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Today In Patriots History Jan 21, 1994: Robert Kraft buys Pats from James Orthwein

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The Patriots have plaved in two AFC Championship Games on January 21, but for newsworthy is today being the 32nd anniversary of Bob Kraft buting the team, and 33rd anniversary of Bill Parcells being hired to replace **** MacPherson as head coach.



Today in Patriots History
Paper & Packaging executive Robert Kraft
becomes fourth owner in franchise history
Buys team from James Orthwein


Friday, January 21, 1994
Robert Kraft purchases the New England Patriots from James Orthwein.



Monday, January 21st marks the 25th anniversary of Robert Kraft, who at the time owned Schaefer/Sullivan/Foxborough Stadium, purchasing the Patriots from James Busch Orthwein. Fearful that Orthwein would move the Patriots to his hometown of St. Louis, Kraft used his ownership of the stadium and the lease he made the Patriots sign as leverage to buy the team. He paid $172 million for the team, stupid money at the time which sent his late wife Myra into a fit of anger.​


In 2000, the Patriots were considered just a slightly above average team with a value of $464 million compared to the average NFL team ($423 million). Since then, the value of the Patriots has increased 460% while the average NFL team has increased 237%.​

As a point of reference, as of September 2025 Forbes placed the franchise value at $9 billion.
(Note: the Business Insider article above was written in 2014, so those numbers have vastly changed since then.)







The sale assures that the Patriots will remain in New England and ends months of speculation that the team would be moving to another state. Groups in Baltimore, St. Louis and Connecticut had sought to buy the team. The Patriots enjoyed a resurgence of local interest after they finished the season with four straight victories.​

Orthwein purchased the team from razor manufacturer Victor Kiam in May, 1992, at a time when he said the Patriots were viewed generally as losing franchise. 'We changed all of that,' Orthmwein told reporters.​

Orthwein said he tried to do 'what was right' for the team and the fans. Among other things he pointed to was the hiring the coach Bill Parcells and thesigning of rookie Drew Bledsoe, who Orthwein said will be the next superstar quarterback in the NFL.​

Orthwein, who had hoped to get an expansion team for St. Louis, put the Patriots up for sale in December. Orthwein considered moving the Patriots to St. Louis, but said he preferred to sell the team outright to a local owner who would keep it in New England. 'As much as I wanted the team for St. Louis, this community showed how much it wanted to keep the team here.'​


Just what the sale means as to the proposed megaplex, which is to be a sports stadium and convention center in downtown Boston, remains to be seen. Some said the prospects for the megaplex to be built are actually improved by the sale to Kraft. Orthwein said legislative leaders have assured him they will continue to support the megaplex proposal.​

'I have been assured the megaplex plan will go on' and the 'long term viability of the Patriots will be assured.'​

Kraft recalled how bad he felt when the Braves left Boston in 1948, and how sad his friends in New York were when they lost the Dodgers and Giants, and he did not want that to happen here again. 'This was a unique opportunity to fulfill a dream and I hope serve part of the best interest of the community,' Kraft said. 'Some people think it is silly to spend so much money for a team, but this team really impacts the psyche of the community, and it would not have been the same if the team had left here.'​








Robert and Jonathan completed the sale in a conference room in St. Louis in 1994, before hustling to the airport. They had to fly home to tell Myra that they’d spent $172 million, or more than anyone had paid for a team in NFL history, before the news broke. Kraft, his son says, had to bribe airline officials to get them on the next flight back to Boston, and they had to slide some extra cash to their fellow passengers to obtain two seats next to each other. When they got home, the phone rang. It was a lawyer offering Kraft three times the money that he had paid six years earlier for the stadium lease; they wanted to move the team out of Massachusetts. Kraft thought back to the heartbreak he felt as a kid when the Boston Braves were uprooted to Milwaukee, and he refused. Myra was livid.​



As both a successful and savvy businessman, Kraft had purchased a 10-year option on Foxboro Raceway, a horse-racing track adjacent to the stadium. Knowing the Sullivans owned the stadium but not the surrounding land, his purchase became the catalyst for Kraft to purchase not only the stadium, but also the team and the Patriots.​

Conversely, Sullivan's family was in need of financial relief, reeling from a series of bad investments — one of their most high-profile fiscal misfires being The Jacksons 1984 Victory Tour, for which they had to pledge Sullivan Stadium as collateral. Those problems ultimately forced Sullivan to sell controlling interest in the team in 1988, while the stadium lapsed into bankruptcy.​

Kraft outbid several competitors to buy the stadium out of bankruptcy court for $22 million later that same year. The purchase also included the stadium's lease to the Patriots, which ran through 2001. Though he also placed a bid on controlling interest in the franchise, Kraft lost the bidding to entrepreneur Victor Kiam.​

Kiam, in conjuction with Sullivan, almost immediately explored a potential move of the team to Jacksonville, Florida. However, Kraft refused to let the team owners break the lease. Kiam, who also was wrought with financial difficulty from previously unsuccessful investments, was unable to sustain a prolonged legal battle. As a result, he and Sullivan sold the Patriots to businessman James Orthwein in 1992.​

Orthwein, a native of St. Louis, Missouri, had designs on re-locating the Patriots after the 1993 season. In fact, exploratory measures were already in motion to re-name the team the St. Louis Stallions.​

As with the Kiam-Sullivan accord, Kraft’s control of the stadium’s lease was Orthwein’s primary roadblock. Despite the then-owner’s offer of $75 million to buy out the remainder of the team's lease at Foxboro Stadium. Kraft turned it down. Unable to relocate, and uninterested in operating the team in New England, Orthwein ultimately decided to sell his relatively newly-purchased franchise.​



“I’d rather finish first with no superstars than finish last [with them],” Kraft told the Globe after the 1976 season. “Big names are necessary to the gate, but a winning team is more important than a superstar. … We have a tremendous product to sell. It’s just a matter of having people taste it.”​

And it was likely with that in mind when Kraft made his next big moves. Kraft hired 12-time Grand Slam singles winner Roy Emerson as the Lobsters’ player-coach for 1977, giving the Australian full control to choose his team, then paid $50,000 to acquire the rights to Martina Navratilova, then just 20 but already the No. 2 women’s player in the world.​

“She made a big difference. When we switched to Roy Emerson as a coach, he knew how to bring out the best in her. She won a Wimbledon championship while she was part of the Boston Lobsters,” Kraft told Howe. “To enhance our gate in the summertime, we used to play a few matches down in Cape Cod because our family was there. It was pretty cool. I remember her coming from Wimbledon on global TV to the Cape Cod Coliseum. I had a chance to get close to her, and I realized how important it is to have a marquee star. The combination of the business aspect, the coaching and the star, I learned from World Team Tennis.”​






 
Robert Kraft:
I took over a paper mill up in Newfoundland at a time when it was a negative market. The paper industry is dominated by big companies in Canada, Europe and the U.S. We had converting plants that made boxes, but 50 to 60 percent of our sales price was raw materials. So we’d buy this paper and then convert it and add value, but the biggest beneficiary was the mill owners who we’d buy the paper from. So I said at some point I’ve got to own the raw material.​

Kraft made a creative play to successfully purchase the mill, and he eventually turned it into one of the largest privately owned paper companies in the world. He learned a valuable lesson — that when he believed in his plan and trusted his instinct, he could take a big risk and make it pay off.


