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Today In Patriots History July 7: Bull Bramlett

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Today in Patriots History
Bull Bramlett


Happy posthumous birthday to John 'Bull' Bramlett, who would have turned 83 today
Born July 7, 1941 in Memphis
Patriot OLB, 1969-1970; uniform #57
Died Oct 23, 2014 at the age of 73

Acquired in a trade with Miami on March 24, 1969




Undrafted out of Memphis State, John Cameron Bramlett was the runner-up to Joe Namath as the rookie of the year in 1965. He was a two-time American Football League All-Star before being part of one of the most infamous trades in Patriots history. A few weeks after the 1969 AFL draft the Dolphins traded Bramlett, backup QB Kim Hammond and a 1970 fifth round draft pick to the Pats in exchange for future Hall of Fame linebacker Nick Buoniconti. It wasn't as if the move was an attempt to make the aging Patriots roster younger; Nick was only a year older than his counterpart. And while Bramlett had been a second team All-AFL (equivalent of second team All-Pro) in 1966 and 1967, Buoniconti had been a first team All-AFL from '64 through '67. Perhaps the Patriots were concerned he was coming off a season where he missed six games due to injury; or maybe that and the fact that Buoniconti was prepping for a post-football life by having completed night classes at Suffolk University and earning his law degree in '68 had them concerned about his focus and longevity.

Bull Bramlett had a reputation for reckless behavior and disdain for authority, which had already ended his professional baseball career. In his fifth year of pro football he was already on his third team, despite being a starter all four years: two seasons in Denver and two in Miami. Bull played in 24 games with 23 starts in two seasons with the Pats, and was out of football a year later. The Pats traded him to Green Bay at the end of the 1971 training camp, but he refused to report to the Packers. He later signed with the Falcons in '71, and retired on May 23, 1972. Two years later his days as a drinker and brawler ended, and he became a minister.


Taming the Bull: The John Bramlett Story


John Bramlett | Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame


Jan 19, 2014:


Because of his on-field aggressiveness and his antics off the field, Bramlett was given his nickname. But he changed his behavior when he retired from football, becoming a Christian evangelist.​

According to a website dedicated to his ministry, Bramlett spent 40 years speaking to hundreds of churches, schools, prisons and conventions, as well as NFL and MLB chapel services.​

"Indeed, he inspired many people as a professional football player," Luttrell said in a statement. "Yet ... John's stories of forgiveness and hope through his Christian witness made a real difference in the lives of countless people throughout the nation and here in Shelby County.​

"John Bramlett was ... a dear friend. I'm grateful for having known him and his family."​


John Bramlett Obituary
After a brief career with the St. Louis Cardinals, John began a career in the NFL in 1965 as “the meanest man in football” that included Denver Broncos, Miami Dolphins, Boston Patriots, Atlanta Falcons and two Pro Bowl appearances (’66, ’68). John was named runner- up AFL Rookie of the Year behind Joe Namath in 1965.​

While playing for the Patriots, John was named Most Valuable Player for the team in 1970. John was honored to be inducted into the Tennessee Football and Baseball Hall of Fame, University of Memphis Football and Baseball Hall of Fame, Denver Broncos Wall of Fame, All-Time Denver Broncos Team, All American Football Association Hall of Fame, And Fellowship of Christian Athletes Hall of Champions.​



The Globe story below sums up the legend of John Bramlett.

Oct 28, 2017: Big men with broken minds: The largely forgotten faces of the Patriots franchise | The Boston Globe
As for Bramlett, who died with Alzheimer’s, the Patriots acquired him in 1969 from the Dolphins in exchange for Nick Buoniconti, then an all-star linebacker who later was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. (Buoniconti, now 76, also suffers from CTE symptoms. “I feel like a child,’’ he told Sports Illustrated in May.)​

Bramlett was a risky acquisition for the Patriots. A hard-drinking renegade who grew up in a tough section of Memphis, he had been making trouble since he played football as a kid with his longtime friend Elvis Presley.​

A two-sport star at Memphis State, Bramlett was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals and played three years in the minors before his recklessness cost him his baseball career.​

According to his 1989 book, “Taming the Bull,’’ Bramlett’s misdeeds as a Cardinal included drinking whiskey during a game, then throwing an eight-pound weight that looked like a baseball at an unsuspecting teammate. The projectile knocked out three of the player’s teeth and rendered him unconscious in a bloody heap.​

Bramlett then signed to play football for the Denver Broncos. With his singular ferocity, he finished second to Joe Namath on the 1965 Rookie of the Year ballot and earned Pro Bowl honors, as he did again in 1966.​

By the time Bramlett arrived in Boston, his future appeared bright. The Patriots, though, were largely luckless vagabonds, mocked as the Patsies while they averaged barely four wins a season for nearly a decade. They lurched from one temporary home to another — Fenway Park, Boston College, Harvard — before they settled in Foxborough in 1971.​

Yet Bramlett thrived. In 1970, Marty Schottenheimer described him to the Globe as “the best outside linebacker in the American Conference, probably the best in all pro football.’’​

Bramlett’s teammates voted him their most valuable player, and Patriots trainer Bill Bates told the Globe, “Bull Bramlett plays this game with reckless abandon. The man’s body is a total wreck.’’

