Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Broncos and Wes Welker agree to a 2-year deal, $12 million deal


Wes Welker is saying goodbye to Tom Brady and hello to Peyton Manning. After spending six years with Brady in New England, the Pro Bowl receiver agreed to a two-year, $12 million deal Wednesday to team up with Manning in Denver. The Welker signing was the highlight of a big day for the Broncos, who once again made a major splash in free agency. Denver also came to terms on a two-year deal with defensive tackle Terrance Knighton, formerly of Jacksonville, and a one-year contract with linebacker Stewart Bradley, who played with the Cardinals the past two seasons. Last year, the Broncos won the high-stakes contest to sign Manning, prompting Broncos boss John Elway to quip, ''Plan B? I don't have a Plan B. We're going with Plan A.'' Coming off a 13-3 season during which the Broncos looked like a Super Bowl contender before losing to Baltimore in the division round of the playoffs, Elway is clearly on the same path this time. He picked up the league's most productive receiver to play in the slot where Brandon Stokley was last season. Welker's five 100-catch seasons are the most in the NFL. He has been selected to the Pro Bowl in each of his past five seasons and was an All-Pro four of the past five years. ''When you look at Wes in the middle of the field, you can't cover him,'' Elway said. ''He does such a tremendous job of getting open, finding seams in zones, beating man-to-man coverage. So, he'll be a huge asset for us inside.'' Welker caught 118 passes for 1,354 yards and scored six touchdowns last year, helping the Pats go 12-4 and make the AFC title game before they also fell to Baltimore. He developed quite a rapport with Brady during his six seasons with the Patriots. The Broncos are banking the same kind of relationship can blossom between their 37-year-old future Hall of Fame quarterback and his newest target, Welker, who is 31. That the Broncos are signing a top player away from New England certainly didn't hurt, either. ''Anytime you can take a player from a team you have to compete against, it helps, especially the caliber of Wes Welker,'' Elway said. ''New England is there year in and year out and that's a team we have to beat to get where we want to get.'' Although the deal with Welker received a bulk of the attention, the Bradley and Knighton deals could also influence Denver's starting lineups. Bradley played last season for Arizona, where he didn't fit in with the team's 3-4 scheme. His best season came in Philadelphia in 2008, when he had 108 tackles. He will compete with Nate Irving and Steven Johnson for Denver's starting middle linebacker spot. Knighton was a third-round pick of Jacksonville in 2009, when Broncos defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio was there. His signing, along with Tuesday's resigning of Kevin Vickerson, gives the Broncos 600-plus pounds of defensive linemen to plug holes in the middle. ''Jack used the word 'stout.' He needs stout,'' Vickerson said. ''He wants us to be stout. Stout in the inside. No movement.'' To open free agency on Tuesday, the Broncos solidified the offensive line by bringing in guard Louis Vasquez on a four-year contract worth $23.4 million, with $13 million of that guaranteed.

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