of the team turmoil and on-field struggles around him, Brees continues to be at the top of his game. He has thrown for at least 325 yards in five of the Saints' six games this season and thrown at least three touchdown passes in five games. In his last three games, including wins over San Diego and Tampa Bay, Brees has thrown 11 touchdown passes and only two interceptions while averaging 8.3, 8.2 and 10.2 yards per attempt. The Broncos have to get enough pressure to create some discomfort, or Brees will add the Denver secondary to his list. 2. Don't lose track of Sproles or Graham Saints tight end Jimmy Graham, a 6-foot-7 matchup nightmare, didn't play last weekend against the Buccaneers because of an ankle injury. But Graham and tailback Darren Sproles have combined for 57 catches this season, including six for touchdowns. Offenses have found room to work against the Broncos' linebackers and safeties in coverage, and you can bet the Saints will test them with Graham and Sproles. When the Saints switch to a three-wide receiver formation, the Broncos will have to cover Sproles, Graham or both with linebackers who haven't always fared that well in the job. 3. Denver needs to dictate the tempo Every team in the NFL seems to want to push the pace on offense, and the Saints are no exception. Brees gets the ball out in a hurry, helping the Saints keep the chains moving. And while the Saints' problems on defense will make it attractive to throw the ball early and often, the Broncos will have to slow the pace at times with their own offense. Opponents are averaging 4.9 yards per carry against the Saints' defense, which is giving up 160.3 yards rushing per game. The best way to limit Brees' production is keeping him on the New Orleans sideline. 4. Take better care of the football Peyton Manning says division games count double in the standings. Well, turnovers count for more than that. The Broncos, who are minus-three in turnover margin this season, have created a significant portion of their problems. The Falcons scored 13 points off turnovers in a six-point win over the Broncos and the Patriots scored seven points off turnovers in a 10-point win over the Broncos. It took an improbable comeback in San Diego for the Broncos to beat the Chargers, who scored 17 points off turnovers. That is being way too generous. 5. Time to get off the roller coaster The Broncos haven't won consecutive games since a six-game winning streak that ended last December. With a favorable schedule, and a road win over the Chargers already in their pocket, the Broncos are poised to make a run at the AFC West title. But they need to start playing sound football. Saints at Broncos: Game plan Jeff Legwold The Denver Broncos October 28, 2012 When the Broncos run The Saints have allowed staggering yardage this season, the most after six games by any NFL team since at least 1940. The Broncos' patience on offense should be rewarded if they can keep their running game as an option. To dictate the tempo, Denver will have to push Saints defensive tackles Brodrick Bunkley (a former Bronco) and Sedrick Ellis off the ball. Offenses have averaged only 2.9 yards a carry over the center against the Saints but have averaged 5.5 yards per carry on the perimeter, including a 7.7 yards per carry around the offensive left end. Edge: Broncos When the Saints run New Orleans ranks last in the 32-team league in carries (averaging 20.3 per game) and last in yards rushing (76.2). The Saints traded back into the first round of the 2011 draft to select Mark Ingram, but the former Alabama star hasn't been a big hit in the NFL. He is averaging only 2.9 yards per carry. Edge: Broncos When the Broncos pass Most teams have been content to pile up first downs against the Saints with short and intermediate plays, but quarterbacks have found success challenging right cornerback Patrick Robinson down the field. Denver's Peyton Manning is one of the league's all-time best at finding a defense's weak spot and pounding away at it. If they avoid turnovers, the Broncos will move the ball and score. Edge: Broncos When the Saints pass Super Bowl-winning New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees continues to pile up extraordinary statistics — including the NFL record for most consecutive games with a touchdown pass, a record that once belonged to the legendary Johnny Unitas at 47. Brees is at 49, a streak that began Oct. 18, 2009, with a four-touchdown game against the Giants. Edge: Saints Special teams New Orleans' Darren Sproles has the