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Today In Patriots History Feb 5, 2017: Ninth anniversary of 28-3

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Today In Patriots History
28-3: Roger That!
Greatest comeback
in pro football history




















 
Today In Patriots History
28-3: Roger That!

Tom Brady gets retribution for Goodell's witch hunt

Solidifies any questions about his being the G.O.A.T.
Greatest comeback in pro football history


Sunday February 5, 2017 at 6:37 (5:37 local time)
Super Bowl 51 at NRG Stadium in Houston
New England Patriots 34, Atlanta Falcons 28
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Dan Quinn
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Matt Ryan
Odds: New England favored by 3; over/under 57
Referee: Carl Cheffers; time: 3:47; paid attendance: 70,807
Roof closed due to potential rain; 76º, 14 mph wind outside
TV: Fox. Joe Buck, Troy Aikman; Erin Andrews, Chris Myers
Patriots finish the 2016 season with a 17-2 record, winning their last ten in a row
Atlanta's eight-game winning streak is snapped, finishing 13-6 after a 7-5 start



Relive the Patriots' Amazing 25 point comeback in Super Bowl LI
13:42 Comeback Highlight Video



Super Bowl LI: Patriots vs. Falcons Mic'd Up | NFL Films | Sound FX
33:22 Mic'd Up SoundFX Video, via VFL Films:



NFL Films Presents: Super Bowl LI, The Greatest Comeback in Super Bowl History | NFL Films
21:35 Highlights Video, via NFL Films



Patriots Unbelievable Comeback in Super Bowl LI to Beat the Falcons | NFL Turning Point
41:24 Turning Point Video, via NFL Films



Super Bowl 51 FULL GAME: New England Patriots vs. Atlanta Falcons
2:23:03 Full Game, via the NFL





Inside the Patriots' overlooked play that made 28-3 possible | Washington Post
“Tom Brady should be in Hollywood for the acting job he does,” Faulk said.​

The performance provided White enough cover to slip behind Andrews and over the goal line. The Patriots had sliced Atlanta’s lead to 28-20, the first time they had come within reach.​

Ride 34 Direct had again occupied a unique place in Patriots’ lore, a testament to the Patriots’ attention to detail. They had prepared all year, and over multiple seasons, really, just in case the appropriate situation arose. When it did, they executed flawlessly. It was a small play that explained so much giant success, a couple seconds that illuminated a decade-plus of football excellence.​

In the aftermath, the Falcons may have felt one specific regret. They could have identified the play simply by noticing White’s cozy alignment with Brady, the split Faulk had taken against Carolina all those Super Bowls ago. They could have seen what was coming.​

“But things are happening fast,” Koppen said. “And we ran it three times in 17 years.”​




4th and 3 at NE 46, 6:04, third quarter — Brady to Amendola, 17-yard completion​

3rd and 1 at ATL 36, 8:31, fourth quarter — Dont’a Hightower strips Matt Ryan, Alan Branch recovers​

2nd and 11 at NE 23, 3:56, fourth quarter — Ryan sacked for -12 yards by Trey Flowers​

3rd and 10 at NE 9, 3:17, fourth quarter — Brady pass to Chris Hogan for 16 yards​

1st and 10 at NE 36, 2:28, fourth quarter — Brady pass to Edelman for 23 yards​




Quote from @Palm Beach Pats Fan from an old thread:
1) Patriots 4th & 3 at NE 46 (6:04 - 3rd) (Shotgun) T.Brady pass short left to D.Amendola pushed ob at ATL 37 for 17 yards (D.Campbell). Failure would have meant turnover on downs, 25 points behind.​

2) Patriots 3rd & 8 at ATL 35 (4:49 - 3rd) (Shotgun) T.Brady scrambles up the middle to ATL 20 for 15 yards (R.Alford). Failure would have meant 4th and 8 and a 53 FG attempt or a low percentage 4th down attempt.​

3) Falcons 3rd & 11 at NE 42 (0:52 - 3rd) (Shotgun) M.Ryan sacked at ATL 49 for -9 yards (sack split by K.Van Noy and T.Flowers). Allowing even a short gain of 5 or more yards would have permitted a FG attempt with a reasonable chance of success.​

4) Patriots 4th & Goal at ATL 15 (9:44 - 4th) Stephen Gostkowski 33 Yd Field Goal. Missing this would have meant a lead larger than 2 scores.​

5) Falcons 3rd & 1 at ATL 36 (8:31 - 4th) (Shotgun) M.Ryan sacked at ATL 25 for -11 yards (D.Hightower). FUMBLES (D.Hightower) [D.Hightower], RECOVERED by NE-A.Branch at ATL 25. A.Branch to ATL 25. Conversion of 3rd and short would have cost 2+ minutes on the clock and would have cost 50+ yards of field position, relative to the fumble recovery.​

6) Patriots 3rd & 11 at ATL 26 (7:03 - 4th) (Shotgun) T.Brady pass short left to M.Mitchell to ATL 14 for 12 yards (C.Goodwin). Failure would have meant 4th and 11 and a very low percentage 4th down attempt.​

7) Patriots 2 point conversion attempt (5:56 - 4th). J.White rushes up the middle. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS. Missing this would have meant 2 scores were required to win.​

8) Falcons 3rd & 23 at NE 35 (3:50 - 4th) (Shotgun) M.Ryan pass short left to M.Sanu pushed ob at NE 26 for 9 yards (L.Ryan). PENALTY on ATL-J.Matthews, Offensive Holding, 10 yards, enforced at NE 35 - No Play. If Chris Long had not drawn holding, ATL would have had a 43 FG attempt. The hold, plus a sack on the following play, prevented even trying.​

9) Patriots 3rd & 10 at NE 9 (3:17 - 4th) (Shotgun) T.Brady pass short right to C.Hogan to NE 25 for 16 yards (J.Collins). Failure would have meant 4th and 10 and a very low percentage 4th down attempt.​

10) Patriots 2 point conversion attempt (0:57 - 4th) T.Brady pass to D.Amendola is complete. ATTEMPT SUCCEEDS. Missing this would have meant another score was required to win.​

OT there were no 3rd down or 4th down plays. One could say that the coin flip was pretty important, though!​

What are the chances of pulling off all 10 plays? Pretty low, I'd think.​



Warning: the ups and downs of the Game Day Thread may cause sea sickness:


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


Patriots-Falcons Injury Reports:

Patriots-Falcons Rosters and Depth Charts:



Patriots Starting Offense:
15 WR Chris Hogan
77 LT Nate Solder
72 LG Joe Thuney
60 C David Andrews
69 RG Shaq Mason
61 RT Marcus Cannon
88 TE Martellus Bennett
11 WR Julian Edelman
19 WR Malcolm Mitchell
12 QB Tom Brady
33 RB Dion Lewis

