Broncos Ice the 'Skins
Win it with Defense
The Broncos D came up big when they absolutley had to. Knockng
down a 2pt conversion at the end of the 4th quarter sealing the
win. Tatum Bell had career day with 127 yds and 2 TDs . . . good
thing, Jake the Snake had 92yds in the air.
Broncos 21, 'Skins 19
DENVER (AP) -- The offense wasn't moving. Denver was facing overtime
in the icy, bitter rain. Linebacker Ian Gold stuck his hand out,
knocked down a pass -- and with that, the Broncos showed that
Washington isn't the only team that can find odd and ugly ways
to win the close ones.Gold knocked away Mark Brunell's two-point
conversion pass with 1:09 left Sunday to help Denver hang onto
a 21-19 victory and keep the Redskins from adding yet another
fantastic finish to their charmed season.
"Later in the season, you don't remember how they came,
you only remember it's a win," said Broncos quarterback Jake
Plummer, held to 92 yards passing in the driving rain.
The problems that plagued Plummer, however, didn't bother Brunell.
He went 30-for-53 for 322 yards and drove the Redskins 94 yards
for the touchdown -- an 11-yard pass to Chris Cooley -- that pulled
Washington (3-1) within two.
On the conversion try, Brunell spotted David Patten open in the
back of the end zone for a moment, but Gold came over and batted
down the pass to prevent a possible overtime.
"You saw what his speed and athleticism will do," Broncos
linebacker Al Wilson said. "It was a hell of a play."
The Redskins won their first three games by a total of six points,
including a grinding 20-17 overtime win last week that came only
after Seattle kicker Josh Brown hit the upright on the last play
of regulation. This time, though -- no great finish.
"This one is going to hurt, it's supposed to hurt,"
Brunell said.
While Gold's big play saved the game, Tatum Bell made the difference
for Denver (4-1) the rest of the time, rushing for 127 yards and
two long scores to help the Broncos to a 21-10 lead.
In the first quarter, Bell took a toss on fourth-and-1 and faked
out Phillip Daniels en route to a 34-yard score. That stood as
Bell's longest career run until the third quarter, when he burst
through the Washington defense on a sweep for a 55-yard touchdown
to put the Broncos ahead by 11.
"I just have to keep working," said Bell, demoted behind
Mike Anderson in training camp this year. "I don't want to
just be a 'one-game wonder.' I want to be the starter."
The Broncos won their fourth straight despite missing Champ Bailey,
who sat out his second straight game with a sore hamstring. It
put a damper on what was supposed to be the first meeting between
him and Clinton Portis since the Redskins and Broncos pulled off
a blockbuster trade and swapped the two stars before last season.
Portis, a flamboyant and temperamental playmaker during his two
years in Denver, ran for 103 yards on 20 carries for the Redskins
and was booed pretty much every time he touched the ball.
"My fans don't boo me in Washington and that's the only
fans I look for to cheer for me," he said.
Cheers or boos, there was no denying Portis wasn't nearly as
big a factor as Bell.
The Broncos acquired Bell last year with a second-round pick
Washington threw in to complete the Bailey-Portis trade, and Bell
finally cashed in on the potential he showed signs of during his
injury-plagued rookie season.
His big plays were needed.
Denver gained only 257 yards and managed 11 first downs. Plummer
went 10-for-25, a sloppy showing that wasn't nearly as efficient
as he'd been in Denver's last two wins.
He was as happy as anyone that the defense held at the end.
"We'd been standing there a long time," Plummer said.
"It would have been hard to get back out there as an offense
and get back ready for overtime."
Brunell, meanwhile, looked at home in the rain. In the end, though,
the Redskins had a number of missed opportunities to bemoan in
such a close game.
A false-start penalty nullified what would have been a 54-yard
field goal by Nick Novak -- a good kick given the conditions --
at the end of the first half. In the third quarter, Washington
moved into field goal range again, but Trevor Pryce got a hand
on Novak's kick.
Washington also had a safety taken away courtesy of the infamous
"tuck rule." Plummer lost the ball near his goal line
and recovered in the end zone where he was tackled, but officials
overruled the play, saying Plummer's arm had been moving forward
when the ball slipped from his grasp, making it an incomplete
pass.
"We had enough mistakes to actually go out and lose this
game," Portis said. "We hurt ourselves."
Game notes
Denver improved to 4-1 or better for the seventh time in Mike
Shanahan's 11 seasons with the Broncos. ... Washington's lost
fumble was the only turnover of the game and the Redskins' turnover
ratio fell to minus-5.
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