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2005 Denver Broncos season

NFL team season


NFL team season

FieldValue
teamDenver Broncos
year2005
record13–3
division_place1st AFC West
ownerPat Bowlen
presidentPat Bowlen
coachMike Shanahan
general_managerTed Sundquist and Mike Shanahan
off_coachGary Kubiak
def_coachLarry Coyer
stadiumInvesco Field at Mile High
playoffs**Won [Divisional Playoffs](2005-06-nfl-playoffs)**
(vs. [Patriots](2005-new-england-patriots-season)) 27–13
Lost [AFC Championship](2005-06-nfl-playoffs)
(vs. [Steelers](2005-pittsburgh-steelers-season)) 17–34
shortnavlinkBroncos seasons

(vs. Patriots) 27–13 Lost AFC Championship (vs. Steelers) 17–34

2005 season

After losing their first game 34–10 to the Miami Dolphins on September 11, the Broncos won 5 straight games, defeating the San Diego Chargers 20–17, the Kansas City Chiefs 30–10, the Jacksonville Jaguars 20–7, the Washington Redskins 21–19, and the two-time defending champion New England Patriots 28–20 on October 16 before losing to the New York Giants on October 23 by a final score of 24–23, courtesy of an Amani Toomer touchdown much like the Broncos 1998 season where they suffered their first loss of the year. They then beat the defending NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles 49–21 on October 30. In that game, the Broncos became the first team in NFL history to have two players, Mike Anderson and Tatum Bell, rush for over 100 yards and another player, Jake Plummer, pass for over 300 yards in a single game. They then beat the Oakland Raiders on November 13, 31–17. They beat the New York Jets on November 20, 27–0. It was the first time the Broncos had shut out a team at home since the Carolina Panthers on November 9, 1997. They played the Dallas Cowboys on Thanksgiving day, November 24, winning a very hard fought game in overtime 24–21. The key play that led to Jason Elam's 24-yard game-winning field goal was a 55-yard run by Ron Dayne who filled in for the injured Tatum Bell. They lost to the Chiefs 31–27 on December 4, but defeated the Baltimore Ravens the following week 12–10. On December 17, the Broncos defeated the Buffalo Bills 28–17. On Christmas Eve 2005, the Denver Broncos clinched the AFC West division title as they finished 8–0 at Invesco Field, beating the Oakland Raiders 22–3. On December 31, 2005, the Broncos got win number 13 by going on the road and sweeping their division rivals, the Chargers, with a final score of 23–7.

The Broncos entered their third consecutive year in the playoffs with the momentum of a four-game winning streak. With a record of 13–3, they were tied with the Seattle Seahawks for second overall in the league, behind the 14–2 Indianapolis Colts. They were seeded number two in the AFC behind the Colts. On January 14, 2006, the Broncos defeated the two-time defending champions, the New England Patriots, 27–13, ending the Patriots chance of becoming the first NFL team ever to win three consecutive Super Bowl championships. The last team with a chance of winning three consecutive Super Bowls before the Patriots were the Broncos themselves. The Broncos' run came to an end by losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Championship 34–17 on January 22, 2006. Their strength of controlling the ball collapsed with 4 turnovers. They were outscored in the first half 24–3 and were not able to come from behind to win in the second half. The Steelers went on to win Super Bowl XL.

Offseason

The Broncos failed to retain safety Kenoy Kennedy, who signed with the Detroit Lions, defensive end Reggie Hayward, who signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars and cornerback Kelly Herndon, who signed with the Seattle Seahawks, and offensive guard P.J. Alexander was released before the start of regular season. Also running back Garrison Hearst and offensive tackle Dan Neil were released and eventually retired.

During the offseason, the Broncos brought back Keith Burns and Ian Gold after one season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Also trading running back Reuben Droughns to the Cleveland Browns for defensive lineman Ebenezer Ekuban and Michael Myers, also signing defensive end Courtney Brown and Gerard Warren as the former Browns were known to be the "Browncos". Including the signing of 49ers defensive end John Engelberger and New York Giants running back Ron Dayne.

Future Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver Jerry Rice suited up for the Broncos in four preseason games, catching four passes for 24 yards. He retired before the start of the regular season.