Patriots Starting Defense:
97 LDT Alan Branch
90 RDT Malcom Brown
98 RDE Trey Flowers
58 LLB Shea McClellin
54 MLB Dont'a Hightower
50 RLB Rob Ninkovich
21 LCB Malcolm Butler
26 RCB Logan Ryan
23 SS Pat Chung
32 FS Devin McCourty
30 DB Duron Harmon

Patriots Special Teams:
3 K Stephen Gostkowski
6 P Ryan Allen
49 LS Joe Cardona
33 KR Dion Lewis
11 PR Julian Edelman
23 PR Pat Chung
 
Coming into Super Bowl LI Tom Brady had already cemented his place as the greatest quarterback in the history of the league.​

On Sunday night, he essentially became immortal.​

The best part about Sunday night’s game is that the world got to see one of the best performances of all time, as it was Brady’s incredible grit and determination that played a big role as the Patriots fought their way back from 25-points down to a historic 34-28 come-from-behind victory for the ages to win their fifth Super Bowl Championship.​

Brady finished the game 43-of-62 for 466 yards and two touchdowns, one of which came with 8:24 left in the game to pull them to within eight points at 28-20 and gave them the confidence to pull off the win.​



Sorry World, we all know you are sick of seeing the Patriots win but you’ve got to put up with another Super Bowl win. And this one was one for the ages.​

After being down 21-0 and 28-3, Tom Brady led an epic comeback to push the Patriots to an overtime win over the Atlanta Falcons 34-28 in what had to be one of the best Super Bowls in the 51-year history of the game. James White ran the ball in from the 2-yard line with just over 11 minutes left in OT, his third TD of the game to finish the most improbable of comebacks.​

The Patriots seemed dead in the water late in the third quarter, the Falcons had everything going their way, the high-flying offense was clicking and their young, fast and athletic defense was all over the field and doing a tremendous job of disrupting the timing of the NE-wide receivers. Tom Brady was being hit, more and more often as the Patriots had to abandon the running game.​

Brady Incredible 4th Qtr/OT: But Tom Brady has the heart of a lion and he never quit, never got frustrated and kept grinding. His fourth quarter was one for the ages. The drive to send the game to extra time was a Brady classic, a 91-yard drive in 10 plays in 2:33 followed by a two-point conversion, a pass from Brady to Danny Amendola to tie things up.​

The Patriots won the toss in OT and promptly drove down the field 75 yards in 8 plays where White sent New England home with its fifth Lombardi Trophy.​

Brady finished 43-62 for an NFL record 466 yards with 2 TDs and 1 INT. After his fourth-quarter heroics in the Super Bowl two years ago against Seattle, I thought his place in NFL history was cemented. But this one was even bigger, this was a comeback for all time greatness and even his harshest critics will be left scrambling for answers now. He stands alone with 5 SB wins, 4 SB MVPs and IS the greatest QB of all time.​

With the game seemingly lost, Brady rallied the team and caught fire. He finished 26-33 for 283 yards as the Patriots scored on their last five possessions in regulation and overtime combined.​



Where do you begin. Bill Belichick wins fifth Super Bowl. Tom Brady wins fourth Super Bowl MVP. Patriots win fifth Super Bowl in team history. Patriots set Super Bowl record for biggest comeback win. First overtime game in Super Bowl history, and the Patriots win it with a first possession touchdown.

The Patriots are the greatest team in NFL history. And they won the greatest Super Bowl game in history. It may also have been the greatest game ever in NFL history.

The NFL formed in 1920, and it may never have authored a game better than this one. Many sages still like the 1958 NFL Championship Game, also an overtime game. This one will give it a run for its money.

James White scored on a two-yard touchdown run on the first possession of overtime, giving the Patriots a 34-28 win over the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI. It culminated one of the biggest momentum changes you have perhaps ever seen. The Patriots trailed at one point, 28-3. The Patriots wound up scoring the last 31 points of the game. This sort of thing simply doesn’t happen, but it did on Sunday night at NRG Stadium in Houston.


There isn’t enough space in this article to fit in all the nuances of this game, how Atlanta built its big lead, how the Patriots engineered the comeback, how Brady finished it off with what could perhaps be his career valedictory. As bad as the Patriots played when they trailed by 25, they played that well as they were chipping away at the Falcons’ lead. What is even more amazing is that Stephen Gostkowski missed another extra point, and the game was heading towards a Denver finish last year with a 2-point loss on a missed conversion.


A sack by Kyle Van Noy of Ryan on the final play of the third quarter ended the ensuing Falcons drive, and Brady got the ball back at the Patriot 13. He managed to drive the Patriots to the Atlanta 7, but Grady Jarrett sacked Brady twice (he had three sacks overall) to force a 33-yard field goal by Gostkowski. That made it a two-score game at 28-12. Two touchdowns, two two-point conversions still needed.

But your team has Brady. As Kevin Garnett once said, “Anything is possible!”


On the third play of the next drive, Dont’a Hightower strip-sacked Ryan. Alan Branch recovered the fumble at the Atlanta 25. Five plays later, Brady hit Danny Amendola from seven yards out to make it 28-18. Amendola became only the third Patriot to score his second career Super Bowl touchdown. Someone else would become the fourth later on.

But a two-point conversion was needed. Bringing back an old play from yesterday, Brady faked a snap and David Andrews snapped the ball to Lewis, who ran it in for the conversion and a 28-20 deficit. That was the old Kevin Faulk play, and Faulk pulled off that play in the last Super Bowl the Patriots played in Houston.

Atlanta got the ball back at their own 10, but Devonta Freeman hauled in a 39-yard pass to begin the next drive. Julio Jones caught an unreal 28-yard pass two plays later despite great defense by Eric Rowe. It was first and ten at the Patriot 22, and a field goal perhaps ends it right there. But a holding call on Jake Matthews and a sack of Ryan by Trey Flowers put the Falcons out of field goal range. The Patriots got the ball back at their own 9, with plenty of time to tie the game.


On third and ten, Brady hit Hogan for 16 yards. Two plays later, he hit Malcolm Mitchell for 11 yards. The next play will literally remove David Tyree, Mario Manningham and Jevon Kearse from the New England vernacular when Super Bowls are discussed.

Brady took the ball at his 36, dropped back and heaved one over the middle towards Julian Edelman. He collided with two defenders, the ball popped up in the air, bounced off the leg of one of them, and landed into the hands of Edelman. Replay confirmed the call. It was the catch of the year, never mind the game. For once, a crazy play went the way of the Patriots, and seemed to portend what was to come.


