Regardless Of Outcome, Travis Henry Needs To Go
The news regarding Travis Henry is less than 12 hours old, but I have already made up my mind. I usually don't rush to judgment, try not to have the knee-jerk reaction that is so prevalent around the blogosphere, but not this time. Travis Henry violated my trust, embarrassed me as a fan, and made the organization we all hold so dear look bad. For that I have little patience and I am full of rushed judgment and knee-jerk reactions.
I know some out there will want to wait for the process to unfold and we are likely to hear little form the team, especially with pending litigation. Luckily I don't have to follow the same rules or be held to the same gag order. The Broncos should immediately suspend Travis Henry, remove him from the football field. This may seem harsh to some, but when compared to the commitment the Broncos made to Henry in terms of $$$, it's the least the team should do.
Don't start talking to me about "innocent until proven guilty" or any of that BS. Travis Henry, even in suing the NFL, isn't claiming his innocence, he's not saying he didn't test positive. Instead, Henry is spending a lot of money, money that should be going to any of his 9 children, in trying to get off the hook because of a technicality, a loop hole in the collective bargaining agreement. I am sure there are good reasons for the stipulation Henry is contesting to be included in the CBA, but it still doesn't change the fact that Henry, with the risk of a 1-year suspension staring him right in the face, and knowing his slate would be clean on October 1 decided to smoke up, in turn disregarding his new city, fans, coaches, and most importantly, his new teammates.
Maybe it's because Henry is only 4 games into his stay in Denver, maybe it's because I always thought in the back of my mind that Henry was walking a fine line. I remember when Henry first signed with the Broncos and was asked about his thoughts regarding Pot, his answers were a bit non-committal, almost defiant. Henry seemed to be walking the straight and narrow because he had to, not because he wanted to or because of the commitment he made to the Broncos and his teammates.
While I was cautiously optimistic about Henry at first, the news about his 9 children, with nine different women, soured me somewhat. To be honest, it wasn't the fact that Henry had so many kids, what he wants to do in his own time is his business, but it went a long way to show the kind of character he had, to show what type of person Henry is. I felt worse about Henry when it came to light that he borrowed money from the Tennessee Titans to pay child support. All of a sudden it started to become clear why the Titan would let their offensive MVP from 2006 walk with nothing to show for it.
Now this, which happens at a time when the Broncos are struggling, questions about the defense abound, and the team has lost two straight. Henry was a bright spot, leading the league in rushing through 4 weeks, a seemingly bringing some consistency back to the running game. That is all gone now, and the Broncos should turn the page and close the book. It was questionable that Henry would play this weekend due to injury and the Broncos should remove any doubt. Send Henry home to deal with whatever it is he needs to deal with and let this team, which has had to deal with so much adversity this year, move on with the 52 other guys that DO want to play football, that DO want to turn the season around, that DO care about themselves and each other.
Shanny said it best back in March when the Broncos signed Henry and was asked about the risk involved. "I talked to him about that," Shanahan said. "He knows this is his last chance. He knows if he screws up, he's gone. Sometimes that's better than a guy who's only got one strike. When a guy knows he doesn't get another chance and he's got a chance for financial security on a great team, he's got a chance to do something special.
"For him to take a chance to do anything would be completely stupid."
Stupid is as stupid does, I guess.
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Like I wrote today
In the time it takes for Denver
Ugh.
I will only say this once.
Get it done, Denver!!
by Jeremy Bolander on Oct 5, 2007 3:26 PM MDT up reply actions
Does this surprise anyone?
Now you can get into the whole debate about how weed is no worse than a player who goes out and drinks alcohol and gets completely wasted, but that's neither here nor there because weed is completely illegal and if you're caught you pay the price. Mr. Henry, you are a disgrace, and will never be a true Bronco. Some folks will never learn.
by Make It Rain @ Mile High Report on Oct 5, 2007 9:31 AM MDT reply actions
Wouldnt the Broncos have known...
Time for Selvin Young to become a star and another unknown 1000 yard rusher....he need 850+ yards in 12 games. I think he does it!
This season has been a real rollercoaster ride so far and it is only week 5!
Cut Henry
What are the odds of Selvin getting 1200 yards?
See my Last Post
The problem...
I just don't want him around the complex, or the team, in any way, shape, or form.
Go home and smoke all the weed you want, loser!
