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Today In Patriots History May 15, 2006: Doug Flutie retires

Fun historical team facts.

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Today in Patriots History
Doug Flutie retires



May 15, 2006:
The pride of Natick and Boston College, QB Doug Flutie retires after 20 years of pro football






Heisman Trophy, 1984
UPI Player of the Year, 1984
Sporting News Player of the Year, 1984
Unanimous All-American, 1984
BC jersey #22 retired, Nov 10, 1984
NFL Comeback Player of the Year, 1998
Boston College Varsity Club Hall of Fame, 2007
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame, 2007
College Football Hall of Fame, 2007
Canadian Football Hall of Fame, 2008
Ontario Sports Hall of Fame, 2009
Natick High School Sports Hall of Fame, 2012
Space Coast Hall of Fame, 2014
ECAC Football Hall of Fame, 2015
Hula Bowl Hall of Fame, 2025





















































 
Doug Flutie walked, so Drew Brees could run.
 
Happy birthday to @Patjew , wherever you are flying around the globe and making your high tech business deals.
I'm honored to share my birthday with you.
 
Happy birthday to @Patjew , wherever you are flying around the globe and making your high tech business deals.
I'm honored to share my birthday with you.
And happy birthday right back at ya, my friend!! Mine is peaceful and full of gratitude and will include a hair cut and no alcohol. I hope yours is great and more fun than mine
 


I love this shot of Doug Flutie & Peyton Manning back in the day.
 
And happy birthday right back at ya, my friend!! Mine is peaceful and full of gratitude and will include a hair cut and no alcohol. I hope yours is great and more fun than mine
The wife is treating me to an out-of-town relaxing weekend, departing later today.
Cannot promise that there will be no alcohol involved . . .
So today's 'This Day' entry will likely be relatively abbreviated.



Weird birthday fact: she has a brother and sister who are twins; the sister and I share the same birth date, but the brother does not. (The two were born just before and after midnight.)
 
Today in Patriots History
Wes Welker signs franchise tender



May 15, 2012:
Wes Welker signs franchise tender, for $9.5 million


In 2012 Welker would be named to his fifth consecutive Pro Bowl, in what was his final year with the Patriots. This was coming off a loss in the super bowl, when Wes was unable to corral a late fourth quarter pass near the 20 yard line that would have resulted in a first down. Instead the Pats had to punt, and the Giants drove down the field for the win. Welker was unsuccessful in his attempt to get a long-term deal, and would depart for Denver in free agency the following spring.

Leading up to Welker's signing, early May of 2012 had several newsworthy events for the Patriots. While people were still talking about the draft, in the first week of May Junior Seau died, Gerard Warren was re-signed, Jabar Gaffney was signed for a second stint, director of player personnel Jason Licht departed for Arizona, former Colts RB Joseph Addai was signed, and Matt Light retired.






By league rule the Patriots and Welker have until July 15th to work out an extension, and it will be interesting to see if this sudden change by Welker - who had previously seemed reluctant to even come into camp prior to the start of the regular season without a new contract - is a positive sign that the talks are moving in the right direction.​

Welker announced the signing on Twitter, saying "I signed my tender today. I love the game and I love my teammates! Hopefully doing the right thing gets the right results. #leapoffaith"​

The signing also shuts down the potential media circus that could have taken place next week as the team prepares to come together for OTA's, and will allow the players to focus on the task at hand - which is trying to get back to work and prepare for another season.​








 
Today in Patriots History
20th Century Trivia



May 15, 1971:
The Patriots re-sign WR Bill Rademacher and TE Tom Beer to one-year contracts


For some reason I can recall my brother being a big fan of Bill Rademacher when he was with the Patriots way back in the day. Maybe it was being the backup/underdog, maybe it was his all-out effort - he was outstanding in coverage on special teams.

William Stiles Rademacher was undrafted out of Northern Michigan in 1964, and signed with the Jets. In his first four seasons he spent as much time on the taxi squad as on the active roster. Rademacher made four starts as a rookie due to injuries, but appeared in only 17 games during that span - on special teams, wide receiver, and as a defensive back.