Amendola caught an 18-yard pass on the next play, then White took a slant pass to the Atlanta 8. Two plays later, White ran it in from one yard out to become the fourth Patriot player to score his second Super Bowl touchdown. It was 28-26 with 52 seconds left.

But another two-point conversion was needed. Unlike Denver last year, Brady was able to hit Amendola for the conversion to tie the game.

 
Today In Patriots History
Robert Edwards makes Pro Bowl

Plays beach flag football
Nearly loses his leg

Promising career ruined


February 5, 1999:
Rookie RB Robert Edwards nearly had to have his leg amputated after blowing out his knee in a beach flag football event in Hawaii, as part of the prelude to the Pro Bowl game. Edwards was the 18th overall pick of the 1998 draft, from Georgia. Selected to fill the void after Curtis Martin's departure, Edwards came through with 1,446 yards from scrimmage and twelve touchdowns.

The injury led to the Patriots having to use 31-year old Terry Allen as their lead running back in 1999. Allen was a downgrade, averaging 3.5 yards per carry in his one and only season in New England. Which makes me wonder: if Edwards' freak injury had not occured, would Pete Carroll have not been fired following the 1999 season?



Feb 6: 1999:

Feb 12, 1999:
New England Patriots running back Robert Edwards will miss the 1999 season after injuring his knee during a beach flag football game, the team announced Friday.​

Edwards, a rookie who rushed for 1,115 yards this season, dislocated his left knee on Feb. 5 while playing in a Pro Bowl weekend event on Waikiki Beach in Hawaii. He was released from a hospital in Hawaii on Thursday and was examined Friday by team doctors in Boston.​

"This is a very serious knee injury," Dr. Bertram Zarins, the team doctor, said in a statement. "He will definitely miss the 1999 season. His ability to play football again will depend upon the recovery of the nerve function and will require extensive rehabilitation."

While in Hawaii, Edwards had surgery to repair damage done to an artery in his left leg. On Friday, the results of an MRI -- magnetic resonance imagaing -- scan confirmed that the knee dislocation had torn three of the four major knee ligaments.​

Because of nerve damage, Edwards is unable to move his foot, Zarins said.​


Feb 17, 1999:
Edwards had the four-hour surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital after injuring himself in a beach flag football game. The rookie, who rushed for 1,115 will miss the entire 1999 season.​

Doctors were able to repair damage done to four knee ligaments, but also found the nerve damage, the team said in a statement.​

Dr. Bertram Zarins, the team doctor, said he was "pessimistic" about Edwards returning to football but did not rule it out.​

Edwards will undergo a long rehabilitation process. The process will continue for 4-6 weeks, but the recovery of the nerve function will be the biggest hurdle, Zarins said.​

"It's going to be very difficult to get stability in that knee again," said Dr. John Richmond, director of sports medicine at New England Medical Center in Boston, prior to the operation.​

"You have to worry about both stability and flexibility, and that's huge for a football player, particularly a running back," Richmond told the Boston Herald on Monday.​







 
Coming into Super Bowl LI Tom Brady had already cemented his place as the greatest quarterback in the history of the league.​

On Sunday night, he essentially became immortal.​

The best part about Sunday night’s game is that the world got to see one of the best performances of all time, as it was Brady’s incredible grit and determination that played a big role as the Patriots fought their way back from 25-points down to a historic 34-28 come-from-behind victory for the ages to win their fifth Super Bowl Championship.​

Brady finished the game 43-of-62 for 466 yards and two touchdowns, one of which came with 8:24 left in the game to pull them to within eight points at 28-20 and gave them the confidence to pull off the win.​



Sorry World, we all know you are sick of seeing the Patriots win but you’ve got to put up with another Super Bowl win. And this one was one for the ages.​

After being down 21-0 and 28-3, Tom Brady led an epic comeback to push the Patriots to an overtime win over the Atlanta Falcons 34-28 in what had to be one of the best Super Bowls in the 51-year history of the game. James White ran the ball in from the 2-yard line with just over 11 minutes left in OT, his third TD of the game to finish the most improbable of comebacks.​

The Patriots seemed dead in the water late in the third quarter, the Falcons had everything going their way, the high-flying offense was clicking and their young, fast and athletic defense was all over the field and doing a tremendous job of disrupting the timing of the NE-wide receivers. Tom Brady was being hit, more and more often as the Patriots had to abandon the running game.​

Brady Incredible 4th Qtr/OT: But Tom Brady has the heart of a lion and he never quit, never got frustrated and kept grinding. His fourth quarter was one for the ages. The drive to send the game to extra time was a Brady classic, a 91-yard drive in 10 plays in 2:33 followed by a two-point conversion, a pass from Brady to Danny Amendola to tie things up.​

The Patriots won the toss in OT and promptly drove down the field 75 yards in 8 plays where White sent New England home with its fifth Lombardi Trophy.​

Brady finished 43-62 for an NFL record 466 yards with 2 TDs and 1 INT. After his fourth-quarter heroics in the Super Bowl two years ago against Seattle, I thought his place in NFL history was cemented. But this one was even bigger, this was a comeback for all time greatness and even his harshest critics will be left scrambling for answers now. He stands alone with 5 SB wins, 4 SB MVPs and IS the greatest QB of all time.​

With the game seemingly lost, Brady rallied the team and caught fire. He finished 26-33 for 283 yards as the Patriots scored on their last five possessions in regulation and overtime combined.​



Where do you begin. Bill Belichick wins fifth Super Bowl. Tom Brady wins fourth Super Bowl MVP. Patriots win fifth Super Bowl in team history. Patriots set Super Bowl record for biggest comeback win. First overtime game in Super Bowl history, and the Patriots win it with a first possession touchdown.

The Patriots are the greatest team in NFL history. And they won the greatest Super Bowl game in history. It may also have been the greatest game ever in NFL history.

The NFL formed in 1920, and it may never have authored a game better than this one. Many sages still like the 1958 NFL Championship Game, also an overtime game. This one will give it a run for its money.

James White scored on a two-yard touchdown run on the first possession of overtime, giving the Patriots a 34-28 win over the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI. It culminated one of the biggest momentum changes you have perhaps ever seen. The Patriots trailed at one point, 28-3. The Patriots wound up scoring the last 31 points of the game. This sort of thing simply doesn’t happen, but it did on Sunday night at NRG Stadium in Houston.


There isn’t enough space in this article to fit in all the nuances of this game, how Atlanta built its big lead, how the Patriots engineered the comeback, how Brady finished it off with what could perhaps be his career valedictory. As bad as the Patriots played when they trailed by 25, they played that well as they were chipping away at the Falcons’ lead. What is even more amazing is that Stephen Gostkowski missed another extra point, and the game was heading towards a Denver finish last year with a 2-point loss on a missed conversion.