Bramlett underwent knee and elbow surgeries after the season, as well as an appendectomy, and the Patriots might have given him time to recover had he not continued his wild ways.​

During training camp at UMass Amherst, Bramlett wrote in his book, “My constant drinking in the bars near camp and the disturbances I caused gave management the excuses they seemed to be looking for to call me on the carpet.’’

He was shipped to the Green Bay Packers, who waived him after he insulted the coach. The Atlanta Falcons then gave him his final opportunity, which quickly resulted in a career-ending knee injury.​

At that, Bramlett returned to Tennessee and embraced religious faith. He spent the rest of his days as a Christian evangelist, until he began to slip away.​


John Bramlett Resume
 
Today in Patriots History
Cassius Marsh



Happy 32nd birthday to Cassius Marsh
Born July 7, 1992 in Mission Hills, CA
Patriot DE, 2017; uniform #55
Acquired in a trade with Seattle on September 2, 2017

At the end of the 2017 training camp the Patriots made three transactions. The club traded QB Jacoby Brissett to the Colts for WR Phillip Dorsett; CB Johnson Bademosi was acquired from Detroit for a future draft pick; and Cassius Marsh was acquired from Seattle for 5th and 7th round draft picks. This came a few days after defensive lineman Kony Ealy was released, as the Pats needed some depth for their pass rush.

Marsh didn't like the Patriot defensive concept - which meant there were times he would have to set the edge and cover a running back - rather than just teeing off on the opposing quarterback. He let Bill Belichick know about his own defensive coaching strategy - and nine games into his career as a Patriot, Marsh was gone.

Cassius Marsh also did gain notoriety by giving an interview soon after about how he had 'no fun' playing in New England. But it is worth noting that Marsh was signed and released by nine teams in his eight year NFL career, so perhaps he needed to take a good look in the mirror rather than blaming his coaches.

May 26, 2018:

May 28, 2018:

July 13, 2021:

July 14, 2021:

July 14, 2021:



Sept 18, 2017: Chiefs RB Kareem Hunt eludes Patriots DE Cassius Marsh as he runs for a touchdown after
catching a pass from Alex Smith during the second half of Thursday's game. KC won the week one contest 42-27.
 
Today in Patriots History
Bull Bramlett


Happy posthumous birthday to John 'Bull' Bramlett, who would have turned 83 today
Born July 7, 1941 in Memphis
Patriot OLB, 1969-1970; uniform #57
Died Oct 23, 2014 at the age of 73

Acquired in a trade with Miami on March 24, 1969




Undrafted out of Memphis State, John Cameron Bramlett was the runner-up to Joe Namath as the rookie of the year in 1965. He was a two-time American Football League All-Star before being part of one of the most infamous trades in Patriots history. A few weeks after the 1969 AFL draft the Dolphins traded Bramlett, backup QB Kim Hammond and a 1970 fifth round draft pick to the Pats in exchange for future Hall of Fame linebacker Nick Buoniconti. It wasn't as if the move was an attempt to make the aging Patriots roster younger; Nick was only a year older than his counterpart. And while Bramlett had been a second team All-AFL (equivalent of second team All-Pro) in 1966 and 1967, Buoniconti had been a first team All-AFL from '64 through '67. Perhaps the Patriots were concerned he was coming off a season where he missed six games due to injury; or maybe that and the fact that Buoniconti was prepping for a post-football life by having completed night classes at Suffolk University and earning his law degree in '68 had them concerned about his focus and longevity.

Bull Bramlett had a reputation for reckless behavior and disdain for authority, which had already ended his professional baseball career. In his fifth year of pro football he was already on his third team, despite being a starter all four years: two seasons in Denver and two in Miami. Bull played in 24 games with 23 starts in two seasons with the Pats, and was out of football a year later. The Pats traded him to Green Bay at the end of the 1971 training camp, but he refused to report to the Packers. He later signed with the Falcons in '71, and retired on May 23, 1972. Two years later his days as a drinker and brawler ended, and he became a minister.


