The insertion of Stork at the center position was the first step in an offensive line overhaul that will continue this season. And it appears the Patriots are working from the inside of the line toward the edges.
The Patriots have a stable of players who can play both guard and center including Stork (exclusively a center), Ryan Wendell (right guard/center), Dan Connolly (a free agent but possible returnee) and Mason (possibly).
The guards are the aforementioned Wendell, Connolly and Mason. Add Jackson to that. And Cannon. And perhaps Fleming, who’s reportedly been learning that spot most likely in an effort to increase his versatility. The Patriots also have Josh Kline and Jordan Devey to play guard. Both have had regular-season reps and neither has shown they are more than backups.
The Patriots still have Solder and Vollmer as the main tackles with Fleming and Cannon being able to play out there in a pinch.
As it stands now, the Patriots have a question at left guard. Despite all the guards they have. If they don’t re-sign Connolly, their experienced options are Devey, Kline or Cannon or flipping Wendell over there.
Neither Jackson nor Mason has played any left guard. [Note: this is incorrect, as Mason played LG for a season in 2012.]
“It’s got to be in the high 90 percent (of his reps) at right guard,” Bill Belichick said when asked about Jackson, the Florida State stalwart who slipped because of medical concerns regarding his knee.
How easy would it be to flip?
Belichick, speaking generally, said, “Some players, right side, left side, it doesn’t even matter. The next guy – right side, left side, and he feels his footwork is backwards or the odd-even numbering or the wording, whatever it is, and they are a lot better at one spot than trying to flip back and forth.
"I’ve coached hundreds of players and some guys it’s seamless and other guys it’s monumental and there’s some in between, so we’ll just have to see. But (Jackson) has played that one spot for a long time, so I think until he actually did it, I don’t even know if he could answer that question. But there’s certainly a different stance, different footwork – you’re just seeing the game a little bit differently. But that’s tackles, guards – you know, I think tackle is a little bit different because of the type of player that plays on the offensive left compared to the offensive right. Not that you don’t eventually see them all, but there’s kind of a difference there. But inside it’s more consistent, but again, the footwork is different. Yeah, we’ll have to see. Same thing with Mason too, though – they both played right guard. He played right guard at Georgia Tech. And Mason rarely pass-blocked in the run-heavy Tech offense."
Belichick certainly isn’t daunted about either player adjusting. He went out of his way to praise Mason’s rapid improvement rate during Senior Bowl week.
“It was only one week, but he made a huge improvement just in those, whatever it was four or five practices, whatever it was down there," Belichick said. "His stance is different. You could see each day progressively how he was taking to the coaching down there and his footwork and his hand placement and his body position. I know it was basic. It wasn’t like it was a big scheme thing at the Senior Bowl, but just doing things on a daily basis better than the day before, looking more comfortable doing them. And it was different than what they did at Georgia Tech.”
There’s a reason Belichick and his staff have faith that they can take a big, powerful, athletic man with nice footwork and smarts and mold him. The reason is Stephen Neal.
Having never played college football, Neal was signed as an undrafted free agent in 2001 and by 2004 was the starting right guard on a Super Bowl-winning team. He is the standard for learning.
“I thought in a few days (Mason) showed tremendous technique progress in (pass blocking),” said Belichick. “But I mean look, Steve Neal, talk about adjustment. The guy went from not even knowing where the field was to starting at guard in a year and a half. It’s not that kind of adjustment. And this guy is a football player and from a run blocking standpoint, I’d say he’s probably ahead of every other player in the draft. Unless there was another one from Georgia Southern or Georgia Tech or whatever, but this guy ran blocked in one game more than some teams did all season. So I’d say he’s ahead in the run blocking, behind in the pass blocking. There may be other players that are in a two-point stance pass-block 50 times a game that in all honestly don’t run block very well. He’s kind of the flip of that which is a little bit unusual but it is what it is.”