 |
| Dumervil had 12 1/2 sacks for an otherwise porous defense.
|
| Doug Pensinger/Getty Images |
|
|
| | 2008 Schedule |
| |
September
8 at Oakland (M)
14 SAN DIEGO
21 NEW ORLEANS
28 at Kansas City
|
October
5 TAMPA BAY
12 JACKSONVILLE
20 at New England (M)
26 Bye
|
| |
November
2 MIAMI
9 at Cleveland
16 at Atlanta
23 OAKLAND
30 at N.Y. Jets
|
December
7 KANSAS CITY
14 at Carolina
21 BUFFALO
28 at San Diego
|
|
|
| | SPOTLIGHT |
| |
Selvin Young, Running Back: No one wanted Terrell Davis, Olandis Gary or Mike Anderson, either. So when Young went undrafted out of Texas in 2007, he signed with Denver and looked to those former 1,000-yard rushers for motivation. Now Young is setting his goals absurdly high: 2,000 yards rushing this season. "It's a confidence thing," he says. "You've got to speak it before you can do it."
.
|
|
Yet another new coordinator tries to fix a defense that is vulnerable to the run -- in a division full of elite backs.
Elvis Dumervil is one of the best young pass rushers in the NFL, a leader on
the field and in the locker room, the kind of ambassador whose face a franchise
can plaster on billboards all over town. But coach him at your own risk. Over
the past five seasons -- three at Louisville and then two in Denver -- Dumervil has
had five defensive coordinators. That means a different playbook to study,
a different scheme to learn, a different terminology to memorize each
year. "I should have kept a page from each one of those playbooks," Dumervil
says. "I'd have a pretty good collection by now."
The high turnover rate has nothing to do with Dumervil, a 5' 11"
defensive end who, by all accounts, is a coach's dream. Despite his height, or
lack thereof, Dumervil led the Broncos with 121/2 sacks last season and was
an alternate for the Pro Bowl. But it can make a guy paranoid when his boss
keeps getting fired. As a rookie Dumervil watched Larry Coyer get the ax. Last
season, Jim Bates was ushered out of town. This year, Dumervil is intent on
stopping the streak and keeping Bob Slowik employed for a while.
Slowik has stepped into one of the most precarious positions in the league.
Coach Mike Shanahan helps run the offense, so when the team falters, Shanahan
can blame either himself or his defensive coordinator. After last season, when
Denver ranked 30th in the league against the run, the choice was obvious.
"Everybody had a finger in the pie," Dumervil says. "Some weeks it was the
players, but some weeks it was the scheme. There was too much 'If this happens,
do that,' and 'If that happens, do this.' It's a lot simpler now. There's not as
much thinking."
Bates was doomed five games into last season, when the Broncos were giving up
an average of 187.6 rushing yards. They trashed the seven-man front that Bates
was using and brought strong safety John Lynch up to help against the run. It
was hard to tell who was making the decisions -- Bates was listed as an assistant
coach in charge of defense, while Slowik was a defensive coordinator in charge
of the secondary. But those titles were slightly misleading. "Jim ran the
defense," Slowik said. "I coached the defensive backs."
After Bates was dismissed, the defensive backs lobbied hard for Coach
Slow, citing his engaging
personality and businesslike approach. They didn't mind that he had not run a
defense since 2004, when the Packers hired and fired him in the same year. "Many
times, I thought I would never get this opportunity again," Slowik says.
Hiring a new coordinator is often a Band-Aid solution for a deeper problem in
Denver: finding players to help Dumervil anchor the front seven. The Broncos
were 7-9 last season, only the second losing record in Shanahan's 13 years with
the team. They are talking playoffs this year, but they are in the same division
as LaDainian Tomlinson, Larry Johnson and Darren McFadden, so they first have to
stop a few sweeps. Slowik cannot rely anymore on Lynch, who asked for his
release and signed with New England, but Denver did acquire 308-pound defensive
tackle Dewayne Robertson from the Jets. Asked his job description, Robertson
says, "To cause havoc."
If Robertson and Dumervil can hold the line, the Broncos should contend for a
wild-card spot, and Slowik should be back next year. Otherwise, Dumervil is in
danger of his streak reaching six. "When you've had as many defensive
coordinators as I have, you see that they use a lot of the same terminology,"
Dumervil says. "One of them says something and it reminds you of another. I like
to connect the different plays they use."
If it seems that Dumervil is training for a second career, he is. Despite all
the upheaval he has witnessed over the past five years, he wants to be a
football coach. -- Lee Jenkins
|