A sack by Kyle Van Noy of Ryan on the final play of the third quarter ended the ensuing Falcons drive, and Brady got the ball back at the Patriot 13. He managed to drive the Patriots to the Atlanta 7, but Grady Jarrett sacked Brady twice (he had three sacks overall) to force a 33-yard field goal by Gostkowski. That made it a two-score game at 28-12. Two touchdowns, two two-point conversions still needed.

But your team has Brady. As Kevin Garnett once said, “Anything is possible!”


On the third play of the next drive, Dont’a Hightower strip-sacked Ryan. Alan Branch recovered the fumble at the Atlanta 25. Five plays later, Brady hit Danny Amendola from seven yards out to make it 28-18. Amendola became only the third Patriot to score his second career Super Bowl touchdown. Someone else would become the fourth later on.

But a two-point conversion was needed. Bringing back an old play from yesterday, Brady faked a snap and David Andrews snapped the ball to Lewis, who ran it in for the conversion and a 28-20 deficit. That was the old Kevin Faulk play, and Faulk pulled off that play in the last Super Bowl the Patriots played in Houston.

Atlanta got the ball back at their own 10, but Devonta Freeman hauled in a 39-yard pass to begin the next drive. Julio Jones caught an unreal 28-yard pass two plays later despite great defense by Eric Rowe. It was first and ten at the Patriot 22, and a field goal perhaps ends it right there. But a holding call on Jake Matthews and a sack of Ryan by Trey Flowers put the Falcons out of field goal range. The Patriots got the ball back at their own 9, with plenty of time to tie the game.


On third and ten, Brady hit Hogan for 16 yards. Two plays later, he hit Malcolm Mitchell for 11 yards. The next play will literally remove David Tyree, Mario Manningham and Jevon Kearse from the New England vernacular when Super Bowls are discussed.

Brady took the ball at his 36, dropped back and heaved one over the middle towards Julian Edelman. He collided with two defenders, the ball popped up in the air, bounced off the leg of one of them, and landed into the hands of Edelman. Replay confirmed the call. It was the catch of the year, never mind the game. For once, a crazy play went the way of the Patriots, and seemed to portend what was to come.


Amendola caught an 18-yard pass on the next play, then White took a slant pass to the Atlanta 8. Two plays later, White ran it in from one yard out to become the fourth Patriot player to score his second Super Bowl touchdown. It was 28-26 with 52 seconds left.

But another two-point conversion was needed. Unlike Denver last year, Brady was able to hit Amendola for the conversion to tie the game.

the greatest comeback in the history of football.

there is nothing else like it, especially when the scope of the setting is considered.

The margins of doing the impossible were so thin, one missed first down, one additional dropped pass etc etc and its over...

Watching a master of his craft directing the team back from the abyss? It is why Brady is the GOAT, no matter how much he wants to suck up to jerry rice... It does not get any better than that.
 
I was my friends Super Bowl party. They cleared out and went outside when it was 28-3. I was sitting there alone watching the game when people would peek in the house to ask what the score was. Once it got to 28-20 everyone came back in the house.

What a bunch of a holes.

I couldn't believe what happened to Robert Edwards that day. The biggest freak injury of all time. It was the last thing Pete Carroll needed after losing Curtis Martin. I do think the Pats would've made the playoffs with Edwards and most likely would've destroyed the timeline of Brady being drafted by the Patriots.
 
Today in Patriots History
Feb 5 Trivialities


February 5, 1962:
Fred Bruney is hired as a defensive backfield coach.

Bruney would coach with the Pats for two seasons, including 1963 when the team won the AFL East title. He went on to coach for 35 years, mostly with the Eagles and Falcons. Fred played in 40 games with 33 starts for the 1960-62 Patriots at safety and was a two-time AFL All-Star. He began his pro football career in 1953 as a third round draft pick out of Ohio State. In 1962 Bruney was one of the last player-coaches in pro football, and the only one to do so with the Patriots. (Dan Reeves was the last NFL player-coach, under Tom Landry for Dallas in 1970-71.)





February 5, 1975:
Joe Sweet is sent to the San Diego Chargers for "past consideration".
Joe was a backup WR who appeared in four games for the Pats in 1974, with no stats. Sweet played in 34 games with the Rams, Pats and Chargers from 1972-1975, with ten receptions and one touchdown.




February 5, 1982:
LeBaron Caruthers is hired as strength and conditioning coach.
He held that title for 13 years at the college level and 7 years in the NFL, before performing the same duties as a private business owner. Caruthers was the Pats strength and conditiong coach from 1982-1984 under Ron Meyer.






February 5, 1992:
Pats sign free agent LB Reggie Clark, from North Carolina.
Clark never saw the field for the Pats, but did play in 15 games for the Steelers and Jaguars from 1994-96.




February 5, 1999:
Rookie RB Robert Edwards nearly had to have his leg amputated after blowing out his knee in a beach volleyball event in Hawaii, as part of the prelude to the Pro Bowl game. See post above.




February 5, 2002:
The state of Massachusetts holds a victory parade for the Pats Silence of the Lambs Super Bowl victory. An estimated 1.25 million fans attend, with the parade going through downtown Boston to City Hall Plaza.







February 5, 2003:
Mike Nagy is promoted from College Scout to Area Scout
Kyle O'Brien is promoted from Scouting Assistant to Area Scout
Frantzy Jourdain is hired as Player Personnel Assistant





February 5, 2007:
Jonathan Smith is re-signed.
The wide receiver had been a 7th round draft pick by the Bills from Georgia Tech in 2004. He appeared in two games for the Pats in 2006, and later was waived early in the offseason, on July 19, 2007. Smith played in a total of 18 games in his brief NFL career.




February 5, 2008:
The Patriots announced the signing of guard Dan Connolly, wide receiver C.J. Jones, offensive lineman Jimmy Martin and cornerback Tim Mixon to future contracts today.​

Connolly, Jones and Mixon all ended the season as members of the Patriots practice squad. This means all four players will be with the club once the 2008 league year starts in March.​

Neither Jones, Martin or Mixon ever progressed beyond the practice squad in their careers, though Martin and Jones did play in NFL Europe, and Jones also played in the CFL. Connolly showed off his versatilty at right guard, left guard, center and kickoff returns over 96 games with the Patriots.







