Broncos’ schedule for Day 7 of training camp

The Broncos practice at 10 a.m. today. Gates to the parking lot open at 8 and gates to the practice facility open at 9. Tickets are required

The Denver Broncos will hit the practice field at 10:00 a.m. MT on Friday, Aug. 4 for Day 7 of the team’s 2023 training camp schedule. The practice is free to attend, but a free ticket is required (more on that below).

Parking will be available on a first-come, first-served basis at 13403 Broncos Pkwy beginning at 8:00 a.m. Gates to the practice facility open at 9 a.m. Seating will also be available on a first-come, first-served basis, primarily on the berm on the west end of the practice fields. There will also be some ADA seating available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Because the berm is not shaded, fans who attend practice are encouraged to wear sunscreen and stay hydrated. Fans can bring the same kind of small bags that are allowed at the team’s stadium. Lawn chairs and umbrellas are not allowed at practice.

Due to Arapahoe County enforcing a 3,000 capacity limit for events at the team’s Centura Health Training Center, fans will need a (free) ticket to attend training camp practices this year.

Those free tickets quickly “sold out,” but fans should check availability on Ticketmaster because some tickets could be returned. (If you have free tickets and cannot attend a practice, there is an easy process to return tickets so other fans can use them.)

Some players will be available to sign autographs at the west end of the practice fields after each practice session.

The team’s complete training camp schedule can be seen below.

Broncos 2023 Training Camp Schedule

Date Day Start Time
7/28 Friday 10 a.m. MT
7/29 Saturday 10 a.m. MT
7/31 Monday 10 a.m. MT
8/1 Tuesday 10 a.m. MT
8/2 Wednesday 10 a.m. MT
8/4 Friday 10 a.m. MT
8/5 Saturday 10 a.m. MT
8/8 Tuesday 10 a.m. MT
8/9 Wednesday 10 a.m. MT
8/15 Tuesday 10 a.m. MT
8/16 Wednesday 10 a.m. MT
8/17 Thursday 10 a.m. MT

Fans should note that Denver’s practice schedule is subject to change due to weather. Be sure to check the team’s official Twitter page for the latest updates on the practice schedule.

The Broncos will play three preseason games in August ahead of their regular-season opener against the Las Vegas Raiders on Sept. 10. View the team’s complete regular season schedule here.

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Observations from Lions 2020 training camp: Day 7

Lions Wire’s Erik Schlitt was in Allen Park for Day 7 of the Detroit Lions 2020 training camp and here are his observations.

Day 7 of Detroit Lions training camp was scheduled for Tuesday, but after coming together to discuss and make a statement on social justice issues, practice was canceled and pushed to Wednesday.

Today the Lions were back in pads and took the field in the pouring rain. It did lighten up near the end of practice, but for the most part, it was a wet day in Allen Park.

Tracy Walker put on a show

Tracy Walker was the clear star of the day today.

In tight end versus safety drills, Walker put T.J. Hockenson in his back pocket and was so tight in coverage, Matthew Stafford didn’t even bother throwing the ball. Maybe he didn’t want to force a wet ball, but I’m not sure I’ve ever seen this drill run where the quarterback didn’t even attempt the throw because the tight end was so blanketed by coverage.

On his next pass through, Walker matched up with Jesse James and Walker basically ran the route for him giving James no chance on the ball.

Third time through, Walker versus James again and it was a repeat of the second rep, expect this time Walker tipped the ball to himself and intercepted the pass.

When team drills began, Walker was back with the starters. On one play during goal-line drills, Walker was isolated in coverage with Kenny Golladay, and he put himself in the perfect position to force an incompletion.

Despite running with the twos at the end of last week, don’t get confused: Walker is the best safety on this team.

Quarterbacks

A wet ball is not a quarterback’s friend and it showed today. Chase Daniel had a real hard time handling the ball, David Blough missed some bad throws, and even Matthew Stafford fumbled and was forced to run a lap — so was Frank Ragnow, so he may have been partially to blame.

It wasn’t all bad today, but there were more errors than typical of this group.

Running backs

D’Andre Swift and Bo Scarbrough returned to the sidelines today and were dressed in a half-pads half-sweats combo. They traveled with their position group but did not interact in drills. This is step one of the acclimation process: “We’re just kind of trying to put them back in an environment where they feel comfortable and just working with them to acclimate them back in,” coach Matt Patricia said at his morning press conference.

Today’s running back versus linebacker blitz pickup drills were pretty even with the one standout being Kerryon Johnson who cleanly beat three of the four challengers he faced. Johnson also caught a touchdown score from Stafford during team drills.

Nick Bawden participated in positional drills but didn’t take the field during team drills until late in the morning — when he walloped linebacker Elijah Lee on the goalline.

Jason Cabinda continues to see the majority of work at fullback as Bawden gets back into the mix.

Wide receivers

It was a quiet day for the wide receivers. Maybe it was the rain. Maybe I cursed them after publishing my 10 players who impressed me during the first half of training camp article this morning and it listed three receivers.

Either way, they only caught my eye a handful of times, with the main standouts being: Quintez Cephus who continues to gain separation in a variety of ways and Jamal Agnew who has strung together several solid practices. In goal-line team drills, Agnew high-pointed a ball from Blough and reeled it in for the score.

Housekeeping note: Victor Bolden returned in full.

Tight ends

T.J. Hockenson looked human for the first time in camp — see the above section on Walker — but he did catch a touchdown during team drills on the goal line.

Isaac Nauta looks ready to roll and upgraded his participation level to full. Matt Sokol — who was repping in Nauta’s place — is still making his case.

Hunter Bryant was not in pads and was seen walking around after stretching with a limp as he recovers from what appeared to be a hamstring pull over the weekend.

Offensive line

Starting left guard Joe Dahl opened practice with his position group and went through some warmup drills, but once the live period began he sat out the rest of the day. “We’re trying to do a good job of monitoring him,” Patricia said of Dahl, “just in general with camp and some of the hitting that we’re doing in certain practices and stuff like that. We’re keeping track of that.”

With Dahl out, Oday Aboushi was promoted to the starters. On the second line, Logan Stenberg slid over to Aboushi’s vacated spot at left guard, and Beau Benzschawel — now recovered from an injury that limited early in camp — took over at center.

Frank Ragnow had an upper-body injury scare during OL vs DL drills but after sitting out the drill he was right back in with the starters on the next activity.

When Ragnow was temporarily out, it was Benzschawel who took over his spot. This may just be a case of he was next man up in the rotation, but it’s also a reminder not to count him out of the mix for the 53-man roster just yet. This is an important week for him.

With Dahl sitting out Wednesday, the offensive line depth chart was as follows:

Left tackle Left guard Center Right guard Right tackle
Taylor Decker Oday Aboushi Frank Ragnow Jonah Jackson Hal Vaitai
Tyrell Crosby Logan Stenberg Beau Benzschawel Kenny Wiggins Dan Skipper
Matt Nelson Logan Stenberg Matt Nelson

Matt Nelson continues to get looks at both guard and tackle, and while he is still a developmental project, he may be working his way towards a spot on the practice squad.