A Patriots season-ticket holder since 1971, Kraft also cut his teeth as the owner of a sports franchise when he was part of a group that bought the Boston Lobsters of World Team Tennis in 1974. He learned a couple of valuable lessons that he carried over to the Patriots decades later.​

Kraft: At the same time, I always loved sports. The sport that was my favorite to participate in was tennis. We became part of World Team Tennis and bought the Boston Lobsters out of bankruptcy. I eventually bought out all my partners but one. I learned a lot about how to run a sports team doing that. . . . The university would get the parking, the concessions and sponsorship revenue, and all I got was the ticket revenue. I realized if I ever had the privilege of owning a team that I would make sure I controlled the venue and all the different parts of it.​

The other thing I learned is our attendance and performance went up when we had a star. We had great coaches, and I learned the importance of a great coach. We had a very good coach in Ion Tiriac, but you need a coach who can relate to both men and women. When I got Roy Emerson, I learned the importance of coaching. I wanted a star, and I brought in Martina Navratilova. She defected to America, and I paid a $50,000 fee in 1976. That was a lot of money in World Team Tennis to get her rights. She made a big difference. When we switched to Roy Emerson as a coach, he knew how to bring out the best in her. She won a Wimbledon championship while she was part of the Boston Lobsters. To enhance our gate in the summertime, we used to play a few matches down in Cape Cod because our family was there. It was pretty cool. I remember her coming from Wimbledon on global TV to the Cape Cod Coliseum. I had a chance to get close to her, and I realized how important it is to have a marquee star. The combination of the business aspect, the coaching and the star, I learned from World Team Tennis.​




Kraft: Football was always the sport I was passionate about. I loved it, my favorite sport. I used to look at the Sullivan family, and I liked Billy. I used to chat with him and say one day if he ever decided to sell the team, I hoped he would call me and give me a shot at it. Their finances got pretty complicated. I became a season-ticket holder in 1971 when they moved to Foxboro and Schaefer Stadium. E.M. Lowe gave them the land, and they built the stadium for $6 million. As I used to sit in the stands and look at how they ran the team and how things went, I learned that the 300 acres around the stadium were owned by a group of 12 people. The stadium was owned by a trust by the Sullivan family, and the team was owned by the Sullivan family. There was a racetrack, a trailer park and stables. There were a lot of ****oo things going on there. I used to sit in the stands in the 1970s and early 1980s and think, “What could I do, how could I own the team?” I tried to cultivate a relationship with Billy.​

So there I am sitting in the stands watching them. They were founded in 1960. Their first home playoff game was in 1978, the 19th season, against the Houston Oilers, which they lost. I was there in the stands for that. I used to sit in the stands, and the season would be over at Christmastime. It was a weird feeling. I started to put together a plan in the early 1980s.​


Jonathan Kraft (Robert Kraft’s son, current president of the Kraft Group): My senior year of college, I’d come home in the fall of 1985 because the Sullivans had put up all three pieces of the team (for sale). You had the land, which they had a lease on. It was owned by a group of guys. The stadium was owned by Chuck Sullivan. The team was owned by Billy and family members. But the Sullivans as a family controlled all three pieces, and they marketed the whole thing as a team. My dad had put a group of people together that worked with us — lawyers, accountants and stuff to start to put (the purchase plan) together . . .​
 
The Sullivans ran into financial issues and their debt worsened, notably with the spectacular failure of the Jackson Family Victory Tour in 1984. Chuck Sullivan bankrolled the tour for $40 million and used Sullivan Stadium — one of three names, along with Schaefer and Foxboro, that the old stadium used — as collateral. The tour was a disaster from a financial perspective and sparked a chain of events that ultimately caused the Sullivans to sell the team in the coming years.

Jonathan Kraft: As the team started doing well that fall (of 1985), the Sullivans, who were selling all three pieces — and you really needed to sell all three pieces together because, as money had gotten tight for the Sullivans, they had rewritten the lease between the team and the stadium, basically because the team had a debt limit. The NFL, in those days, had a $45 million debt limit. It was $35 million on the team, and the general partner could have another $10 million, so it was $45 million. There was a debt ceiling, and they needed cash to pay off the obligations that had come from the limited partner lawsuits and the screwed-up Victory Tour of the Jacksons. I have two tickets from the Jackson Victory Tour sitting there (in a frame on the office wall). They were always short money, so they got around the league’s debt-ceiling rules by basically rewriting the lease from the team to the stadium where they gave virtually all of the revenues — like all of the signage, all of the concessions, a big percentage of ticket sales as rent to put a lot of leverage on the stadium and to get leverage debt on the stadium. So they had a lease that ran through 2001 that was a very strict lease because the banks who loaned the money on the stadium wanted to be sure the Sullivans didn’t pull the team out of the stadium to let the stadium go bankrupt.​

Carmen Policy: All of a sudden, Michael Jackson and his Victory Tour enters the scene. The Sullivans become the premier and primary investors. As a matter of fact, they tried talking (49ers owner) Eddie DeBartolo into joining with them, and I strongly, strongly fought that. I’ll never forget, Eddie’s kids were really upset that he did not go forward with it because of the glamour and the glory of the Victory Tour, and Michael Jackson as big as he was, and probably the fun that would have connected to being part of it for teenage girls. I don’t blame them. Eddie, very non-ceremoniously, said, “OK, I’m going to take your advice, but if this tour is a big success, I think you’re going to be fired.” I’m laughing, but I’m not sure if he was serious or not. The long and short of it is it was a disaster for the Sullivan family, just a disaster.​

Robert Kraft: In 1984, under Chuck Sullivan, Billy Sullivan’s son, they sponsored the Michael Jackson national tour. They guaranteed $40 million to Don King. They put $48 million in debt, which they gave to him for the tour, and they wound up losing money. They couldn’t get licenses in Foxboro to even do it there. They lost a lot of money.​


 
Jonathan Kraft: So you had the team, and you had the stadium, then you had the parking lots, which they didn’t own but they had a lease on. . . . if you didn’t control the parking — because in those days, they didn’t have all of the satellite (parking lots), it wouldn’t have been enough. You needed the parking lots that existed on site to open the stadium, and you had to have the stadium because all the revenues from the team basically went to the stadium. So basically, you’d be crazy to ever buy the team without owning the stadium because all of the revenue went from the team operations to the stadium to pay the debt. And you’d be crazy to buy the stadium if you didn’t control the land because you’d have no guarantee that you could actually open the stadium if the parking lots weren’t available. So you had those three pieces, and the Sullivans controlled all three in the fall of 1985. They put them up for sale as a unit.​

The Krafts nearly bought all three pieces in 1985, as the Patriots began a run to Super Bowl XX, for approximately $100 million.

Jonathan Kraft: It was early at the start of this process. We came close that fall to buy all three pieces at once, but then the team started doing well, and I can’t speak for (the Sullivans). We weren’t here, but my sense was Billy Sullivan was like, “Hey, this is pretty good. We’re making the run I always hoped we would make.” So as the team started doing better, they pulled back from selling all three pieces. So later — end of 1985, beginning of 1986 — the first thing they did was default on the lease of the land. So Robert was like, “That would have been the last thing I would have ever done. I want to control the parking lots.” Because without the parking lots, you can’t open the stadium, and it’s a domino effect.​

Robert Kraft: In 1985, I approached the owners of the land and gave them a 10-year option at $17 million. I paid them $1 million a year for 10 years to have that option.​

The 10-year lease to buy the land ultimately cost Robert Kraft a total of $27 million with the $1 million annual lease and $17 million purchase price. The unconventional strategy was paramount to the purchase of the team in the next decade.

Robert Kraft: What revenue was I getting from the land? I was getting parking revenue from concerts and games. That was between $600,000 and $700,000, so I made a strategic decision to try to control the land in 1985 as a way to one day, going back to my Boston Lobster days, I would now control the parking revenue.​













Billy Sullivan managed to stay afloat through various means until 1988, when he sold the Patriots to Victor Kiam for $83 million, and Sullivan Stadium went into bankruptcy auction. Surprisingly, after purchasing the team, Kiam went low on his bid for the stadium.

