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Today In Patriots History April 11: Houston Antwine

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Today in Patriots History
Houston Antwine



In memory of Houston Antwine, who would have turned 86 today
Born April 11, 1953 in Louise, Mississippi; raised in Memphis, Tennessee
Died December 26, 2011 at the age of 72 in Memphis
Patriot right defensive tackle 1961-1971; uniform #65

Rights traded from Houston Oilers to Boston Patriots on October 9, 1961 in exchange for a 1962 4th round draft pick
Pats résumé: 11 seasons, 142 games; 6x AFL All Star; All-Time All-AFL Team; Pats All-1960s, 35th & 50th Anniversary Teams; Pats Hall of Fame



It's a great thing that Houston Antwine is a member of the Patriots Hall of Fame.
It's also a shame that he, Jim Nance and Leon Gray did not receive that honor before their deaths.

Houston Antwine was one of the best players in football history that is not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
'Twine may also be the greatest player in Patriot history that most Pats fans don’t know about.


Antwine played in 142 games over eleven seasons for the Patriots. 270 pounds may not be big by today’s standards, but in 1961 it certainly was. Houston Antwine was a man among boys, constantly commanding double or even triple teams from opposing offenses. He wasn’t just some big slug though; Antwine was extremely athletic, using skills he had acquired as a collegiate wrestling champion. ’Twine was not only strong but also very quick on his feet, and nearly impossible to move out of the middle. He was also a well-rounded, versatile player; not only devastating against the run, but also tenacious on his pass rush, totaling 39 sacks in his career and leading the Pats in sacks three straight years.

“Houston Antwine was the kind of football player you don’t forget if you ever saw him, but he’s the kind few remember today because he did his playing before ESPN highlight shows existed. If they had, ‘Twine would have been a staple because he was everything you wanted in a defensive tackle — Warren Sapp before there was a Warren Sapp, but without the need for volume control.”

Antwine was an AFL All-Star for six straight years, and was named to the All-Time All-AFL Team. Now stop and think about that for a moment. If a player that was named to the NFL’s all time team of the decade for say the 1990’s or 2000’s that also went to six consecutive Pro Bowls, would there even be any discussion as to whether or not he should be voted in to the Pro Football Hall of Fame? Probably not. Yet Antwine earned identical honors that just so happened to be at an earlier time. Why was he be penalized for that?



Defensive tackle Houston Antwine chases down Dolphins quarterback Bob Griese during a 1970 game.


Perhaps the biggest reason for the lack of Pro Football HoF consideration is because it took far too long for his own team to honor him. The Pats set up their team Hall of Fame in 1991. John Hannah was the original inductee, in the same year he became the first Patriot enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The following year Nick Buoniconti and Gino Cappelletti got their bust at Patriot Place. Antwine was arguably more deserving than either of these two legends though. Buoniconti is more well known for his championships in Miami rather than his seven seasons with the Patriots. And as good as Cappelletti was, he was never the league’s premier player at a position, the way Antwine was.

Perhaps legitimate cases might be made for those three over Antwine, but not for the next group. In 1993 the Pats’ HoF added three more players from the sixties. Nothing against Bob Dee, Jim Lee Hunt or Babe Parilli, but Houston Antwine was a far more dominant football player. In terms of the team's Hall of Fame, at that point the Patriots were moving ‘on to the seventies and eighties’ after that, for all intents done with honoring AFL-era players.


Antwine is one of the best trade bargains in Patriots history, arriving out of Southern Illinois in '61 in exchange for a fourth round draft pick,
and forming a dominating defensive tackle pairing with Jim Lee Hunt.


Yes, the Patriots eventually did add Antwine to the hall in 2015. Sadly it was four years after he passed away. He deserved to go in twenty-plus years earlier, while he was still alive. So why did that not happen? His play on the field was such that he deserved to be the first player after John Hannah to enter the Patriot Hall of Fame.


Rumor has it that some of the old time beat writers did not care for Antwine. Maybe he wasn’t friendly enough with the old guard and they held a grudge. He was one of 22 players to boycott the 1965 AFL all star game in New Orleans, where Jim Crow laws and blatant racism still prevailed; maybe that protest against conditions there had something to do with it. Let's be brutally honest: racism in Boston was unfortunately a reality in the sixties.

Regardless of the reason, it started a vicious circle. The thought process was that if Antwine’s own team would not honor him, he couldn’t have been good enough for the Pro Football Hall of Fame – who already were showing an obvious bias against consideration for AFL players.


More time passed, and fewer and fewer writers and fans were old enough to remember or appreciate Antwine. The thinking of those nominating and voting for for the Patriot Hall of Fame mirrored that of those voting for enshrinement to Canton. On the rare occasion his name was brought up it was quickly dismissed. The sentiment was that ‘he couldn’t have been that good if all these other old timers are in, and he is not’.