Taming the Bull: The John Bramlett Story


John Bramlett | Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame


Jan 19, 2014:


Because of his on-field aggressiveness and his antics off the field, Bramlett was given his nickname. But he changed his behavior when he retired from football, becoming a Christian evangelist.​

According to a website dedicated to his ministry, Bramlett spent 40 years speaking to hundreds of churches, schools, prisons and conventions, as well as NFL and MLB chapel services.​

"Indeed, he inspired many people as a professional football player," Luttrell said in a statement. "Yet ... John's stories of forgiveness and hope through his Christian witness made a real difference in the lives of countless people throughout the nation and here in Shelby County.​

"John Bramlett was ... a dear friend. I'm grateful for having known him and his family."​


John Bramlett Obituary
After a brief career with the St. Louis Cardinals, John began a career in the NFL in 1965 as “the meanest man in football” that included Denver Broncos, Miami Dolphins, Boston Patriots, Atlanta Falcons and two Pro Bowl appearances (’66, ’68). John was named runner- up AFL Rookie of the Year behind Joe Namath in 1965.​

While playing for the Patriots, John was named Most Valuable Player for the team in 1970. John was honored to be inducted into the Tennessee Football and Baseball Hall of Fame, University of Memphis Football and Baseball Hall of Fame, Denver Broncos Wall of Fame, All-Time Denver Broncos Team, All American Football Association Hall of Fame, And Fellowship of Christian Athletes Hall of Champions.​



The Globe story below sums up the legend of John Bramlett.

Oct 28, 2017: Big men with broken minds: The largely forgotten faces of the Patriots franchise | The Boston Globe
As for Bramlett, who died with Alzheimer’s, the Patriots acquired him in 1969 from the Dolphins in exchange for Nick Buoniconti, then an all-star linebacker who later was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. (Buoniconti, now 76, also suffers from CTE symptoms. “I feel like a child,’’ he told Sports Illustrated in May.)​

Bramlett was a risky acquisition for the Patriots. A hard-drinking renegade who grew up in a tough section of Memphis, he had been making trouble since he played football as a kid with his longtime friend Elvis Presley.​

A two-sport star at Memphis State, Bramlett was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals and played three years in the minors before his recklessness cost him his baseball career.​

According to his 1989 book, “Taming the Bull,’’ Bramlett’s misdeeds as a Cardinal included drinking whiskey during a game, then throwing an eight-pound weight that looked like a baseball at an unsuspecting teammate. The projectile knocked out three of the player’s teeth and rendered him unconscious in a bloody heap.​

Bramlett then signed to play football for the Denver Broncos. With his singular ferocity, he finished second to Joe Namath on the 1965 Rookie of the Year ballot and earned Pro Bowl honors, as he did again in 1966.​

By the time Bramlett arrived in Boston, his future appeared bright. The Patriots, though, were largely luckless vagabonds, mocked as the Patsies while they averaged barely four wins a season for nearly a decade. They lurched from one temporary home to another — Fenway Park, Boston College, Harvard — before they settled in Foxborough in 1971.​

Yet Bramlett thrived. In 1970, Marty Schottenheimer described him to the Globe as “the best outside linebacker in the American Conference, probably the best in all pro football.’’​

Bramlett’s teammates voted him their most valuable player, and Patriots trainer Bill Bates told the Globe, “Bull Bramlett plays this game with reckless abandon. The man’s body is a total wreck.’’

Bramlett underwent knee and elbow surgeries after the season, as well as an appendectomy, and the Patriots might have given him time to recover had he not continued his wild ways.​

During training camp at UMass Amherst, Bramlett wrote in his book, “My constant drinking in the bars near camp and the disturbances I caused gave management the excuses they seemed to be looking for to call me on the carpet.’’

He was shipped to the Green Bay Packers, who waived him after he insulted the coach. The Atlanta Falcons then gave him his final opportunity, which quickly resulted in a career-ending knee injury.​

At that, Bramlett returned to Tennessee and embraced religious faith. He spent the rest of his days as a Christian evangelist, until he began to slip away.​


John Bramlett Resume
years ago the Globe ran an article on the effects of football on the brain... Bill Lenkaitis, just mentioned last week (?) along with Dennis Weirgowski (sp?) and Bull Bramlett were brought up in the article... it was a really moving piece about the effects of football on the brainpan...
 
years ago the Globe ran an article on the effects of football on the brain... Bill Lenkaitis, just mentioned last week (?) along with Dennis Weirgowski (sp?) and Bull Bramlett were brought up in the article... it was a really moving piece about the effects of football on the brainpan...
It's a rathering sobering article for fans of professional football.

 
Today in Patriots History
Six Cups of Coffee


Happy 47th birthday to Chris Redman
Born July 7, 1977 in Louisville
Patriot QB, 2005 offseason; uniform #55
Signed to future contract on January 6, 2005

Patriots Sign Four Free Agents To Future Contracts | Patriots.com
The New England Patriots signed free agent quarterback Chris Redman, offensive tackle Jeff Roehl, wide receiver Jake Schifino and tight end Joel Jacobs to future contracts today.