Jonathan Kraft: Right after the stadium goes bankrupt and we start doing work, I had just started Harvard Business School. I was in business school but had worked a little bit with the team of guys that my dad had put together. We’re like, OK, no one else is going to bid for this thing in bankruptcy. The Sullivans don’t have the money. They’re barely staying afloat. So we’ll get it. While it was in bankruptcy and we thought the team was on the cusp of going bankrupt, too, out of the blue, Victor Kiam buys the team. And it turns out, he did literally 48 hours of due diligence. He was riding high. He did no diligence and bought the team. So we owned the land. He buys the team. The stadium is in bankruptcy. You can sort of think of it as a tug of war, almost.​



Robert Kraft: (Kiam) wanted to move the team and get a new stadium. So he bid $17 million. I bid $25 million. The bankruptcy judge awarded it to me because we were paying 50 cents on the dollar. My banking friend wouldn’t loan me the money because he thought it would be a white elephant, that the team would move. So we had to go to a private bank to get the money to do this deal. Once again, it was a big amount to put out, but it was all part of the strategic plan. By 1988, we controlled all of the revenues. It was sort of the Boston Lobsters in reverse.​

Carmen Policy: Robert Kraft successfully captured the stadium. Now he basically controlled the whole situation with the lease signed by the Patriots.​



Jonathan Kraft: Then (Kiam) was angry when he lost (in bankruptcy court). I remember my dad telling me the story. Kiam met with him and said, “The lease is a piece of blank. You’ve got to renegotiate.” It’s like, well, did you look at it when you bought the team? Did you understand when you bought the team? That didn’t happen. He’s running the team, and he’s complaining. We knew he was looking at how to move it to Jacksonville. I think his lawyers told him he couldn’t do it.​


 
He outmaneuvered a shyster (Sullivan), a huckster (Kiam) and a carpetbagger (uber rich boy Otis) to end up with the team and keep it in New England and THAT is why RKK is Krafty Bob. He understood what the Sullivans did with their lease shenanigans, bought it out from under Kiam who didn't and then used it to leverage Otis who only bought the team to move it. Not... too... shabby Bob, not too shabby at all.
 
Today in Patriots History
Bill Parcells is hired as Head Coach

Super Bowl winner viewed as
major upgrade over McPherson, Rust



Thursday, January 21, 1993
Bill Parcells is hired as Head Coach of the New England Patriots.



After missing the playoffs for six consecutive seasons and the team regressing to the bottom of the barrel following the Lisa Olson/Rod Rust/Victor Kiam era. The Patriots made a decisive move by signing a two-time Super Bowl winning head coach. At least carpet bagger James Orthwein made one positive hire for the franchise before being forced to sell, ruining his relocation dreams.


Over the previous three years the Patriots had gone 9-39 - finishing with the league's worst record not once, but twice - and had just completed their fourth consecutive season with double-digit losses.






Jan 22, 1993:
“I started my coaching career here in New England (linebacker coach in 1980) and I am going to end it here. This will be my last coaching job,” Parcells said.​

Although he doesn’t have the title of general manager, Parcells figures to have strong input on personnel matters, while others handle financial and administrative duties.​

“But this isn’t about control. This is a team. We’re a team, from top to bottom. Anyone that has their own agenda won’t be around long,” Parcells said.​

“The Patriots have convinced me they are willing and able to bring a championship-caliber team to New England. That was my only concern during our discussions. I have no reservations on that now. If I did, I wouldn’t be sitting here today.”​




Jan 22, 1993:
In the market glut of big-name NFL coaches, none comes with the credentials Parcells has -- two Super Bowl championships.​

The announcement Parcells will be coming to New England was made at a news conference at the upscale Westin Hotel-Copley Place by team owner James B. Orthwein, the St. Louis multimillionaire who purchased the Patriots in May.​

Parcells agreed to become the Patriots' new leader -- he has sweeping powers in all personnel areas, including the draft and the broadening spectrum of the free-agent marketplace -- for a contract, according to a source, worth $1.5 million a season for four years. He made about $1 million his final year with the New York Giants.​

According to the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula will make $1.4 million in 1993, $1.6 million in '94.​

Parcells is the first coach the Patriots (2-14 last season) have ever had who had previous success as an NFL head coach. The 11 previous coaches were either former college coaches or NFL assistants.​

The Patriots also interviewed former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka and former Philadelphia Eagles coach Buddy Ryan.​

Didn't realize that last factoid.
Truly dodged a bullet there.
Same holds true with Jeff Carlson blowing the final game of the 1992 season, pushing the Patriots ahead of Seattle in the draft order - and allowing the Pats to draft Drew Bledsoe rather than Rick Mirer.




At the time, the Patriots were the worst they have ever been in their history. The only other time period that compares is 1967 to 1973, where the Patriots won a total of 28 games, an average of four wins a season. It began with the disastrous switch of head coaches from Mike Holovak to the erratic Clive Rush, and ended with the advent of the Chuck Fairbanks era. But the early 1990s was a Patriot black hole, make no mistake.​

From 1990 to 1992, the Patriots won a grand total of 9 games, an average of three per season. And unlike the previous seven-year dark age era which was based on a 14-game season, this dark ages era was played with 16-game schedules. The Patriot win percentage in these three years was .188. One year of former defensive coordinator Rod Rust, then two years of former UMass head coach **** MacPherson. Patriot football was simply putrid. Awful. Ugly. Make that dawg-ugly.​

Then, as if out of the blue, comes this two-time Super Bowl champion head coach, back from a three-year hiatus for health reasons. Orthwein hired Parcells and gave him the keys to the car. All football decisions were his and his alone. He wouldn’t have coached here if he didn’t have that power. We’ll get back to that power in a bit.​

Parcells lasted four seasons, took his team to the playoffs twice, and wound up taking them to Super Bowl XXXI. But most of all, he put the Patriots on the NFL map. The Patriots became a somebody after three decades of being a nobody (save for perhaps the 1976 and 1985 seasons). Even after Pete Carroll succeeded him, the Patriots have been a somebody. The riches would wait just a few more years. But it all started with The Tuna. From that moment on, being a Patriot fan was permanently different.​




Chuck Fairbanks had been the best coach in franchise history, and to get another top coach into a franchise that was struggling with possible relocation at the time was a major coup, but he didn’t “save” the franchise from relocation. Robert Kraft who controlled the stadium lease and parking, thus limiting what James Orthwein could do with the franchise certainly had much more to do with the franchise remaining in New England than Parcells did.​

There is no denying that Parcells, along with Robert Kraft and yes, Drew Bledsoe, led a major turnaround in the situation here in New England. When Parcells left, I was thoroughly dismayed. But let’s not state that Parcells “put them on the map” – they were in the Super Bowl just seven years earlier under Raymond Berry.

The circumstances under which Parcells left New England has been documented ad nauseum, and really should’ve created much more acrimony towards the coach than it really did. He was negotiating with a division rival during Super Bowl week in which the Patriots were participating. It was betrayal of outrageous proportions, no matter what the personal situation between he and Bob Kraft was at the time.​

Yet, the undeniable charisma of Parcells (along with the Patriots steady decline under Pete Carroll) led some to keep their loyalties to Parcells, and to pardon him for his actions. Particularly in the media was this case, with Parcells toadies breathlessly praising him at every opportunity. This despite the fact that he was only in New England for four seasons and compiled exactly a .500 record here.
 
Plus who doesn’t love Macaroni and Cheese!
I can remember Stiller fans boycotting Kraft mac & cheese and other food products, because they just assumed he owned the food conglomerate.

Stupid Yinzers must have had a stroke when Kraft and Heinz merged.
 
Today in Patriots History
Patriots rally late from 10 down
to beat Jaguars in AFCCG

Danny Amendola saves the day
with two 4th quarter touchdowns
Jacksonville fumble recovery fortunately blown dead


Sunday January 21, 2018 at 3:05
2017 AFC Championship Game at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 24, Jacksonville Jaguars 20
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Doug Marrone
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Blake Bortles
Odds: Patriots favored by 7½
TV: CBS. Jim Nantz, Tony Romo;Tracy Wolfson, Jay Feely
Clear and cool, 48°, 3 mph wind from the WSW, 48% humidity
Referee: Clete Blakeman; time: 3:01; paid attendance: 65,878
Game MVP: Danny Amendola

Pats improve to 15-3; advance to Super Bowl 52 vs Eagles
Jaguars finish season with a record of 12-7



The 2017 Jacksonville Jaguars had a great defense, ranked second in scoring, yardage as well as turnovers. They limited Buffalo to just three points in their wild card game, then won a 45-42 shootout at Pittsburgh to advance to the AFC championship game.

What the Jags did not have was Danny Amendola and Tom Brady.