Commencing in 2011 a ten-person senior committee was formed for the Pats Hall of Fame. They were scheduled to convene and have the option of adding one Patriot that had been retired for at least 25 years. It seemed like such a no-brainer; Antwine surely would finally be honored in Foxboro. He had already been a finalist three times, futilely going up against more recent and recognizable players. Incredibly his election still did not happen. Jon Morris was a good guy with a nice career - but he was nowhere close to the same level of player as Houston Antwine. Apparently the old time writers refused to let go of whatever grudges they were still holding on to.


In December of 2005 Antwine was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. The disease was allegedly caused by repeated blows to the head from his playing days, back when concussions were just “dings” and players were expected to just shake it off and keep going. Houston Antwine passed away in December of 2011 at the age of 72, a few months after Morris was inducted to the Pats Hall of Fame. The senior committee must have felt a bit of remorse; they then voted Antwine in the next time they met.


There are a ton of Super Bowl era players that will come up for nominations in the next several years. Hopefully Pats fans and the nominating committee will carefully consider “forgotten” players such as Russ Francis from prior to 2001, and not simply cast their ballot for the most recently retired nominee that played in the Brady-Belichick era.




 
2009 forum discussion on Houston Antwine:



2010 forum discussion on Houston Antwine:



(Thank you to @RayClay and others for their comments in the threads above.)



And in case you missed it, there was another thread on Houston Antwine from earlier this month:

Today in Patriots History - April 2, 2015: Houston Antwine elected to Pats Hall of Fame
 
one of my favorite patriots as with jim "earthquake" hunt and babe parilli as much about their names as their play. a few other non pats favorites for their names and play were cookie gilchrist, marlin briscoe, speedy duncan, elijah pitts, homer jones, y a tittle, johnny outlaw, leroy kelly and roman gabriel. i have many more names to bore people with.
 
one of my favorite patriots as with jim "earthquake" hunt and babe parilli as much about their names as their play. a few other non pats favorites for their names and play were cookie gilchrist, marlin briscoe, speedy duncan, elijah pitts, homer jones, y a tittle, johnny outlaw, leroy kelly and roman gabriel. i have many more names to bore people with.
For non-Patriot players I was a fan of quarterbacks Len Dawson and Daryle Lamonica; running backs Paul Lowe, Keith Lincoln and Cookie Gilchrist; and receivers Otis Taylor, Lance Alworth and Warren Wells in the AFL.

Jim Brown was far and away my favorite football player. I liked the front four of the Viking defense too, the "Purple People Eaters".
 
Today in Patriots History
Justin Canale


In memory of Justin Canale, who would have turned 82 today
Born April 11, 1943 in Memphis, Tennessee
Died October 11, 2011 at the age of 68 in Memphis
Patriot guard and kicker, 1965-1968; uniform #63

Pats sixth round (47th overall) selection in the 1965 draft, from Mississippi State
Pats résumé: four seasons, all 56 games (23 starts)



By pure coincidence, two Boston Patriots who were Memphis natives share today's birthday, born four years apart. They even had similar jersey numbers - 63 and 65 - because Houston Antwine began his career as a guard, before converting to defensive tackle in his second season.


Justin Dominic Canale appeared in all 56 games during his four years with the Patriots, and was the starting left guard in 1968. He later played for the Bengals, then five years in the CFL and three seasons in the WFL. His brother Whit was a Patriot defensive end in '68, making them the first of four Pats brother-tandems. In '66 Canale kicked 21 touchbacks, a team record that would stand for an incredible 44 years, until 2010.




Justin and his five brothers, all of whom would play football at Tennessee or Mississippi State, were the subject of a story in Sports Illustrated in 1964 that compared the family farm to a gladiatorial training ground. Whit Canale, Justin’s older brother, died three weeks ago.​

Justin played offensive guard and kicker for Mississippi State in the Joe Namath years of the Southeastern Conference. From 1965-1975, he played for the Boston Patriots of the AFL, the Cincinnati Bengals of the NFL, the Memphis Southmen of the World Football League, and three different pro teams in Canada. He kicked straight on, old-school style, and could make them from 50 yards. He underwent 20 operations for football injuries, some performed by his cousin, Dr. Terry Canale of the Campbell Clinic.​

A Paul Bunyanesque character said to be able to pop a basketball by squeezing it in his hands, Justin Canale was known for both his physical strength and his gentle disposition. As high school and college stars in Memphis and at rival colleges, the games where Whit and Justin squared off were legendary. They were a newspaper photographer’s dream as they posed in a three-point stance or with their mother kissing one or the other of them on the cheek. Justin also starred in track and once tossed the shot put 58 feet to win the SEC meet.​