potential to wreck the Broncos. Sproles is averaging only 7.9 yards per punt return, but he does have a 48-yard kickoff return. The Broncos rank third in the league in covering both punts and kickoffs. And they have perhaps the league's best power tandem in kicker Matt Prater and punter Britton Colquitt. Edge: Broncos Sunday's NFL games: NFC has dominated games against AFC thus far Jeff Legwold The Denver Post October 28, 2012 The balance of power is rarely in balance in the NFL. And when it comes to the AFC and the NFC, the pendulum swings back and forth, with one of the league's conferences dominating the other. NFC teams have won the past three Super Bowls, but from the 2000 through the 2006 seasons, AFC teams won the Super Bowl six times. Between the 1984 season and the Broncos' victory in Super Bowl XXXII, the NFC won 13 consecutive Super Bowls. This season, when teams from the two conferences have faced each other, it has been a one-sided affair. The NFC teams that are 3-3 or better are 17-5 in games against the AFC. Atlanta (6-0) has built the NFL's only undefeated record by pillaging the AFC West, beating Kansas City, Denver, San Diego and Oakland. The AFC teams that are 3-3 or better, including the Broncos, are only 5-9 against NFC teams. Houston, the AFC's power team, lost its only game against an NFC team so far (Green Bay). Must-see game of the week Falcons at Eagles 11 a.m. The skinny: Both teams are coming off a bye. This will be just the third game the Falcons have played this season against an NFC team. The Falcons' six wins have come against teams that do not currently have winning records. The Eagles have defeated Atlanta in six of their last eight meetings. But the Falcons beat them last season in the Georgia Dome with help from Matt Ryan's four touchdown passes. The difference will be: If Ryan can continue to stake his claim as one of the league's elite quarterbacks. In his past five road games, Ryan has completed 67 percent of his passes for 1,612 yards, 13 touchdowns and only two interceptions. Ryan has three games this season with at least three touchdown passes; the Falcons are 27-0 when he has three TD passes in a game. This will be the Eagles' first game since coach Andy Reid fired defensive coordinator Juan Castillo and promoted secondary coach Todd Bowles to replace Castillo. The call: Falcons 2824. Catch 'em if you can Seahawks at Lions 11 a.m. Both offenses will have to solve powerful, active defensive fronts in this game. The Seahawks have been more limited on offense this season (averaging 293.6 yards per game) than the Lions, but rookie quarterback Russell Wilson has led Seattle to four wins. Lions QB Matt Stafford has 12 touchdown passes in his past six home games, and has three consecutive 300yard passing games at Ford Field. Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson has averaged 103.3 yards per game since the start of the 2011 season, tops in the NFL over that span. The call: Lions 23-17. Redskins at Steelers 11 a.m., KDVR-31 Redskins rookie QB Robert Griffin III leads the NFL in completion percentage (.704), but the Pittsburgh defense presents a time-honored puzzle. Dick LeBeau's style of defense is unique. The Steelers, despite their injuries, lead the AFC in defense, allowing only 277.3 yards per game. Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger is 14-1 in home starts against NFC teams. The call: Steelers 28-23. Patriots vs. Rams 11 a.m., KCNC-4 The Rams spent the whole week in London and the Patriots didn't arrive until Thursday. The Patriots lead the league in scoring (averaging 31 points per game) and total offense (436.1 yards). New England quarterback Tom Brady is 34-8 in starts against NFC teams. The Rams' pass rush must get to Brady. They are tied for fifth in the NFL in sacks. The call: Patriots 3020. Giants at Cowboys 2:25 p.m., KDVR-31 In what has to grate Cowboys owner Jerry Jones as much as anything, the Giants have defeated Dallas in six of their last nine meetings, including last December's game at Cowboys Stadium. Giants QB Eli Manning, who leads the NFL in passing with 2,109 yards, has won five of his last seven starts against Dallas. Manning is 26-5 in October starts. The call: Giants 3119. Quick hitters Panthers at Bears 11 a.m. With a formula that looks much like the 49ers in 2011, the Bears lead the NFL in turnover margin at plus-13 and quarterback Jay Cutler has won his last seven starts at home. The call: Bears 24-17. Chargers at Browns 11 a.m. This is a dangerous game for a team taking as much