Get rid of him
I'm not to fault the Broncos for signing him. He has tons of talent, and you'd like to think that when put in a good situation he could thrive....but I guess the same could have been said when they drafted Clarett.
I am hurt...
Like many of you I have been counting on Mr. Henry to remain a steadying influence and someone we can count on while the Broncos work their way through this transition. Unfortunately, Mr. Henry has proven himself unworthy of that trust.
And even though I have seen this time after time, it always amazes me. How can people with so much on the line and so many people counting on them, take such a foolish risk?
With all due respect to others who have posted, I believe a leopard can change his spots. I've seen it just enough to give me hope. But a leopard can only change his spots if he really wants to. I no longer believe Mr. Henry really wants to.
Sadly, I have to agree with Guru on this. Mr. Henry has chosen not to be a part of our family. It is time to mourn the loss of what could have been, should have been, and then move on.
Disappointment in Bronco MGMT
Travis is a waste of skin and should be barred from ever playing the game or earning any income associated with the sport. There is plenty of talented players out there that have ethics. But most of all shame on the NFL and the Broncos for their inaction in this situation.
by joebob on Oct 7, 2007 6:56 PM MDT up reply actions
Hawkish.
Had Selvin Young not shown flashes of brilliance, would we all be so eager to ditch Henry? If we hadn't shown the ability to churn out 1,000 yard backs regardless of name, would we still want to dump the league's leading rusher?? In other words, were this Cutler or one of our stud WR, would we be calling for Ramsey and Stokley??? Maybe we all would, and I'm sure you'll say so, but I'm just not that sure that's the truth.
Don't get me wrong, I'm mad at Henry and think he's an idiot for getting himself into this, too, but why must we be judge, jury and excecutioner? I agree that we should suspend him until the matter is resolve and, if he's dishonored himself and the franchise, then we can move to get rid of him.
Not to toot my own horn
For one, I didn't see the rationale of giving an aging runner without explosive qualities a big contract when you're the Denver Broncos. I thought he was overrated as a power guy, and didn't do enough to be a feature back, and I worried about injuries.
So I consider myself half right. To be honest, I've liked but not loved Henry's performance in Denver. He hasn't been everything he was made out to be, helping to move the chains, but providing few breakout plays and offering little explosion to the offense. I just don't think he's worth the contract.
That said, this team is in trouble if they ditch him quickly. Young's looked decent in a limited role, but without the presence of Henry, defenses will put more pressure on Cutler and take a defender out of the box.
Competitively speaking, this team takes a big hit with Young over Henry, but from an ethical standpoint, I'm not thrilled to put my rooting interest in someone of such dubious character.
by ohnokoolaid on Oct 5, 2007 3:51 PM MDT up reply actions
Really?
HELL NO
I still don't like it. 30 mil with half of it guaranteed? FOR AN IN-LINE BLOCKER? If that's what we wanted then we should've gone after Kyle Brady.
The fact that he'll be lucky to reach even half of the 55 catches that Heimerdinger boasted makes it look even more ridiculous.
That's what I said
Churning yards from twenty to twenty is good for personal numbera and can chew some clock, but Denver should be able to do this without paying a guy 25 million. Henry's success rate on runs (getting a certain amount of yards as judged by down and distance) is actually low for a Denver back, so he isn't getting the yardage consistently when needed, and he unsurprising has not shown game breaking ability.
His best trait is in game durability, which isn't something Denver's had since Anderson's early years, but this wasn't the biggest need. Denver needed a guy to get the short yardage when they needed short yardage, and big plays when they needed big plays.
Henry, as I suggested back then, has not been that guy.
Regardless of reason, I did not support the signing, but his shortcomings have come more on the opposite concern. It's nice that he can run for 1,400 yards, but when they're mostly empty, it puts a lot of pressure on your passing game to provide the big plays and scores.
Hopefully, this will now allow Denver to re-examine it's running game and hopefully target players that can provide a power-speed combo (or I could just say Jonathan Stewart).
by ohnokoolaid on Oct 5, 2007 10:44 PM MDT up reply actions
Wait and see...
If he gets this test buried, they're in a tough spot. It suddenly becomes clearer why the Broncos kept 5 tailbacks on the roster, doesn't it?
Not looking...
At least it should be resolved during the BYE week, I'd imagine...

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