NFL draft

Main article: 2005 NFL draft

Personnel

Staff / Coaches

  • President and chief executive officer – Pat Bowlen

  • Executive vice president of football operations/head coach – Mike Shanahan

  • Assistant to head coach – Troy Calhoun

  • Offensive coordinator – Gary Kubiak

  • Quarterbacks – Pat McPherson

  • Running backs – Bobby Turner

  • Wide receivers – Steve Watson

  • Tight ends – Tim Brewster

  • Offensive line – Rick Dennison

  • Coaching intern – Mike McDaniel

  • Defensive coordinator – Larry Coyer

  • Defensive line/ends – Jacob Burney

  • Defensive line/tackles – Andre Patterson

  • Linebackers – Kirk Doll

  • Defensive backs – Bob Slowik

  • Assistant defensive backs – Jimmy Spencer

  • Defensive assistant – Jim Ryan

  • Defensive assistant – Ryan Slowik

  • Special teams – Ronnie Bradford

  • Special teams assistant – Thomas McGaughey

  • Strength and conditioning – Rich Tuten

  • Assistant strength and conditioning – Greg Saporta

  • Assistant strength and conditioning – Cedric Smith

Roster

  • Jake Plummer

  • Bradlee Van Pelt

  • Mike Anderson

  • Tatum Bell

  • Ron Dayne

  • Kyle Johnson FB

  • Cecil Sapp FB

  • Charlie Adams KR/PR

  • Todd Devoe

  • Ashley Lelie

  • Rod Smith

  • David Terrell

  • Darius Watts

  • Stephen Alexander

  • Wesley Duke

  • Nate Jackson

  • Jeb Putzier

  • Cooper Carlisle G

  • George Foster T

  • Cornell Green T

  • Ben Hamilton G

  • Matt Lepsis T

  • Chris Myers C/G

  • Tom Nalen C

  • Taylor Whitley G

  • Courtney Brown DE

  • Marco Coleman DE

  • Ebenezer Ekuban DE

  • John Engelberger DE

  • Michael Myers DT

  • Monsanto Pope DT

  • Trevor Pryce DE

  • Gerard Warren DT

  • Demetrin Veal DT

  • Keith Burns MLB

  • Patrick Chukwurah OLB

  • Ian Gold OLB

  • Louis Green OLB

  • Al Wilson MLB

  • D.J. Williams OLB

  • Hamza Abdullah FS

  • Roc Alexander CB/KR

  • Champ Bailey CB

  • Sam Brandon FS

  • Curome Cox CB/S

  • Nick Ferguson SS

  • Domonique Foxworth CB

  • John Lynch FS

  • Karl Paymah CB

  • Darrent Williams CB/KR/PR

  • Jason Elam K

  • Mike Leach LS

  • Todd Sauerbrun P

  • P. J. Alexander C (NF-Inj.) [[File:Injury icon.svg|7px]]

  • Brandon Browner CB (IR) [[File:Injury icon.svg|7px]]

  • Dwayne Carswell G (NF-Inj.) [[File:Injury icon.svg|7px]]

  • Jeff Shoate CB (IR) [[File:Injury icon.svg|7px]]

  • Chris Young S (IR) [[File:Injury icon.svg|7px]]

  • Josh Buhl LB

  • Cedric Cobbs RB

  • Paul Ernster K (IR) [[File:Injury icon.svg|7px]]

  • George Gause DE

  • Rob Hunt C

  • Corey Jackson DE

  • Patrice Mwamba DT Int'l

  • Brandon Miree RB

  • Erik Pears T

  • Antwaun Rogers CB

Schedule

Preseason

Denver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"WeekDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"DateDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"OpponentDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"ResultDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"Record1234
August 13at [Houston Texans](2005-houston-texans-season)**W** 20–141–0
August 20[San Francisco 49ers](2005-san-francisco-49ers-season)**W** 26–212–0
August 27[Indianapolis Colts](2005-indianapolis-colts-season)**W** 37–243–0
September 2at [Arizona Cardinals](2005-arizona-cardinals-season)**W** 30–214–0

Regular season

Denver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"WeekDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"DateDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"OpponentDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"ResultDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"RecordDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"TVDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"Attendance123456789*Bye*1011121314151617
September 11at [Miami Dolphins](2005-miami-dolphins-season)**L** 10–340–1CBS72,324
September 18**[San Diego Chargers](2005-san-diego-chargers-season)****W** 20–171–1CBS75,310
**[Kansas City Chiefs](2005-kansas-city-chiefs-season)****W** 30–102–1ABC76,381
October 2at [Jacksonville Jaguars](2005-jacksonville-jaguars-season)**W** 20–73–1CBS66,045
October 9[Washington Redskins](2005-washington-redskins-season)**W** 21–194–1FOX75,880
October 16[New England Patriots](2005-new-england-patriots-season)**W** 28–205–1CBS76,571
October 23at [New York Giants](2005-new-york-giants-season)**L** 23–245–2CBS78,516
October 30[Philadelphia Eagles](2005-philadelphia-eagles-season)**W** 49–216–2FOX76,530
November 13at **[Oakland Raiders](2005-oakland-raiders-season)****W** 31–177–2CBS62,779
November 20[New York Jets](2005-new-york-jets-season)**W** 27–08–2CBS76,255
at [Dallas Cowboys](2005-dallas-cowboys-season)**W** 24–219–2CBS63,273
December 4at **[Kansas City Chiefs](2005-kansas-city-chiefs-season)****L** 27–319–3CBS78,261
December 11[Baltimore Ravens](2005-baltimore-ravens-season)**W** 12–1010–3CBS75,651
at [Buffalo Bills](2005-buffalo-bills-season)**W** 28–1711–3ESPN71,887
December 24**[Oakland Raiders](2005-oakland-raiders-season)****W** 22–312–3CBS76,212
December 31at **[San Diego Chargers](2005-san-diego-chargers-season)****W** 23–713–3CBS65,513
Denver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"**Note**: Intra-division opponents are in **bold** text.