Every 98-pound-weakling in Memphis in the early Sixties would have given his Converse All-Stars, Superman comics collection, and allowance to look like Justin and Whit Canale in blues jeans and t-shirts.​




Six brothers dedicated to their faith, family and football. In John Branston’s, Rowdy Memphis, he called the Canale Brothers “The first family of Memphis jockdom.” The brothers would have disavowed such celebrity. They’re far too humble.​

From oldest to youngest, Frank, George, Whit, Justin, Billy and Conn grew up on the family’s 70-acre hay farm just east of Memphis. A 1964 Sports Illustrated article described the six sons as having “made the family name the most notable in southern football … the seventh might have added to the family football stature had not her parents named her Mary Arnette.” Their father, George Canale Sr., had played for Notre Dame. When asked if his sons got their athleticism from him, he insisted it came instead from their mother, Augusta Hise Canale, a former All-State basketball player.​

The young men grew strong on the farm, described by one writer as “a gladiatorial training ground”; it had ball fields, a shot put pit and hurdles. This remarkable family gene pool was sought out by the premier football programs across the South. A ‘who’s who’ of coaching notables — including John Vaught and Paul “Bear” Bryant, on multiple occasions — visited at the Canale dinner table.​




Justin Canale and the Canale Clan
With three brothers who played football for the University of Tennessee and three for Mississippi State University, there is a strong case to support the comment from their cousin Billy Tagg that “They are the greatest football family that ever came out of Memphis…and I’m not sure they’re not the greatest to ever play the game of college football.” To others lacking knowledge about Memphis area football, this might sound like hyperbole but for those who saw the Canale clan play, the argument that many have made is compelling. In an era seemingly lost to the progress of technology, urban sprawl, and the erosion of old fashioned values, the Canales did it the old fashioned way, they earned it!​


Patriarch George Canale and his brother Frank played at Notre Dame, setting the precedent for athletic success and the University of Tennessee enjoyed the services of George’s sons Frank, George, and John Whitfield while Mississippi State successfully recruited the three younger brothers, Dominic Justin, Billy, and Conn. The physical preparation varied little from eldest to youngest with “strength training” consisting of hard and heavy work on the family farm with an emphasis on baling hay, and night time running through fields illuminated by car lights for so-called “cardio work.” Described variously as “country strong,” “looking like Greek Gods,” and “Paul Bunyanesque” in a number of articles, the boys became powerful not from weight training which was in its infancy for athletes in their day, but instead due to the daily work done on the farm and the chores that were part and parcel of rural life in a by-gone era. Justin at 6’2”, 250 pounds could explode a regulation basketball by squeezing it between his hands. As described by one reporter, “Even in the age of weight training, he was one of the most massive men I have ever seen, with forearms and shoulders built up by farm work and hefting axles long ago at the family’s Sinclair Station on Union Avenue.” Stars at Memphis Catholic High School For Boys, the older brothers began the trek to the Southeastern Conference.​





Oct 24, 2010:
GOSTKOWSKI ON THE TOUHCBACK​
K Stephen Gostkowski has 14 kickoffs that have gone for touchbacks. Last season he set a career-high of 21 when he tied a Patriots record with 21 touchbacks. Justin Canale had 21 kickoffs for touchbacks in 1966 for the Patriots.​


Sept 12, 2011:
Game Notes: Patriots at Dolphins -- Patriots.com
BROTHER ACT​
Rob Gronkowski and Dan Gronkowski became the fourth set of New England Patriots brothers to be on the Patriots' active roster in the same regular season. The Gronkowski's join DE Whit Canale and G Justin Canale (1968), WR Clarence Weathers and RB Robert Weathers (1983-84) and RB Chuck McSwain and CB Rod McSwain (1987). The Gronkowskis became the first brother tight end tandem during the Super Bowl era to be active NFL roster teammates. The only other current brother tandem on the same roster are linebackers E.J. and Erin Henderson of Minnesota.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Dietrich Jells


Happy 53rd birthday to Dietrich Jells
Born April 11, 1972 in New York City; raised in Erie, Pennsylvania
Patriot wide receiver, 1996-1997; uniform #83
Claimed off waivers from Kansas City on August 21, 1996
Pats résumé: two seasons, 18 games (1 start); two recptions for 14 yards



Dietrich Davis Jells was a sixth round draft pick by KC in '96, and the Patriots picked him up after he was cut before the season began by the Chiefs. He appeared in 18 games in his two seasons with New England, mostly on special teams. The former Pitt Panther had two receptions for 14 yards with the Pats, and was then traded to Philadelphia for a 7th round 2000 pick. That pick was eventually part of a trade with Detroit that resulted in the Pats drafting Matt Light - so Jells can claim to have had a hand in the 21st century success of the Patriots. He finished his NFL career with 14 receptions for 247 yards and two touchdowns in 41 games played over four seasons. In his post-football life Jells has been working as a network engineer with Charter Communications in Charlotte, North Carolina.