While 'Dola was the hero of the game for Patriot fans, there was another play that created far more attention nationwide. Jacksonville's defense had been relentless with constant pressure on Brady, sacking him three times. The Jaguar offense had controlled the clock, keeping the Pats offense on the bench. Two plays into the fourth quarter the Jags kicked a field goal to increase their lead to 20-10.

Three plays later Amendola completed a 20-yard double pass on the left sideline to Dion Lewis, who was hit and fumbled at the Jacksonville 33. Jaguar linebacker Myles Jack recovered, with a path to what likely would have been a 67-yard scoop-and-score. However, the play was whistled dead and ruled that while Jack did recover, he was down by contact.

It was a very close call, and I can understand Jacksonville being upset. I could see if it was either called that Lewis was tackled and the play was over, or that it was a fumble and Jack recovered - much more than the ruling on the field, because I don't really see Jack ever being tackled after he recovered the ball.


The Patriots quickly forced a three-and-out and got the ball back. Then on a third-and-18 from their own 25 with 10:49 left to play, Brady connected with Danny Amendola on a 21 yard pass for a first down. The next play was a 31 yard completion to Phillip Dorsett, then the Pats found the end zone on two more passes to Amendola.

Both teams punted on their next possessions, but Jacksonville began the following drive deep in their own territory. The Jaguars had to punt once again, this time from their nine yard line. Amendola returned the kick 20 yards to the Jacksonville 30, with 4:58 left to play. Five plays later Brady connected with 'Dola again to give the Patriots a four point lead.


Amendola finished with 84 yards receiving on seven receptions and two touchdowns, and Brandin Cooks had 100 yards on six receptions. The Jacksonville defense sacked Brady three times, limited the Pats to 2.4 yards per carry (46 yards on 19 carries). The Jaguars held a 35:08 to 24:52 advantage in time of possession, never turned the ball over (the Pats had the one fumble), and were better on third down (6-15, compared to 3-12 for the Patriots. One aspect that New England did hold a distinct advantage was penalties, with Jacksonville flagged six times for 98 yards, while the Pats had just one penalty, for ten yards.










Danny Amendola's 2 TD Day Sends Pats to Super Bowl | Jags vs. Patriots | AFC Championship Player HLs
2:42 Amendola Highlight Video



Jaguars vs. Patriots | NFL AFC Championship Game Highlights
19:06 NFL Highlight Video



Tom Brady's Epic 4th Quarter Comeback vs. Dominant Jaguars Defense (AFC Champ) | NFL Turning Point
23:49 NFL Films Video



On This Day in 2018 - AFC Championship - Jacksonville Jaguars at New England Patriots
42:52 Condensed Game Video





He was ruled down by contact, and the Jags followed with a three-and-out series. Everything started to unravel a few minutes later.​

With 10:49 remaining and the Pats facing third-and-18 at their own 25-yard line, the Jaguars liked their chances — and for good reason. Jacksonville’s vaunted defense ranked fifth in the league in preventing third-down conversions of 16 yards or longer.​

The unit featured six Pro Bowl selections, two speedy linebackers, the league’s top-rated secondary and arguably the best pass rush in franchise history. The Jags had few, if any, holes on that side of the ball. In third-down situations of 16 yards or longer, they had stopped opponents short of first downs 17 times in 18 tries during the regular season.​

None of those came against Brady.​

The New England quarterback handled a low snap in a shotgun formation, took a five-step drop to buy extra time, shuffled left to avoid Dareus’ rush and then threw a low pass to Danny Amendola in the middle of the field that he hauled in for a 21-yard gain.​

“I remember how big the play was,” Patriots running back James White recalled. “I don’t remember the exact play call or what-not, but it was a big play. I mean, Danny always comes up with plays like that, finds the right spot in zone. We had good protection; the offensive line did a great job. Tom did a good job finding him. We needed that play in order to get to where we wanted to be, so it was huge play.”​

New England scored four plays later, seizing the momentum from the unlikely conversion and leaving the Jags reeling.​

Players, coaches, and fans point to other reasons for the Patriots’ comeback: Brady being Brady; officials ruling Jack down; Pro Bowl defensive linemen Calais Campbell and Yannick Ngakoue getting injured; two busted coverages near the goal line that resulted in touchdowns; and the offense’s inability to run the ball late.​

But the one that sticks out for everyone is the third-and-long play.​

On the third-down catch, Amendola ran a seam route that started between the left-side numbers and the hash marks. He curled behind Jack, who had taken a few steps right to cover White out of the backfield, and in front of safety Tashaun Gipson.​






More headlines:





Box Score, Halftime & Full Game Summaries, Team & Individual Stats, Drive Charts and Full Play-by-Play:



Patriots-Jaguars Rosters and Depth Charts:

Patriots-Jaguars Injury Reports:

Patriots Media Dept Post-Game Notes:
- Patriots extend NFL record to tenth super bowl appearance, two more than any other team.
- Robert Kraft is first owner in NFL history to have his team in nine super bowls.
- Patriots extend their NFL record for consecutive conference championship games to seven.
- Pats moved into a tie with Dallas for third most appearances in a conference championship game with 14, one behind San Francisco and two behind Pittsburgh.
- Pats moved into a tie with Dallas and Green Bay for second most all-time playoff wins with 34, two behind Pittsburgh.
- Bill Belichick extends his NFL record for most super bowl appearnces as head coach or assistant to 11, four more than any other coach.
- Belichick extended his NFL record for most conference titles in the super bowl era to eight, two more than Don Shula.
- Belichick extended his NFL record for most conference championship games to twelve, two more than Shula.
- Tom Brady extended his NFL record for most conference championship titles as the starting QB to eight, three more than John Elway.
- Brady extended his NFL record for most conference championship hames to twelve, two more than Gene Upshaw and George Blanda.






Patriots Starting Offense:
14 WR Brandin Cooks
77 LT Nate Solder
62 LG Joe Thuney
60 C David Andrews
69 RG Shaq Mason
71 RT Cameron Fleming
87 TE Rob Gronkowski
80 WR Danny Amendola
12 QB Tom Brady
33 RB Dion Lewis
46 FB James Develin

Patriots Starting Defense:
94 LDE Ricky Jean Francois
93 LDT Lawrence Guy
90 RDT Malcom Brown
98 RDE Trey Flowers
53 LLB Kyle Van Noy
52 MLB Elandon Roberts
92 RLB James Harrison
21 LCB Malcolm Butler
23 SS Patrick Chung
32 FS Devin McCourty
24 RCB Stephon Gilmore

Patriots Special Teams:
3 K Stephen Gostkowski
6 P Ryan Allen
49 LS Joe Cardona
33 KR Dion Lewis
80 PR Danny Amendola
 
I have my issues with Krafty Bob, but Thank GOD he bought this team.
 
Jonathan Kraft: So you had the team, and you had the stadium, then you had the parking lots, which they didn’t own but they had a lease on. . . . if you didn’t control the parking — because in those days, they didn’t have all of the satellite (parking lots), it wouldn’t have been enough. You needed the parking lots that existed on site to open the stadium, and you had to have the stadium because all the revenues from the team basically went to the stadium. So basically, you’d be crazy to ever buy the team without owning the stadium because all of the revenue went from the team operations to the stadium to pay the debt. And you’d be crazy to buy the stadium if you didn’t control the land because you’d have no guarantee that you could actually open the stadium if the parking lots weren’t available. So you had those three pieces, and the Sullivans controlled all three in the fall of 1985. They put them up for sale as a unit.​

The Krafts nearly bought all three pieces in 1985, as the Patriots began a run to Super Bowl XX, for approximately $100 million.

Jonathan Kraft: It was early at the start of this process. We came close that fall to buy all three pieces at once, but then the team started doing well, and I can’t speak for (the Sullivans). We weren’t here, but my sense was Billy Sullivan was like, “Hey, this is pretty good. We’re making the run I always hoped we would make.” So as the team started doing better, they pulled back from selling all three pieces. So later — end of 1985, beginning of 1986 — the first thing they did was default on the lease of the land. So Robert was like, “That would have been the last thing I would have ever done. I want to control the parking lots.” Because without the parking lots, you can’t open the stadium, and it’s a domino effect.​

Robert Kraft: In 1985, I approached the owners of the land and gave them a 10-year option at $17 million. I paid them $1 million a year for 10 years to have that option.​

The 10-year lease to buy the land ultimately cost Robert Kraft a total of $27 million with the $1 million annual lease and $17 million purchase price. The unconventional strategy was paramount to the purchase of the team in the next decade.

