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Today in Patriots History
Michael Bishop
Michael Bishop
Happy 49th birthday to Michael Bishop
Born May 15, 1976 in Galveston, Texas
Patriot quarterback, 2000; uniform #7
Pats 7th round (227th overall) selection of the 1999 draft, from Kansas State
Pats résumé: eight games, three completions for 80 yards; one touchdown, one interception
Michael Paul Bishop was a healthy scratch for all but one game his rookie season, which was Pete Carroll's last in New England. Because of his strong arm and mobility, he came in as a substitute for Drew Bledsoe on the final play of the half in Week 6 of the 2000 season under new coach Bill Belichick versus the Colts - and completed a 44-yard Hail Mary touchdown to Tony Simmons.
Bishop went to NFL Europe the following spring, while his fan club that was based on one throw grew. The oft repeated concept of fans loving the backup on a losing team was in full force, and it hit a crescendo when Bishop was released during 2001 training camp. Bill Belichick wasn't listening, and he kept Tom Brady on the roster instead. Bishop finished his Patriot career with eight games played, completing three of his nine pass attempts for 80 yards - and that one touchdown.
Green Bay picked Bishop up after being waived by the Pats, but the Packers released him less than two weeks later. Bishop later had tryouts with the New York Giants and the Miami Dolphins, but wasn’t signed and never played in the NFL again. He did find success north of the border, winning the Grey Cup in 2004 with the Toronto Argonauts. Overall he played in the CFL for ten seasons, plus a couple of years in the Arena League, with stops in two lower level indoor football leagues in between in 2009.
Good article on Michael Bishop below, from Feb 3, 2017:
Michael Bishop Is Rooting for Tom Brady, Who Beat Him for the Patriots Starting QB Job
In 2000, dual-threat quarterback Michael Bishop—and not relative unknown Tom Brady—was seen as a better prospect for the New England Patriots. Now Bishop plans to be in the stands for Super Bowl LI, cheering on his former teammate.
www.vice.com
Bishop and Brady were technically competing with each other and trying to impress Bill Belichick, New England’s first-year coach, but they understood that the chance of either of them getting any meaningful playing time was slim to none. The Patriots had Drew Bledsoe, the team’s franchise player and starting quarterback since his rookie season in 1993. Bledsoe was entrenched, although Bishop and Brady were ready in case anything happened.
. . . . .
For a time, Bishop was seen as the potential heir apparent to Bledsoe, or at least someone the Patriots could trade for a serviceable veteran or draft pick. After winning two national junior college titles at Blinn College in Texas and leading the school to a 24-0 record in two years, Bishop enrolled at Kansas State in 1997. That August, before he won the starting job, he told reporters his dual-threat skills compared favorably with then-Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway and former Nebraska quarterback Tommie Frazier, who led the Cornhuskers to two national titles and finished second in the 1995 Heisman Trophy voting.
During his two years as Kansas State’s starter, Bishop’s confidence never wavered. In 1997, the Wildcats finished eighth in the final Associated Press poll and went 11-1, the best record in school history. Bishop ran for 566 yards and nine touchdowns and threw for 1,557 yards and 13 touchdowns during the season, and saved his best game for last, throwing for four touchdowns and running for another in a 35-18 Fiesta Bowl victory over Syracuse.
. . . . .
Other high-profile programs later copied Bishop’s dual-threat approach, and coaches such as Urban Meyer visited Kansas State coach Bill Snyder to learn the Wildcats’ offense.
“A lot of people talk about Cam Newton, Michael Vick, and all those guys,” Bishop said. “What those guys did, I did five, six years prior to what they did. At the end of the day, I finally started getting some credit…. When it’s all said and done, I felt great about what I was doing. I think that the rest of the world, as far as the NFL, wasn’t ready for my style of play. I think that might be a main factor why I didn’t get the opportunity that I wanted.”
While Vick (2001) and Newton (2011) were top overall NFL draft picks, Bishop lasted until the final round of the 1999 NFL draft. At the time, league executives weren’t fond of dual-threat quarterbacks. They questioned Bishop’s relatively low completion percentage, and didn’t think he would be able to elude tacklers and avoid injuries like he did in college.