criticism in its home city as the Chargers are. Despite their numbers, the Browns have moments in pass defense when they can make life difficult for an offense as dependent on throwing the ball as San Diego's is. The call: Browns 2423. Jaguars at Packers 11 a.m. This game has rout written all over it. The Jaguars have the NFL's worst offense, averaging 14.7 points per game. And there may be no hotter QB at the moment than Aaron Rodgers, who leads the league with 19 touchdown passes and a 109.6 rating. The call: Packers 35-10. Dolphins at Jets 11 .a.m The Dolphins have won three times in their last four road games against the Jets. And rookie QB Ryan Tannehill has thrown for a total of 654 yards in his last two road starts. The call: Jets 28-19. Colts at Titans 11 a.m. The Colts have won six of their last nine games in Nashville, Tenn. This will be the first look at rookie QB Andrew Luck for the Titans' defense. The Titans need Chris Johnson — he had his fourth career game with at least 190 yards rushing last weekend — to continue to produce if they are going to dig out from their 1-4 start. The call: Titans 21-20. Raiders at Chiefs 2:05 p.m. The Raiders have won their last five games at Arrowhead Stadium, including a 16-13 overtime thriller last season. Former Broncos backup QB Brady Quinn will start for the Chiefs against former Broncos defensive coordinator Dennis Allen. The call: Raiders 24-16. Broncos Q&A: Rookie running back Ronnie Hillman Tom Kensler The Denver Post October 28, 2012 Although Oregon speedster De'Anthony Thomas was the one to receive cover-story publicity for having participated on a Los Angeles youth football all-star team sponsored by rapper Snoop Dogg, Broncos rookie running back Ronnie Hillman was there too. Hillman, a native of Long Beach, Calif., is two years older than Thomas. They played one game together on Snoop Dogg's all-star team. "Snoop Dogg was around," Hillman recalled of the youth league. "That wasn't the first time I'd seen him. But it was kind of cool being on his all-star team. You'd see him over there, but after a while, you get used to it. It's kind of like being around Peyton (Manning)." A third-round draft pick out of San Diego State, Hillman (5-foot-10, 190 pounds) has rushed for 50 yards on 17 carries as a backup to Broncos starter Willis McGahee. Hillman also has four receptions for 37 yards. Q: Your nickname while starring for La Habra (Calif.) High School was "the Reggie Bush of Orange County." Was the former Southern California and current Dolphins running back one of your idols? A: That nickname was something that a newspaper gave me. I didn't try to pattern my game after his at all. Some (reporters) thought I resembled him. It was a nice compliment, but I didn't go around and try to be like Reggie Bush. Q: Considering that nobody can be credited with a 100-yard run from scrimmage, your 99-yard touchdown run for San Diego State against Wyoming, almost a year ago to the day, put you in select company. What do you recall about that carry? A: It was crazy. I just remember trying to make a play for our team because we were down. I went up the middle and then juked a couple of Wyoming players. But I also got some blocks that helped, so I have to give the whole offense credit. It's funny, I wasn't even winded after 99 yards. It was all the adrenaline, I guess. Q: While your high school transcript was being approved by the NCAA (he was eventually cleared for 2010), you sat out the 2009 season as a "grayshirt" and spent that autumn in Georgia, where your mother lived. Is it true you waited tables at an Applebee's that fall? A: Yes, it's true. I didn't like waiting tables, but it was a learning experience. You're waiting tables for all kinds of people. Some people are grumpy. Some people are bossy. I don't really like to be told what to do and not be able to say something about it. But you have to deal with that. It helps you with your social skills." Q: Your impressive rushing stats at San Diego State were similar, and yet they reveal improvement: 1,532 yards and 17 touchdowns as a freshman in 2010 and 1,711 yards and 19 touchdowns as a 2011 sophomore. How do you look back on your two seasons at San Diego State? A: I wanted to improve from one year to the next, and that's what I did. I've always been able to do that. Even from my sophomore year of high school to my junior year, I got better. It's being able to adapt better to situations. Q: What's been the biggest adjustment to playing in the NFL? A: Speed. The players are faster. But