The Denver Post

WARD RELEASED

Ward’s absence will make No Fly Zone look a little different

- By Nicki Jhabvala

The Broncos cut veteran safety T.J. Ward, saving the team $4.5 million in salary cap space.

The No Fly Zone will look a little different in 2017.

The Broncos on Saturday released eighth-year safety T.J. Ward, saving the team $4.5 million in salary cap space and shifting its focus to the future.

“This was a difficult decision to part ways with T.J. after everything he’s done for our football team,” general manager John Elway said. “He was a respected teammate whose physical mindset played a big part in our success, especially during our Super Bowl run.

“We thank T.J. for his contributi­ons as a Bronco and wish him nothing but the best in the future.”

Ward arrived in Denver in 2014 as the first piece of Elway’s revamped defense. He signed a fouryear deal, awaited the arrival of cornerback Aqib Talib and outside linebacker Demarcus Ware, then quickly morphed into a force in the defensive backfield. A hardhittin­g safety who split his time at weakside linebacker in subpackage­s, Ward was a tone-setter, on the field and off.

His release comes on the heels of what he described as his best season yet, with 87 tackles (second-most on the team), a sack, an intercepti­on, eight pass-breakups, three forced fumbles and two recoveries. During the offseason Ward said he hoped to stay in Denver.

“You know what, if I do the things that I have to do and do them the right way, everything will handle itself,” he said in April.

But Ward is soon to be 31, was in the final year of his contract and coming off a hamstring injury which kept him from playing in any preseason games. Over the years he’s watched Peyton Manning take a pay cut, Demarcus Ware restructur­e his deal and defensive starters Chris Harris and Derek Wolfe both accept significan­tly less money to stay in Denver. Elway has always drawn a hard line and has made it clear he will make roster decisions with the singular goal of trying to win another Super Bowl title.

A pay cut was never discussed with Ward, though he sought a new contract. The Broncos will eat about $1.3 million in “dead money” from Ward’s prorated signing bonus, but the team had a long-held plan to move on with their depth and youth.

And the Broncos have plenty of both in their secondary.

In 2016, the Broncos drafted Boston College safety Justin Simmons in the third round and Arizona safety Will Parks in the sixth. Both were viewed as key pieces of the team’s future.

The “Baby” No Fly, they called themselves.

Simmons, the Broncos believe, is ready for the true No Fly, and moves into the starting lineup.

The 6-foot-2, 202-pounder posted a 40-inch vertical at the 2016 NFL combine, besting all in his position that year. He put it to use with his extra-point block at New Orleans last year and he’s continued to grow more comfortabl­e in the Broncos’ scheme that has since been tweaked by defensive coordinato­r Joe Woods and coach Vance Joseph.

“That’s the biggest thing, is that year one to year two, making that big leap and those big strides and going into that, so really looking forward to it,” Simmons said.

News that the Broncos were considerin­g trading or releasing Ward left the locker room in disbelief last week, with many players still hoping it was untrue even as reality set in.

“It was shocking just to come out of nowhere toward the end of camp,” Parks said. “But at the end of the day it’s a business. He’s been through it once already, so I’m pretty sure he knows how to handle it.”

Elway understood how the players felt, and he knew the decision wouldn’t be fully embraced, at least initially.

“It’s always hard. I was in that locker room,” Elway said. “I didn’t agree with every move that management made. … I think they understand — at least I hope they understand — we have to do what we believe is best for the Denver Broncos. When you make tough (decisions) like this they’re not always popular. I think the young guys will step up and play well and fill those shoes.”

Ward posted a Thank You to fans on Twitter Saturday evening, saying he’s “looking forward to my next chapter.” As a vested veteran, he is free to sign with another team immediatel­y.

Denver has decided to move on, and Elway expressed optimism about the future.

“It’s a combinatio­n of everything,” Elway said. “Anytime you have a guy like T.J. that was such a big part of the championsh­ip year we had and the last three years that he’s been here — he’s led that defense and plays with an attitude and a chip on his shoulder. We give him a lot of credit for how we’ve played defensivel­y the last few years. But it always comes down to football decisions. The young guys, they were playing well. It really wasn’t anything to do with T.J. It was just the fact that the young guys played well and we thought that was the best football move for us.”

 ?? Joe Amon, The Denver Post ??
Joe Amon, The Denver Post

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