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 Posted in Video on September 1st, 2010 at 7:40 PM


Kansas City Chiefs tackle Branden Albert talks about wanting to get better. (Video by Todd Feeback - August 23, 2010)

Read more: http://videos.kansascity.com/vmix_hosted_apps/p/media?id=17662634#ixzz0yKAbP8Yi



 Posted in Video on September 1st, 2010 at 7:39 PM


"I see a good battle between Branden (Albert) and Tamba (Hali) on a consistent basis," Todd Haley said during Monday's press conference. (Video by Todd Feeback - August 23, 2010)

Read more: http://videos.kansascity.com/vmix_hosted_apps/p/media?id=17693091#ixzz0yKABwSkA



 Posted in News on August 31st, 2010 at 11:51 AM


SN correspondents spotlight three players on each team who are poised to step up their games this season:

DENVER BRONCOS

OLB Robert Ayers. He had an average rookie season, and the injury to Elvis Dumervil has shined a white-hot spotlight in Ayers’ direction. He could respond. The coaches have raved about his work ethic, and he seems to be playing more free and loose during preseason.

CB/KR Perrish Cox. His role is undefined right now, but it should grow as the season progresses. Cox’s preseason performance will get him on the field initially as a nickel defensive back. Cox is a quick study, and his playmaking ability has pushed Alphonso Smith to irrelevance. Cox, regardless of his role on defense, is the favorite to win the kickoff returner job.

C J.D. Walton. Denver’s scouting staff fell in love with Walton while watching him scrap and claw against Ndamukong Suh in college. The coaches are even more pleased now that Walton has assimilated the offense quickly and continues to demonstrate an attacking style. Only five first-year linemen in Broncos’ history have started an opener; Walton will join that group. --Lee Rasizer

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS

CB Brandon Flowers. He could be ready to become an elite player at his position. Flowers was poised to make that leap last year, but a preseason shoulder injury limited his play all year long. Flowers must improve at making the plays that come his way.

LT Branden Albert. A holding penalty in last week’s game aside, Albert has had a solid preseason. He kept himself in better shape during the offseason and seems more capable of playing at the lighter weight of 315 pounds the coaches prefer him to carry.....






 Posted in News on August 30th, 2010 at 12:52 PM


Chiefs left tackle Branden Albert focused on coming to camp in the best shape he could.

When the 2009 season mercifully ended, Branden Albert was like everyone else and unsure whether he would be the Chiefs’ left tackle when they gathered again.

Albert was still trying to establish himself as a quality player at his position, a premium one because it protects the back side of quarterback Matt Cassel and battles each week against the NFL’s best pass rushers.

Albert decided shortly after season’s end that he would prepare as if he would have to battle to keep his job. That decision might have persuaded the Chiefs not to draft a left tackle.

In any case, it was an extremely quiet preseason for Albert until Friday night’s game against Philadelphia. Albert was penalized once for holding and another time for a false start.

Still, the Chiefs are encouraged by what they’ve seen from Albert. He ties that to his offseason decision.

“I really wasn’t thinking about what else would happen,” Albert said. “My thing was not to make the same mistake I did last offseason by getting out of shape. That’s what I was worried about. If I had done what I did last year, it would have been a big step back.

“I didn’t worry about what else was going on. I wanted to control what I could control and that was to come into the offseason in the best shape possible.”

In last year’s new world of coach Todd Haley, smaller was deemed to be better for a lot of Chiefs players and Albert was one of them. He had trouble getting to his prescribed weight of 316 pounds and then had trouble dealing with his new, slimmed-down body.

The result was a difficult season. Albert was among the league leaders in sacks allowed, sparking thoughts the Chiefs would look for a new left tackle with the fifth pick in the draft and then move Albert to right tackle or guard, where he played at Virginia.

Two things stopped the Chiefs — aside from the fact they fell in love with Tennessee safety Eric Berry. Albert improved toward the end of last season and attacked the offseason with a vengeance.

“I’ve felt that about Branden going back to last year, from the conditioning aspect to buying in to the thought process to believing what he was told, that he could be a better player if he was in better condition and at a certain weight,” Haley said.

“He went through an adjustment period of dealing with his new body. He stayed in shape when the season ended. He came into this offseason with a baseline of where he needed to be and then he built on it. He’s gotten stronger, he’s gotten quicker, he’s got better stamina.”

Veteran left guard Brian Waters last year was Albert’s biggest — and seemingly sometimes only — fan. He vigorously defended Albert, saying that given time, Albert could become a franchise left tackle for years.

Waters hoped the Chiefs wouldn’t draft a left tackle.

“I didn’t think it was necessary, to be honest with you,” Waters said. “He has the ability to be as good there is in this game. We had a lot of other pressing needs that were definitely more important than that one.

“I know how hard he works. He wants to be great. That’s one thing about him. His work ethic and his concentration in the classroom and on the field match what he wants out of life as far as being a football player. A lot of guys say they want it but they don’t want to put in the work and handle all the details. He’s one of those guys who if you give him something he did wrong, he’s going to work all week to fix that.

“He’s not one of those guys who thinks he has all the answers, which a lot of times those high draft picks … these days you don’t even need to be a high draft pick. He listens, takes everything in.”

The Chiefs were hopeful about Albert’s progress when camp started but unsure. So far, he’s been what they hoped.

“He’s got (Tamba Hali) lining up across from him every single day,” Haley said. “When Tamba brings in it like he’s bringing it in a game … he isn’t calling off the dogs very often. I see a good battle between Branden and Tamba on a consistent basis.

“He’s got good competition and that makes the game a little easier for him. He’s just got to keep it going.”

The Chiefs gave Albert a vote of confidence when they opted to pass on the chance to draft a left tackle, but Albert isn’t necessarily looking at it that way.

“I won’t say that,” Albert said. “I’ll just say that what I’ve done in the offseason showed people what I needed to show them.

“I’m not going to say I’m a better player. Let me go through the season first. I’ve started off on a good foot by staying in shape in the offseason and doing what I had to do. From January to March, I think I did a good job. We’ll see how everything plays out during the season.”





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