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Today In Patriots History August 14: Tim Tebow

Fun historical team facts.
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Today in Patriots History
Ancient August 14 History


Aug 14, 1959:
The first league meeting of the American Football League was held in Chicago, and the league was publicly announced in a press conference on this day. Charter memberships were given to Dallas, New York, Houston, Denver, Los Angeles, and Minneapolis-Saint Paul.




Aug 14, 1960:
The Boston Patriots play their first home game at Harvard Stadium. The Pats lost the preseason game - or, exhibition game, as they were referred to then - 24-14 to the Dallas Texans, before a crowd of 11,000 fans on that Sunday afternoon.











Aug 14, 1961:
The Patriots take the training camp show on the road, to Marblehead.

 
Today in Patriots History
More Recent August 14 News



August 14, 2024:





August 14, 2023:
Veteran linebacker Raekwon McMillan will not play a snap during the 2023 NFL season.​

But even though the 27-year-old is expected to be on the shelf all year due to injury, Bill Belichick and the Patriots clearly want to keep him around. According to ESPN’s Field Yates, the Patriots signed McMillan to a one-year extension through the 2024 season worth up to $2.245 million.​

This marks the second time that the Patriots have handed out a contract extension to the linebacker while he was on injured reserve.​

The former Dolphin and Raider established himself as a steady contributor last season in New England, appearing in 16 games and recording 35 tackles, five tackles for loss, and posting a touchdown against the Cardinals off of a fumble return.​



August 14, 2022:
Devin Hafford may have received less than his share of draft-worthy attention, as the product of an FCS program. However, there is a lot to like about his game. Hafford appeared in 56 games during his six-year tenure with the Tarleton State Texans, He is adequately sized for the position at 6-0, 195 pounds, while demonstrating impressive speed. He ran a 1.52-second 10-yard split at his pro day. In his 2021 senior season, Hafford compiled 50 tackles, six interceptions, two fumble recoveries — along with scoring one touchdown. He was later named the WAC Defensive Player of the Year.​

Hafford did not last long: he was waived six days later. Earlier this year he was playing for Lowell in the Indoor Football League.



August 14, 2015:
Casey Walker spent part of last season on the Patriots' 53-man roster and practice squad. He played five games for the Patriots with one start and had 10 tackles and one sack.​

Walker entered the NFL as a rookie free agent with Carolina on April 30, 2013. He spent part of his rookie season and began the 2014 season on the practice squad before being signed by New England to the 53-man roster on Sept. 27.​

He was released by the Patriots on Nov. 20 and signed to the practice squad on Nov. 22. He was signed by Baltimore to the 53-man roster from the Patriots practice squad on Dec. 16 and played in one regular-season game. Walker was released by Baltimore on Aug 5.​

The Patriots released Walker on September 4. He played in eight NFL games, five of which were with the Pats.



August 14, 2014:
Veteran blocking tight end Ben Hartsock, who signed a one-year deal with the New England Patriots on Sunday, was released by the team on Thursday.​

The release of Hartsock, who on Monday had talked about the Patriots being the quintessential role-playing team, leaves the Patriots thin at tight end at the moment. The top three players on the depth chart -- Rob Gronkowski, Michael Hoomanawanui and D.J. Williams -- are all either limited or not practicing because of health-relates issues. That will leave just Steve Maneri and fullback James Develin to handle tight-end type duties in Friday's preseason game against the Eagles, with undrafted free-agent Taylor McCuller also possibly getting into the mix.​

The Patriots have shuffled personnel at the bottom of the tight end depth chart since Sunday, making a total of seven transactions at the position.​
- Releasing undrafted free agent Justin Jones
- Releasing undrafted free agent Asa Watson
- Signing Hartsock​
- Signing Maneri​
- Signing undrafted free agent Terrence Miller
- Waiving Miller with an injury designation​
-Releasing Hartsock​



