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Today in Patriots History
Richard Bishop
Richard Bishop
In memory of Richard Bishop, who would have turned 75 today
Born March 23, 1950 in Cleveland
Died September 26, 2016 at the age of 66 in Miami
Patriot nose tackle and defensive end, 1976-1981; uniform #64
Signed as a free agent on September 5, 1976
Pats résumé: six seasons, 85 games (51 starts); 32½ sacks, 7 fumble recoveries, safety, blocked FG; 3 sacks in two playoff games; NT on Pats All-1980s Team
After high school Richard Allen Bishop spent two years in junior college before transferring to Louisville, where he played for Lee Corso. He was selected in the fifth round of the 1974 draft by Cincinnati but was a final camp cut, and never played for the Bengals. Bishop spent two seasons in the Canadian Football League with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Ottawa Rough Riders before finally signing with the Patriots as a free agent at the age of 26 in 1976.
Bishop was an impact player as a rookie, helping the Pats make the playoffs for the first time in thirteen years. He played a major role in one of the most famous (or more appropriately, infamous) plays in franchise history. That ’76 team was a juggernaut, finishing the season on a six-game winning streak. The offense averaged 27 points per game and 5.0 yards per carry, while the defense was equally productive, forcing 50 turnovers. The Patriots made the playoffs as an 11-3 wild card team, and met Oakland in the playoffs; the Pats had pummeled the Raiders earlier in the year, 48-17.
The officiating in the game was a travesty. Oakland was permitted to get away with one non-call after another. All world tight end Russ Francis was the primary target for the Raiders. On one play George Atkinson broke Francis’ nose with no flag thrown, and on another key play he was so blatantly held by Phil Villapiano that he could not raise either arm – again with no penalty called.
The non-call led to a long missed field goal with the Patriots up by four with four minutes remaining. Oakland drove but after a Mel Lunsford sack and two incompletions the Raiders were faced with a 3rd-and-18. The defensive play call was for a stunt with Bishop drawing defenders and leaving an open lane for Ray Hamilton. Ken Stabler got the pass off just as he was about to be sacked, but Ben Dreith flagged Hamilton for roughing the passer even though replays showed that was the incorrect call.
Back to Richard Bishop. He was a very solid player for the Pats, appearing in a grand total of 87 games with 52 starts from 1976-81. In the 1978 playoff game against the Oilers he was in on each of the three sacks on Dan Pastorini. Some of his best games were against division rivals. Bishop sacked Richard Todd eight times over his career, and also had a fumble recovery against the Jet quarterback. He also had a safety on Bob Griese in a crucial game against the Dolphins in '78. Bishop received the Jim Lee Hunt Memorial Award for Team's Most Outstanding Lineman, as well as the 1776 Fan Club Unsung Hero Award in 1978.
In 2014 Bishop was one of fifteen players to file a federal lawsuit against the NFL for negligence and purposeful concealment of knowledge that a direct relationship existed between concussions and the development of brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s, dementia and ALS. Richard Bishop passed away nine years ago at the age of 66.
‘Roughing the Passer’: The Patriots-Raiders Game You Should Know About
Now that Tom Brady has shown us his throwback resume, let’s flash back to the Patriots-Raiders AFC divisional playoff game that took place on Dec. 18, 1976.
www.boston.com
Patriots defensive end Mel Lunsford – who was drafted by the Raiders in ’72 – sacked Stabler for an eight yard loss and Pats fans were feeling pretty fancy with just 1:24 left to play.
Stabler misfired on the next two passes and the Raiders were faced with a third and 18 from their own 28 yard line. The Patriots were seemingly poised to pull off a playoff win in enemy territory.
The Snake then dropped back to pass and Patriots defensive tackle Ray "Sugar Bear" Hamilton came charging in on him. Hamilton got a piece of the ball on a pass intended for former Patriot halfback/kick returner Carl Garrett down at the goal line. Pass incomplete.
Game. Set. Match.
Not quite. The most horrible thing happened next. The most backbreaking, heartbreaking call you could imagine.
Referee Ben Dreith called a highly-questionable roughing-the-passer penalty on Hamilton that gave the Raiders new life. Dreith said Hamilton came down on Stabler with excessive force, which forced him to throw the flag.
“It goes incomplete on our sideline,” Patriots broadcaster Gil Santos told NFL Network in a look back at the game. “And then we see the flag. And then they call roughing the passer and I look at the replay and I said, ‘You gotta be kidding me.’”
Hamilton could not believe the call was going to be on the Patriots.
“I just figured that someone had held one of our guys,” Hamilton told NFL Network. “I just knew that’s what it was. It couldn’t have been anything else. I was totally shocked. It was just a phantom, bogus call.”
And the Raiders took advantage of it as Stabler snaked into the end zone behind guard Gene Upshaw to score the winning touchdown with 10 seconds remaining to advance by a final score of 24-21.
“With the Ray Hamilton penalty, we kind of lost our composure and they easily walked down the field,” Patriots Pro Bowl defensive back Mike Haynes would later admit.
Penalties were a factor all game, with the Raiders getting flagged 11 times for 93 yards, while the Patriots had 10 penalties for 83 yards. But the only call that mattered in the end was the roughing the passer infraction that cost them a chance to live another week.
“I seldom have walked away from a game with a feeling of anger and bitterness to equal the sensation that overcame me following the events of Dec. 18, 1976, when the New England Patriots had a playoff game stolen from them by the Oakland Raiders and by an officiating crew for whom there should be reserved a special place in athletic Hades…,” the Globe’s Bob Ryan wrote in 2002. “My conclusion was that the Patriots wuz robbed. I had seen a great injustice, and it bothered me. Worse yet, those damnable Al Davis Raiders went on to win that Super Bowl.”
The Globe’s Will McDonough caught up with Stabler in 2002 and The Snake admitted the call was lousy.
"That should have never been a penalty," Stabler told McDonough. "I got hit a lot worse than that in my career and it was never called. Hamilton just went for the ball and landed on me. That's all that happened."
Patriots 1981 Media Guide - page 21
Retired NFL players accuse league officials of concealing long term effects of concussions
Officials with the National Football League have been aware of the long-term degenerative
pennrecord.com
Former Patriots DT Richard Bishop passes away
Richard Bishop Career Game Log | Pro-Football-Reference.com
Get Richard Bishop Career game log for regular season and playoff games on Pro-football-reference.com.
www.pro-football-reference.com