That type of versatility that Bill Belichick covets paid off with an increased role and more playing time in 1968, as Bill appeared in every game that season for the Jets one and only championship. He was waived just a few days prior to the start of the 1969 season, and immediately signed by the Patriots. Rademacher played in 27 games with five starts for the Boston Patriots, with 21 receptions for 268 yards, 12.8 yards per catch and three touchdowns. He suffered a fractured arm early in training camp in 1971 and was waived later that season, ending his NFL career. Rademacher later became assistant coach and then head coach at his alma mater, Northern Michigan. He was also a linebackers coach at Michigan State from 1983 to 1991. Bill Rademacher passed away on April 2, 2018 at the age of 75.






A four-time letter-winner with the Wildcats from 1960-1963, Rademacher was an A.P. All America Honorable Mention selection in 1963. A wide receiver and defensive end for NMU, he went on to play professionally for seven years with the New York Jets and Boston Patriots. He was a member of the Jets team that won Super III.​

After his playing career, he coached for two years at Xavier University before returning to NMU as an assistant coach in 1974. In his second season with the team, the Wildcats went 13-1 on their way to win the 1975 Division II National Championship.​

Rademacher was named the Head Coach in 1978 and posted a 37-16 record in his five seasons behind his high-powered passing attack. He was named the 1980 Mid Continent Conference Coach of the Year. He left NMU in 1983 after accepting a coaching position at Michigan State University.​

In 1981, Rademacher was inducted into the Northern Michigan University Sports Hall of Fame and was later enshrined into the Upper Peninsula Sports Hall of Fame in 1983.​



Overall, Rademacher played in 58 pro games and had 24 catches for 282 yards and three touchdowns, all of his scores coming with the Patriots.​




After five scoreless years with the Jets, Bill Rademacher scored all of his career points in two years with the Patriots
In his second game with the Pats he had six catches for 78 yards and a TD against his former team



"One of Weeb Ewbank's favorite quotes was 'the more things you can do helps you get a spot on the team,' " recalled long-time Jets public relations director Frank Ramos. " 'Rad,' like John Dockery, was one of those good athletes who could help out on offense and defense in a pinch and also proved to be a very good special teams player."​

The Jets waived Rademacher in the '69 preseason and he moved on to Boston for his final two pro seasons. He had the best pro receiving game of his career as a Patriot in a loss to the Jets in '69 with six catches for 78 yards and his first pro touchdown.​



William Rademacher Obituary – May 13, 1942 – April 2, 2018







As for Tom Beer, he was one of many players that Clive Rush just had to have, then couldn't make up his mind what he wanted to do with him. In one of his many foolish moves, on April 14, 1970, Rush traded 26-year old Jim Whalen to Denver for Tom Beer in an attempt to get bulkier at the tight end position. Rush changed his mind, and ordered Beer to gain weight, to play guard . . . then a couple months later realized the Pats were short of tight ends, and switched Beer back to TE - after he had already put on 30 pounds. Rather than this being a win-win it was a lose-lose deal for both players and both teams, and Rush was fired midway through the season.

Tom Beer played in all 42 games for the Patriots from 1970-72, with 25 receptions and three touchdowns. After retiring from pro football following his last season in New England, he wrote a book about his football memoirs. Titled Sunday's Fools: Stomped, Tromped, Kicked and Chewed in the NFL, the work recounts playing for what was at that time the two worst franchises in pro football during his career, the Denver Broncos and the Boston/New England Patriots.














May 15, 1976:
New England signs free agents Bob Mitch, Don Callahan, Jim Jerome and John Delaney.

None of these four survived roster cuts, or ever played in the NFL.





May 15, 1995:
Former Patriot RB Billy Lott passes away at the age of 60.

Lott was traded to the Pats along with Babe Parilli in a one-sided 1961 blockbuster trade. He led the team with 11 touchdowns in his first season with the Patriots, but was slowed down by injuries in 1962. Lott retired following the 1963 season, finishing with 14 touchdowns during his three seasons playing for the Patriots, and 20 TD overall.








 
Today in Patriots History
News from the Aughts


May 15, 2001:
RG Sale Isaia is released

For Isaia, this was the end of his pro football career. The 6'5, 320 pounder was originally signed by the Browns as an undrafted rookie from UCLA in 1995. He spent 1995, '97 and '98 on IR before signing with the Patriots on August 30, 2000, three days after second round draft pick Adrian Klemm was placed on PUP.

Two weeks into the season Max Lane was injured, and Isaia suddenly went from a guy that was only on the roster due to one player's injury, to starting because of another injury to a different player. Thrust from being a roster bubble guy to starter, he played in all 16 games with 14 starts for the Pats in 2000, but struggled at times. The Pats ranked 26th in rushing and yielded 48 sacks, and went 5-11. The following year Mike Compton was signed as a veteran free agent and took over at left guard, and Joe Andruzzi moved from LG to RG - making Isaia expendable.