Year Inducted: 2008​
Sport: Track and Field​

Dietrich Jells was All-State and Parade All-American as a wide receiver at Tech. He also played in the Big 33 Classic. He was a standout Track and Field runner and receiver at Pitt where he played for four seasons. When he graduated, he was Pitt’s all-time leading receiver in yardage and receptions with 3,003 yards while catching 160 passes and scoring 25 touchdowns. He set a Big East record with 225 yards in a game against West Virginia. He was a member of the All Decade Team for the Big East Conference from 1990-1999. He was also twice named Big East Champion in Track and Field in the 100 meters.​

He was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the sixth round of the 1996 NFL draft. He played two seasons with the New England Patriots and two seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles. He caught 14 passes for 247 yards and two touchdowns in the NFL. He also was a standout sprinter and still holds the PIAA District 10 Class AAA 100-meter dash record of 10.57 seconds.​



 
Today in Patriots History
Tom Reynolds


Happy 76th birthday to Tom Reynolds
Born April 11, 1949 in Pasadena, California
Patriot wide receiver, 1972; uniform #21
Pats 2nd round (49th overall) selection of the 1972 draft, from San Diego State
Pats résumé: one season, 12 games (no starts); eight catches for 152 yards (19.0 ypc); two touchdowns



Raoul Thomas Reynolds Jr. was in Foxboro for only one season, appearing in twelve games with just eight receptions for 152 yards and two TD. In 1973 Chuck Fairbanks took over, and he jettisoned Reynolds after drafting Darryl Stingley. The 6'3, 200 lb receiver lasted just one more season in the NFL, with seven receptions in nine games for the Bears in '73. Not sure if a knee injury he suffered in college had something to do with his brief NFL career.



1972 Patriots Media Guide -- page 48
Patriots top choice, 49th player selected . . . two-time Jr. All-America choice . . . caught NCAA record of 18 TD passes in ‘69... In 7% games he grabbed 50 passes... his 6.7 catches per game last year ranked him No. 1 in the country ... great speed and moves, strong runner . . . first team all-PCC and Time AllAmerican ... College coach thinks he has more potential than Elmo Wright (Chiefs) and J. D. Hill (Bills).​



Induction Year: 1990​
Class: 1971​

Caught a school-record 18 touchdown passes in 1969...Sat out 1970 with a knee injury and then returned to earn All-America honors in 1971...His 18 scoring receptions in just eight games in '69 set an NCAA touchdown percentage mark...Had 67 catches for 1,070 yards during his All-American season...Was drafted in the second round by the Patriots...Was the 1971 Aztec Most Valuable Player.​



 
Today in Patriots History
Houston Antwine



In memory of Houston Antwine, who would have turned 86 today
Born April 11, 1953 in Louise, Mississippi; raised in Memphis, Tennessee
Died December 26, 2011 at the age of 72 in Memphis
Patriot right defensive tackle 1961-1971; uniform #65

Rights traded from Houston Oilers to Boston Patriots on October 9, 1961 in exchange for a 1962 4th round draft pick
Pats résumé: 11 seasons, 142 games; 6x AFL All Star; All-Time All-AFL Team; Pats All-1960s, 35th & 50th Anniversary Teams; Pats Hall of Fame



It's a great thing that Houston Antwine is a member of the Patriots Hall of Fame.
It's also a shame that he, Jim Nance and Leon Gray did not receive that honor before their deaths.

Houston Antwine was one of the best players in football history that is not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
'Twine may also be the greatest player in Patriot history that most Pats fans don’t know about.


Antwine played in 142 games over eleven seasons for the Patriots. 270 pounds may not be big by today’s standards, but in 1961 it certainly was. Houston Antwine was a man among boys, constantly commanding double or even triple teams from opposing offenses. He wasn’t just some big slug though; Antwine was extremely athletic, using skills he had acquired as a collegiate wrestling champion. ’Twine was not only strong but also very quick on his feet, and nearly impossible to move out of the middle. He was also a well-rounded, versatile player; not only devastating against the run, but also tenacious on his pass rush, totaling 39 sacks in his career and leading the Pats in sacks three straight years.

“Houston Antwine was the kind of football player you don’t forget if you ever saw him, but he’s the kind few remember today because he did his playing before ESPN highlight shows existed. If they had, ‘Twine would have been a staple because he was everything you wanted in a defensive tackle — Warren Sapp before there was a Warren Sapp, but without the need for volume control.”

Antwine was an AFL All-Star for six straight years, and was named to the All-Time All-AFL Team. Now stop and think about that for a moment. If a player that was named to the NFL’s all time team of the decade for say the 1990’s or 2000’s that also went to six consecutive Pro Bowls, would there even be any discussion as to whether or not he should be voted in to the Pro Football Hall of Fame? Probably not. Yet Antwine earned identical honors that just so happened to be at an earlier time. Why was he be penalized for that?