August 14, 2008:
Chris Dunlap, 22, was signed by the Patriots as a free agent on July 21. He was originally signed by the Patriots as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 14, 2007. The 5-foot-11-inch, 200-pound receiver participated in the Patriots' 2007 training camp before being released on Sept. 1, 2007. Dunlap attended Georgia Tech.​
The Patriots announced the signing of free-agent offensive lineman Stephen Sene today. To make room on the 80-man roster for Sene, the team waived receiver Chris Dunlap.​

Sene, who played in college at Liberty, was most recently with the Rams. He will wear No. 64.​



August 14, 2002:
Built for depth, the Patriots defensive backfield has been anything but deep or durable this summer. Yesterday, the Pats addressed that issue with a blast from the past.​

The team signed veteran cornerback Jimmy Hitchcock, who played three years with the Patriots (1995-97) before spending the last four seasons in Minnesota and Carolina.​

Hitchcock, who joined the Pats for practice in the afternoon and expects to be in the lineup for Saturday's preseason home game against Philadelphia, fondly remembers playing for then-secondary coach Bill Belichick during the Pats' 1996 Super Bowl season.​

"I could tell right away he was smarter than everybody else," said Hitchcock, who had been without a job until the Pats called. "I can't believe he did it (win the Super Bowl) as soon as he did. But he did, and I'm proud of him."​

Hitchcock is expected to fill the void created by injured defensive backs Tommy Knight (hamstring pull) and Leonard Myers (groin). While the regulars in the secondary - Ty Law, Otis Smith, Tebucky Jones, Lawyer Milloy, Victor Green - have been on the field every day and performing well, the nickel and dime coverages have suffered as a result of the injuries.​

Hitchcock, an aggressive player on the field and a brash personality off it during his first stint with the Pats, was benched by coach Bill Parcells (in favor of Smith) midway through 1996. He returned to starting duty under Pete Carroll the next season before being traded to the Vikings for a third-round pick.​

Hitchcock is known for taking chances on the field, and while that helped him make seven interceptions with the Vikings in 1998, it also has caused him to be burned badly at times.​

Hitchcock said he realizes he won't be able to be such a gambler under Belichick.​

"I'm just going to fit into the system, play hard, play aggressive, try to tackle well, get in great football shape and learn the defense," he said. "I'm a rookie today."​

The Pats' secondary now has a distinct 1996-97 feel, as Law, Milloy, Smith and Hitchcock were all in the mix at that time. Hitchcock said he returns older and wiser.​

"(I'm) smarter. A smarter guy," he said. "I've done some things out on the corner that gives you experience. I've been through everything. But I'm still the same Jimmy Hitchcock. Some things change, but not much."​

Someone who is probably feeling the heat of Hitchcock's arrival is Knight, the veteran free agent cornerback who was brought in to play in nickel defenses and perhaps compete with Smith for starting duty.​

Knight missed all of the spring minicamp with scraped hands before pulling his hamstring the second day of training camp. Knight said he hopes to return to the field by next week.​

"It's been a bad-luck start in general, I guess," Knight said. "But you face adversity and keep fighting. Obviously, I'm very disappointed. But at the same time all I can do is focus on the things I need to do to get better."​



August 14, 2000:
The New England Patriots announced the signing of veteran free agent wide receiver Chris Calloway and also released eight players, including veteran wide receiver Vincent Brisby. They also released wide receivers Aaron Bailey, Matt Bumgardner and Tony Gaiter, safeties Cory Gilliard and Rodney Rideau, cornerback Mike Woods and tight end Dave Stachelski. Following today's transactions the Patriots have 73 players on their active roster.​
Calloway, 32, was released by the Atlanta Falcons in the offseason.​

He played in 11 games for the Falcons in 1999, starting six and finishing with 22 receptions for 314 yards and one touchdown.​

Originally a fourth-round pick by Pittsburgh in 1990, Calloway spent his first two seasons with the Steelers before signing as a free agent with the New York Giants before the 1992 season. In six seasons with New York, Calloway had 334 receptions to rank third on the club's all-time list.​

