
Battle of top Fire defense and Scottish offense as Rhein hopes to sweep Claymores
May 13, 2003 - National Football League Europa (NFLE)
Rhein Fire News Release
Gelsenkirchen, Germany â Four games remain in the 2003 regular season and after a 34-27 win at Amsterdam, the Rhein Fire (4-2) enter their road trip at Scotland (2-4) in a three-way tie for first place.
"We realize the position we are in but can only look to the next game and have to go into the Scotland trip with that mentality," head coach Pete Kuharchek said.
The Fire-Claymores matchup will feature the top defense of Rhein (1800 total yards) against the number one offense of Scotland (2516 yards). The Claymores are coming off a heart-breaking overtime loss at Frankfurt but still see several players among the offensive League leaders. Scotland and Rhein matched up in Week 3 and the Fire won 34-17, their best offensive outing until last weekend's win against the Admirals.
Rhein saw some impressive individual offensive efforts against the Admirals starting with wide receiver Kendall Newson (voted NFL Europe Special Teams Player of the Week) who recorded the first 100-yard receiving game of the year for the Fire to go with his touchdown catch and 94-yard kickoff return. Charlie Adams had seven catches for the second time this year and quarterbacks Nick Rolovich and Chris Greisen both had stellar days, combining for 17-24 for 229 yards and a score. The Fire's rushing attack was again effective, combining for 147 yards and two touchdowns.
Sunday's game will be the first on national television of the season for NFL Europe. The Rhein Fire have historically thrived in the national spotlight, recording a 7-2 overall mark on FOX (two losses were World Bowls).
"The players realize it is even a bigger game when they hear it is on national television," said Charlie Adams. "We have to go out and take advantage of the opportunity and show the world that we are a solid football team."
Rhein returns home on Sunday, May 25th, to face the red-hot Berlin Thunder at 16:00 locally.
Game features top runners of NFLE
Sunday's matchup will feature the top two rushers of NFL Europe in Rhein's Autry Denson and the Claymores' Ken Simonton.
Denson, allocated by Detroit, owns a six-yard lead for the 2003 rushing title as he has tallied 523 yards on the season. Simonton is breathing down Denson's neck with 517 yards and six touchdowns.
The back-up runners for both teams are also among the team leaders with Scotland boasting the fourth-best runner in Maurice Hicks (Chicago) who has 392 yards and a 7.7-yard average. Rhein has Frank Moreau who has ran for 266 yards and two scores, good for seventh in the League.
GAME INFORMATION
ANNOUNCERS
Ron Pitts â play-by-play
Brian Baldinger â color commentary
TV
USA: FOX national TV
STADIUM ADDRESS
Hampden Park
Glasgow, Netherlands
HEAD COACHES
Rhein Fire:
Pete Kuharchek
16-10 overall, 3-2 vs. SCO
Scottish Claymores:
Gene Dahlquist
11-15 overall, 2-3 vs. Rhein
Arena AufSchalke a modern marvel
The Rhein Fire will be the first American football team to play at the Arena AufSchalke, the home stadium of the FC Schalke 04. Created in August 2001 at the cost of $180 million, the Arena AufSchalke is one of the loudest and certainly most advanced stadiums in Europe. The multi-functional stadium has a capacity of 61,800 seats with views close to the action. Arena AufSchalke hosts soccer, football, opera, rock concerts and biathalons, among other events. Schalke 04 has never played for less than capacity at its new home.
Arena AufSchalke is perhaps the most state-of-the-art stadium in all of Europe and more advanced than most NFL arenas in America. The true grass playing field at AufShalke is portable, rolling in and out of the stadium to be manicured. Moving the field takes six hours and costs $15,000 a time. The Arena also has a retractable roof which takes 20 minutes to open and/or close. Other features include a chapel inside the stadium and many luxury boxes for businesses.
The arena forms the new heart of the "Schalker of field" in the north Gelsenkirchens between the quarters Erle, Buer and Schalke. The arena is located close to the metropolitan railway line 302 with connection to the Gelsenkirchener main station as well as for the motor traffic over the exits Gelsenkirchen Buer at A 2 and Gelsenkirchen Schalke at A 42.