Defensive tackle Houston Antwine chases down Dolphins quarterback Bob Griese during a 1970 game.


Perhaps the biggest reason for the lack of Pro Football HoF consideration is because it took far too long for his own team to honor him. The Pats set up their team Hall of Fame in 1991. John Hannah was the original inductee, in the same year he became the first Patriot enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The following year Nick Buoniconti and Gino Cappelletti got their bust at Patriot Place. Antwine was arguably more deserving than either of these two legends though. Buoniconti is more well known for his championships in Miami rather than his seven seasons with the Patriots. And as good as Cappelletti was, he was never the league’s premier player at a position, the way Antwine was.

Perhaps legitimate cases might be made for those three over Antwine, but not for the next group. In 1993 the Pats’ HoF added three more players from the sixties. Nothing against Bob Dee, Jim Lee Hunt or Babe Parilli, but Houston Antwine was a far more dominant football player. In terms of the team's Hall of Fame, at that point the Patriots were moving ‘on to the seventies and eighties’ after that, for all intents done with honoring AFL-era players.





Antwine is one of the best trade bargains in Patriots history, arriving out of Southern Illinois in '61 in exchange for a fourth round draft pick,
and forming a dominating defensive tackle pairing with Jim Lee Hunt.


Yes, the Patriots eventually did add Antwine to the hall in 2015. Sadly it was four years after he passed away. He deserved to go in twenty-plus years earlier, while he was still alive. So why did that not happen? His play on the field was such that he deserved to be the first player after John Hannah to enter the Patriot Hall of Fame.


Rumor has it that some of the old time beat writers did not care for Antwine. Maybe he wasn’t friendly enough with the old guard and they held a grudge. He was one of 22 players to boycott the 1965 AFL all star game in New Orleans, where Jim Crow laws and blatant racism still prevailed; maybe that protest against conditions there had something to do with it. Let's be brutally honest: racism in Boston was unfortunately a reality in the sixties.

Regardless of the reason, it started a vicious circle. The thought process was that if Antwine’s own team would not honor him, he couldn’t have been good enough for the Pro Football Hall of Fame – who already were showing an obvious bias against consideration for AFL players.


More time passed, and fewer and fewer writers and fans were old enough to remember or appreciate Antwine. The thinking of those nominating and voting for for the Patriot Hall of Fame mirrored that of those voting for enshrinement to Canton. On the rare occasion his name was brought up it was quickly dismissed. The sentiment was that ‘he couldn’t have been that good if all these other old timers are in, and he is not’.


Commencing in 2011 a ten-person senior committee was formed for the Pats Hall of Fame. They were scheduled to convene and have the option of adding one Patriot that had been retired for at least 25 years. It seemed like such a no-brainer; Antwine surely would finally be honored in Foxboro. He had already been a finalist three times, futilely going up against more recent and recognizable players. Incredibly his election still did not happen. Jon Morris was a good guy with a nice career - but he was nowhere close to the same level of player as Houston Antwine. Apparently the old time writers refused to let go of whatever grudges they were still holding on to.


In December of 2005 Antwine was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. The disease was allegedly caused by repeated blows to the head from his playing days, back when concussions were just “dings” and players were expected to just shake it off and keep going. Houston Antwine passed away in December of 2011 at the age of 72, a few months after Morris was inducted to the Pats Hall of Fame. The senior committee must have felt a bit of remorse; they then voted Antwine in the next time they met.


There are a ton of Super Bowl era players that will come up for nominations in the next several years. Hopefully Pats fans and the nominating committee will carefully consider “forgotten” players such as Russ Francis from prior to 2001, and not simply cast their ballot for the most recently retired nominee that played in the Brady-Belichick era.




I think I saw Houston Antwine play during my first game at Schaefer Stadium in October of 1971. The main reason I said I "think" I saw him play is because it was sooooooo long ago but I remember thinking what a cool name he had. It wasn't raining when we left to go to the game but when we got there I remember it was raining buckets and all we had to stay reasonably dry was cut out garbage bag ponchos which didn't work. The game was against Buffalo and I think we won. There was a lot of beer drinking going on back in the day.
 
Today in Patriots History
Tom Reynolds


Happy 76th birthday to Tom Reynolds
Born April 11, 1949 in Pasadena, California
Patriot wide receiver, 1972; uniform #21
Pats 2nd round (49th overall) selection of the 1972 draft, from San Diego State
Pats résumé: one season, 12 games (no starts); eight catches for 152 yards (19.0 ypc); two touchdowns



Raoul Thomas Reynolds Jr. was in Foxboro for only one season, appearing in twelve games with just eight receptions for 152 yards and two TD. In 1973 Chuck Fairbanks took over, and he jettisoned Reynolds after drafting Darryl Stingley. The 6'3, 200 lb receiver lasted just one more season in the NFL, with seven receptions in nine games for the Bears in '73. Not sure if a knee injury he suffered in college had something to do with his brief NFL career.