February 5, 2009:
The New England Patriots placed the franchise tag on Matt Cassel on Thursday, making it tougher for other teams to sign the free agent quarterback.​

The Patriots might keep him if they have doubts that Tom Brady will be ready for the start of next season after sustaining a serious knee injury in the 2008 opener. If they're confident Brady will be ready, they could trade Cassel rather than pay him the $14.65 million offer for 2009 in the franchise designation.​

Cassel had a breakout season in 2008, starting 15 games after starting none the seven previous seasons — four with Southern California as backup to Heisman Trophy winners Carson Palmer and Matt Leinart, and three after New England drafted him in the seventh round in 2005.​

For now, he remains a free agent, but the Patriots can match any offer made by another team or allow him to sign with that team in exchange for two first-round draft picks. The franchise tag value is the average of the top five paid NFL players at a particular position.​

If and when Cassel signs the one-year designation, he will be under contract to the Patriots and could be dealt.​




Sunday February 5, 2012 at 6:30:
Super Bowl 46 at Lucas Oil Stadium
New York Giants 21, New England Patriots 17

While a loss is never fun - especially in a championship game - at least this one didn't sting like the one four years earlier. In my opinion the Pats vastly overachieved in the 2011 season; it was supposed to be rebuilding/reloading year. The worst part was having to read or listen to trolls yapping about how 'the Patriots can't win without cheating'.

AP/ESPN recap

Washington Post recap

Boston.com recap

Greg Bedard recap
 
Today in Patriots History
More Feb 5 Trivia




February 5, 2015:
The New England Patriots announced that they have signed 11 free agents: OL Cole Croston, OL Jake Eldrenkamp QB Danny Etling, DL Trent Harris, DL Frank Herron, DB A.J. Howard, OL Ryker Matthews LB Calvin Munson, DL David Parry, WR Damoun Patterson and OL Dan Skipper. Croston, Etling, Harris, Herron, Howard, Munson, Patterson and Skipper finished the season on the New England practice squad.​




February 5, 2016:
RB Montee Ball is arrested; he would be released four days later.

Ball, who was jailed Friday on a felony battery charge after an apparent dispute with his girlfriend, had spent the end of the 2015 season on the practice squad, and his contract expired Feb. 1. He was promptly signed by the Patriots to a future deal for 2016, although it was never officially announced.​

Tuesday, four days after he was arrested, Ball was officially waived by the Patriots, according to the NFL's official transactions report.​

Ball was charged with disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor, for an incident at a downtown Madison hotel early Friday. He will not face felony charges. A criminal complaint says Ball also was charged with misdemeanor battery for allegedly striking the woman on the face five days earlier.​

A Wisconsin product, Ball was a second-round draft pick by the Denver Broncos in 2013 after scoring 83 touchdowns for the Badgers. He was cut before the regular season started in 2015 and spent most of this past season out of football before being signed to the Patriots' practice squad in December.​





February 5, 2019:
The New England Patriots mades their first moves towards setting up their 2019 team by locking up 11 players on the edge of the roster. The Patriots announced that they had signed 11 players to futures contracts, including quarterback Danny Etling, who was a seventh-round pick in 2018 before spending the regular season on the practice squad.​

Here’s the full list of players signed: OL Jake Eldrenkamp; DL Trent Harris; DL Frank Herron; DB A.J. Howard; OL Myker Matthews; LB Calvin Munson; DL David Parry; OL Dan Skipper; WR Damoun Patterson. Eight of the players signed to futures deals spent the 2018 season on the Patriots practice squad.​




February 5, 2019:
An estimated 1.5 million fans attended the New England Patriots Super Bowl LIII victory parade in Boston in unseasonably warm weather, celebrating the Pats 13-3 win over the Los Angeles Rams. The rolling rally in duck boats began at Boylston Street and finished at City Hall Plaza.











February 5, 2025:
Mike Smith is hired as OLB coach, and the Pats formally announce their 2025 coaching staff.
The Patriots are hiring former NFL linebacker Mike Smith to be their new outside linebackers coach. Smith, 43, replaces Drew Wilkins, who was hired by the Los Angeles Rams on Tuesday night.​

Smith spent last season working as the Minnesota Vikings outside linebackers coach / pass rush specialist.​

Smith is the third coach to join Vrabel’s defensive staff who has experience coaching linebackers. He joins Zak Zuhr, who coached inside linebackers in Tennessee, and Milton Patterson, who coached linebackers at Florida A&M.​

A seventh-round pick by the Baltimore Ravens, Smith played in the NFL from 2005-2008, where he backed up Ray Lewis. After retiring, he immediately got into coaching working at Hawaii as a linebackers coach in 2009.​

Smith joins a completely new Patriots defensive staff that will have no holdovers from last year’s team.​

Analysis: Breaking Down the Patriots Full Coaching Staff for the 2025 Season - Patriots.com
OffenseDefenseSTs/Other
OC - Josh McDanielsDC - Terrell WilliamsSTC - Jeremy Springer
PGC/TEs Coach - Thomas BrownILB Coach - Zak KuhrAsst. STs - Tom Quinn
OL Coach - Doug MarroneSafeties Coach - Scott BookerVP of Football Ops and Strategy- John Streicher
QB Coach - Ashton GrantCB Coach - Justin HamiltonDir. of Sports Performance - Frank Piraino
WR Coach - Todd DowningDL Coach - Clint McMillanStrength & Conditioning - Deron Mayo
RB Coach - Tony DewsOLB Coach - Mike SmithAsst. Strength & Conditioning - Brian McDonough
Asst. OL - Jason HoughtalingSr. Def Asst. - Ben McAdoo
Asst. OL - Robert KuglerDef Asst. - Kevin Richardson
Off Asst. - Riley LarkinDef Asst. Vinny DePalma
Off Asst. Chuckie KeetonDef Asst. Milton Patterson




Thursday February 5, 2026 at 9:00:
NFL Honors Awards, Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco

It will be televised on NBC and the NFL Network, but I won't be watching.
 
Today in Patriots History
Laurence Maroney



Happy 41st birthday to Laurence Maroney
Born Feb 5, 1985 in St. Louis, Missouri
Patriot RB, 2006-2009; uniform #39
Pats first round (26th overall) selection of the 2006 draft, from Minnesota
Pats résumé: four seasons, 4.2 yards per carry, 22 TD, plus 3 TD in the playoffs



The 2005 season was a bit of a letdown for the Patriots. After consecutive 14-2 seasons culminating in a Super Bowl championship, in '05 the Pats started 6-5, finished with four fewer wins at 10-6, and lost by 14 points in the division round. New England ranked 30th with 3.4 yards per rush, and a replacement for Corey Dillon would soon be needed. Dillon's rushing yardage dropped in half from 2004 to 2005, and his yards per carry fell from 4.7 to 3.5. He would turn 32 early in the 2006 season and his body was showing the wear from being tackled more than 2,600 times.

