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Bench Warmer
Brandon Stokley caught the deflected pass, turned and looked upfield. Nobody stood between him and the end zone.
Unbelievable!
In the time it takes to sprint the length of the field, Stokley ran Denver out of a crushing loss and into franchise lore. His 87-yard touchdown with 11 seconds left on Sunday provided a 12-7 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals, who are going to need a long time to recover from this one.
"I've never seen anything like that," Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer said. "I've played football since I was 7 or 8, and I've not seen that."
No one had.
A half hour after it ended, a Bengals fan in an orange Rey Maualuga jersey sat alone in the otherwise empty expanse of green seats behind the end zone, staring at the field, trying to comprehend what had just happened.
One weird bounce had changed everything.
"You know you need a miracle, and that's basically what we got," Stokley said. "When I scored, I just remember it being quiet, and that was a good feeling."
The Broncos felt sick after Cedric Benson's 1-yard run put the Bengals up 7-6 with 38 seconds left. No one felt worse than quarterback Kyle Orton, whose poor judgment had given the Bengals their chance to pull ahead.
Down to desperation, Orton threw a sideline pass that was nearly intercepted. The next play was a throw to the other sideline for Brandon Marshall, who was blanketed. Cornerback Leon Hall cut in front, went up for the ball and tipped it into the air.
The carom went to Stokley, who couldn't believe his luck as he headed for the end zone, running sideways a few steps to **** time before finally crossing in.
"So much went through my head," the receiver said. "I just thought: Get what you can. My mind was racing. What should I do? I felt myself pulling away."
Bengals defenders stopped and dropped their heads, unable to fathom the wacky ending. It will go down among the Bengals' worst, along with the time they failed to run out the clock and let San Francisco's Joe Montana throw a winning touchdown pass to Jerry Rice on the game's final play in 1987.
That one was the result of a risky coaching decision. This one came off a bad defensive play -- Hall didn't knock the ball down, and none of the safeties was looking for a possible deflection.
"I've got to knock it to the ground," Hall said, "either that or pick it off."
Instead, the game was left up to chance.
"I've seen some things in football, but never anything quite like this," Broncos running back Correll Buckhalter said.
Orton put the Broncos in line for a kick-to-the-stomach loss in coach Josh McDaniels' regular-season debut. Nursing a dislocated index finger on his right hand, he did just enough to get the Broncos a 6-0 lead heading into the closing minutes.
Then, he had a brain-freeze moment on a warm afternoon, taking a sack that pushed Denver out of range for what could have been a third and clinching field goal by Matt Prater, who had connected from 48 and 50 yards.
Still, the odds seemed to be in Denver's favor. The Bengals had only one first down in the second half against an overhauled defense. Shut down all day, Palmer was perfect in the clutch, completing all six passes on a 91-yard drive to Benson's touchdown run.
Turned out to be just a tease.
"The funniest, weirdest, craziest ending I've ever experienced in football," Benson said.
Tell it to the lone fan in the stands.
Unbelievable!
In the time it takes to sprint the length of the field, Stokley ran Denver out of a crushing loss and into franchise lore. His 87-yard touchdown with 11 seconds left on Sunday provided a 12-7 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals, who are going to need a long time to recover from this one.
"I've never seen anything like that," Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer said. "I've played football since I was 7 or 8, and I've not seen that."
No one had.
A half hour after it ended, a Bengals fan in an orange Rey Maualuga jersey sat alone in the otherwise empty expanse of green seats behind the end zone, staring at the field, trying to comprehend what had just happened.
One weird bounce had changed everything.
"You know you need a miracle, and that's basically what we got," Stokley said. "When I scored, I just remember it being quiet, and that was a good feeling."
The Broncos felt sick after Cedric Benson's 1-yard run put the Bengals up 7-6 with 38 seconds left. No one felt worse than quarterback Kyle Orton, whose poor judgment had given the Bengals their chance to pull ahead.
Down to desperation, Orton threw a sideline pass that was nearly intercepted. The next play was a throw to the other sideline for Brandon Marshall, who was blanketed. Cornerback Leon Hall cut in front, went up for the ball and tipped it into the air.
The carom went to Stokley, who couldn't believe his luck as he headed for the end zone, running sideways a few steps to **** time before finally crossing in.
"So much went through my head," the receiver said. "I just thought: Get what you can. My mind was racing. What should I do? I felt myself pulling away."
Bengals defenders stopped and dropped their heads, unable to fathom the wacky ending. It will go down among the Bengals' worst, along with the time they failed to run out the clock and let San Francisco's Joe Montana throw a winning touchdown pass to Jerry Rice on the game's final play in 1987.
That one was the result of a risky coaching decision. This one came off a bad defensive play -- Hall didn't knock the ball down, and none of the safeties was looking for a possible deflection.
"I've got to knock it to the ground," Hall said, "either that or pick it off."
Instead, the game was left up to chance.
"I've seen some things in football, but never anything quite like this," Broncos running back Correll Buckhalter said.
Orton put the Broncos in line for a kick-to-the-stomach loss in coach Josh McDaniels' regular-season debut. Nursing a dislocated index finger on his right hand, he did just enough to get the Broncos a 6-0 lead heading into the closing minutes.
Then, he had a brain-freeze moment on a warm afternoon, taking a sack that pushed Denver out of range for what could have been a third and clinching field goal by Matt Prater, who had connected from 48 and 50 yards.
Still, the odds seemed to be in Denver's favor. The Bengals had only one first down in the second half against an overhauled defense. Shut down all day, Palmer was perfect in the clutch, completing all six passes on a 91-yard drive to Benson's touchdown run.
Turned out to be just a tease.
"The funniest, weirdest, craziest ending I've ever experienced in football," Benson said.
Tell it to the lone fan in the stands.