1972 Patriots Media Guide -- page 48
Patriots top choice, 49th player selected . . . two-time Jr. All-America choice . . . caught NCAA record of 18 TD passes in ‘69... In 7% games he grabbed 50 passes... his 6.7 catches per game last year ranked him No. 1 in the country ... great speed and moves, strong runner . . . first team all-PCC and Time AllAmerican ... College coach thinks he has more potential than Elmo Wright (Chiefs) and J. D. Hill (Bills).​



Induction Year: 1990​
Class: 1971​

Caught a school-record 18 touchdown passes in 1969...Sat out 1970 with a knee injury and then returned to earn All-America honors in 1971...His 18 scoring receptions in just eight games in '69 set an NCAA touchdown percentage mark...Had 67 catches for 1,070 yards during his All-American season...Was drafted in the second round by the Patriots...Was the 1971 Aztec Most Valuable Player.​



 
For non-Patriot players I was a fan of quarterbacks Len Dawson and Daryle Lamonica; running backs Paul Lowe, Keith Lincoln and Cookie Gilchrist; and receivers Otis Taylor, Lance Alworth and Warren Wells in the AFL.

Jim Brown was far and away my favorite football player. I liked the front four of the Viking defense too, the "Purple People Eaters".
my all time favorite non patriot is lance alworth....met him a few times ...great guy....hated when they called him "bambi".....i've also met paul warfield, gale sayers and randomly, leo nomellini. loved jim brown but was a little bummed about his domestic issues. loved when he would get up after being tackled like he could barely move then outrun everyone for another 20 yards and he was bigger and faster than everyone on the defense. he was totally sandbagging. these old pics are awesome.
 
When I was a boy I used to bicycle to the Patriots training camp which at the time was at Phillips Academy's facilities in Andover.

I well remember Antwine who was absolutely a dominating figure, short but incredibly powerful and agile. Was deservedly named to the All-time All-AFL team as DT.

Jim Lee Hunt wasn't as powerful as Antwine but he was very fast. He actually could beat out most of the skill players in a race for 10 or 20 yards.

Except for Jim Nance, who was extraordinarily explosive with great feet. As a FB. He also was named to the All-time All-AFL team. He was the All-time best Patriots running back IMO.
 
When I was a boy I used to bicycle to the Patriots training camp which at the time was at Phillips Academy's facilities in Andover.

I well remember Antwine who was absolutely a dominating figure, short but incredibly powerful and agile. Was deservedly named to the All-time All-AFL team as DT.

Jim Lee Hunt wasn't as powerful as Antwine but he was very fast. He actually could beat out most of the skill players in a race for 10 or 20 yards.

Except for Jim Nance, who was extraordinarily explosive with great feet. As a FB. He also was named to the All-time All-AFL team. He was the All-time best Patriots running back IMO.
Jim Nance is still, to this day - sixty years after he began playing - the franchise leader in rushing touchdowns.

Amazing that any record would last that long, especially when you take into account the fact that he played in an era of 14-game seasons.

He's also second in franchise history in career rushing yardage, only 130 yards less than Sam Cunningham - who had the benefit of running behind John Hannah and Leon Gray.
 
Today in Patriots History
David Richards


Happy 59th birthday to David Richards
Born April 11, 1966 in Staten Island
Patriot offensive tackle, 1996; uniform #62
Claimed off waivers from Atlanta on October 24, 1996
Pats résumé: one season, five games (no starts)



David Reed Richards was an eight-year veteran NFL starting offensive lineman with San Diego, Detroit and Atlanta before being picked up by the Pats in his final pro football season. Richards was added to the line after the Pats waived some scrub that I don't remember at all and know nothing about, by the name of Larry Tharpe. New England was the final stop in Richards' pro football career.

David Richards is also one of several players who sued the NFL over their bogus 'Plan B' free agency, winning the largest settlement from that group. He has since worked in commercial real estate in Dallas, with high school road trips a distant memory.





"I felt the (free-agency) restrictions placed on me as a player were degrading and unfair," said San Diego Chargers lineman David Richards. "I didn't feel like I should be bought and sold like a commodity without considering my wishes."​


Plan B, as in Bogus​

In Minneapolis, a U.S. district court jury struck down the NFL's Plan B compensation system because it violates antitrust law and awarded four of the eight players who had filed the suit a total of $543,000 in damages, which was trebled as stipulated by federal antitrust law, to $1.63 million.​

With so many players headed for court, there is much that can be learned from the Minneapolis trial about what constitutes giving 110% on the witness stand. Herewith is a list of suggestions.​

1. DON'T BE AFRAID TO BE A HUNK. Dave Richards, a guard for the San Diego Chargers and a dead ringer for Superman, collected the largest award ($240,000) of the eight players. The eight members of the all-women jury never took their eyes off him during his five hours of testimony, and when he came back to watch final arguments, Richards was again the object of the jurors' gazes even though he was sitting with a stunning blonde.