mainly it's the faster pace that the offense is going with the no-huddle. Q: You're a speed back, and yet you haven't broken a big gain yet as a Bronco. Has that been frustrating? A: I don't let it be. I'm just out there playing my role and trying to help the team win any way I can. It will come. Ronnie Hillman file Position: Running back Height: 5-foot-10 Weight: 190 pounds Hometown: Long Beach, Calif. College: San Diego State Draft: Third round , 2012, by the Broncos 2012 stats: 17 carries for 50 yards; four receptions for 37 yards. No NFL touchdowns. Saints, Broncos set for fireworks Eddie Pells Associated Press October 28, 2012 DENVER — If the Denver Broncos and New Orleans Saints put on as compelling a show on the field as they do off of it, tonight’s game should be a blockbuster. The two teams that have captured the bulk of the NFL headlines for the past nine months — Denver by chasing, then landing, Peyton Manning, New Orleans for its bounty scandal — meet in what’s being plugged as an entertaining, high-scoring shootout. The Broncos (3-3) have Manning, who is on pace for a 4,800-yard season and, in Denver’s last game, became the first quarterback in NFL history to throw for 300 yards, three touchdowns and complete 70 percent of his passes in three straight games. Trying to keep pace with Manning is Drew Brees, who has grown used to trying to match teams point for point this season. New Orleans (2-4) leads the league in passing yards but is last in rushing. On the other side of the ball, the Saints not only have the league’s last-ranked defense, but they’ve given up more yards (2,793) than any team over the first six games since 1950, which is as far back as STATS LLC can search its NFL database. “I feel like, in a lot of ways, those numbers don’t tell the story,” Brees said. Indeed, you must look beyond the numbers to figure out the Saints this year. Almost every part of their 2012 resume so far — the pass-happy offense, the woeful defense, games decided by an average score of 30-29 — has been shaped by the uncertainty and turmoil that’s surrounded them since the NFL penalized them for running a money-for-hits bounty pool. The defense’s emotional leader, linebacker Jonathan Vilma, will play for the second straight game this week but his future is cloudy because of the uncertain status of his season-long suspension, which has been put on hold while it’s under appeal. The appeal itself has been the issue of this week, with the NFL looking to former Commissioner Paul Tagliabue to decide the case and the players’ union balking at that. Meanwhile, Joe Vitt returns to the team as the interim head coach for the rest of the season. Vitt, normally the linebackers coach, is coming off his own six-game suspension and now takes over with New Orleans already four games behind undefeated Atlanta in the NFC South. The real head coach, Sean Payton, is suspended for the year. The Saints are also getting used to the scheme being run by first-year defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. “At the end of the day, no one wants to hear our excuses,” said Vitt, who wasted no time and rejoined the team for the flight back from last week’s win in Tampa. “The thing is what it is. And we’re going to be held accountable for our performance and we’re going to be held accountable for our win-loss record and play the hand we’re dealt.” Not a very good hand, to hear Brees tell it. Have the Saints been getting a raw deal this year? “I think that’s kind of obvious at this point, isn’t it?” said the quarterback, who has thrown at least one touchdown pass in a record 49 straight games. “But for us, we’re midway through the season here and we’re focused on winning football games.” Though they’ve won two straight, the Saints still look very much like a team that needs to score four or five touchdowns to have a chance in any given game. Tonight’s over-under is 55½, a full eight points higher than the next highest game on the board in Las Vegas. Manning and the Broncos are a big part of that, as well. They have the NFL’s fourth-ranked passing game — partly a product of Manning, who has answered all questions about his health and arm strength after sitting out a year and becoming a free agent, and partly because Denver has had to play come-from-behind football in almost all its games so far. The Broncos took that to an extreme last time they were on the field, two weeks ago in San Diego; they turned a 24-0 deficit into a 35-24 win, marking the first time in NFL history a team has trailed by that