Bell was undrafted out of college, but signed with the
Denver Broncos for the
1986 season. Almost exclusively a kick returner (he had just 3 receptions and less than 100 yards rushing in four seasons with the team), Bell initially saw split duty with
Gene Lang. However, after he finished his rookie year 6th in the league with 23.1 yards per return, he became the starter for all but three games where he was injured in
1987. Bell was so popular with the coaching staff, that even though his replacement
Shane Swanson still holds the franchise rookie record for most all-purpose yards in a game, he was released from the team when Bell returned. In the
1987–88 NFL playoffs, Bell muffed a kick-off return late in the 4th quarter of the
AFC Championship Game, recovering it at the 2-yard line. This set up "
The Drive", arguably the defining moment of
Hall of Famer
John Elway's career. Bell returned most of the Broncos kicks in both
1988 (career highs of 36 returns for 768 yards) and
1989 (30 returns for 602 yards). 's NFL off-season, Bell still holds the Broncos franchise record for most playoff kick returns at 21. ==References==