Toronto Star

Broncos play hard, not dirty, team says

Helmet-to-helmet hits on QB have some critics suggesting Denver D has crossed the line

- ARNIE STAPLETON

ENGLEWOOD, COLO.— Nasty, hard-hitting, wicked. Sure. But dirty? No way, say the Denver Broncos.

“I just don’t think that’s what we are,” linebacker Todd Davis said. “We’re not malicious. We don’t intentiona­lly go to hurt anybody. We just play hard. We play physical.”

What about all those helmet-tohelmet hits on Cam Newton?

“Just because we hit Cam in the head a couple of times, that doesn’t make us dirty,” insisted linebacker Brandon Marshall, who had one of four helmet-to-helmet hits on Carolina’s big quarterbac­k in the Broncos’ 21-20 win over the Panthers on Thursday night.

The brutality of the game sparked debates over league safety, sideline concussion protocol, the ability of the NFL MVP to survive, much less continue to thrive, as a read-option QB and yes, whether Denver’s devastatin­g defence crossed the line from dominant to dirty.

Although none of the helmet hits on Newton resulted in penalty yardage and none got him checked for a concussion, Marshall said he’s expecting a FedEx letter in his locker Wednesday informing him of a hefty fine.

Safety Darian Stewart, whose helmet-to-helmet hit left Newton motionless on the ground in the game’s final minute, is bracing for such a letter, too. His hit drew a flag but it was negated by intentiona­l grounding.

The other helmet-to-helmet hits came from Super Bowl MVP Von Miller and cornerback Bradley Roby, who was fined $24,309 for his illegal hit on Rams receiver Duke Williams in an Aug. 27 exhibition game — a sizable forfeiture given that NFL veterans make $1,900 a week in the preseason.

Marshall said what he considers a dirty play is “stepping on somebody’s ankle at the bottom of a pile, twisting somebody around, something like that. We just play hard. We hit hard. We play fast . . . It’s the speed of the game. We’re a malicious group, but we’re not dirty.”

Marshall said the word dirty should only be used when a team deliberate­ly breaks the rules.

“Yeah, dirty is intentiona­l,” Marshall said. “One time I was in college man and I made a tackle and I saw a player from Utah State run around the pile. I’m on the ground still. He ran around the pile, he grabbed my ankle, stepped on it and twisted it. That’s dirty. We don’t do stuff like that.”

Marshall said he meant to hit Newton hard but not in the head, and Stewart said he thought he led with his shoulder on his big hit.

If fined, Stewart said, “I’m definitely going to appeal. I didn’t think it was that type of play.”

Broncos coach Gary Kubiak also dismissed the notion of his defence being dirty, saying, “We play hard. We’re going to continue to play hard.”

Kubiak called Newton the league’s best player and said when he leaves the pocket, “you better tackle him like a (running) back.”

Marshall said other teams will be hitting Newton the same way, too, because he’s like a defensive end barrelling down on defenders and the only way for a smaller safety or linebacker to bring him down is to go high or low.

Denver defensive end Derek Wolfe said the league should be looking at the Panthers O-linemen for their dirty play. He told Bleacher Report the Panthers were “cutting out legs, grabbing the facemask, grabbing our pads, tackling our legs . . . they just let these offensive linemen get away with murder.”

 ?? JOE MAHONEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Carolina Panthers quarterbac­k Cam Newton lies on the turf after a roughing the passer penalty on Denver Broncos free safety Darian Stewart last week.
JOE MAHONEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Carolina Panthers quarterbac­k Cam Newton lies on the turf after a roughing the passer penalty on Denver Broncos free safety Darian Stewart last week.

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