much and gone on to win by double digits. “It certainly says something good about our team, that we can come back and we can score when we need to,” Manning said. “But we’re still looking for that 60minute game, not that 30- or 40-minute game.” If the Saints could get even half a solid game out of their defense, it would be an improvement. A team that’s giving up an average of 465 yards a game certainly isn’t talking about shutting down Manning completely. “You can try to get in his head, but more often than not you’ll probably get in your own head and mess yourself up,” safety Roman Harper said. “If you do the same thing two or three times, that’s when he starts to get a bead on it.” None of the Broncos, meanwhile, want to hear about how badly the Saints have been struggling. “What you can’t do is get caught up in the hype,” defensive lineman Kevin Vickerson said. “They’ve been under a lot of turmoil with the coaches and the bounty suspensions. But at the same time, it’s still a group of good men over there. They’ve got a good team. But it’s not really what they do. It’s what we do.” Tracy Porter unlikely to be cleared to face former team Dan Hanzus NFL.com October 27, 2012 Denver Broncos cornerback Tracy Porter is listed as questionable for Sunday night's game against the New Orleans Saints, but sources tell NFL.com and NFL Network's Michelle Beisner that Porter is unlikely to play. Porter was at the Broncos' facility for Saturday's walkthrough and reiterated his desire to play against his former team. Beisner reported that the consensus inside the building is that doctors will err on the side of caution. "Everything looked normal," Porter told Beisner, "but they still want to make sure I'm 100 percent before they put me on the field." Porter didn't play against the San Diego Chargers on Oct. 15 after experiencing light-headedness and a racing heart -- symptoms similar to the ones he felt before suffering a seizure in August. Porter did not practice with the team on Friday. Porter said doctors haven't been able to pinpoint why he suffered the seizure, though they're confident it won't happen again. "You want to know the cause but if they can't pinpoint it, they say that's a good thing and it's not likely you're going to have any more," he said. "With them saying that, it takes a little stress off my chest. That makes me feel a little better." Chris Harris is in line to take Porter's place in the lineup. Beisner reports that Harris will start at right corner, with Tony Carter playing as the third cornerback in the nickel package. Sunday Playbook: Brees vs. Manning a good bet to entertain Milt Northrop The Buffalo News October 28, 2012 When two for-certain future Hall of Fame quarterbacks hook up in a National Football League game, it’s an intriguing event. Most of the attention in an otherwise mundane Week Eight schedule in the NFL today will be directed towards tonight’s game between the New Orleans Saints and the Broncos in Denver and quarterbacks Drew Brees and Peyton Manning. Two of the most productive passers in NFL history – Brees of the Saints and Manning of the Broncos – will go at it in the Mile High City. Their career accomplishments are already piled a mile high, figuratively. Last week in a 35-28 win over Tampa Bay, Brees passed for four touchdowns, adding to his NFL record of 49 straight games with a scoring pass. It was also his 16th career game with 300 yards and four passing TDs, tying Dan Marino for the most in league history. Manning owns the NFL record with 67 games with 300 or more passing yards. Brees has 62. Also, Manning engineered his 47th career game-winning drive in the fourth quarter two weeks ago when he led Denver to a 35-24 win at San Diego after the Broncos trailed 24-0. That tied Marino for most career fourth-quarter comebacks since 1970. No lead should be safe tonight. The franchises have not met since 2008 and that one was an offensive show with Denver winning, 34-32. Game of the day Saints (2-4) at Broncos (3-3) TV: Ch. 2, 8:20 p.m. The line: Broncos (-6) The scoop: Easily the best and most interesting game on schedule matching Brees and Manning. ... Broncos coming off a bye after rallying from 24-0 to win at San Diego. Brees threw four TDs in first half as Saints hung on for 35-28 win at Tampa Bay. Interim head coach Joe Vitt comes off suspension to guide Saints. Outlook: Manning should have fun carving up Saints’ pass defense, which gave up 415 yards to Bucs’ Josh Freeman last week. Denver, 42-35. Saints face Peyton Manning in Denver Gary