Laurence Maroney and Marion Barber formed one of the best college running back duos of the 21st century at the University of Minnesota. The pair rushed for 4,934 yards in 2003 and 2004, with Dallas drafting Barber in 2005. Maroney rushed for 1,464 yards in 2005, bringing his three year total as a Gopher to 3,933 yards and 6.0 yards per carry, with 33 touchdowns.

Maroney was the second running back taken in the 2006 draft, behind only Reggie Bush at #2. Unfortunately for the Pats other running backs selected later in the first (DeAngelo Williams, Joseph Addai) and second rounds (Maurice Jones-Drew) had more productive careers.


That's not to say Maroney was a bust. He was solid in the beginning, with over 900 yards from scrimmage in both of his first two seasons, and 13 touchdowns; he also averaged 28.0 yards returning kickoffs in 2006. Maroney had two very good games in the 2007 postseason, rushing for 122 yards and a touchdown against both Jacksonville and San Diego - but was able to gain just 36 yards on 14 carries in the loss to the Giants.

Maroney missed nearly the entire 2008 season after suffering a broken bone in his shoulder in week two. There was speculation that the Pats tried to hide the injury, as well as rumors that Maroney leaked that information to the press after being portrayed as being soft. Maroney returned in '09 poised to be the lead back in a running back by committee, sharing playing time with Sammy Morris, Fred Taylor, Kevin Faulk and BenJarvus Green-Ellis.

In 2009 Denver was in dire need of a player to split carries with Knowshon Moreno after multiple injuries to their running backs, and the Patriots had such an excess at the position that Maroney was inactive for week one. The Pats sent Maroney to the Broncos to be reunited with Josh McDaniels in exchange for a fourth round pick.


Succint trade analysis by Mike Reiss:
Maroney was entering the final year of his contract, so this is a sign that the Patriots didn’t expect him to be back in 2011.​

Maroney, who was limited by a thigh injury of late, was inactive for the team’s season-opening win. Yet even upon his return to health, he might have remained inactive as the 34-year-old Taylor had wrestled the No. 1 spot on the depth chart away from him.​

Also, Morris had leapfrogged Maroney because of his added value as a lead-blocking fullback, occasional ball-carrier, and contributor on special teams units.​

With Faulk entrenched as the team’s third-down back, that left Maroney fighting for the No. 4 spot on the depth chart.​

Because coaches often look for special teams value in that spot, Green-Ellis is a better fit than Maroney.​

Given that set of dynamics, plus the chance to pick up a fourth-round draft choice, the Patriots saw enough value in the deal to pull the trigger.​


Maroney played in just four games for Denver and was a healthy scratch for the final seven games. He was not re-signed the following offseason, never receiving a nice payday in free agency - and never again played in the NFL.

Laurence Maroney ranks 16th in franchise history with 2,430 career rushing yards (13th at the time he left New England), and is tied with Antowain Smith for 13th most rushing touchdowns by a running back with 21 (8th when he left). His 4.2 yards per carry ranks 12th among players with at least 250 rushing attempts, and sixth for those with at least 500 carries (formerly 4th and 1st at the time, respectively).


Michael Hurley retrospective on the 2007 AFCCG:


College Highlights:



2007 AFCCG versus San Diego:












 
Today in Patriots History
Ron Sellers


Happy 79th birthday to Ron Sellers
Born Feb 5, 1947 in Jacksonville, Florida
Patriot WR, 1969-1971; uniform #34
Pats first round (sixth overall) selection of the 1969 draft, from Florida State
Pats résumé: three seasons, 35 games (30 starts); 18.7 yards per catch, 13 touchdowns; 1969 AFL All-Star



Ron Sellers was a second team AFL All-Star (equivalent to a Pro Bowl honor) as a rookie, scoring six touchdowns and averaging 26.1 yards per catch while totaling 705 yards receiving. Over three seasons he played in 35 games with 30 starts, compiling 1,477 yards receiving and 13 touchdowns. Sellers averaged 18.7 yards per catch while with the Patriots; that ranks as the third highest in franchise history for players with at least 75 receptions, behind only Harold Jackson and Stanley Morgan. At the time he left New England his touchdown reception ranked sixth in club history (31st now).

In the last game of the 1969 season, Sellers set what was then the second-most receiving yards in franchise history, with 158 at Houston. He was just short of Art Graham's 167 yard game in 1964, also against the Oilers. Remarkably, that came on just three receptions (77 yards, 11 yards, 70 yards) - none for touchdowns!. This a team record that will likely never be broken for most yards per catch in a single game (52.7). Stanley Morgan broke the single-game record with 182 yards versus Miami on November 8, 1981 - but Sellers' 158 yards remains the most ever by a rookie in Pats history. Perhaps if Sellers had somebody other than Mike Taliaferro throwing him passes he could have eclipsed the 200-yard mark.

After missing four games in 1971 due to injuries, on July 13, 1972 the Patriots traded Sellers to Dallas for a third round draft pick. He began the season as a backup for the Cowboys but eventually replaced former Olympian and future Hall of Famer Bob Hayes in the starting lineup. In a 1998 postseason playoff game Sellers caught the winning touchdown from Roger Staubach to defeat the 49ers 30-28, capping a 17-point fourth quarter comeback with 52 seconds left to play. His final NFL season was with Miami in 1973, earning a ring following their Super Bowl victory over Minnesota.

Sellers worked at a Boston-based regional stock brokerage during his offseason time in New England. In 1975 he opened his own life insurance agency, where he is still president and CEO. Ron Sellers was named to the Florida Sports Hall of Fame in 1973, and the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988.





"I don't know," said Sellers. "I think I just lull people to sleep with my long stride. They don't think I'm going as fast as I am, then pffft."​

People see Sellers for the first time, standing around or warming up, and invariably they are confused. How could this guy be so good? For sure, with his long, skinny bowed legs and thin frame, he's the most unlikely looking player on the field. Sellers can run 50 yards in 5.5 seconds, but always he looks as though at any moment his arms and legs will go flying off in entirely different directions. A Houston defensive back nicknamed him "Jingle Joints."​




About Us: Key Retirement Solutions
Ron has been inducted into 10 Sports Hall of Fames and was FSU’s first football player to be inducted into the National College Football Hall of Fame (1987). Ron was honored to be inducted into the Hall of Fame in all three post season bowl games during his career at FSU – the Gator Bowl, Peach Bowl and Sun Bowl.​

In 2007, Ron was honored by being named to The State of Florida’s “100 Greatest High School Football Players in Florida History.”​


Ron “Jingle Joints” Sellers played college football for Florida State University, where he was a two-time All-American (1967 & 1968). Despite being limited to a total of 30 games of regular season eligibility, Sellers still holds Florida State career records for receptions, receiving yards, and most 200-yard receiving games.. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988. A wide receiver, he played for the American Football League’s Boston Patriots in 1969, when he was an AFL All-Star, then for the NFL’s Patriots, Dallas Cowboys and Miami Dolphins.​