History of the Fire
Team History:
Established in 1995, the Fire posted a disappointing 4-6 record in their inaugural season. In 1997, the Fire played in World Bowl '97, losing at the Barcelona Dragons, 24-38. The Fire have been in the World Bowl four times in their first eight years of existence, winning a title in 1998 and 2000.
Team Name:
The Rhein Fire is named for the Northrhein-Westphalia region of Germany and the mammoth 820-mile Rhein River that forms Germany's southwest boundary. The team used to play its home games in Düsseldorf, capital of Northrhein-Westphalia, and now hosts games in Gelsenkirchen, a 40-minute drive North of Düsseldorf. City/Region:
A conglomerate of 24 cities forms the Rhein-Ruhr region of Germany. Situated on the western fringe of Germany, the densely populated region covers 200 kilometers. The largest cities surrounding Düsseldorf (population 577,250, the capital of Northrhein-Westphalia since 1946), are Duisburg (537,000) and Essen (626,000) to the North, Wuppertal (384,000) to the East, Cologne (1,000,000) and Bonn (294,000) to the South. Düsseldorf's airport serves 11.5 million passengers annually and reaches 150 destinations worldwide. The World Team Tennis Cup in Düsseldorf's Rochus Club and the ice hockey games of the "Düsseldorf EG" are highlights of the city's sports scene.
Head coach Pete Kuharchek
Coach Pete Kuharchek enters his third season as head coach after leading the Fire to a 7-3 mark in 2002 and a World Bowl appearance. Coach Kuharchek was promoted to head coach in 2000 after five seasons as Fire defensive coordinator and helped Rhein to a record four straight winning seasons in that time as well as boasting one of the League's stingiest defenses.
Under Kuharchek, the Fire's defense ranked number one overall in NFL Europe in 1999. Against the run, they have been number one on three occasions (1996, 1998, 1999) and topped the ratings against the pass in 1999.
As a player, Kuharchek started at linebacker for two years at George Washington University and a further two years at the University of Tampa. He also began his coaching career at the University of Tampa, serving as linebackers coach in 1970, and was recently named to Tampa's sports Hall of Fame.
From 1972-75, Kuharchek was defensive coordinator at Tampa Catholic High School before returning to the college ranks as a defensive assistant at the University of Kentucky in 1976. He served for two years as defensive coordinator at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire before stints at Holy Cross (defensive assistant) and East Tennessee State University (defensive coordinator).
His first venture into pro football came in the USFL, where he served as linebackers coach for the Tampa Bay Bandits from 1983-85. He was defensive coordinator at Memphis State University from 1986-89 and spent a year with the Canadian Football League's British Columbia Lions and then the University of Texas-El Paso.
In 1992, his first season in the NFL Europe League, Kuharchek helped the Orlando Thunder gain a place in World Bowl, where they were beaten by the Sacramento Surge.
From 1993-95 he retuend to UTEP as defensive coordinator before teaming up with Galen Hall and the Fire in 1996. Kuharchek won World Bowl rings with the Fire in 1998 and 2000.
Depth at skill positions lead Fire offense
The Rhein Fire offense is led by a tandem of talented quarterbacks including Nick Rolovich (Denver Broncos) and Chris Greisen. Rolovich got the starting nod during the first three Fire games after a successful training camp. Greisen also will split time, playing in the second and fourth quarters. Both quarterbacks combined for 95 yards passing in Week One, 195 versus Berlin, 159 against Scotland, 140 at Barcelona, 165 against Frankfurt and 229 against Amsterdam.
Lining up in the Fire backfield this season are four multi-faceted running backs. Starting is NFL veteran Autry Denson (Detroit Lions) who offers a scat-back mentality and sure hands. Denson is averaging almost 100 yards a game and is leading the League in rushing yardage. Louisville product Frank Moreau backs up Denson and qualifies as a power runner through the offensive line and he has proved to be a valuable contributor to Rhein's offense, rushing for 200-plus yards on the year. Matt Stanley (San Francisco 49ers) is a natural fullback but in the single-back offense of the Fire, he has multiple jobs as a running back, goal line back and occasional tight end.