Estwick The Sun Herald October 27, 2012 METAIRIE-- First, the good news: The Denver Broncos are prone to slow starts. Then the not-so-good news - at least for Saints fans entering tonight's 7:30 p.m., nationally-televised game: Denver, led by its future Hall of Fame quarterback, knows how to finish strong. Peyton Manning, its mega-free agent acquisition, has engineered two comebacks in 2012, thanks to his team's ability to make secondhalf adjustments and just as important, execute them. While the Saints (2-4) have faced roller-coaster consistency this season in the fourth quarter, the Broncos (3-3) have outscored opponents 79-6. "It certainly shows we are capable of coming back, playing with a sense of urgency," Manning said. "We're still working on being more efficient in the first half." Denver trailed Pittsburgh 10-7 during its Sept. 9 season opener before outscoring the Steelers 25-9 in the second half, including 17-6 in the fourth quarter. On Oct. 15, Denver trailed San Diego 24-0 at halftime then scored 14 points in third quarter and in the fourth, another 21 points. The Broncos won, 35-24. "They're never out of a game because they have a quarterback who can score points," Saints linebacker Scott Shanle said. Manning nearly completed rallies during losses this season to Atlanta and Houston, so if there's something the new quarterback has taught Broncos fans, it's to never leave Mile High Stadium early. "If there's ever been a game where we're going to put finish as a premium, it's going to be this week," Saints Interim Coach Joe Vitt said. "We're going to have to finish this game." The Saints, thanks to their potent passing offense, has the ability to transform a potent rout into a close game, which is why they have not lost a game in 2012 by more than eight points. Still, quarterback Drew Brees and his 32nd-ranked defense have been unable to mimic Denver's second-half efforts. The Saints have outscored opponents 52-42 in the fourth quarter, a respectable amount of points but not enough help from the defense. Last Sunday, the Saints allowed Tampa Bay quarterback Josh Freeman to lead a late scoring drive in the fourth quarter, capped by his TD pass to Dallas Clark with 4:10 remaining. Then, after a Saints punt, Freeman drove the Buccaneers to the Saints 9, and on a fourth down with five second left, found Mike Williams in the end zone - but his catch was ruled illegal after he was forced out earlier in the play. The Saints know they can't make the same mistake against Denver. "It's a huge difference," Saints defensive tackle Akiem Hicks said of Denver's fourth-quarter scoring differential. "We definitely want people to be able to say the same thing about our team, and we're going to keep working hard and get to where we need to be." Peyton Manning’s secret workouts at Duke a key to his rehab Darin Gannt ProFootballTalk.com October 27, 2012 Peyton Manning could have gone anywhere and worked with anyone while he rehabbed from neck surgery last year. But Manning chose to work with one of the people he trusts the most. Jeff Duncan of the New Orleans Times-Picayune details the lengths Manning went to rehab on his terms with trusted confidante David Cutcliffe at Duke University, showing both his loyalty and desire to keep things quiet. Cutcliffe was Manning’s college offensive coordinator at Tennessee, and Duke’s indoor facility was an off-the-beaten-path place to work. “It was really kind of a fun experience for he and I both,” Manning said. “We kind of both got to go back in time, if you will. I can’t thank him enough for sacrificing that time for me.” After his third neck surgery on Sept. 8, 2011, Manning didn’t throw a football until late December, when he made the first of several trips to Durham, N.C. He stayed in a guest room at Cutcliffe’s home, and the Duke coach didn’t even tell his assistants who was dropping by. “Our equipment people knew he was there,” Cutcliffe said, “and that was it.” For months he’d work out quietly, with a few spare players. In March, Cutcliffe put Manning through the most grueling workout, a recreation of his 2009 AFC Championship Game win over the Jets, replaying every play from that day. Manning flew in former Colts teammates Jeff Saturday, Austin Collie and Dallas Clark, current Broncos receiver Brandon Stokley and former Colts offense coordinator Tom Moore for the simulation. “It was pretty impressive,” Stokley said. “It showed you exactly what kind of detail Peyton went to in trying to get back. Most people would never even think about doing