Reply

Old 07-27-2007, 09:13 PM   #1 (permalink)
Professor
TGM Trillionaire
 
Professor's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Philly boy in Cali
Posts: 33,859
Professor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond reputeProfessor has a reputation beyond repute
Default Henry a tireless numbers cruncher

Rocky Mountain News - Denver and Colorado's reliable source for breaking news, sports and entertainment: Broncos & NFL

ENGLEWOOD - There are plenty of numbers to crunch in an NFL offense, all swirling around in a playbook waiting for their time to come.

But at the moment, only two concern Broncos running back Travis Henry.

One. And one.

"That's it," Henry said with a smile. "One and one. Hope it adds up to me."

One back. One ball. That's it. So, what exactly does it equal?

It depends, in a salary-cap league. Depends on who gets the question. And it certainly depends on the running back with the ball.

"Sure, you'd like one guy who gets 2,000 yards like T.D. (Terrell Davis)," Broncos coach Mike Shanahan said. "That's a perfect scenario, but that doesn't always happen. Well, it almost never happens, but the perfect scenario is to have that one back to carry the load.

"That guy's got to be durable, have pretty good size, he's got to play hurt a little bit to survive the wear and tear that goes on during the season. Some guys embrace it, they want it that way. Some guys just don't. They want the 20 carries a game and that's it, they want to be done with it."

But Henry doesn't want to just embrace the idea of being the guy. He wants to grab it and lug it as many times as Shanahan lets him.

He wants to help turn back the clock on the idea that an NFL backfield has become a place for sharing, a place where many hands make light work.

But following Davis' footsteps in the Broncos offense is certainly a grueling quest.

Davis carried the ball at least 369 times in the two seasons that ended in Super Bowl wins - 1997 and '98 - and carried the ball 345 times in '96, when the Broncos finished 13-3.

Henry's résumé - it includes three 1,000-yard seasons and two seasons with at least 325 carries - points to the potential to carry that type of load.

"Me, personally, I'm from the old school," Henry said. "From watching Emmitt Smith, Barry Sanders, Walter Payton, all those guys, it was one back. That's it. One guy got the ball.

"It's good to have the backup in case something goes wrong, but as far as rotating during the game, that takes away from a premier back trying to get in a rhythm. So, a two-back rotation? I guess I don't see it."
__________________
Professor is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are On


VerticalSports
Baseball Forum Golf Forum Boxing Forum Snowmobile Forum
Basketball Forum Soccer Forum MMA Forum PWC Forum
Football Forum Cricket Forum Wrestling Forum ATV Forum
Hockey Forum Volleyball Forum Paintball Forum Snowboarding Forum
Tennis Forum Rugby Forums Lacrosse Forum Skiing Forums
Copyright (C) Verticalscope Inc LinkBacks Enabled by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC8
vBCredits v1.4 Copyright ©2007, PixelFX Studios