Chris Redman was signed by the Patriots in January 2005 after missing the entire 2004 season while recovering from back surgery.​

Redman's chances of making the team took a major hit when the Patriots signed veteran quarterback Doug Flutie in April to back​
up Tom Brady.​

The other quarterback spot will likely go to Rohan Davey, a backup for the last three years.​


3 - Chris Redman, picked at #75, Baltimore Ravens​
4-8 career record, 3,179 passing yards, 21 touchdowns, 14 interceptions, 1 Super Bowl title (as backup)​

Technically the most accomplished of the group by virtue of picking up a Super Bowl victory as a member of the 2000 Ravens team, but someone who spent the vast majority of his time as a backup in the league with the Ravens.​

He did bounce around the practice squads of a few other teams around the league before moving to the Atlanta Falcons where he remained a backup but playing a few games before retiring in 2012.​





Happy 26th birthday to Jalen Elliott
Born July 7, 1998 in Richmond VA
Patriot S, 2022 offseason
Signed August 2, 2022

The Patriots added a pair of defensive backs to their 90-man roster on Tuesday.​

The team announced the signings of Jalen Elliott and Brad Hawkins. They had space for both players, so they did not announce any corresponding roster moves.​

Elliott signed with the Lions after going undrafted in 2020, failed to make the cut and returned to the team in 2021. He had 12 tackles in eight games and was dropped from the roster earlier in the offseason.​






Happy 30th birthday to DeMarcus Ayers
Born July 7, 1994 in Lancaster, Texas
Patriot WR, 2017 practice squad
Signed to practice squad on September 4, 2017

The New England Patriots have added a new wide receiver to the mix.​

The Patriots on Monday signed former Pittsburgh Steelers wideout Demarcus Ayers to the practice squad.​

Ayers, who played his college ball at Houston, was a seventh-round draft pick of the Steelers in 2016. He appeared in two games last season, catching six passes for 53 yards and one touchdown, and two more in the 2016 postseason, catching three passes for 27 yards in wins over the Miami Dolphins and Kansas City Chiefs.​



The 23-year-old, who returned kicks and punts in college, turned down a spot on the Steelers’ practice squad after Pittsburgh released him over the weekend.​

Ayers is the only current member of New England’s practice squad who did not go through training camp with the team. The other eight members, all of whom signed Sunday, are wide receiver Cody Hollister, running back D.J. Foster, offensive linemen Ted Karras and James Ferentz, safeties Damarius Travis and David Jones, linebacker Trevor Bates and defensive end Geneo Grissom.​

The Patriots still have one practice-squad spot remaining after reportedly releasing defensive tackle Darius Kilgo on Monday.​





Happy 45th birthday to John Stone
Born July 7, 1979 in Somers Point, NJ
Patriot WR, 2006 offseason
Signed to a future contract on January 7, 2006

The wide receiver was part of final roster cuts in Septmeber. Stone was originally signed as an undrafted rookie by the Colts in 2002. He played in five games for the Raiders in 2003-04.




In memory of Craig Cotton
Born July 7, 1947 in Elizabeth, PA
Patriot TE, 1974 offseason
Claimed off waivers from Chicago on September 2, 1974

Cotton had been in the league since 1969, all but one season with the Lions. The 6'5 blocking tight end didn't last long; Chuck Fairbanks waived him on September 11, four days ahead of the season opener.

Playing for the Penguins during the middle 60's (1965-68), the native of Elizabeth, Pa., went on to play professionally for both the Detroit Lions and the Chicago Bears. A blood and guts player, Cotton was once described by then head coach Dwight "Dike" Beede as one of the finest ever to suit up and play football for the penguins. His professional career ended in the mid-70's, and he is currently one of the most respected restauranteers in the San Francisco, Calif. area, residing in Half Moon Bay, Calif.​

For the past 21 years Elizabeth's Craig Cotton has been one of the country's more respected restaurateurs. Last month he opened the Brentwood Express where his specialty is smoked ribs, among others.​

"My food is smoked and I create my own flavor," said Cotton, who started in the restaurant business in San Francisco.​

Cotton was good enough at Elizabeth Forward High and Youngstown State University to make both schools' Hall of Fames.​

A 1965 Elizabeth Forward High graduate, Cotton also ran track and played basketball for the Warriors.​

Cotton then picked Youngstown State over bigger schools like Arizona State and the University of Illinois.​

"The highlight for me was just being there in the NFL," said Cotton. "In those days making a team and playing on the highest level was something. There weren't as many teams over 30 years ago and the big money wasn't there. It was a game. Now they've taken all the violence out of the game to protect the stars and it's all money now."​

Three of Cotton's teammates -- Lem Barney, **** Butkus and Dan Fouts -- went on to make the Pro Football Hall of Fame.​

Other well-known teammates for Cotton were Alex Karras, **** LeBeau, Mike Lucci, Mel Farr, Wayne Walker, Greg Landry, Bill Munson, Ed Flanagan, Steve Owens, Rocky Freitas, Wally Chambers, Russ Washington, Coy Bacon and Bobby Douglass.​

His NFL head coaches were Joe Schmidt, Abe Gibron and Tommy Protho.​




Happy 82nd birthday to Mike Haffner
Born July 7, 1942 in Waterloo, Iowa
Patriot WR, 1971 offseason
Acquired in a trade with Denver on September 8, 1971

Mike Haffner went undrafted out of UCLA in 1965. He was a second-team All-Pacific Conference in 1961 and 1964, at two different positions. Haffner was a QB from 1961-63, then a RB in '64. He began his pro football career with the Hartford Charter Oaks of the old Atlantic Coast Football League in 1965.