something like that.” After evaluating the tape of that practice, and comparing it side-by-side with the Jets game, Cutcliffe was able to pronounce Manning was back. “He was on it,” Cutcliffe said. “Some throws were better than what he did before, with the amount of the velocity, the throws across the field. His conditioning, his legs were back. “Afterward, guys were saying, ‘Dang! This is Peyton.’” While it might be a bit of a stretch to say he looks like the old Peyton, he looks close enough to himself for the Broncos, thanks to the work Cutcliffe did during the winter. Broncos vs. Saints: Final Preview Sam Davis DenverBroncos.com October 27, 2012 DenverBroncos.com takes an in-depth look at the Week 8 clash between the Broncos and Saints on Sunday Night Football. ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -- Week 8 brings another matchup of premiere quarterbacks, as the Broncos host Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints on Sunday Night Football. The Saints, a playoff team in each of the last three years, come to Denver riding a twogame winning streak after starting off 0-4. The Broncos, meanwhile, will look to build on a stellar second-half performance in Week 6 to piece together back-to-back wins for the first time in 2012. WHEN THE BRONCOS HAVE THE BALL: The Denver offense knows what it's up against. Each time it steps out on the field, on the other sideline sits Saints quarterback Drew Brees and the most efficient scoring attack in the NFL. Throughout the week, the Broncos' offensive players have embraced added responsibility to maintain drives and finish them with points. "They put up a lot of points, so we'll have to put up points," wide receiver Demaryius Thomas said. "I feel like it's going to be a dog fight with who has the best offense. I'm pretty sure our defense can get stops, but Drew Brees is a great quarterback and he's smart. You know they'll put up points on the board so we have to go out as an offense and try to put together a drive every time we put up points, even if it's just three. Our goal is to get a touchdown, but every time we're on the field we want to get points." After scoring touchdowns on three of its last four possessions in the second half against San Diego, Thomas believes the offense will continue to build on the rhythm it established. His confidence in his quarterback and his teammates has reached an alltime high. "You just see (quarterback) Peyton (Manning) do his work, and do all his things, I feel like everything was perfect," Thomas said. "I feel like the sky is the limit. I feel like we'll just build onto that and get better." While maintaining offensive efficiency from the second half is a goal for Denver, another first-half performance like it had in San Diego could dig Denver in too deep a hole. "This is not a team that you want to fall that far behind because they have the potential to keep scoring and keep extending that lead," Manning said. "It sure would be nice to try to put together that 60-minute game starting this week." WHEN THE SAINTS HAVE THE BALL: Facing a quarterback like Brees, it's unlikely the defense will pitch a shutout. What Defensive Coordinator Jack Del Rio's unit aims to accomplish on Sunday is play mistake-free and stop the Saints from extending drives on third downs. "This is one of those teams where you're not going to go in and shut them down," safety Rahim Moore said. "They're going to get their plays. But if we eliminate most of them, then we'll be fine. They're as good as it gets on third down. All we have to do is just challenge all throws and play hard and let the chips fall where they may." Offensively, New Orleans looks to establish more balance than it has in its first six games. In 2012, the Saints have passed it more than twice as much as they've ran it. They expect that to change on Sunday night, and the defense is honoring it. "They've got a three-headed monster back there at running back with (Mark) Ingram, (Darren) Sproles and Pierre Thomas," defensive tackle Kevin Vickerson said. "They've got a well-rounded offense, and we've got to come out, and it's another big test for us to come out and prove ourselves on national television." While Vickerson and the rest of the defensive linemen will respect the run, the biggest challenge in playing the Saints sits directly under center. If Brees is able to continue his recent success - 11 touchdown passes and two interceptions in his last three games the Broncos could be in for a long night. "He's their bread and butter," Moore