Overall in 10 seasons, Calloway has 381 receptions for 5,402 yards and 30 touchdowns.​

Brisby, 29, is the most notable of the eight players the Patriots cut Monday. He had a breakout year for New England in 1995, amassing career highs of 66 catches and 974 yards while starting all 16 games. Since then, the seven-year veteran has managed just 48 catches in four injury-plagued campaigns.​


Chris Calloway played in seven games for the Patriots in 2000, with two starts. He averaged 19.0 yards per catch, with five receptions (all for first downs), on ten targets. The Patriots released Calloway on October 21, thus ending his NFL career.

Vincent Brisby signed with the Jets, appearing in three games with four receptions, also ending his NFL career in 2000.
 
Today in Patriots History
20th Century August 14 News



August 14, 1997:
New England signs free agent RB/KR Butler By'not'e

By'not'e was a running back at Ohio State back when John Cooper was the head coach. The Buckeyes had Bobby Hoying at QB, with senior Raymont Harris getting most of the carries and sophomore Eddie George waiting to take over. By'not'e was never the lead back but did average 4.6 yards while scoring 11 touchdowns and rushing for 1,530 yards in his four seasons in Columbus. That 1993 Ohio State team also had junior Joey Galloway and sophomre Terry Glenn at wide receiver, yet lost to Michigan 28-0.

Butler By'not'e was selected by Denver in the seventh round, 212th overall in the 1994 draft. Ironically that pick was originally owned by the Patriots. It was traded to Green Bay for 29-year old safety Adrian White, who finished his NFL career with five games played for the Pats in 1993.

By'not'e played in 16 games for the Broncos and Panthers, averaging 21.0 yards on 42 kickoff returns. He had zero carries or receptions at running back. By'not'e did not last long in New England: he was released ten days later. He spent the '98 offseason with the Raiders, but was cut near the end of their training camp, marking an end to his NFL career. Apparently he is now the offensive coordinator at Westminster Christian Academy in St Louis County, Missouri.




Butler B'ynote' is a former defensive back who played five years in the NFL. B'ynote' was a part of the Denver Broncos, New England Patriots, Oakland Raiders, and Carolina Panthers before becoming a preacher, teacher and coach.

Q: What was your transition like?​
A: It was very up and down because I didn’t leave on my own terms. I got to a point where, emotionally, I couldn’t do it anymore. I was with the Oakland Raiders and ended up getting released – I kind of had an emotional break down. I ended up going back to school at Ohio State to finish my degree, and when I went back it was very difficult for me to even concentrate because I was in a state of depression.​

Q: What have you been doing since leaving the NFL?​
A: I’m preaching, teaching and coaching. I am a pastor at the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, a new upcoming church located in the inner-city of St. Louis. I’m also teaching career leadership development at a local inner-city high school. I was also a head football coach for the last two seasons at Vashon High School, my alma mater in St. Louis. This year I am coaching at Kirkland High School.​



August 14, 1996:
The Patriots waive four players:
Andre Bowden -never played in the NFL, but he is an Arena Football Hall of Fame FB/LB
S Eddie Cade - played in ten games for the Pats in 1995
WR Bill Schroeder - spent '95 on IR; had 304 receptions in the NFL, mostly with Green Bay
NT Bruce Walker - played in 11 games with five starts for the Pats in '95

See the August 4 entry for more on Eddie Cade, and the July 18 entry for more on Walker.

Bowden spent several years in the Arena League as a LB/FB, but I can't tell which position he played at Fayetteville State or for his offseason with the Patriots. He doesn't appear to have any college football stats, so I assume it's linebacker.

The Patriots had traded Mike Arthur to Green Bay for Schroeder and Jeff Wilner. Schroeder went on to have a pretty good career, with three consecutive seasons with 900-plus yards receiving. Arthur had been the Pats starting center for two seasons, in '93-'94. Wilner was a tight end from UConn who had five receptions in 13 games with the Packers in '94-95, but never played for the Patriots. In hindsight, letting Schroeder go was not the best of Bill Parcell's personnel decisions - though to be fair, his career did not take off until 1999.