With a facet of tall and quick wide receivers, this group of wideouts is Rhein's most talented corps in years. Leading the way are Emmett Johnson (Seattle Seahawks), Kendall Newson (Miami Dolphins) and Charlie Adams (Denver Broncos) for the three-wide Rhein set. Newson and Adams are among the League leaders in touchdowns scored and Adams has scored three touchdowns in the last four games. Newson is coming off a 100-yard receiving game against the Admirals. LaVell Boyd (Houston Texans), capable of playing multiple receiver spots, started for the first time three weeks ago and has four grabs in his last three games. German national Christopher Liess plays behind Johnson and newly signed Todd Elstrom will see time at WR. Tight end will also is a strong suit for Rhein, boasting NFL talent in Chad Mustard (Cleveland Browns), who has been out for a bit because of personal matters, and starter Dwayne Blakley (Kansas City Chiefs).
Rhein's offensive line is led with tackles Dwayne Ledford and German national Patrick Venzke. Guards Pat Crummey (New York Giants) and Jim Jones (Baltimore Ravens) will start against Frankfurt and the line will be centered by Dustin Keith (Dallas Cowboys) after Illinois product Luke Butkus (San Diego Chargers) was moved to injured reserve. Scot Osborne and German national Peter Heyer provide depth.
Veteran line, active linebackers highlight Rhein defense
Defensive coordinator Ed O'Neil leads the historically strong Rhein Fire defense. The defensive line has two bookends in Andre Arnold and Corey Callens, a Fire veteran. Callens and Arnold both have contributed as Callens has two sacks in 2003 and Arnold has one. The run-stopping tandem of Brad Harris (New York Giants) and Josh McKibben (Tampa Bay Bucs) will help anchor the line and McKibben starred against Berlin with three sacks and two forced fumbles. Providing depth are two former Fire members in DE Derrick Ham (three sacks on the year) and German national Bastian Lano (4.5 sacks on season) along with Swedish national Dan Petersson. Defensive end Jesse Warren also has seen significant time since being signed as a free agent as has recently-activated DT David Viger.
Rhein's linebacking corps may be the strongest portion of the defense. Top NFL allocation draft pick Courtney Ledyard (New England Patriots) leads the group as the middle linebacker but will be missing in action after suffering a shoulder injury versus the Thunder and was placed on injured reserve. Charles Burton (Arizona Cardinals) and Rhein veteran Jamel Smith play outside, both leading the LB corps with 45 and 38 tackles, respectively. Jay Johnson is starting in Ledyard's place and has responded with 38 tackles as well. Recent pickup Dane Krager (Seattle Seahawks) will also see significant time as well as newcomer Terrence Dukes.
The secondary is led by cornerbacks Teddy Gaines (Chicago Bears) and Tony Lukins (Oakland Raiders), who has two interceptions on the year. Safety Greg Brown, who had a pick last week at Amsterdam, and Abdual Howard (Jacksonville Jaguars), who returned a 93-yard interception for a touchdown against the Claymores and also added one against Frankfurt, play safety and providing depth in the secondary are corners Adesola Badon (Carolina Panthers) and Tierre Sams (Cincinnati Bengals) as well as German national Richard Yancy and Lemual Ligon, who had a sack and interception versus Berlin, (San Diego Chargers) at safety.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Kendall Newson is the biggest threat returning kickoffs (94-yard touchdown at Amsterdam) and punts (14.3-yard average). Autry Denson is the second option at kickoff and punt return. Tony Lukins and Adesola Badon may also see time as returners in 2003.
Punting for Rhein is Jay Taylor (Cleveland Browns) and kicks are handled by Todd France (Minnesota Vikings), 2-3 on the year in FGs, and former German soccer star Ingo Anderbrugge, 4-4 on FGs and 12-13 on PATs in 2003.
National Football League Europa Stories from May 13, 2003
- Battle of top Fire defense and Scottish offense as Rhein hopes to sweep Claymores - Rhein Fire
- Dragons Seek Revenge in Berlin - NFLE
- German Teams Sweep Player Awards - NFLE
The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.
Other Recent Rhein Fire Stories
- Kuharchek resigns as Fire head coach
- Rhein hopes to keep World Bowl chance alive with win over Dragons
- Fire travel to rival Frankfurt for Deutchland Derby with much at stake
- Fire return home, look to sweep Berlin
- Battle of top Fire defense and Scottish offense as Rhein hopes to sweep Claymores