Haffner signed with the Broncos and from 1968 to 1970 he played in 34 games with 16 starts. During that time he had averaged 16.8 yards per catch, with 59 receptions and seven touchdowns. Late in the 1968 season Haffner set a Denver franchise single game record for a rookie when he averaged 30.5 yards per catch with his four-reception, 122 yard game against the Chiefs. Surprisingly, despite all that yardage on so few catches, none went for a TD.

Just prior to the start of the '71 season the Patriots traded a '72 13th round draft to Denver in exchange for Haffner. Apparently it didn't work out, perhaps due to an injury? Haffner never got on the field for the Pats before he was waived mid-season. The Bengals picked him up and he played in three games for them late in the '71 season, but that was it for his pro football career.

After retirement, Haffner was a color commentator for the NFL on NBC. He is most noted for being the sideline reporter who inadvertently captured on his live microphone a two?word expletive uttered by head coach Terry Donahue, who was voicing his disapproval over a Bruins interception being nullified due to a penalty in NBC's Christmas Day telecast of the 1978 Fiesta Bowl. Haffner and Donohue had been roommates at UCLA.




Two other former pro football players born on July 7 with New England area connections:

- Victor Heflin, 64 (7/7/60);
born in Springfield, Mass.
The safety played in 24 games over two seasons with the St Louis Cardinals. Since 1995 Heflin has been a senior account executive at Dancker, an office furniture store in Maryland.

- Arnie Horween (7/7/1898-8/5/1985); Arnie played and coached at Harvard, and the QB also played and coached for the Chicago Cardinals. The Horween Leather Company to this day still supplies the leather used in NFL footballs, as well as manufacturing high end dress shoes.





A few notable pro football players born on July 7:

- Michael McCrary, 54 (7/7/70); 10-year DE went to two Pro Bowls with the Ravens.

- Jerry Sherk, 76 (7/7/48); four-time Pro Bowl DT for the Browns in the seventies.

- Carl Mauck, 77 (7/7/47); 10-year starting center with San Diego and Houston.

- Darnay Scott, 52 (7/7/72); WR had 6,193 receiving yards, mostly with Cincinnati.

- Robert James, 77 (7/7/47); All Pro corner for Buffalo in the seventies.

- Michael Westbrook, 52 (7/7/72); caught Kordell Stewart's Hail Mary (over Ty Law) for Colorado to beat Michigan in 1994, and had 26 touchdowns in the NFL.

- Matt Suhey, 66 (7/7/58); fullback for the Bears from 1980-89 had 25 TDs and 5,059 yards from scrimmage.
 
Today in Patriots History
Rex Burkhead, Otis Smith, Drew Bledsoe and Chy Davidson



July 7, 2020:
Rex Burkhead is re-signed to a three year, $3.5 million restructured contract.


Heading into his final season of a three-year deal, Rex Burkhead has reworked his contract.​

The running back will be taking a pretty noteworthy pay cut to stay in New England. Burkhead will get $550,000 to sign the new deal, but his base salary will drop from $2.5 million to $1.05 million in 2020.​

The Patriots have been strapped to the salary cap, so saving almost $1 million gives them so much needed flexibility, while Burkhead would clearly rather play in New England on a cheaper deal than risk getting cut as a cap casualty.​

Burkhead adds a jack-of-all trades element to the Patriots running back room, which is one of the deepest positions on the roster. On a depth chart with James White, Sony Michel and Damien Harris, Burkhead offers a unique skill set that sets him apart from the rest. Bill Belichick offered high praise for the running back last season, calling him “one of the most versatile players on our team.”​

“Rex has been a good player for us so, everybody improves and can work on little things every year, but I’d say he’s been a pretty solid player for us,” Belichick said. “He plays on all four downs. He can run the ball, can handle all our regular run plays. He’s a good third-down back. James White’s a great third-down back. Rex can play on all big four in the kicking game – kickoff, kickoff return, punt, punt return. He’s one of the most versatile players on our team.​

“There’s a handful of players like that, that can play on every down, but those guys are rare and play it at a high level like Kyle (Van Noy), Devin (McCourty), Pat (Chung), Rex, too,” Belichick said. “As a coach, it’s a tremendous luxury to have on your team, to have players that are that versatile and that versatile in terms of the variety of things they can do and that versatile in terms of being able to do it at a high level in all those situations. You’re lucky to have one of those guys on your team. Maybe two. We have more than that. It’s something that’s really a great help as a coach in terms of game planning and managing the entire roster. They give you so much depth.”​