Ron Sellers was the greatest college pass receiver of his time. In three seasons at Florida State he caught 212 passes for 3,598 yards. His career yardage was a national record in 1968 and lasted 19 years. When he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988, 20 years after his last game, he still held 16 school records. His best performance came in 1968 against South Carolina with 16 catches. In other games in his career he caught 14 passes (three times) and 13 passes (three times). His 14 receptions against Penn State in 1967 set a Gator Bowl record. Against Wake Forest in 1968 he caught five touchdown passes. Ron was twice a first-team All-America. Sports Illustrated named him Lineman of the Week; the Atlanta Touchdown Club named him Back of the Week. He tacked on five years as a pro with the Patriots, Cowboys and Dolphins and later moved to Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, to head Ron Sellers Associates, insurance specialists. He was named to the board of trustees of Florida State University.​


FSU all-time countdown: #8, WR Ron Sellers
Born in Jacksonville, Florida, by the time Sellers was fielding college offers he had helped his high school win a state basketball championship and most people thought his athletic future would unfold on the hardwood. At 6-4 180, he was– by conventional standards– the wrong build to be a football player.​

"Funny," Sellers said in a 1968 Sports Illustrated article, "but if I hadn't been so thin I probably would have gone to college on a basketball scholarship. But people kept telling me I was too light to play football; that I'd get killed. It made me mad and I decided I'd show everybody. And so when FSU offered me a football scholarship, I took it."​


Ron Sellers Bio: Hall of Fame class, 1977 | Seminoles.com

College Football Hall of Fame - Ron Sellers




 
Today in Patriots History
Cups of Coffee



Happy 75th birthday to Noe Gonzalez
Born Feb 5, 1951; from San Diego, Texas
Patriot RB, 1974; uniform #38
Signed as a free agent on Dec 5, 1974
Pats résumé: two games: a week 13 loss to Pittsburgh, and a week 14 loss at Miami


Noe Mio Gonzalez grew up in a small town (population 3,748) that is two hours south of San Antonio in southern Texas. He played his college football at Southwest Texas State (now Texas State) and was a 12th round (305th overall) selection by Oakland in the 1974 NFL draft. '74 was his one and only season in the NFL; he also signed with San Antonio of the World Football League, but was released very early in the 1975 season.







In memory of Eric Patterson, who would have turned 33 today
Born Feb 5, 1993 in Tampa
Died June 8, 2019 at the age of 26 in Tampa
Patriot CB, 2015 offseason

Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 8, 2015
Pats résumé: one month of offseason training


Eric Patterson was only with the Patriots for a month, released prior to the start of training camp. He later spent time with the Colts, Rams and Browns, appearing in three NFL Games. Patterson was fatally shot by an intruder in his home on June 8, 2019.





In memory of Gary Wood, who would have turned 84 today
Born Feb 5, 1942 in Taylor, New York
Died March 2, 1994 at the age of 52 in Dix Hills, New York
Boston Patriots 17th round (132nd overall) selection of the 1964 AFL Draft, from Cornell
Pats résumé: QB chose the NFL over the AFL


Gary Wood was a career backup, first to Y.A. Tittle and then to Fran Tarkenton, appearing in 61 games for the Giants and two with the Saints from 1964 to 1969. He was called on to start nine times, going 1-8, with 14 touchdowns and 23 interceptions. Afterwards he spent two seasons in the CFL.

As a quarterback in 1962, Wood was third in the nation in total offense (1779 yards) and fourth in the nation in rushing (889 yards). In 1963, he was first in the nation in kickoff return yardage (618 on 19 returns for a 32.5 average) and eighth in the nation in rushing (818 yards). He set five major Ivy League records: career total offense (3457 yards); career rushing (1867); single season total offense (1616 yards in '62); single season rushing (813 yards in '62); single game total offense (387 yards vs. Penn in '62). In 1962 and '63, he was the Ivy League's total offense and rushing leader.​

In 1962, Wood led the nation in all-purpose yards, with 1,395 (155 yards per game). That season, he also set an Ivy League total offense record in a game against Penn with 387 yards (207 rushing, 106 throwing), and was named first team All-Ivy and to the AP All-East Team. He also lettered as a center fielder-second baseman-pitcher on the 1962 Cornell baseball team, batting .277 in 17 games, with a six-inning ERA of 1.49.​

In 1963, during his senior year, Wood was elected team captain, had 545 yards passing and 818 yards rushing (8th in the nation), was again named first-team All-Ivy, and was named to the Associated Press All-East team, and was elected to the National Honor Society. He was first in the country in kickoff return yardage (618 yards on 19 returns, for a 32.5 average).​




Today in Patriots History
Feb 5 Obituaries



John Tanner (1945-2009); Pats LB 1973-1974
The OLB played in 26 games for the Patriots over two seasons.

John V. Tanner, Sr., 63, lost his battle with cancer on Thursday, February 5, 2009. John was a Fifth generation Florida native. He was born in Orlando and was part of the family of the first settlers of Orlando. His great-grandfather with the first mayor of Orlando, W.J. Black. His family participated in the last cattle drive in Florida. John was a retired US Army Vietnam veteran. He retired from USBI and he formerly played for the NFL with the San Diego Chargers and the New England Patriots. He was a member of the Christian Athletes in Action, former member of the Moose Lodge, VFW and West Cocoa Gorillas Cacti.​


Jack Atchason (1936-2020); Pats End, 1960
Jack Atchason played briefly for the Pats in their inaugural season, then finished the year with 1960 AFL champion Houston Oilers.


George Sauer Sr (1910-1994); Pats GM 1969-1970
Following the Super Bowl III upset win, Jets OC Clive Rush became the Pats new HC, and Jets GM George Sauer became the Pats new GM. The Patriots had a 6-22 record in Sauer's two seasons, ending his NFL career.