Robert Kraft: What revenue was I getting from the land? I was getting parking revenue from concerts and games. That was between $600,000 and $700,000, so I made a strategic decision to try to control the land in 1985 as a way to one day, going back to my Boston Lobster days, I would now control the parking revenue.​













Billy Sullivan managed to stay afloat through various means until 1988, when he sold the Patriots to Victor Kiam for $83 million, and Sullivan Stadium went into bankruptcy auction. Surprisingly, after purchasing the team, Kiam went low on his bid for the stadium.

Jonathan Kraft: Right after the stadium goes bankrupt and we start doing work, I had just started Harvard Business School. I was in business school but had worked a little bit with the team of guys that my dad had put together. We’re like, OK, no one else is going to bid for this thing in bankruptcy. The Sullivans don’t have the money. They’re barely staying afloat. So we’ll get it. While it was in bankruptcy and we thought the team was on the cusp of going bankrupt, too, out of the blue, Victor Kiam buys the team. And it turns out, he did literally 48 hours of due diligence. He was riding high. He did no diligence and bought the team. So we owned the land. He buys the team. The stadium is in bankruptcy. You can sort of think of it as a tug of war, almost.​



Robert Kraft: (Kiam) wanted to move the team and get a new stadium. So he bid $17 million. I bid $25 million. The bankruptcy judge awarded it to me because we were paying 50 cents on the dollar. My banking friend wouldn’t loan me the money because he thought it would be a white elephant, that the team would move. So we had to go to a private bank to get the money to do this deal. Once again, it was a big amount to put out, but it was all part of the strategic plan. By 1988, we controlled all of the revenues. It was sort of the Boston Lobsters in reverse.​

Carmen Policy: Robert Kraft successfully captured the stadium. Now he basically controlled the whole situation with the lease signed by the Patriots.​



Jonathan Kraft: Then (Kiam) was angry when he lost (in bankruptcy court). I remember my dad telling me the story. Kiam met with him and said, “The lease is a piece of blank. You’ve got to renegotiate.” It’s like, well, did you look at it when you bought the team? Did you understand when you bought the team? That didn’t happen. He’s running the team, and he’s complaining. We knew he was looking at how to move it to Jacksonville. I think his lawyers told him he couldn’t do it.​




Anyone else catch Coach Scar standing next to Ron Meyer at 1:23 of that last video?

.
 
Today in Patriots History
Colts turn up Thermostat in RCA Dome
Flu-ridden Pats run out of gas in second half
Manning, Dungy finally beat NE to win 2006 AFCCG


Sunday January 21, 2007 at 6:44
2006 AFC Championship Game at RCA Dome
Indianapolis Colts 38, New England Patriots 34
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Tony Dungy
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: Colts favored by 3
Weather: 82° in the dome
Game MVP: the HVAC guy
Pats finish the season with a 14-5 record
Colts improve to 15-4; advance to Super Bowl 41 vs Rex Grossman, Lovie Smith and the Chicago Bears in Miami



Tony Dungy and Peyton Manning finally beat the Patriots to advance to the Super Bowl. The Patriots jumped out to a 21-3 lead after an Asante Samuel 39-yard pick-six, but the Colts battled back to tie the game three times - and then scored the winning touchdown with 60 seconds left to play.

About half of the Patriot defense was sick with the flu, and television announcer Jim Nantz commented that the stadium felt like a sauna. Bill Polian had allegedly ordered stadium workers to turn off the air conditioning and turn on the heat, though that report was quickly buried and never pursued.

In a bit of trivia three linemen scored touchdowns in this game: Logan Mankins and Jeff Saturday on fumble recoveries in the end zone, and former Patriot Dan Klecko on a one yard reception.




Earlier that season the Colts had pumped in fake crowd noise against the Patriots






2006 AFC Championship: Colts vs Patriots
11:15 Highlight Video



Tom Brady vs. Peyton Manning: 2006 AFC Championship | Patriots vs Colts | NFL Full Game
2:15:55 Full Game








Takes that did not age well


An unnamed staff writer on the NFL's website had this to say following the game.
The Colts piled on 455 yards and scored on six of their final eight drives, not counting the one where Manning kneeled down. The mystique that seemed so prevalent last week in an upset win over San Diego seemed missing, and this looked like a tired, desperate, defeated team in the end. Maybe it was due in part to a flu bug that worked its way through its locker room during the week.

So while that dynasty is dead, it is now Manning's turn to take a shot at starting a new one.




In the 2014 article below, the Globe's Eric Wibur also prematurely declared Brady, Belichick and the Patriots dead and buried, proclaiming the dynasty to have died when this game versus Colts was over.
But the Colts’ 38-34 victory on Jan. 21, 2007, did more than end the Patriots’ dynasty. It accomplished what most thought impossible at the time, what many still refuse to acknowledge almost eight years after Manning and the Colts came back and changed the legends of Brady, Bill Belichick, and the Patriots forever.

It has never been the same since.





Patriots lose grip in second half, fall 38-34 - Patriots.com



For a good number of Patriots fans, halftime was spent clearing schedules, requesting vacation, booking flights to Miami, and securing hotel rooms.​

It was a done deal.​

The New England Patriots were heading back to the Super Bowl for the fourth time in six seasons. Tom Brady sat back and watched as center Logan Mankins recover a fumble for a touchdown. He watched from the sidelines as cornerback Asante Samuel picked off Peyton Manning as New England roared out to a 21-3 lead. It was 21-6 by halftime, once again beating Manning and the Indianapolis Colts in the 2006 AFC Championship game, a script seen before with the ending of warm familiarity all but inevitable.​

Brady would have his shot at a fourth Super Bowl title against the Chicago Bears, earning revenge for the then-21-year-old embarrassment laid out for his New England ancestors in New Orleans, and cementing the present-day Patriots as one of the NFL’s most dominant dynasties. Manning would, once again, be a Big Game bridesmaid, a guy with all the numbers looking on from the outside, while Brady was in search of even more jewelry, a ring that, it seemed, the more time passed, the more it might be unattainable for the Colts quarterback.​

In the next 30 minutes, everything would change.​

“We had the dagger in them, and we didn’t twist it in enough,” said cornerback Ellis Hobbs, who, along with Samuel, Roosevelt Colvin, and Ty Warren, gave the Colts fits in the Patriots’ dominant first half on the defensive side of the ball. “We let them survive, and with an explosive offense like that, that’s a mistake.”​

Manning finally won the “big one,” and a Super Bowl to boot. The Patriots defense, so stalwart in building a seemingly-relentless lead on the Colts in the first half on that memorable evening in the old RCA Dome, choked at the most inopportune moments in the fourth quarter. And Brady, who went into the game with Ben Watson, Troy Brown, Jabar Gaffney, Reche Caldwell, and Daniel Graham as his primary throwing targets, couldn’t muster any of the magic that had helped define him in previous Super Bowl runs in ’01, ’03, and ’04.​




Box Score, Halftime & Full Game Summaries, Team & Individual Stats, Drive Charts and Full Play-by-Play:



Patriots Starting Offense:
87 WR Reche Caldwell
84 TE Ben Watson
72 LT Matt Light
70 LG Logan Mankins
67 C Dan Koppen
61 RG Stephen Neal
77 RT Nick Kaczur
82 TE Daniel Graham
10 WR Jabar Gaffney
12 QB Tom Brady
28 RB Corey Dillon

Patriots Starting Defense:
94 LDE Ty Warren
75 NT Vince Wilfork
93 RDE Richard Seymour
54 LOLB Tedy Bruschi
59 LOLB Rosevelt Colvin
52 RILB Eric Alexander
50 ROLB Mike Vrabel
22 LCB Asante Samuel
36 SS James Sanders
25 FS Artrell Hawkins
27 RCB Ellis Hobbs

Patriots Special Teams:
3 K Stephen Gostkowski
18 P Todd Sauerbrun
66 LS Lonie Paxton
27 KR Ellis Hobbs
39 KR Laurence Maroney
80 PR Troy Brown
 
For the first 25:28 of the game, the Patriots did absolutely everything they needed to do to defeat the Colts and make it to Super Bowl XLI. Leading 21-3 towards the end of the first half, the Patriots went back to their soft defense which led to the two losses in Foxborough over the past two seasons, and Peyton Manning was able to take full advantage of it. Like the 2003 regular season barnburner here at the RCA Dome, when the Patriots squandered a 31-10 lead, the Patriots squandered this lead and the Colts had Miami dead set in their sights.