July 7, 2004:
Patriots release CB Otis Smith


The New England Patriots on Wednesday released veteran Otis Smith, nearly three months after the cornerback signed with the team.​

The 38-year-old Smith spent last season with the Detroit Lions and had two stints with the Patriots during his 14-year career. His seven interception returns for touchdowns rank sixth in NFL history.​

After being released by the Patriots last August, Smith signed with the Lions and started 13 games. He was credited with 67 tackles, just three shy of the career-highs he recorded in 1997 and 1998 with the New York Jets.​

Smith originally signed with the Patriots on October 9, 1996 after being released by the Jets. He started six games at right cornerback and returned a fumble 47 yards for a touchdown in New England's win over Jacksonville in the AFC championship game.​

Smith returned to the Patriots in 2000 after three years with the Jets and started 42 of 45 games over the next three years. In New England's 2001 championship season, Smith led the team with five interceptions for 181 yards, including two he returned for touchdowns.​

The 5-11 Smith has 525 tackles and 29 interceptions in 180 career games.​




July 7, 1993:
Patriots sign first round draft pick Drew Bledsoe



As for who would be a fit with the Patriots with the No. 1 pick, New England’s new coach kept things as blanketed in secrecy as he could.​

“NFL insiders? They don’t have a clue,” quipped Bill Parcells at a pre-draft press conference. “There’s no one who knows. No one. My wife has asked and she doesn’t have a clue.”​

It was a classic soundbite from one of the league’s most quotable figures, and it provided the Patriots with a burst of headlines and public interest.​

Still, Parcells’s secretive tactics weren’t designed for publicity (though his mere presence had already caused an increase in season ticket sales). He was leaving the door open for a possible trade.​

As Globe reporter Will McDonough would note after the draft, the Patriots were reportedly offered two serious trade proposals. One was from the 49ers, in possession of two first-round picks after trading Joe Montana to the Chiefs. Their offer, per McDonough (as well as Sports Illustrated’s Peter King), was all 10 draft choices San Francisco possessed in 1993 in exchange for the Patriots’ first and second-round picks.​

The other offer came from the Colts, with McDonough elaborating that Indianapolis proposed three separate scenarios, all involving an array of draft picks and players. As tempting as both offers may have been, Parcells balked. It was a sign that he was leaning towards picking a quarterback.​

Yet as the fateful day approached, the mystery persisted, even for Bledsoe and agent Leigh Steinberg. Following a productive but noncommittal pre-draft meeting with Patriots leadership in Foxborough, Steinberg recalled the coach’s demeanor.​

“Parcells was impressive,” he said, “but he was cool as a cucumber.”​

“There has never been so little known the night before.”

In the buildup to the 1993 draft, expert predictions centered on Bledsoe and Rick Mirer. ESPN draft expert Mel Kiper Jr. forecasted that New England would opt for Mirer.​

“With the No. 1 pick, it looks like the Patriots will select quarterback Rick Mirer of Notre Dame instead of Washington State’s Drew Bledsoe,” Kiper said in an ESPN segment. “In my opinion this would be a major reach, but Bill Parcells likes Mirer’s arm strength and mobility.”​

It was testament to the veil of secrecy Parcells had cast over of the draft process. But for Bledsoe, the possibility of being picked by the Seahawks at No. 2 overall was far from a disaster.​

“Seattle was the hometown team,” Bledsoe, a Walla Walla native who had stayed in-state for college, told Jeff Howe of The Athletic in 2018. “I would have been able to stay close to home and have friends and family around. Initially, that seemed appealing to me.”​

By April 25, the day of the draft, the ongoing mystery of the No. 1 pick had made the Patriots one of the league’s more interesting teams.​

“There has never been so little known the night before by player personnel, general managers, and coaches as there was for this draft,” said ESPN anchor Chris Berman as coverage of the event began.​

In the end, having kept everyone — fans, reporters, and other NFL executives — in suspense for months, Parcells didn’t waste time once league commissioner Paul Tagliabue formally put New England on the clock. Less than sixty seconds into the allotted 15 minutes the Patriots were given to make the pick, Tagliabue nonchalantly strolled back to the podium.​

“The Patriots select Drew Bledsoe, quarterback, Washington State University.”​

Bledsoe remembered the moment during a 2017 interview with Boston.com.​

“[Parcells] always played his cards really close to the vest, so we didn’t know right up until they announced the pick that I was going first,” he said. “Which was different because in those days if it was fairly cut and dried who was going to be the first pick, a lot of times a contract would already be starting to be negotiated before the draft.”​

