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Whenever I watch the game and Bobby Hamilton cries at the end, I cry too; not as much as I used to, as time goes by. I've also cried at the end of the last 2 seasons, but for an entirely different reason.
God-damn it; or, better still, damn you God.
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Not to put a damper on the moment, but they lost the game that made them 5-5 (the game against the Rams). They got to .500 two weeks before, against the Falcons.
Ok, maybe it was when they hit 4-4 that I yelled that. I was going to say it was the Falcons game but I didn't feel like looking it up.
Ok, maybe it was when they hit 4-4 that I yelled that. I was going to say it was the Falcons game but I didn't feel like looking it up.
I suck.
Don't be too hard on yourself, we all make mistakes.
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I don't like Dungy and that's because he [was] the head coach of the Colts. Period. End of question. The degree to which I like a player or coach is predicated solely on the color of the laundry they wear on Sunday. When fans admit this and stop bashing players and coaches for any other reason, the world of sports will be infinitely improved.
super bowl xxxvi, brady spikes the ball with 7 seconds left, and holds it perfectly in the air. i get chills every time i see that
That is one of mine as well.
My other favorite is when Willie (I think) hauls down Warner after chasing him all over creation. He lays on the ground and extends both arms straight up in the air. That is another moment that just seemed to freeze in time on that great night.
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Re: One of My Favorite Pat Moments
My favorite Pats moment changes but I'd have to say the 1986 AFC Championship game win against the Fish. It was the fist time I was proud to be a Pats fan. I watched all the sports highlights there was on at the time. I have the game on disk and still love to watch it.
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One can only see what one observes, and one observes only things which are already in the mind -Alphonse Bertillon
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Ty Law's pick for a TD against the Rams in SB36 is way, way up there for me as far as this era. It was at that moment that I finally convinced myself we were going to win.
Willie Mac's tackle at the goal line in the 2003 regular season Colts game at Indy is also a favorite.
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Three off the top of my head:
1. The '02 SB Brady takes the ball with 1:23 left (Madden say we should play for overtime) We march down crisply and Vienatary kicks the winning field goal. All the years of bad luck, bad owners bad coaches, and disapointments gone as the ball crosses the goal post. Redemption for 28 years of watching the Pats through thick and thin.
2.The Miami game back in '03 or '04 it goes into overtime Mare' misses a field goal to win. We take over Brady roles out to his Left and throws a bomb to T.Brown for a TD to win the game. BB throws his head phones in the air and almost gets hit in the head by them.
3.1976 We destroy Oakland ahh 46 to 13? not sure of the finale score. Of course that season ended with Ben Dryth.........No need to go any farther.
My favorite Pats moment lasted only 15 seconds before turning to dust, but the sheer hysteria of that moment.....I can still feel it.
It was the called-back fumble recovery-TD by Tebucky Jones in SB36.
Sometimes, there is a player you just latch onto and root for through thick and thin even though he might not be the star. For me, those guys have been Bob Windsor (whose game winning TD against the Vikes at the Met in '74 began my Patfandom), Mini Mack Herron (to the younger folks - - I cannot describe how electric that guy was), Bill Lenkaitis (guy became an MD fer cryin' out loud), Mosi Tatupu (before it was cool) and Jimmy Hitch**** (because he was a very good player and never deserved much of the early crap he got from Parcells and the fans).
But then the Pats drafted Tebucky Jones out of Syracuse. This guy had great physical talent and had survived a terribly dangerous childhood on the wrong side of Hartford. But more than anything he became a symbol of the Old Guard Boston Sportswriter hatred for Bob Kraft. Before being drafted, Kraft evidently went along with the scouts to watch Tebucky workout. The story goes that he held a watch to time Tebucky run the 40. That was all we would hear for the next few years from McDonough and Borges and Shaughnessy and Mannix, etc. The arrogant "Amos Alonzo Kraft" and that bust he forced the team to draft named Tebucky Jones. Through the personal vitriol of the failed attempt to build a Pats stadium in Southie, this was all we heard.
Jones DID have a rough first few years with the Pats and was considered a bust. To me that was NOT his fault, however. TJ was big and a vicious hitter, but Pete Carroll was convinced, becase of his great talent and speed, he could turn him into a shutdown cornerback to defend against some of the big AFC East WR's like Keyshawn Johnson. Jones was talented, but he wasn't THAT talented to turn 6'2" 225 into a shutdown CB.
Long story short, BB came in and put him back where he belonged at Safety. When the Patrots were struggling to pull off the greatest upset in SB history, here come the St Louis Rams on a 4th and goal to get back into the game. Mind you, this was before the SB wins, before the Sox of 2004 and 2007. You know what the mindset was at that point. The pats had the lead, but they were beginning to crack. And they were up against The Greatest Show on Turf, after all.
Everyone has seen the play. It never counted. But I can tell you, for those fifteen seconds, not only WHAT was happening, but the glory of WHO was flying that ball 99 yards to what seemed like the Promised Land was a moment I can still feel. If you watch some of the highlight DVD's from that game, watch the slo mo shots from the endzone he is heading for. Look at the Patriots sideline behind him as he runs. Watch the Christmas morning looks of disbelief on the faces of the leaping players, coaches and personnel. My son was only six months old and sleeping upstairs so my muted shrieking and jumping absolutely cracked my wife up, then she begged me to stop since even that was beginning to wake him up.
The Patriots. My team that I can remember back in the 70's everyone looking at as if it was some cheap expansion squad (it was). The HOME team that even the Needham IHOP didn't have those little plastic football helmet souvenirs for that they gave out to the kids back then. Oh sure, I had plenty of Steelers, Cowboys, Dolphins, everybody really. But no Pats. When you're 9 years old, something like that riles you.
And here was Pat Summerall and John Madden (Pat Sumerrall and John Madden!!!!) on CBS (their last year there - - the network that had always symbolized, back then, NFC power, history and superiority) calling what would have been the CROWNING moment of the Patriots ascension to legitimacy. And the guy doing it was the bust that "Amos Alonzo Kraft" had timed with the stopwatch.
Hysterical.
(.......and then, you know the rest).
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"They (Patriots) may be the greatest team ever" - Chris Mortenson, January 18, 2005 on espn.com