The Patriots have come a long way from where the team was half a century ago. The Super Bowl champions were in a very different place in early 1969.​

Nothing epitomized that more than a bizarre press conference on Feb. 12 of that year, when newly installed coach Clive Rush had to receive medical attention after gripping an electrified microphone.​

It was supposed to be a moment for welcoming another new hire: General manager George Sauer. But very quickly, it was clear that something was wrong.​

As soon as he touched the microphone, Rush was unable to let go and began screaming. According to the Boston Globe’s Will McDonough, only the quick actions of Patriots board member Dan Marr Jr. saved him.​

“While Rush was screaming in anguish and staggering into a corner, unable to free himself from the microphone which could have electrocuted him,” wrote McDonough, “Marr jumped from his seat and ripped all the wiring running along the floor out of the wall sockets, shutting off the current.”​

Rush did his best to shrug off the brush with a potentially fatal press conference.​

“I heard about the Boston press being tough,” he joked after being seated in a nearby chair, “but I didn’t think they were going to be this tough.”​

“George,” Rush said turning to the new general manager, “you just got through saying that we were going to do everything together. Why didn’t you take your share of this?”​

It was an inauspicious start for Rush and Sauer’s tandem leadership of the Patriots. And things didn’t improve for the duo, as the then-Boston Patriots lost the first seven games of the 1969 season, finishing a disappointing 4-10. Rush began 1970 1-6 before resigning; the team finished 2-12.​

The Rush-Sauer tenure — and electrified press conference episode — has often been maligned as the epitome of the old failings of the Patriots. The 1969-1970 seasons fell in the middle of a nine-year run in which the Patriots finished without one winning record, simply an inconceivable notion to current fans of the six-time Super Bowl champions.​


Late in their first decade, owner Billy Sullivan was looking for a replacement for Mike Holovak as head coach. The New York Jets, with Clive Rush as their offensive coordinator, had just upset the Baltimore Colts, with Chuck Noll as their defensive coordinator, in Super Bowl III, 16-7. The story goes that Sullivan couldn’t justify hiring a losing assistant, so he went with Rush. Nice choice. Rush’s only head coaching experience had been a three-year, 8-20 stint at Toledo. Crippling. The Steelers would be left with Noll.​

The Patriots subsequently brought on another Jet, George Sauer Sr., as the general manager. At Sauer’s introductory news conference, Rush picked up the microphone – and immediately started wailing. What little hair he had stood on end. He was, in fact, being electrocuted. He should have put that jolt into New England’s offense. Instead, when someone finally unplugged the mic, Rush slumped to the floor.​
 
Today in NFL History
Feb 5 Trivia


Feb 5, 2006:
Super Bowl 40 at Ford Field, Detroit Michigan
Pittsburgh Steelers 21, Seattle Seahawks 10
Head Coaches: Bill Cowher, Mike Holmgren
Quarterbacks: Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Hasselbeck
MVP: Hines Ward (5 catches for 123 yards, TD)

The Steelers won it all for the first time in 26 years, primarily due to two big plays. On the second play of the second half Willie Parker bolted 75 yards for a TD, giving Pittsburgh a 14-3 lead. Then with 9:04 left to play WR Antwaan Randle El hit Hines Ward on a 43-yard touchdown pass, giving the Steelers a 21-10 lead. On the ensuing drive Mike Holmgren elected to punt on a 4th-and-13 from the 48 rather than go for a first down, hoping to pin Pittsburgh deep. The punt went into the endzone for a touchback, and the Seahawks did not get the ball back until there were less than two minutes left to play.

Pittsburgh won despite Roethlisberger, who was in his second season, going 9-21 for 123 yards, 0 TD and two interceptions. Jerome Bettis - who was playing in his hometown - retired after the game. Bill Cowher finally won the big game in his 14th season as head coach; he would retire one year later after finishing with an 8-8 record.

The game capped off an improbable run for the Pittsburgh, who had lost three games in a row and fell to 7-5 before finishing the regular season with four straight wins. As the sixth seed, Pittsburgh had to win three games on the road to reach the Super Bowl - the first NFL team to pull off that feat.








Happy 84th birthday to QB Roger Staubach, born Feb 5, 1942 in Cincinnati
2x Super Bowl champ, 6x Pro Bowler, Super Bowl VI MVP and Hall of Famer.
Not too shabby for a guy who didn't enter the NFL until age 27, due to his military commitment after attending Navy.




How ironic is it that two quarterbacks who were on the same team at the same time share a birthday?

Happy 83rd birthday to QB Craig Morton, born Feb 5, 1943 in Flint, Michigan
Led the NFL in yards per pass attempt 3x; 1977 UPI MVP, Sporting News Player of the Year, and PFWA Comeback Player of the Year.



Happy 50th birthday to P Brian Moorman, born Feb 5, 1976 in Wichita, Kansas
2x All Pro and member of the HoF All-2000s Team played in 202 games from 2001-13.



Happy 31st birthday to Vita Vea, born Feb 5, 1995 in Milipitas, California
35 sacks with the Bucs from 2018-present - as a nose tackle.


In a six degrees of Kevin Bacon manner, Vita Vea is linked to both Josh Allen and Duke Dawson
1) A month prior to the 2018 draft, Buffalo traded up, sending their #21 pick to Cincinnati for the #12 pick (eventually used on Vea).
The Bengals received LT Cordy Glenn (who had played well for the Bills but fizzled out after just 1½ seasons in Cincy), and a 5th in exchange for thir 6th.
2) On draft day Buffalo traded up again, sending that #12 pick to Tampa along with two 2nd round picks to move up to #7 - where they selected Josh Allen.
3) Buffalo owned the latter of those 2nd round pick via a previous trade, when they acquired WR Sammy Watkins from the Rams in 2017.
4) Back to the Bucs: they received a 1st (#12, Vea), a 2nd (#53), and another 2nd (#56) in the trade from Buffalo.
5) Tampa then traded down seven spots, sending #56 to New England for a lower 2nd (#63) and a 4th (#117).
The Bucs used those picks on CB Carlton Davis, an 8-year NFL starter who just finished his first season with the Patriots, and S Jordan Whitehead, who started 101 games over seven seasons.
6) New England used that pick on a player that they felt so strongly about, that they traded up for - on the infamous CB Duke Dawson, the poster child for Bad Drafts during the end of the Belichick era. In case you have forgotten, Dawson never got on the field for a single snap with the Patriots. He was traded away along with a 7th round pick for nothing more than a 6th round pick just a year later; he lasted two seasons with Denver (4 starts), his NFL career over at the age of 24.
. . . Apologies for the nightmarish Duke Dawson memories . . .



C Rich Saul and Ron Saul, born Feb 5, 1948 in Butler, PA
The twin offensive linemen combined to play in 318 games from 1970 to 1981, with Rich going to six Pro Bowls.


TE Red Phillips (Feb 5, 1936 - March 25, 2015)
401 receptions and 34 TD were quite a bit for his position and era (1958-1967).


Happy 75th birthday to TE Charle Young, born Feb 5, 1951 in Fresno CA
Named to the Pro Bowl in each of his first three seasons, Charle (not a typo) had 418 receptions and 28 TD from 1973 to 1985.
 
The 28-3 game, greatest football game I’ve ever seen, period. Greatest SB comeback ever by the greatest QB ever.
 
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