said. "He's their franchise. He's their best player. We're going to have to really come with it." KEY TO THE GAME: Building on a Win The Broncos played perhaps their best half of football of the 2012 season in Week 6 against the Chargers. On Sunday night, Denver will look to carry the momentum from the win through the bye and into Week 8, to string together its first winning streak of the season. "Build. That's my mindset, is building on the last game," Vickerson said. "It was a good victory. We're trying to get a streak started ourselves and build on that game." SERIES HISTORY The Broncos and Saints have faced off in the regular season nine times, with Denver taking seven of those contests. At home, the Broncos have won four of five, their only loss coming in a 30-28 battle in 1994. Since that game, the Broncos have won the next three contests, two in New Orleans and one at home. Most recently, the Broncos won a close one in Denver in 2008, 34-32. NOTEWORTHY NUMBERS Both teams rank in the top-10 in the league in yards per game, yards per play, and points per game. The Saints rank inside the top five in all three of those offensive categories. Both offenses are also very solid on third down. The Broncos convert on 45.3 percent of third down opportunities, tied for fourth-best in the league, while the Saints are the second-best third-down offense, converting 48.2 percent of the time. The New Orleans defense is surrendering the most yards per game (465.5) and per play (6.6) in 2012. The Broncos are 29th in the league in third-down defense, allowing their opponent to convert on 45.6 percent of their third-downs. ANY-MINUTE MILESTONES Safety Mike Adams needs one pass defensed to set a single-season career high. Cornerback Champ Bailey needs one interception to tie Mike Harden (33) for the fifthmost in franchise history. Defensive end Elvis Dumervil, with four forced fumbles on the year, is one shy of taking the NFL lead and setting a career high in that category. Quarterback Peyton Manning needs one game-winning scoring drive to pass Dan Marino (47) for most all-time. Running back Willis McGahee needs one rushing touchdown to tie Maurice Jones-Drew of Jacksonville for the second-most among active players. BACK TO THE BAYOU Cornerback Tracy Porter and Defensive Coordinator Jack Del Rio have each spent time with the Saints. Porter played the previous four seasons in New Orleans, while Del Rio spent two years (1997-98) on the coaching staff. Wide receiver Brandon Stokley hails from Lafayette, La., the same hometown as Saints wideout Devery Henderson. Stokley played his college ball at Southwestern Louisiana. BROADCAST INFORMATION The game will air nationally on NBC, with Al Michaels (play-by-play), and Cris Collinsworth (color commentary) calling the game and Michele Tafoya reporting from the sidelines. Locally, KOA Radio (850 AM) will feature Dave Logan (play-by-play) and Ed McCaffrey (color commentary) with Andy Lindahl reporting from the sidelines. Celebrating for a Cause Von Miller DenverBroncos.com October 27, 2012 We’re back from the bye week and focused on another tough game this week. During the bye, I went to New York to promote my foundation, Von’s Vision, which gives back to underprivileged kids who can’t afford glasses, eye exams, lasik surgery and contacts. I went to New York to promote that with the hip hop dance experience video game. Every time I do that sack dance they donate $1,000 to my foundation, so hopefully I can make a couple of big plays and raise money for an important cause. I’m going to change it up a little bit, but hopefully we can see it a lot of times this season. Every time I can do it, it means more money for Von’s Vision, which is very important to me. It was great to get away from football and relax your mind for a bit, but you know what? There’s no job like this, and I’m happy to be back. We face a really good offense this week led by Drew Brees. He’s a great quarterback and we’re definitely going to have to be on top of our stuff. We’re going to have to get off on third downs. Our personnel, we’re too deep, personnel wise, with Elvis, Champ, Rahim and Tracy Porter, we should be rated a lot higher on third downs. So, I’m hoping we have a positive week this week, get off on third downs and that’ll be a key to this game. It’s always great to play a primetime game, for family and friends to see nationwide, and it’s good for our city. It’s good for Denver to promote what we’re doing out here. Gig em!
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