By the way Edelman and Amendola are WRs. They caught passes mostly from WR positions, not the slot.
I want to re-emphasize this point. People get married to the preconception that the Patriots only have slot wide receivers. It's not true. Yes these guys do at times line up in the slot but they also have the speed to make plays downfield.
Even though Brady had a conservative passing day, he still hit some big plays downfield, taking advantage of play-action and our dominant run game.
What is interesting about New England's rushing attack is now it is going to force Denver's Defensive Coordinator to account for it. As long as the Pats can get the run going, they open up a LOT of options in their passing game.
It is refreshing to see the Pats dictate to the defense with a smash mouth attitude of - we're gonna run it on you, you know we will, how are you going to stop us? And the best thing about that is not only will it take precious possession time away from Manning, but it really gets the offensive line revved up and involved in the game.
By design? Based upon the injuries on the roster, this seems more like the contingency plan. As for Edelman, he is more than a slot receiver.
I would agree with the sentiment that the Patriots roster with the idea of strengthening the running game was built by design.
2011, the Patriots expend two high draft choices on Shane Vereen and Stevan Ridley. They also draft Solder their current LT in round 1 and Cannon their current RT in round 5.
2012, believing Ridley is ready, the Patriots let BJGE walk to the Bengals. But they acquire Bolden as a UDFA and Jeff Demps as a UDFA. They also acquire Michael Hoomanawanui as a backup TE/FB.
2013, For some reason James Develin makes the team even though he's a fullback and the Patriots haven't kept a fulltime fullback on their roster in
years. Later in the year Pats trade a 7th round pick and Demps to Tampa Bay for Blount.
If you observe the moves the Pats made over the past 3 years, you can spot a conscious pattern of addressing the run and bringing it up to par with the pass. I think BB realized that postseason success required a stronger more balanced offense and deliberately made the moves to make it possible.
The rest is playoff history. Blount's 166 yards and 4 TDs sets a new Patriots playoff record and his 4 rushing touchdowns is the most in any regular or postseason game. The Patriots combined 6 rushing TDs is 1 shy of the NFL's all-time postseason record for rushing TDs.
Easy tiger. The New England Patriots ran all over the 2013 Indianapolis Colts defense not the 2000 Baltimore Ravens defense. Let's see if this type of performance is replicable against the 2013 Denver Broncos defense let alone in the Super Bowl against either the Seahawks or the 49ers.
A valid point, however the fact remains that having a potent rushing attack FORCES the other team's DC to adjust to the offense and opens up so many options for the passing game. Even if we only get 120+ yards against Denver on the ground instead of 240+, keeping that defense honest will prevent it from 'teeing up' on Brady and only helps our passing game. As for Seattle/San Fran, we'll cross that bridge when we get there.