May 15, 2003:
Patriots sign rookie free agent offensive lineman Dave Petruziello, and released of rookie free agent guard Kyle Croskey

Neither lasted long, or ever played in the NFL. The only mention of either that I could find was Croskey getting into a brief May 3 camp fight with an opposing nose tackle by the name of Ken Kocher.

Petruziello, 23, was a four-year letterman at Michigan. The 6-foot-4-inch, 297-pound lineman was originally recruited from Lake Catholic High School in 1998 as a defensive lineman. He redshirted that year, but lettered as a red-shirt freshman in 1999, appearing in six games as a defensive end and defensive tackle. He appeared in all 12 games as a sophomore, including three starts, and recorded his first career sack at Northwestern. The following season, he made the transition in the trenches, moving from defensive line to offensive line. He started 10 of 12 games for the Wolverines as a junior and all 13 games as a senior. During his career, he played in four bowl games, concluding his collegiate career with a 38-30 victory over Florida in the 2003 Outback Bowl on January 1.​

Croskey, 22, signed with the Patriots on May 2, 2003 as a rookie free agent from Central Michigan following the recent NFL draft.​





May 15, 2006:
On the same day that Doug Flutie retired, two rookie free agents are signed: North Texas RB Patrick Cobbs and Minnesota WR Jakari Wallace.

Cobbs would be traded to Pittsburgh on September 1, and played in 54 games for the Dolphins from 2006-10. Jakari Wallace didn't appear to be anything special with the Gophers (37 catches for 559 yards an 0 TD in his junior and senior years combined), and never played any pro football.










May 15, 2007:
ILB Justin Warren of Texas A&M was released, 12 days after the rookie free agent and teammate of Ty Warren (no relation) was signed.

The 22-year-old Warren, of Texas A&M, was initially signed May 8 as a rookie free agent. The 6-foot-3, 237-pound Warren was a two-time first-team All-Big XII selection and led the Aggies in tackles as a junior (2005) and as a senior (2006).​

At the Patriots’ rookie minicamp over the past weekend, Warren spent most of the time on exercise equipment.​





May 15, 2008:
Patriots sign WR Robert Ortiz

Ortiz had two stints with the Pats and was on the team's practice squad, but he never appeared in any regular season games.

Ortiz (6-1, 188) first entered the NFL as a rookie free agent in 2006, with the Chargers. He also spent time with the Seahawks and in the Canadian Football League. In addition, he was a 13th-round selection in the All-American Football League draft.​

The former San Diego State product was the subject of a recent piece in the San Diego Union-Tribune, which focused on how he wasn’t giving up on his NFL dreams.​

Ortiz is a longer shot to make the Patriots’ roster, with the team stocked at receiver. Randy Moss, Wes Welker, Jabar Gafffney, Chad Jackson, Kelley Washington and Sam Aiken top the depth chart.​




 
Did Lee Gissendaner actually get hired or did he use the Pats? The GB Packers official bio says he was promoted to Area Scout in 2001 until 2014.

 
Did Lee Gissendaner actually get hired or did he use the Pats? The GB Packers official bio says he was promoted to Area Scout in 2001 until 2014.

No he did not; I removed him because the site I used for that info was incorrect. I had copied that info from a previous 'This Day' post but it just didn't look right; I didn't remember his name at all. When I went back to check, sure enough, there was no information anywhere on his ever being with the Patriots.

As near as I can tell, the site I used simply scraped info off a news article with all the sports transactions from that day - and it failed to attach the correct information. His name was mentioned just prior to the Pats transaction with Sale Isaia. Looks to me as though Gissendaner was hired by Green Bay as a scout on May 15, 2001.

Good catch.
 
Today in Patriots History
Trivia from the 2010s



May 15, 2012:
QB Mike Hartline is released

After spending the 2011-2012 offseason with the Colts and Patriots, Hartline hung up his cleats. He has worked as a college football coach since 2015, and is currently the QB coach for the University of South Florida, where his brother Brian is the Bulls head coach.