“They started the draft and then right away they announced I was the first pick,” Bledsoe added. “I looked over and my dad was trying to take the video camera off his hand and my mom was trying to figure out what just happened. And I couldn’t get to her, so I ended up hugging my agent. It was just kind of not how I envisioned it, but it ended up being awfully cool.”​


As the top overall pick, Bledsoe would normally have expected to sign a near-record contract, but the newly created NFL salary cap put a damper on expectations.​

“The new collective bargaining agreement was put specifically in so that more money would go to proven starters and less money would go to rookies,” Steinberg explained. Still, the agent and his team went to work. Their solution would have a long-lasting impact.​

“You had to work within the law, but I was not ready to to take a reduction,” Steinberg joked. “We came up with a concept called ‘voidable years,’ which had never been done in a football contract before.”​

It provided a creative solution, allowing Bledsoe to get paid at a higher rate in his rookie season. Voidable years, as a contractual concept, would become a highly utilized tactic across the league.​

Back in New England, reactions from Patriots fans were largely positive. On top of having a proven Super Bowl-winning coach, New England now had a top talent at quarterback. A Boston Globe poll of more than 700 readers following the draft found that 80.5 percent of responders agreed with the pick.​

“Who would have thought with the Bruins being swept, the Red Sox going south and the Celtics in transition that the most optimism surrounding any franchise in Boston would be the Patriots?” remarked reader Rich Barron from Natick. “Parcells and Bledsoe — it’s a new era, and let’s hope that the decade of the ’90s is for the Patriots.”​


Ultimately, Barron was off by a decade (or two). The Patriots would become the team of the 2000s (and arguably the 2010s) under Bill Belichick and Tom Brady. But in their predecessors, New England found important pieces in the team’s journey back towards legitimacy. For a team that had become the league’s laughingstock — “pro football’s Siberia,” as King would write in a 1993 column — adding Parcells and Bledsoe was invaluable.​




July 7, 1981:
New England selects Chy Davidson, a wide receiver from the University of Rhode Island, in the Supplemental Draft. The Pats forfeit an 11th round pick for the rights to Davidson. He was one of only two players taken in the supplemental draft that year; the other was quarterback Dave Wilson, taken by the Saints for a first round pick. Davidson did not make the roster for the Pats; he was with Washington (USFL), Washington (NFL) and Jets through 1985.

 
Today in Patriots History
Bull Bramlett


Happy posthumous birthday to John 'Bull' Bramlett, who would have turned 83 today
Born July 7, 1941 in Memphis
Patriot OLB, 1969-1970; uniform #57
Died Oct 23, 2014 at the age of 73

Acquired in a trade with Miami on March 24, 1969




Undrafted out of Memphis State, John Cameron Bramlett was the runner-up to Joe Namath as the rookie of the year in 1965. He was a two-time American Football League All-Star before being part of one of the most infamous trades in Patriots history. A few weeks after the 1969 AFL draft the Dolphins traded Bramlett, backup QB Kim Hammond and a 1970 fifth round draft pick to the Pats in exchange for future Hall of Fame linebacker Nick Buoniconti. It wasn't as if the move was an attempt to make the aging Patriots roster younger; Nick was only a year older than his counterpart. And while Bramlett had been a second team All-AFL (equivalent of second team All-Pro) in 1966 and 1967, Buoniconti had been a first team All-AFL from '64 through '67. Perhaps the Patriots were concerned he was coming off a season where he missed six games due to injury; or maybe that and the fact that Buoniconti was prepping for a post-football life by having completed night classes at Suffolk University and earning his law degree in '68 had them concerned about his focus and longevity.

Bull Bramlett had a reputation for reckless behavior and disdain for authority, which had already ended his professional baseball career. In his fifth year of pro football he was already on his third team, despite being a starter all four years: two seasons in Denver and two in Miami. Bull played in 24 games with 23 starts in two seasons with the Pats, and was out of football a year later. The Pats traded him to Green Bay at the end of the 1971 training camp, but he refused to report to the Packers. He later signed with the Falcons in '71, and retired on May 23, 1972. Two years later his days as a drinker and brawler ended, and he became a minister.


Taming the Bull: The John Bramlett Story


John Bramlett | Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame


Jan 19, 2014:


Because of his on-field aggressiveness and his antics off the field, Bramlett was given his nickname. But he changed his behavior when he retired from football, becoming a Christian evangelist.​

According to a website dedicated to his ministry, Bramlett spent 40 years speaking to hundreds of churches, schools, prisons and conventions, as well as NFL and MLB chapel services.​

"Indeed, he inspired many people as a professional football player," Luttrell said in a statement. "Yet ... John's stories of forgiveness and hope through his Christian witness made a real difference in the lives of countless people throughout the nation and here in Shelby County.​

"John Bramlett was ... a dear friend. I'm grateful for having known him and his family."​


John Bramlett Obituary
After a brief career with the St. Louis Cardinals, John began a career in the NFL in 1965 as “the meanest man in football” that included Denver Broncos, Miami Dolphins, Boston Patriots, Atlanta Falcons and two Pro Bowl appearances (’66, ’68). John was named runner- up AFL Rookie of the Year behind Joe Namath in 1965.​

While playing for the Patriots, John was named Most Valuable Player for the team in 1970. John was honored to be inducted into the Tennessee Football and Baseball Hall of Fame, University of Memphis Football and Baseball Hall of Fame, Denver Broncos Wall of Fame, All-Time Denver Broncos Team, All American Football Association Hall of Fame, And Fellowship of Christian Athletes Hall of Champions.​



The Globe story below sums up the legend of John Bramlett.