In the end, Tom Brady was asked to drive the Patriots 79 yards in 54 seconds with two timeouts. He made it as far as the Colts' 45, before Marlin Jackson stepped in front of Ben Watson and made the interception, sending the Colts to their first Super Bowl in 36 years. The Colts hung on for dear life, winning 38-34, sending the Patriots to their first AFC Championship Game loss in franchise history.


What should have been a Patriot blowout instead turned into a riveting battle, but a battle the Patriots could not withstand. Their defense, which played so well in the first half, wilted in the second half as players either came out hurting, cramping, tiring, or a combination of all three. The Colts riddled the Patriots with 32 second half points, and scored on six of their last eight possessions, not counting the final kneeldown. Manning was finally able to find receivers he couldn't find in the early going, and when he was finally able, it was like when opponents would come into Boston Garden to play the Celtics in May in a hot and humid building. The Patriots simply got gassed.


One single play turned the momentum in favor of the Colts. With 4:32 to play in the first half, the Patriots were driving on the beleaguered Colts, leading 21-3 and trying to deliver a potential fatal knockout punch. With the ball on the Colt 28, Brady hit Watson with a nine-yard toss towards the left sideline and a Patriot first down. But away from the play, Troy Brown pushed off on Jason David in making an in-cut, and was flagged for pass interference. Watson was called for illegal motion on the next play, and Brady wound up being sacked by Raheem Brock at the 49. So, first and ten at the 19 became fourth and 27 at the 49. The Patriots punted, and it was all Colts from that moment on.


Manning got the ball at his own 12, and cornerbacks Asante Samuel and Ellis Hobbs, who had been playing the receivers tight up to that point and had been succeeding, let up and started playing ten yards off, as if to hold Indianapolis to a field goal and run the clock out. It did go to third and ten at the 12, but the catalyst for the Colts was an 18-yard pass to Reggie Wayne, a square-out pattern with Ray Mickens in coverage, not Hobbs. This right here explains that the Patriots had zoned up on the Colts, hoping to at least give up only a field goal, questionable strategy since the Colts were dead and buried up to that point. Switching to a soft zone let the Colts back into the game, and it would cost the Patriots their season.


Manning led the Colts on a 15-play, 80-yard drive, which Adam Vinatieri finished with a 26-yard field goal to make it 21-6 Patriots at the half. But the Colts got the ball to start the second half, and Manning started it off right with two 76-yard touchdown drives, one 14 plays and one six plays. These drives were sandwiched around a three-and-out for the Patriots, begun with Brady lofting a high pass out of bounds on first down seemingly right after he took the snap. Manning sneaked it in from one yard out for the first touchdown, and former Patriot Dan Klecko hauled in a one-yard pass, with Marvin Harrison catching a pass for a two-point conversion to tie the contest at 21.


At this point, the Patriot defense was completely spent. They had been out there for all but 1:05 of the first 11:11 of the third quarter. Players were being treated for cramping, while players like Eric Alexander, Mike Wright and Rashad Baker were being asked to make varsity level plays with a conference championship on the line.


Being the champion Brady is, he held the Patriots together and stood toe to toe with Manning and his offensive juggernaut. He would toss a six-yard touchdown pass to Jabar Gaffney on a play where Kelvin Hayden was called for a pushout. But Manning answered back with a 7-play, 67-yard drive and a one-yard run by Dominic Rhodes, a play on which center Jeff Saturday fell on Rhodes' fumble for the TD. After an exchange of punts, the Patriots drove to the Colt 18. A drop by Reche Caldwell in the right flat, the second such drop he suffered when he was wide open, helped the Patriots settle for a 28-yard field goal by Stephen Gostkowski. But a 52-yard pass to Dallas Clark set up Vinatieri from 36. It was 31-31 with 5:31 to go.


Needing to run clock, the Patriots eschewed featuring Corey Dillon and instead kept trying to attack through the air, thanks to another nifty kickoff return by Hobbs (who had an 80-yarder earlier and a 36.7 yard average). But the Patriots could move only 29 yards and kill 1:42. Gostkowski nailed a 43-yarder, and the Patriots had a 34-31 lead with 3:49 to go.


Incredibly, the Patriots held the Colts to three and out and got the ball back at their own 40, with 3:22 to kill and the Colts with only two timeouts. Seemingly with the Colts where they wanted them, Heath Evans was called for being the 12th man in the huddle before the drive even started, and the Patriots went three and out with zero runs from Dillon. The Colts got the ball back at their 20 with 2:17 to go.


Naturally, everyone is thinking about Vinatieri. What they weren't thinking about was an unknown receiver named Bryan Fletcher, who caught a 32-yard pass with Alexander providing lousy coverage. This led not to a Vinatieri field goal, but instead a Joseph Addai touchdown, a three-yard run up the middle through a gaping hole in the line. It was 38-34 Colts, their first lead of the game. But Brady had 54 seconds and all three timeouts, and he had to take the Patriots 79 yards for a game-winning score.


He made it to the Indianapolis 45. With 24 seconds left, he tried to hit Watson over the middle, but Jackson closed on the ball and snatched it just before it got to Watson at the 35. Unlike Marlon McCree, he fell down at the 41 as the RCA Dome exploded in celebration.


The Patriots had built their 21-3 lead on a stifling defense and a good run attack. Logan Mankins recovered a botched handoff to Laurence Maroney in the end zone to give the Patriots an early 7-0 lead. It was 14-3 after Dillon literally walked in from seven yards out, and two plays later Asante Samuel stepped in front of Harrison and returned an interception 39 yards for a score to make it 21-3 Patriots in the second quarter.


But that was it for Patriot domination. The Patriots let the Colts back in the game, and it cost them a world championship. The Colts should have no problem with the Bears in the Super Bowl. Manning will finally get his ring, and it will be thanks to finally overcoming the team and players which have dogged him his whole career.


As for the Patriots, there is never shame in getting at least this far. This simply is something Patriot folk aren't used to.

Put it this way. If you felt blasé over the win in Super Bowl XXXIX, shame on you.




RRM: One of the overlooked aspects of the game was that the Colts managed to outrush the Patriots by a margin of 125-93, and aside from Corey Dillon's 35-yard burst in the first quarter New England's ground game was not much of a factor. Did you see this as a big advantage in favor of the Colts in this game?

SG: The fact that the Colts were able to run the ball as well as they did helped to put a strain on the Patriots defense since it kept them on field for an awfully long time in the second half. The Patriots inability to run the ball, particularly in that second half, really hurt them because if they had been able to maintain possession of the ball instead of going three and out the few times they did it might have been enough to make a difference.[/CENTER]
 
Today in Patriots History
More January 21 Trivia


January 21, 1961:
Patriots sign free agent QB/P Tom Yewcic


Trivia #1: Yewcic is the only player to win a Rose Bowl and also be named the College World Series Most Valuable Player - all in 1954 with Michigan State.

Tom Yewcic was a late (319th) draft pick by the Steelers in 1954, but chose instead to play baseball. He was the MVP of the 1954 college world series and signed with the Detroit Tigers. Yewcic was in Detroit's minor league system through 1959, only making it to the big leagues for three innings of one game in 1957 before switching to football.

Trivia #2: Tom Yewcic is the only person to appear in two professional sports at Fenway Park: his one MLB game against the Red Sox in '57, and later with the Boston Patriots from '63-'66.

