DENVER – From the moment he played his first pickup game on a steamy summer day in the three-stoplight town of Folkston, Georgia, Champ Bailey had a nose for the football.
“I mean, he was greedy with the football,” said Boss Bailey, his younger brother by 16 months who played with Champ in high school, college and the pros. “He wanted the ball in his hands. He never said, ‘Nah, give it to somebody else.’”
Those ball-hawking skills served Bailey well when he converted from a star running back and quarterback in high school to a superstar cornerback in college and the pros, where he was downright gluttonous with the football during a 15-year NFL career in Washington and Denver that landed him in the 2019 class of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Bailey picked off 54 passes altogether, including one against New England that he returned for 100 yards in the divisional playoffs after the 2005 season.
Tom Brady had already won three of his six Super Bowl rings and all 10 of his playoff starts when he drove the Patriots to the Broncos 5-yard line late in the third quarter on that icy Denver night. The momentum, if not the lead, was slipping from Denver’s grasp when coach Mike Shanahan called for a safety blitz from Nick Ferguson, who collected just one sack in his decade-long career.
Surprised, Brady rolled right and rifled an off-balance throw he’d regret.
“The Broncos never blitzed me, so it probably surprised the hell out of Tom Brady and the offensive linemen,” Ferguson said. “And truth be told, we ran the same blitz twice. The first time, I didn’t go. So, the second time I lined up on that particular play, the linemen even said, ‘25 isn’t coming.’ And I was just like, ‘Holy smokes, they’re not going to block me!’”
Ferguson shot through the line untouched and “Brady saw me at the last second and he started to roll to his right side and he wasn’t able to set his feet,” Ferguson said. “So, he just threw it toward Troy Brown, and luckily enough, Champ broke on the ball and we’re off to the races.”
“I’m just like, ‘OK, that’s a touchdown,’” Ferguson recalled. “Then, ‘Oh! What was that?’”
That blur was tight end Benjamin Watson, who had raced from the far side of the field, or, as Ferguson said, “from out of nowhere,” to knock Bailey out at the New England 1.
“It took a fellow Georgia Bulldog to catch me,” Bailey cracked after the longest non-scoring interception in NFL playoff history, one that helped saddle Brady with his first playoff loss.
Nearly a decade later, Bailey again bested Brady in Denver, this time in the AFC championship, to reach Super Bowl 48 against Seattle. Only, these Seahawks were indestructible as the “Legion of Boom” crushed Peyton Manning’s record-setting offense and put a 43-8 shellacking on the banged-up Broncos in the final game of Bailey’s storied career.
“I’ve settled with the fact I didn’t get it,” said Bailey, whose dozen Pro Bowl berths are an NFL record for defensive backs. “I did have a shot, though.”
Two years later, Bailey proudly watched Denver’s defense destroy the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50 behind Von Miller’s MVP heroics and the “No Fly-Zone” secondary, which had Bailey’s fingerprints all over it thanks to its anchor, Chris Harris.
Bailey had tutored a young Harris the same way Hall of Fame cornerbacks Darrell Green and Deion Sanders had guided him when he arrived in Washington as the seventh overall pick in the 1999 NFL draft.
“I think I would have been great without Deion and Darrell,” Bailey said. “Would I have been Hall of Fame good? I don’t know.”
Shanahan sent star running back Clinton Portis to Washington in a blockbuster trade for Bailey in 2004, acquiring a quiet leader in the mold of Jerry Rice and John Elway.
“One of the reasons he was such a great leader was that he practiced full-speed,” Shanahan said. “Champ set a standard for the rest of the football team that was very high.”
While his work ethic charmed his teammates, it was Bailey’s versatility that befuddled opponents, especially in 2005-06 when he collected 19 of his interceptions, including the 100-yard Brady back-breaker.
“One of the things that made him so good was his ability to match up on so many different types of receivers,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “He could handle speed guys, he could handle size guys. He could match up on tight ends. It didn’t really matter who he was on, he had a way to match up.”
Manning said Bailey had “as good of hands as any top-flight receiver in the NFL,” which is something his little brother knew all along.