Oct 28, 2017: Big men with broken minds: The largely forgotten faces of the Patriots franchise | The Boston Globe
As for Bramlett, who died with Alzheimer’s, the Patriots acquired him in 1969 from the Dolphins in exchange for Nick Buoniconti, then an all-star linebacker who later was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. (Buoniconti, now 76, also suffers from CTE symptoms. “I feel like a child,’’ he told Sports Illustrated in May.)​

Bramlett was a risky acquisition for the Patriots. A hard-drinking renegade who grew up in a tough section of Memphis, he had been making trouble since he played football as a kid with his longtime friend Elvis Presley.​

A two-sport star at Memphis State, Bramlett was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals and played three years in the minors before his recklessness cost him his baseball career.​

According to his 1989 book, “Taming the Bull,’’ Bramlett’s misdeeds as a Cardinal included drinking whiskey during a game, then throwing an eight-pound weight that looked like a baseball at an unsuspecting teammate. The projectile knocked out three of the player’s teeth and rendered him unconscious in a bloody heap.​

Bramlett then signed to play football for the Denver Broncos. With his singular ferocity, he finished second to Joe Namath on the 1965 Rookie of the Year ballot and earned Pro Bowl honors, as he did again in 1966.​

By the time Bramlett arrived in Boston, his future appeared bright. The Patriots, though, were largely luckless vagabonds, mocked as the Patsies while they averaged barely four wins a season for nearly a decade. They lurched from one temporary home to another — Fenway Park, Boston College, Harvard — before they settled in Foxborough in 1971.​

Yet Bramlett thrived. In 1970, Marty Schottenheimer described him to the Globe as “the best outside linebacker in the American Conference, probably the best in all pro football.’’​

Bramlett’s teammates voted him their most valuable player, and Patriots trainer Bill Bates told the Globe, “Bull Bramlett plays this game with reckless abandon. The man’s body is a total wreck.’’

Bramlett underwent knee and elbow surgeries after the season, as well as an appendectomy, and the Patriots might have given him time to recover had he not continued his wild ways.​

During training camp at UMass Amherst, Bramlett wrote in his book, “My constant drinking in the bars near camp and the disturbances I caused gave management the excuses they seemed to be looking for to call me on the carpet.’’

He was shipped to the Green Bay Packers, who waived him after he insulted the coach. The Atlanta Falcons then gave him his final opportunity, which quickly resulted in a career-ending knee injury.​

At that, Bramlett returned to Tennessee and embraced religious faith. He spent the rest of his days as a Christian evangelist, until he began to slip away.​


John Bramlett Resume

Any relation to Delaney Bramlett?
 
Today in Patriots History
Cassius Marsh



Happy 32nd birthday to Cassius Marsh
Born July 7, 1992 in Mission Hills, CA
Patriot DE, 2017; uniform #55
Acquired in a trade with Seattle on September 2, 2017

At the end of the 2017 training camp the Patriots made three transactions. The club traded QB Jacoby Brissett to the Colts for WR Phillip Dorsett; CB Johnson Bademosi was acquired from Detroit for a future draft pick; and Cassius Marsh was acquired from Seattle for 5th and 7th round draft picks. This came a few days after defensive lineman Kony Ealy was released, as the Pats needed some depth for their pass rush.

Marsh didn't like the Patriot defensive concept - which meant there were times he would have to set the edge and cover a running back - rather than just teeing off on the opposing quarterback. He let Bill Belichick know about his own defensive coaching strategy - and nine games into his career as a Patriot, Marsh was gone.

Cassius Marsh also did gain notoriety by giving an interview soon after about how he had 'no fun' playing in New England. But it is worth noting that Marsh was signed and released by nine teams in his eight year NFL career, so perhaps he needed to take a good look in the mirror rather than blaming his coaches.

May 26, 2018:

May 28, 2018:

July 13, 2021:

July 14, 2021:

July 14, 2021:



Sept 18, 2017: Chiefs RB Kareem Hunt eludes Patriots DE Cassius Marsh as he runs for a touchdown after
catching a pass from Alex Smith during the second half of Thursday's game. KC won the week one contest 42-27.

**** Cassius Marsh and the idiot who traded for him.
 
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