For six seasons Yewcic was a punter and backup QB for the Pats. He was also occasionally used at halfback, and at flanker in 1961. Over his career he ran (72 times for 424 yards, 4 TD, 5.9 ypc) almost as often as he passed (87 completions, 12 TD). His 377 punts ranks second in franchise history.

Trivia #3: Tom Yewcic is the only Patriot besides Tom Brady to have punted, caught a pass, thrown a touchdown pass and rushed for a touchdown. Yewcic had a 46-yard reception in a 46-17 1961 victory over Denver, and his 90 yards rushing helped down the New York Titans at BU Field in '62.

Trivia #4: Yewcic holds the franchise record for longest run by a punter, a 20-yard gain against the Raiders at Nickerson Field in '62.

Tom Yewcic is also a member of the Patriots All-Decade Team of the 1960s as their punter. After retiring he worked with the Patriots until 1981 as a coach and a scout. Yewcic then transitioned to commercial business, selling medical supplies to doctors and hospitals.

He played six seasons for the Boston Patriots and is considered one of the greatest punters in the team's history.

A versatile athlete, Tom Yewcic sits behind only Rich Camarillo on the New England Patriots all-time list in punts (378) and punt yardage (14,553). He held the league record for most yards kicked in one game. Yewcic played for the Patriots from 1961-1966, and he did much more than punting. He also played quarterback and threw for 1,374 yards and 12 touchdowns over his six-year career.

"It was a little different then than it is today," said Yewcic. "Today you are talking about a 53-man roster and talking specialization as far as centers, punters and kickers. When I was playing it was only a 32-man roster.

"With a 32-man roster, you had to play more than one position in order to make the team. I was really a halfback coming out of high school, but when I went to Michigan State they converted me over to quarterback. It wasn't a big adjustment."


Obituary for Thomas Yewcic - Keene Funeral Home










January 21, 1968:
Patriots lose five players in the 1968 Expansion Draft to the newly formed Cincinnati Bengals:
DB Ron Hall, a '63 AFL All-Star who played in 88 games for the Pats from 1961-67, and is a member of the Pats All-1960s Team
HB J.D. Garrett, who played in 50 games for Boston from 1964-67
HB Joe Bellino, a Winchester MA native who won the 1960 Heisman trophy with Navy
S White Graves, backup/special teamer who played in 40 games from 1965-67
OT/DE Jim Boudreaux, a 1966 2nd round (10th overall) draft draft bust from LSU






January 21, 1991:
The Patriots formally announce the initial coaching staff for new head coach **** MacPherson.

Joe Collier is the defensive coordinator.
**** Coury is the offensive coordinator.
Bobby Grier (RB) and Rod Humenick (OL) are re-signed as assistant coaches.
Dante Scarnecchia returns to New England after two seasons with the Colts to coach special teams and tight ends.
Other new position coaches are Ivan Fears (WR), Stan Jones (DL), Norm Gerber (ILB), Myrel Moore (OLB), Dave Uyrus (assistant ST/DL) and Joe Collier Jr. (assistant RB/WR).




January 21, 2013:
DT Marcus Forston is elevated from the practice squad to the active roster.
He took the open roster spot vacated when Rob Gronkowski was placed on Injured Reserve with a fractured forearm.




January 21, 2014:
Practice squad member Marcus Forston is re-signed to a futures contract.
The University of Miami product played in four games for the Patriots in 2012-2013, between three stints on the practice squad. The Pats waived Forston late in the 2014 preseason; he signed with the Rams in 2015 but never played in any other regular season NFL games.





January 21, 2016:
James Vaughters is signed to a futures contract.
The LB from Stanford never saw any playing time with the Pats, but did eventually get on the field in 27 games for the Bears and Falcons from 2019 to 2021.




January 21, 2025:
New head coach Mike Vrabel re-hires Josh McDaniels as offensive coordinator.
McDaniels gets the nod over Vikings assistant OC Grant Udinski, who also interviewed for the position.




Jane (Howard) Martinet passes away at the age of 79
Jane worked for the Patriots in the sixties when the office staff consisted of two people.





 
Today in Patriots History
January 21 Birthdays


Happy 33rd birthday to Jordan Richards
Born January 21, 1993 in Sacramento
Patriot safety, 2015-2017, uniform #37; 2019, uniform #39
Pats 2nd round (64th overall) selection of the 2015 draft, from Stanford

Jordan Richards played in 44 regular season games and five playoff games with New England, with seven starts. He was used primarily on special teams, never living up to his draft status. The Pats traded Jordan on August 31, 2018 to Atlanta for nothing more than a conditional 2020 seventh round draft pick.

After spending time with the Falcons and Raiders, the Pats re-signed Richards on October 2, 2019. He played in three games, strictly on special teams, and was released. Richards spent three season with the Ravens, finishing his NFL career in 2021 with Baltimore.

2015: 238 defensive snaps (25%), 253 special team snaps (60%) in 14 games
2016: 18 defensive snaps (2.5%), 151 ST snaps (50%) in 11 games
2017: 272 defensive snaps (26%), 309 ST snaps (69%) in 16 games
2019: zero defensive snaps, 57 special team snaps (13%) in three games

Career stats with Patriots: 50 tackles (41 solo), 3 passes defensed, 2 forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. 528 snaps on defense and 770 on special teams. Jordan received a ring for Super Bowl 51 versus Atlanta, though he did not play in that game.




Happy 42nd birthday to David Harris
Born January 21, 1984 in Grand Rapids, Michigan
Patriot ILB, 2017; uniform #45
Signed as a free agent on June 22, 2017 to a 2-year $5M contract

Harris was a 2nd round pick out of Michigan in 2017, playing ten years with the Jets, and signing with the Patriots shortly after they released him. He appeared in then games for New England with six starts, with 22 tackles and 1½ sacks. He retired on February 23, 2018.

In 11 NFL seasons Harris played in 164 games, racking up 36½ sacks, 1,110 tackles and six interceptions. Unfortunately he was just a bit over the hill at age 33 when the Patriots signed him.




Happy 41st birthday to Dan Gronkowski
Born January 21, 1985 in Amherst NY
Patriot TE in 2011; uniform #82
Signed as a free agent on September 6, 2011

The elder Gronk played in five games with one start while with the Patriots. He was originally a seventh round draft pick by Detroit in 2009, from Maryland. Dan also played for Denver prior to coming to Foxborough, and for Cleveland after the Pats waived him on November 8, 2011. Between those four teams he played in 21 NFL games, with five starts and nine receptions.




Happy 36th birthday to Kanorris Davis
Born January 21, 1990 in Perry, Georgia
Patriot ST/SS/LB 2013-14; uniform #36
Signed as an undrafted free agent on May 3, 2013 from Troy

Kanorris Davis played in three regular season and two playoff games for the Patriots in 2013, bouncing between the active roster and practice squad three times. During that time he was on the field for 53 special team snaps (64%), and zero on defense. He was a binky of mine based on what I saw in his rookie preseason, but my expectations that he would develop into a solid NFL player never quite materialized.

Davis was signed to the practice squad again after being cut at the end of 2014 training camp. Less than a week later he was released, as the Pats signed WR Marcus Thigpen, OL Chris Barker and TE Allen Reisner to the practice squad. Davis went on to play for the Toronto Argonauts in the CFL, but his pro football career abruptly ended in 2016 due to a severe knee injury.







Happy 45th birthday to Johnathan Sullivan
Born January 21, 1981 in Griffin, Georgia
Patriot DT, 2006 offseason
Acquired from New Orleans on June 5, 2006 in a trade for WR Bethel Johnson

Johnathan Sullivan was originally the sixth overall pick of the 2003 draft. The Saints had traded up to snag Sullivan in a lopsided deal with Arizona that netted the Cardinals DE/LB Calvin Pace, WR Bryant Johnson and WR Anquan Boldin. Sullivan played in 36 games with 16 starts in three seasons with the Saints - with only four of those starts coming in years two and three.

