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The Broncos owner explained to season ticket holders that trading QB was ‘about team.’

Broncos head coach Josh McDaniels reacts as he considers a question whether he regrets the events leading up to the trade of disgruntled quarterback Jay Cutler during a news conference last week. The Broncos owner Pat Bowlen sent an e-mail to season ticket holders on Monday explaining the reasoning for the trade.

AP PHOTO

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen said in a letter to season ticket holders Saturday that the organization had no choice but to trade Jay Cutler over his insubordination.
Bowlen preached a message of team unity in the e-mail, reiterating that he and new coach Josh McDaniels had reached out many times to Cutler, who didn’t respond to their overtures.
Bowlen, who remained largely silent during the six-week rift that ended with Thursday’s blockbuster trade with the Chicago Bears, wrote that anybody who puts himself above the team gets a one-way ticket out of town.
“Understand this: it remains about team,” Bowlen wrote. “Our franchise has gone to the Super Bowl six times, with three different coaches and with many different players. It has never been about one player, and it never will be. Coach McDaniels shares this vision, and everyone in the organization — players, coaches and staff — must understand and accept this unconditionally. If anyone does not, that person will not be a part of this franchise.”
Cutler became disenchanted in Denver when he learned the team had talked about trading him for New England Patriots quarterback Matt Cassel six weeks ago.
He requested a trade last month after a face-to-face meeting with McDaniels failed to clear the air. The Broncos initially balked, with McDaniels saying repeatedly that Cutler was his guy and they would work things out.
Cutler ignored calls and texts from McDaniels and Bowlen, however, and the owner reached his breaking point last Tuesday and told McDaniels and general manager Brian Xanders to try to trade Cutler.
Several teams were interested in the 25-year-old, rocket-armed passer who made the Pro Bowl in his second full season as a starter. But the Bears came up with the best offer, sending quarterback Kyle Orton, two first-round draft picks and a third-rounder to Denver for Cutler and a fifth-rounder.
In his letter, Bowlen wrote that he felt compelled “to give our community and our fans an explanation regarding the Jay Cutler situation,” and suggested he had no problem with his 32-year-old rookie coach chasing off a franchise quarterback before he’d even conducted his first practice.
Bowlen said one of his directives when he hired McDaniels to replace Mike Shanahan “was that he consider everything possible to return the Broncos to the level which you and I both expect, and this certainly includes making a fair evaluation of every opportunity presented to us which might improve the team.”
“He and General Manager Brian Xanders have had my complete support throughout, and they have it now,” Bowlen wrote. “It is important that you know that at all times we represented ourselves to Jay with honesty and integrity.”
Bowlen added that more than 96 percent of season ticket holders had renewed for 2009, which he wrote was “a compelling statement of support and trust.”