May 15, 2013:
DT Kyle Love is waived with a non football injury/illness designation soon after he was diagnosed with diabetes

Love was not happy, stating that the Patriots 'treated veterans like rookies'. He was claimed by Jacksonville, but released as part of final roster cuts. Love ended up playing through the 2019, a total of 115 regular season games plus 11 postseason games over ten years. He played in 45 games with 25 starts in his three seasons for the Patriots, plus six playoff games.











May 15, 2014:
TE Tyler Beck and LS Charley Hughlett are released, and sixth round draft pick Zach Moore is signed

The Pats had signed undrafted rookie Tyler Ott to compete with Danny Aiken, making one too many long snappers on the roster. Hughlett has proceeded to play for 11 seasons and counting in the NFL, mostly for the Browns, and last year for Philadelphia.

The other Tyler, Mr. Beck, had just been signed as an undrafted rookie from Bowling Green four days earlier.

Zach Moore was a defensive end from the Division II Concordia Golden Bears in St Paul. He played in eight games with one start for the Pats in 2014, then signed with the Vikings to be on their practice squad rather than do the same with the Patriots in 2015, after being part of final roster cuts. Moore played in 18 additional NFL games, all but with Arizona in 2018.











May 15, 2015:
News reports correctly state that Roger Goodell is 'highly unlikely to recuse himself' from Tom Brady's appeal of his four-game suspension.

Can somebody please explain the logic of even having the right to an appeal, when it will be heard by the very same judge from the original verdict?






May 15, 2017:
Patriots sign DeMarcus Covington as a coaching assistant

Covington would work his way up to OLB coach (2019), DL coach (2020-23) and DC (2024). Since 2025 DeMarcus has been with Green Bay, where he now holds the longest coaching title in pro football history: "outside linebackers coach/run game coordinator/assistant head coach – defense".



Also on this same date:
Turns out that the reason the Patriots traded up, and then down in the previous month's draft was because they wanted OL Dan Feeney at #72, but the Chargers selected him at #71. After trading back down the Pats drafted Derek Rivers at #83, and OT Antonio Garcia at #85.


Bill Belichick explains why timing is more important than speed, why book smart doesn't always mean football smart - MassLive
"I think it's a lot easier said than done," Belichick said. "I think that you have to have a system that you can do that without too much stress. So if every week we have to put in a new defense to take care of a problem, that's a lot of learning, a lot of installation, a lot of adjustments, a lot of things that can happen. You set this defense for whatever it is, but when something happens a little bit different and your team doesn't have experience with it, it's hard to execute. So I think you have to have a system that is flexible enough to handle those various problems that you're going to handle so that when they come up, then there's not a panic on your team of, 'Well we talked about doing it this way but then out in the game they did something a little bit different. So now how do we handle it.' And the other thing I think that's is important going back to what we were talking about a little bit earlier, whether it be in business or in football as you know as an athlete, is timing.​

"You can be fast, but making the cut at the right time is a little bit more important than being fast. Running the route on the right timing is a little bit more important than being whatever, tall. The bigger and faster and quicker and all that, the better, but the timing, whether it being in sports or business, the right decision can be the wrong one if the timing is bad. So, a lot of that is instinctive, and a lot of that is gained through experience. Timing is an important part of all critical decisions."​



"It's funny, because when I grew up -- my dad coached at the Naval Academy -- that was a little bit of a frustration for him," Belichick said. "I can remember him talking about how these guys come in and get 1500 on their college boards and they're some of the smartest young people in our country and blow a coverage when a guy goes in motion and that kind of thing. It doesn't always translate. A mechanical engineer or an aeronautical engineer may not have the same football instinctiveness.​

"I've had guys that have had trouble reading and writing and they just weren't very literate or very well educated, but the knew how to play football and they could see what the other 21 guys on the field were doing all at once because they just were able to process that. Guys that had 1500 on their college boards had trouble seeing what maybe two people were doing. The two guys in front of them. We all have different aptitudes and we all have different ways to process information, but it's interesting. Testing and IQ and some of those measurements don't necessarily coordinate to athletic decision-making and intelligence."​

Belichick also discussed what it was like to coach Lawrence Taylor, and why he has small coaching staffs in the podcast.​





May 15, 2018:
WR Darren Andrews is placed on reserve/non football injury list with torn ACL in right knee, and punter Corey Bojorquez is signed






May 15, 2019:
Patriots sign free agent LB Jamie Collins to a one-year, $2 million contract after being released by the Browns

This would be the second of three stints with New England for Collins.