Playoffs

Denver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"WeekDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"DateDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"OpponentDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"ResultDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"RecordDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"TVDenver Broncosyear=2005border=2}}"AttendanceDivisional RoundAFC Championship
January 14, 2006[New England Patriots](2005-new-england-patriots-season)**W** 27–131–0CBS76,238
January 22, 2006[Pittsburgh Steelers](2005-pittsburgh-steelers-season)**L** 17–341–1CBS76,775

Standings

Playoff results

AFC Divisional Game vs New England Patriots

First quarter no scoring Second quarter

  • NE – Adam Vinatieri 40 yard field goal. (2:48) Patriots 3–0
  • Den – Mike Anderson 1 yard rush (Jason Elam kick). (1:42) Broncos 7–3
  • Den – Jason Elam 50 yard field goal. (0:43) Broncos 10–3 Third quarter
  • NE – Adam Vinatieri 32 yard field goal. (7:49) Broncos 10–6
  • Den – Mike Anderson 1 yard rush (Jason Elam kick). (0:43) Broncos 17–6 Fourth quarter
  • Den – Rod Smith 4 yard pass from Jake Plummer (Jason Elam kick). (8:38) Broncos 24–6
  • NE – David Givens 4 yard pass from Tom Brady (Adam Vinatieri kick). (8:05) Broncos 24–13
  • Den – Jason Elam 34 yard field goal. (3:20) Broncos 27–13 Patriots
  • Tom Brady: 20–36, 341 yards, 1 TD, 2 INT
  • Deion Branch: 8 rec, 153 yards

Broncos

  • Jake Plummer: 15–26, 197 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT
  • Rod Smith: 6 rec, 96 yards, 1 TD

Turnovers

  • Patriots – 5
  • Broncos – 1

Despite scoring 27 points on offense, the Broncos defense was the story of the day. They forced five Patriots turnovers, including intercepting Tom Brady twice, while recovering three fumbles. A Mike Anderson one yard touchdown run in the third quarter was set up by a 100-yard interception return by Champ Bailey. It was the second longest interception return in NFL playoff history. The Patriots outgained the Broncos 420 to 286 in yardage, but the turnovers were too much for New England to overcome. As a result, the Broncos secured their first Divisional Round win since 1998 and improved to 2-0 at home in the playoffs against New England.

AFC Championship Game vs Pittsburgh Steelers

Team stats

The Broncos relied on a more consistent Jake Plummer, their running game behind Tatum Bell, Ron Dayne, and Mike Anderson, and their defense to stop opposing running backs. The Broncos placed second in the league in rushing yards per game, fourth in total offense and allowed the second fewest rushing yards in the league.

The key to Denver's success that year was their ability to keep control of the ball. In the regular season they committed just 16 turnovers, tied for the second-least in the league, and took it away from their opponents 36 times, fifth-best in the league. This resulted in a turnover differential of +20, second-best in the NFL. Jake Plummer, after throwing an NFL-high-tying 20 interceptions in the 2004 season, threw only 7 interceptions on the year, and had the second-lowest interception percentage rate of any quarterback in the league (behind Brad Johnson). His only omission of a serious number of turnovers occurred, unfortunately, in the AFC Championship, with two interceptions.

In 2005 the Broncos had 5,766 total offensive yards and gave up 5,006 yards. They outrushed their opponents 2,539 to 1,363. They were, however, outpassed 3,643 to 3,227. They had 28 sacks and gave up 23. They had 46 touchdowns to their opponents' 31. They were tied for fifth in total touchdowns and were seventh in the league in points per game.

Player stats

Jake Plummer threw 277 completions out of 456 attempts for 3366 yards and 18 touchdowns. He had 7 interceptions and a quarterback rating of 90.2. He also ran 46 times for 151 yards and 2 touchdowns.

Mike Anderson had 239 rushes for 1014 yards and 12 touchdowns. Tatum Bell ran 173 times for 921 yards and 8 touchdowns. He also had 18 catches and 104 receiving yards. Ron Dayne had 53 carries for 270 yards. He also had 18 receptions for 212 yards.

Rod Smith led in receiving with 85 receptions for 1105 yards and 6 touchdowns. Ashley Lelie had 42 receptions, 770 yards, and 1 touchdown. Jeb Putzier made 37 catches for 481 yards. Charlie Adams had 21 receptions and 203 yards.

Ian Gold had 72 tackles, 16 assists, 3 sacks and 2 fumble recoveries. Nick Ferguson made 61 tackles and had 18 assists and 1 fumble recovery. Al Wilson had 61 tackles, 11 assists, 3 sacks and 1 fumble recovery. Domonique Foxworth made 64 tackles, had 6 assists and 2 fumble recoveries. Champ Bailey had 8 interceptions and 2 touchdowns, 59 tackles and 5 assists. John Lynch had 44 tackles, 17 assists, and 4 sacks.

Jason Elam kicked 24 field goals out of 32 attempted and 43 out of 44 extra points.

References

References

  1. "Jerry Rice game logs". The Football Database.
  2. (September 5, 2005). "Rice retires after learning expected role for Broncos". ESPN.
  3. '''No. 76: Washington → Denver''' see [[#Campbell. No. 25: Denver → Washington]]
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