Even though the owners have lost 15 lawsuits to the players in just the last two years, and won none, they always find another way to do what they want to do.​

The Verdict​

A jury of eight women, after deliberating for two days on a case that started June 15 and lasted 36 days, found the NFL liable in all eight players’ cases with four awarded monetary compensation.​

Total damages amount to $543,000 (trebled under federal antitrust laws to $1.63 million).​

The players who were awarded damages:​

* David Richards, San Diego Chargers: $240,000.​

* Mark Collins, New York Giants: $178,000.​

* Lee Rouson (retired), Cleveland Browns: $75,000.​

* Frank Minnifield, Cleveland Browns: $50,000.​




At halftime of the Jesuit game Friday, Sept. 30, two more former Scots were inducted into the Highland Park Football Ring of Honor.​
Two Scots football legends were welcomed into the Ring of Honor during halftime Friday, Sept. 30. David Richards, Class of 1984 and Jack Collins, Class of 1958, were honored for their outstanding athletic achievements over the years. Each athlete was awarded a commemorative football along with a plaque listing their achievements.​

Richards was an All-State Offensive Tackle who was named the Parade Magazine National Offensive Player of the Year in 1983, the first and only time the award has ever been won by an offensive lineman. He went on to star at SMU and UCLA before being drafted by the San Diego Chargers in 1988. Richards played nine years in the NFL for the Chargers, Detroit Lions and Atlanta Falcons and won an AFC Championship in his final year with the New England Patriots. He was inducted into the Texas High School Football Hall of Fame in 1996. He and his wife, Laurene, raised their family in the Park Cities and still reside just down the street.​





As Executive Vice President of Diamond Realty’s Acquisitions, David is responsible for the acquisition, analysis, and investment in new industrial and residential projects across the United States. He is also a member of the firm’s executive investment committee, identifying and developing new investment markets.

Following a successful 9-year career in the National Football League as an offensive lineman, David earned an additional 23 years of experience in the commercial real estate industry, holding executive management positions at leading U.S. real estate firms including Grubb & Ellis and Jones Lang LaSalle.

David is currently a member of the National Association of Industrial and Office Parks (NAIOP), The Salesmanship Club of Dallas, and is active with the SMU Folsom Institute for Real Estate.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Ja'Lynn Polk


Happy 23rd birthday to Ja'Lynn Polk
Born April 11, 2002 in Lufkin, Texas
Patriot wide receiver, 2024-present; uniform #1
Pats 2nd round (37th overall) selection of the 2024 draft, from Washington
Pats résumé: 1 season, 15 games (7 starts); 12 receptions (on 33 targets) for 87 yards (7.3 ypc) and 2 TD, 4 first downs



Grade: incomplete - as were 64% of the passes that were thrown to him in 2024.

Will forever be saddled with the reminder that the Patriots traded down three spots for him, rather than drafting Ladd McConkey.

But hey, at least he had a better season than fellow rookie receiver Javon Baker, the other guy they got in that ill-advised trade!


















 
Today in Patriots History
Patrick Ford


Happy 35th birthday to Patrick Ford
Born April 11, 1990 in Richmond, Virginia
Patriot offensive lineman, 2013 practice squad; uniform #69
Signed as a rookie to the practice squad on November 27, 2013
Pats résumé: six days on the practice squad



Patrick Ford had two stints with the Jets, one before and one after his time in Foxboro - thus dooming his pro football career.



Nov 27, 2013 -- Doug Kyed
FOXBORO, Mass. — The mystery has been solved.​

The offensive lineman wearing No. 69 on the Patriots’ practice field was Patrick Ford, a rookie tackle out of Eastern Kentucky. Ford said in the locker room that he signed to the practice squad.​

D.J. Williams was also spotted in the locker room. He was not allowed to speak to the media, but he looks very slender for a tight end, certainly below his listed weight of 6-foot-2, 245 pounds.​

The Patriots still have one spot left on the practice squad and one on the 53-man roster. They cut Justin Green and Marcus Forston from the practice squad. A.J. Francis was signed to the Dolphins’ 53-man roster off New England’s practice squad. The Patriots had never filled Green’s spot on the practice squad after he was signed to the active roster. Green is expected to re-sign to the practice squad if he clears waivers.​