 
Today in Patriots History
Tidbits from the 2020s


May 15, 2022:
The Patriots wrap up their 2022 rookie minicamp






May 15, 2024:
Pats sign Australian rugby player/DE Jotham Russell








May 15, 2024:
Pete Hart passes away at age 91

Hart was drafted by the Chicago Cardinals in 1959, out of Hardin-Simmons. He played all 14 games in 1961 with the New York Titans at fullback, but was listed in the 1962 Pats roster as a tight end. Pete did not make it past final roster cuts, and that was it for his pro football career.

After that Hart returned to his home state of Texas, where he worked in the oil and drilling industry with companies including Halliburton and Hughes Tool Co. He also taught and coached football and other sports in the Abilene, Texas area. Pete Hart was inducted into the Hardin-Simmons University Athletics Hall of Fame in 1992, and passed away at age 91 in Abilene, following a battle with cancer.





May 15, 2025:
Christian Barmore is medically cleared







May 15, 2025:
A day after being waived by the Patriots, DT Eric Johnson is claimed by the Colts

I was surprised to read somewhere that the team that has claimed the most players placed on waivers by the Patriots over the last several years is not the Jets, but actually is the Indianapolis Colts. Johnson played in 11 games for the Pats in 2024, and was signed by Minnesota last month.

 
Today in Patriots History
Michael Bishop



Happy 50th birthday to Michael Bishop
Born May 15, 1976 in Galveston, Texas
Patriot quarterback, 2000; uniform #7
Pats 7th round (227th overall) selection of the 1999 draft, from Kansas State
Pats résumé: eight games, three completions for 80 yards; one touchdown, one interception



Michael Paul Bishop was a healthy scratch for all but one game his rookie season, which was Pete Carroll's last in New England. Because of his strong arm and mobility, he came in as a substitute for Drew Bledsoe on the final play of the half in Week 6 of the 2000 season under new coach Bill Belichick versus the Colts - and completed a 44-yard Hail Mary touchdown to Tony Simmons.







Bishop went to NFL Europe the following spring, while his fan club that was based on one throw grew. The oft repeated concept of fans loving the backup on a losing team was in full force, and it hit a crescendo when Bishop was released during 2001 training camp. Bill Belichick wasn't listening, and he kept Tom Brady on the roster instead. Bishop finished his Patriot career with eight games played, completing three of his nine pass attempts for 80 yards - and that one touchdown.





Green Bay picked Bishop up after being waived by the Pats, but the Packers released him less than two weeks later. Bishop later had tryouts with the New York Giants and the Miami Dolphins, but wasn’t signed and never played in the NFL again. He did find success north of the border, winning the Grey Cup in 2004 with the Toronto Argonauts. Overall he played in the CFL for ten seasons, plus a couple of years in the Arena League, with stops in two lower level indoor football leagues in between in 2009.







Somebody once summed it up as 'Michael Bishop was Joe Milton 1.0'. Had he been born later, entering the league, say at about the same time Lamar Jackson or Cam Newton did, who knows how his NFL career would have turned out.




Ian had an interesting article on new Pats head coach Bill Belichick's thoughts of Bishop, from February 5, 2000:




Good retrospective article on Michael Bishop below, from Feb 3, 2017:
Bishop and Brady were technically competing with each other and trying to impress Bill Belichick, New England’s first-year coach, but they understood that the chance of either of them getting any meaningful playing time was slim to none. The Patriots had Drew Bledsoe, the team’s franchise player and starting quarterback since his rookie season in 1993. Bledsoe was entrenched, although Bishop and Brady were ready in case anything happened.​

. . . . .​

For a time, Bishop was seen as the potential heir apparent to Bledsoe, or at least someone the Patriots could trade for a serviceable veteran or draft pick. After winning two national junior college titles at Blinn College in Texas and leading the school to a 24-0 record in two years, Bishop enrolled at Kansas State in 1997. That August, before he won the starting job, he told reporters his dual-threat skills compared favorably with then-Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway and former Nebraska quarterback Tommie Frazier, who led the Cornhuskers to two national titles and finished second in the 1995 Heisman Trophy voting.​

During his two years as Kansas State’s starter, Bishop’s confidence never wavered. In 1997, the Wildcats finished eighth in the final Associated Press poll and went 11-1, the best record in school history. Bishop ran for 566 yards and nine touchdowns and threw for 1,557 yards and 13 touchdowns during the season, and saved his best game for last, throwing for four touchdowns and running for another in a 35-18 Fiesta Bowl victory over Syracuse.​