. . . . .
Bishop’s lack of playing time irked some fans and media members who had grown tired of Bledsoe’s plodding style and occasional mistakes. When Bledsoe continued to play late in the season with an injured thumb, a poll on the Patriots’ website revealed that 76 percent of respondents preferred Bishop as Bledsoe’s replacement. Kevin Mannix, a Boston Herald football columnist, wrote in early December that Belichick should give Bishop a chance.
“The scrambling second-year man brings the element of the unexpected, the potentially entertaining,” Mannix wrote. “He may not know the entire offense, but he’s learned enough to move ahead of Tom Brady on the depth chart.
“The way this offense is struggling, what better time to give Bishop a Cliff’s Notes version of the playbook, one that’s tailored to his particular skills. Then let’s see if he can make some plays. Given the rest of the lineup, putting Bishop at quarterback instead of Bledsoe could actually give the team its best chance of winning.”
Former Patriots QB ‘Born Too Soon’ Says NFL Analyst
The Patriots drafted Mac Jones this year. His lack of athleticism is considered an issue. Back in 1999, they selected a QB whose athleticism was his strength.
heavy.com
Former Patriots quarterback and current radio host Scott Zolak responded to Curran’s initial tweet with some disbelief. He tweeted: “wow.”
Curran pushed his point a little more. He responded: Compare that skill set to Fields … better runner … better arm? He just had no concept of how to protect the ball, I think, because he was so outside the box for that time. **** wasn’t in place to take cultivate and take advantage of that skill set and it is now.
. . . . .
The New England Patriots drafted Bishop in the seventh round of the 1999 NFL Draft. Bishop was coming off of one of the most successful and dominant college football careers we’d ever seen.
As a sophomore, he finished as the Heisman Trophy runner-up after throwing for 2,844 yards, 23 TDs, and five interceptions while rushing for 748 yards and 14 more scores.
Despite his brilliance in college and otherworldly athleticism, NFL scouts doubted his ability to become an elite quarterback. Unwilling to change his position, as many athletic black quarterbacks were pressured to do during his time, Bishop found himself at the bottom of the draft and trying to carve a niche on a franchise that already had Drew Bledsoe as their QB1, John Friesz. Some guy named Tom Brady was selected the following year.
That wasn’t an ideal situation for Bishop.
Bishop probably needed more years in school, but he instead entered the NFL Draft after two years at Kansas State. He’d come from Blinn College (a school Cam Newton also attended), but he needed more seasoning and preparation for the NFL game.
He didn’t get much of an opportunity. Old-school offensive coordinator Charlie Weis was the man in charge of the offense, and Bishop’s style wasn’t exactly his cup of tea. Bishop was inactive in almost every game as a rookie.
Bishop says 'no doubt' he could be No. 1 pick in today's NFL
Michael Bishop in 1998 became the first Davey O’Brien Award winner to rush for at least 500 yards and pass for 1,500 yards in a season.
247sports.com
“Coming out and going to New England, I have so much respect for (offensive coordinator) Charlie Weis, because Charlie Weis was the first person to put me in a game,” Bishop said on the recent podcast. "Charlie Weis told me, ‘Listen, Bishop, you have done nothing wrong.’ His exact words to me were, ‘You just have got too much talent. No one knows what to do with you.’ I said, ‘What do you mean, I have too much talent and nobody knows what to do with me?’ He said, ‘You’ve done nothing wrong, it’s just right now we don’t know what to do with you.’ At that time, I was thinking, ‘Hey, then let me go to another team that can find something to do with me.’ I trusted and believed in what I brought to the table.”
Michael Bishop Career Game Log | Pro-Football-Reference.com
Get Michael Bishop Career game log for regular season and playoff games on Pro-football-reference.com.
www.pro-football-reference.com
Pro Football Archives -- Michael Bishop Player Profile
Pro Football Archives -- Michael Bishop Transactions
Michael Bishop (gridiron football) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org