Dec 2, 2013 -- Field Yates
New England also released tackle Patrick Ford from the practice squad.​
Below is a look at the Patriots' practice squad roster:​
-- OL Braxston Cave​
-- LB Ja'Gared Davis​
-- DB Kanorris Davis​
-- OT Jordan Devey​
-- OT R.J. Dill​
-- DL Marcus Forston​
-- DB Justin Green​
-- RB Cierre Wood​


Dec 2, 2013 -- Patriots.com
Patriots re-sign OL R.J. Dill to practice squad and release T Patrick Ford
Ford, 23, was signed to the New England practice squad on Nov. 27, 2013. He was originally signed by the New York Jets as a rookie free agent out of Eastern Kentucky on Aug. 13, 2013, and was released on Aug. 26, 2013. The 6-foot-6, 305-pounder, was a three-year starter at Eastern Kentucky, serving as both a guard and tackle during his collegiate career. He spent the majority of his final two seasons at left tackle.​


* 2012 Sports Network FCS Preseason All-American (third team)
* 2011 All-OVC first team selection

2012 Scouting Report – Finally found his place on the offensive line last year at left tackle … a true bruiser on the line … has really developed his body in his time at EKU.​

At EKU2011: Started all 12 games at left tackle … one of two offensive linemen to start every game … part of offensive unit that led the OVC in rushing attempts (530). 2010: Started nine games at right guard and the Louisville game (Sept. 11) at left guard … helped the offense pile up a season-high 25 first downs in the win at Tennessee Tech on Nov. 13. 2009: Played in all 11 games with one start against Western Carolina on Nov. 14 … used mainly as a back-up offensive tackle and in heavy sets as a tight end. 2008: Took a redshirt season.​

High School – A three-year varsity lineman at Madison Central … honorable mention all-state accolades … team captain … played in the Kentucky East vs. West All-Star game … also played varsity basketball as a senior … a member of the National Honor Society and Governor’s Scholar Program.​

Personal – Son of Gary and Jamie Ford … born on April 11, 1990 … his dad was a linebacker on the 1979 EKU national championship team … inducted into EKU’s Chi Alpha Sigma National Athletic Honor Society in the spring of 2010.​

 
Today in Patriots History
Donald Brown


Happy 38th birthday to Donald Brown
Born April 11, 1987 in Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey
Patriot running bank, 2016 offseason; uniform #34
Signed as a veteran free agent on March 16, 2016
Pats résumé: one offseason and half a preseason



Donald Eugene Brown II was a first round (27th overall) selection out of UConn by the Colts in 2009. Brown had three seasons with 700-plus yards from scrimmage with the Colts - so while he was productive, he also never lived up to his draft status. Brown spent five seasons with Indy and two with San Diego prior to signing with the Patriots. His final season with the Colts was his best, averaging 5.3 yards per carry and a total of 8 touchdowns and 751 yards from scrimmage. He was signed by the Patriots in March of 2016 to a $965,000 contract with $300,000 guaranteed.

At the time I thought it was a really good signing. If I recall correctly James White hadn't done much of anything yet, and there was a major void at running back after LeGarrette Blount.


The Pats released Brown on August 23, 2016, and he never caught on with another team after that. He finished his NFL career with 3,895 yards from scrimmage and 20 touchdowns in 88 games played.



The Patriots have released running back Donald Brown with an injury settlement.​

Brown hasn't practiced for three weeks due to the undisclosed ailment that sabotaged his fast start to camp. Brown was working with the starters through the opening weekend and looked like he could be a contributor on the ground and through the air.​

But Brown couldn't get healthy, and the injury settlement suggests it wasn't going to get much better anytime soon. The release signifies a major swing and miss for the Patriots, who gave Brown $300,000 in guaranteed money this offseason.​

The Pats' remaining running backs include LeGarrette Blount, James White, Brandon Bolden, Tyler Gaffney, D.J. Foster and Joey Iosefa. Blount, White and Bolden should be safe, and Gaffney has the edge for the fourth spot for the time being.​

The Patriots also cut E.J. Biggers, who was behind rookies Cre'Von LeBlanc and Jonathan Jones and 2015 seventh-rounder Darryl Roberts in a battle for the last one or two cornerback spots on the roster. They also released defensive tackle Frank Kearse.​

The Patriots now have 83 players on the active roster. They have to get down to 75 by Aug. 30.​




Jimmy Garoppolo hands off to RB Donald Brown during practice at Gillette Stadium on Monday, August 1, 2016












Other ancient 100-plus year old April 11 birthdays with a New England connection:

Joe Hugret (1909-1977)
Born in Torrington CT; Bristol (CT) HS
Briefly played end for the 1934 Brooklyn Dodgers.

Quentin Reynolds (1902-1965)
Brown University
Two way lineman with the 1926 Brooklyn Lions.
 
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