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The 2012 Pro Bowl will be the NFL's all-star game for the 2011 season. It will take place at 7:00 p.m. EST (2:00 p.m. local time) on Sunday, January 29, 2012 at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii.
The Denver Broncos will have two more Pro Bowl participant in two weeks when the 2012 Pro Bowl takes place in Hawaii. Denver Broncos offensive tackle Ryan Clady was named an alternate when rosters were announced and now he has been chosen to be on the AFC roster with the Miami Dolphins' Jake Long out due to injury.
Clady has played in every game over his first four years and made multiple Pro Bowls.
Joining him will be running back Willis McGahee, also an alternate when the rosters were announced. He replaces Houston Texans' running back Arian Foster. McGahee is in his second Pro Bowl.
The Broncos' other participants are linebacker Von Miller, defensive end Elvis Dumervil and cornerback Champ Bailey. Tim Tebow, Brian Dawkins, Matt Prater and Britton Colquitt were also named alternates, but the latter three are unlikely to make it. Tebow, though, could go if two out of Tom Brady, Ben Roethlisberger and Philip Rivers bow out. Tebow is supposedly the second alternate.
Jordy Nelson has stated before, via a CBS News report, that he believes his race helps him succeed as corners slack off a white receiver.
If cornerbacks foolishly overlook the burner, then you can bet the voters do too. It's hard to argue with 1,101 yards and 12 touchdowns for a Green Bay Packers team that is flush with receiving options. He also has an average of 18.1 yards per catch.
This hardly matters as Nelson loves winning and making his team better over personal accolades. A just Pro Bowl nod would be nice, though.
Just as we will find that the Pro Bowl could use a great deal of Tebowmania, they also could use a huge amount of Beast Mode.
The Seattle Seahawks have little to be proud of on offense, but that sentiment stops at Marshawn Lynch's locker. The man is a dynamo who can't be stopped by conventional weapons.
Forget the 1,000-plus yards and 12 touchdowns he has amassed on an otherwise stagnant offense--I need some of his highlight potential at Aloha Stadium. This omission just makes me sad.
The AFC was a lot thinner on arms than their NFC counterparts--that's why I was confident Andy Dalton would sneak in.
I love his stats, but I love what he has done for the mentality of the Cincinnati Bengals more.
This was a team without a quarterback or an offensive identity. Carson Palmer may have left, and it's great that he did. Bright days are ahead with Dalton under center.
This one stings the heart of millions who wanted to believe a myth. Tim Tebow came onto the scene as a "winner" who defied a horrible throwing motion to win a string of ballgames.
The last two games were awful for Tebow, and that might have done him in at the end.
I still think that the dying exhibition the Pro Bowl seems to have become could use a shot in the arm, and the ever-popular Tebow would do that.
If the Pro Bowl is 50 percent popularity, Tebow maxes that out--and then some.
Consider that through nine games on the season, he has thrown for 1,669 yards and rushed for 644 more, while leading the Denver Broncos to enough wins to be in reach of the playoffs, and you can see that he is more than deserving.
Somewhere deep in the recesses of my brain, I am okay with this snub.
Seeing Newton play this season has been divine and you just know that there will be a boatload of Pro Bowl selections coming his way.
This still hurts though. While everyone was going gaga over Tebow, Newton was somehow flying under the radar with a sick rookie campaign for the Carolina Panthers.
Let's just say 3,893 yards passing, 674 yards rushing and 34 touchdowns by land and air is pretty damn good.
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