Sullivan was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana near Atlanta three weeks after being traded to New England, with those charges later being dropped. He began training camp on the physically unable to perform list due to being unable to pass his conditioning test, then was activated off PUP on August 7. The Patriots released Sullivan on October 9, 2006; he never did get on the field of play in a regular season game while with the Pats. Sullivan never played in the NFL again either, going down in league history as one of the biggest draft busts ever.




Happy 27th birthday to Braylon Sanders
Born January 21, 1999 in Hogansville, Georgia
Patriot WR, 2024 practice squad
Signed as a free agent to the practice squad on Oct 29, 2024

Sanders was originally signed as an undrafted rookie from Ole Miss by the Dolphins in 2022. He played in three games while bouncing back and forth ffrom the practice squad to active roster, with two receptions. Miami placed Sanders on injured reserve on August 28, 2024, then released him with an injury settlement a week later. Jerod Mayo never elevated Sanders to the active roster - unlike several other practice squad player in week 18 - and he is now a free agent.




Other pro football players born on this date with a New England connection:

Damane Duckett, 45 (Jan 21, 1981)
Born in Waterbury, CT
DT played in 20 games for the Panthers, Giants and 49ers from 2004-06.



George Connor (Jan 21, 1925 - March 31, 2003)
Holy Cross
Connor played for the Crusaders for two years before enlisting in the Navy in World War II. When he returned the Chicago native enrolled at Notre Dame, to help his mother care for his ill father. He was twice a consensus All-American as a tackle for the Fighting Irish, in 1946 and 1947, and won the first Outland Trophy as the nation's best college interior lineman in 1946. Connor was a key component of Notre Dame's 1946 and 1947 national championship teams, and was the captain of their unbeaten 1947 team.

Connor stayed close to home, playing for the Chicago Bears. In eight NFL seasons he was named a first-team All-Pro five times. At first exclusively a tackle when playing defense, in a game in 1949 Bears head coach George Halas ordered Connor to stand upright outside the end in an attempt to thwart the running of Philadelphia Eagles halfback Steve Van Buren. The plan worked, as Connor held Van Buren in check and the Bears handed the Eagles their only loss of the season. "We always set high standards for George Connor and he exceeded them," said Halas. He became one of the first big, mobile linebackers in the NFL, and famed sportswriter Grantland Rice once wrote that Connor was "the closest thing to a Greek God since Apollo".

Connor was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1963, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1975.




Nick Klutka (Jan 21, 1921 - April 2, 2003)
Boston Yanks 1946 draft pick
End/Defensive End played in 11 games in the forties.




Besides George Connor, other Pro Football Players born on January 21 include:

Haloti Ngata, 42 (Jan 21, 1984)
A 3x First Team All-Pro, 3x Second Team All-Pro, and longtime Pats nemesis with the Ravens, the DT was inducted to the College Football HoF in December, and is probably bound for the Pro Football Hall of Fame sometime soon.


Peyton Hillis, 40 (Jan 21, 1986)
Ask any Patriot fan the question 'what was the most unexpected Patriots loss?', and near the top of that list there will be a response 'the Peyton Hillis Game' against Cleveland. The running back scored 26 touchdowns with multiple teams from 2008-2014.
 
Robert Kraft:​
I took over a paper mill up in Newfoundland at a time when it was a negative market. The paper industry is dominated by big companies in Canada, Europe and the U.S. We had converting plants that made boxes, but 50 to 60 percent of our sales price was raw materials. So we’d buy this paper and then convert it and add value, but the biggest beneficiary was the mill owners who we’d buy the paper from. So I said at some point I’ve got to own the raw material.​

Kraft made a creative play to successfully purchase the mill, and he eventually turned it into one of the largest privately owned paper companies in the world. He learned a valuable lesson — that when he believed in his plan and trusted his instinct, he could take a big risk and make it pay off.


A Patriots season-ticket holder since 1971, Kraft also cut his teeth as the owner of a sports franchise when he was part of a group that bought the Boston Lobsters of World Team Tennis in 1974. He learned a couple of valuable lessons that he carried over to the Patriots decades later.


Kraft: At the same time, I always loved sports. The sport that was my favorite to participate in was tennis. We became part of World Team Tennis and bought the Boston Lobsters out of bankruptcy. I eventually bought out all my partners but one. I learned a lot about how to run a sports team doing that. . . . The university would get the parking, the concessions and sponsorship revenue, and all I got was the ticket revenue. I realized if I ever had the privilege of owning a team that I would make sure I controlled the venue and all the different parts of it.​

The other thing I learned is our attendance and performance went up when we had a star. We had great coaches, and I learned the importance of a great coach. We had a very good coach in Ion Tiriac, but you need a coach who can relate to both men and women. When I got Roy Emerson, I learned the importance of coaching. I wanted a star, and I brought in Martina Navratilova. She defected to America, and I paid a $50,000 fee in 1976. That was a lot of money in World Team Tennis to get her rights. She made a big difference. When we switched to Roy Emerson as a coach, he knew how to bring out the best in her. She won a Wimbledon championship while she was part of the Boston Lobsters. To enhance our gate in the summertime, we used to play a few matches down in Cape Cod because our family was there. It was pretty cool. I remember her coming from Wimbledon on global TV to the Cape Cod Coliseum. I had a chance to get close to her, and I realized how important it is to have a marquee star. The combination of the business aspect, the coaching and the star, I learned from World Team Tennis.​




Kraft: Football was always the sport I was passionate about. I loved it, my favorite sport. I used to look at the Sullivan family, and I liked Billy. I used to chat with him and say one day if he ever decided to sell the team, I hoped he would call me and give me a shot at it. Their finances got pretty complicated. I became a season-ticket holder in 1971 when they moved to Foxboro and Schaefer Stadium. E.M. Lowe gave them the land, and they built the stadium for $6 million. As I used to sit in the stands and look at how they ran the team and how things went, I learned that the 300 acres around the stadium were owned by a group of 12 people. The stadium was owned by a trust by the Sullivan family, and the team was owned by the Sullivan family. There was a racetrack, a trailer park and stables. There were a lot of ****oo things going on there. I used to sit in the stands in the 1970s and early 1980s and think, “What could I do, how could I own the team?” I tried to cultivate a relationship with Billy.​

So there I am sitting in the stands watching them. They were founded in 1960. Their first home playoff game was in 1978, the 19th season, against the Houston Oilers, which they lost. I was there in the stands for that. I used to sit in the stands, and the season would be over at Christmastime. It was a weird feeling. I started to put together a plan in the early 1980s.​


Jonathan Kraft (Robert Kraft’s son, current president of the Kraft Group): My senior year of college, I’d come home in the fall of 1985 because the Sullivans had put up all three pieces of the team (for sale). You had the land, which they had a lease on. It was owned by a group of guys. The stadium was owned by Chuck Sullivan. The team was owned by Billy and family members. But the Sullivans as a family controlled all three pieces, and they marketed the whole thing as a team. My dad had put a group of people together that worked with us — lawyers, accountants and stuff to start to put (the purchase plan) together . . .​

I attended some Lobstah's games at BU's old Waltah Brown Arena; my older brother was a student there in the School of Pubic Communications at the time and would get tickets either at the student center at a discount or would get them comped through people he knew... Caught a few tennis balls they would hit into the audience at the end of their games... Good times, good times...
 
I attended some Lobstah's games at BU's old Waltah Brown Arena; my older brother was a student there in the School of Pubic Communications at the time and would get tickets either at the student center at a discount or would get them comped through people he knew... Caught a few tennis balls they would hit into the audience at the end of their games... Good times, good times...

Roy Emerson, Martina Navratilova, Greer (Cat) Stevens, Tony Roche, Anne Smith

Bob folded the team in '78, before he could destroy their logo and uniforms.
 

Roy Emerson, Martina Navratilova, Greer (Cat) Stevens, Tony Roche, Anne Smith

Bob folded the team in '78, before he could destroy their logo and uniforms.
If I recall correctly, didn't the men and women share one locker room for the Lobsters, and the same for visiting teams?

Which led to a romance between one of the men (coach? player?) and a woman playing for the Lobsters?
 
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