August 14, 1995:
The Pats waive safety Dwayne Provo and tight end Paul Francisco

Provo was born in Nova Scotia and played in the CFL for eight seasons, but never did play in the NFL. He was also with the Bills during the 1997 offseason, and had a second stint with the Pats in '97 that ended with his being placed on IR.




Francisco was born in Honduras, grew up in Boston, and went to Boston University. Besides the Patriots, he also spent time with the Dolphins and Ravens, but never played in the NFL. The 6'6, 236 Francisco has had a successful business career with State Street Bank.





August 14, 1984:
- Craig Williams is placed on injured reserve
The knee injury ended the NFL dream for the running back from La Tech
- George Crump is placed on the physically unable to perform list
Defensive end from East Carolina was the Pats 4th round pick in the 1982 draft. All of his NFL playing time came as a rookie, when he played in nine games. In week four Crump had a crucial play when he tackled Archie Manning in the ned zone for a safety, as the Patriots held on to win by the score of 29-21. See the July 22 entry for more on Crump.
Seven other players are waived:
- David Brown
- Harper Howell
- James Keyton
- Jerome Ley
- Walter Marlin
- Herb Menhardt
- Leaf Palmer



August 14, 1979:
New head coach Ron Erhardt waives several players:
- Chuck Campagna
- Martin Cox
- Robert Durrett
- Roy Eppes
- Rob Forbes
- John Hurley
- Dave Jacobs
- Mike Patrick
- Richard Peot
- Paul Ricker
- Ken Talton
In addition, Sidney Brown is placed on injured reserve.



August 14, 1978:
The Patriots trade Bob McKay to the Detroit Liosn for Jim Mitchell



August 14, 1975:
Tackle Tom Neville fractures his leg, causing him to miss the entire season.



August 14, 1974:
The Patriots trade James Callier to the Chicago Bears for a whole $200 cash money.
The Pats also acquire David Lewis from Cincinnati for cash.



August 14, 1973:
Henry Moore and Dan Werner are waived.



August 14, 1969:
LB/TE Ken Herock is acquired from Cincinnati.
See the July 16 entry for more.



August 14, 1968:
The Boston Patriots cut John Magnum
 
You headlined this sacred day with Tim Tebow over Mike Vrabel? How dare you.
 
You headlined this sacred day with Tim Tebow over Mike Vrabel? How dare you.
Yeah, I regretted that choice immediately.

I've done these a couple times in the past, and Vrabel was always the headline without a second thought on August 14.
So I figured I would change it up this time.
Started to second guess the decision right away.

It was equal to having as much trust in a Tebow over Vrabel headline as I would have had confidence in Timmy hitting the broad side of a barn on a quick out route.
 
Yeah, he's certainly worse than the athletes who beat up women or kill people drunk driving.
Well I guess I should always issue a caveat with these types of things. Leonard Little, Rae Carruth, Tyreek Hill, and those types all are in a league of their own. Tebow falls into the Aaron Rodgers/Travis Kelce category. A fraudulent, self promoting tool.
 
He embarrassed the Steelers in the playoffs and gave me permanent ammo in any argument i have with their fans so he definitely proved useful as an nfl player
 
Well I guess I should always issue a caveat with these types of things. Leonard Little, Rae Carruth, Tyreek Hill, and those types all are in a league of their own. Tebow falls into the Aaron Rodgers/Travis Kelce category. A fraudulent, self promoting tool.
What a phenomenally stupid comment.
 
What a phenomenally stupid comment.
I'm going to take a guess on why you like him and not bother to engage.
 
I'm going to take a guess on why you like him and not bother to engage.
And I don't need to take a guess on why you hate him. The reason is obvious so no guessing needed.
 
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