. . . . .​

Other high-profile programs later copied Bishop’s dual-threat approach, and coaches such as Urban Meyer visited Kansas State coach Bill Snyder to learn the Wildcats’ offense.​

“A lot of people talk about Cam Newton, Michael Vick, and all those guys,” Bishop said. “What those guys did, I did five, six years prior to what they did. At the end of the day, I finally started getting some credit…. When it’s all said and done, I felt great about what I was doing. I think that the rest of the world, as far as the NFL, wasn’t ready for my style of play. I think that might be a main factor why I didn’t get the opportunity that I wanted.”​

While Vick (2001) and Newton (2011) were top overall NFL draft picks, Bishop lasted until the final round of the 1999 NFL draft. At the time, league executives weren’t fond of dual-threat quarterbacks. They questioned Bishop’s relatively low completion percentage, and didn’t think he would be able to elude tacklers and avoid injuries like he did in college.​

. . . . .​

Bishop’s lack of playing time irked some fans and media members who had grown tired of Bledsoe’s plodding style and occasional mistakes. When Bledsoe continued to play late in the season with an injured thumb, a poll on the Patriots’ website revealed that 76 percent of respondents preferred Bishop as Bledsoe’s replacement. Kevin Mannix, a Boston Herald football columnist, wrote in early December that Belichick should give Bishop a chance.​

“The scrambling second-year man brings the element of the unexpected, the potentially entertaining,” Mannix wrote. “He may not know the entire offense, but he’s learned enough to move ahead of Tom Brady on the depth chart.

“The way this offense is struggling, what better time to give Bishop a Cliff’s Notes version of the playbook, one that’s tailored to his particular skills. Then let’s see if he can make some plays. Given the rest of the lineup, putting Bishop at quarterback instead of Bledsoe could actually give the team its best chance of winning.”






Former Patriots quarterback and current radio host Scott Zolak responded to Curran’s initial tweet with some disbelief. He tweeted: “wow.”​

Curran pushed his point a little more. He responded: Compare that skill set to Fields … better runner … better arm? He just had no concept of how to protect the ball, I think, because he was so outside the box for that time. **** wasn’t in place to take cultivate and take advantage of that skill set and it is now.

. . . . .​

The New England Patriots drafted Bishop in the seventh round of the 1999 NFL Draft. Bishop was coming off of one of the most successful and dominant college football careers we’d ever seen.​

As a sophomore, he finished as the Heisman Trophy runner-up after throwing for 2,844 yards, 23 TDs, and five interceptions while rushing for 748 yards and 14 more scores.​

Despite his brilliance in college and otherworldly athleticism, NFL scouts doubted his ability to become an elite quarterback. Unwilling to change his position, as many athletic black quarterbacks were pressured to do during his time, Bishop found himself at the bottom of the draft and trying to carve a niche on a franchise that already had Drew Bledsoe as their QB1, John Friesz. Some guy named Tom Brady was selected the following year.​

That wasn’t an ideal situation for Bishop.​

Bishop probably needed more years in school, but he instead entered the NFL Draft after two years at Kansas State. He’d come from Blinn College (a school Cam Newton also attended), but he needed more seasoning and preparation for the NFL game.​

He didn’t get much of an opportunity. Old-school offensive coordinator Charlie Weis was the man in charge of the offense, and Bishop’s style wasn’t exactly his cup of tea. Bishop was inactive in almost every game as a rookie.​




“Coming out and going to New England, I have so much respect for (offensive coordinator) Charlie Weis, because Charlie Weis was the first person to put me in a game,” Bishop said on the recent podcast. "Charlie Weis told me, ‘Listen, Bishop, you have done nothing wrong.’ His exact words to me were, You just have got too much talent. No one knows what to do with you.’ I said, ‘What do you mean, I have too much talent and nobody knows what to do with me?’ He said, ‘You’ve done nothing wrong, it’s just right now we don’t know what to do with you.’ At that time, I was thinking, ‘Hey, then let me go to another team that can find something to do with me.’ I trusted and believed in what I brought to the table.”​







 
Today in Patriots History
Doug Beaudoin



Happy 72nd birthday to Doug Beaudoin
Born May 15, 1954; from Jamestown, North Dakota
Patriot safety, 1976-1979; uniform #27
Pats 9th round (243rd overall) selection of the 1976 draft, from Minnesota
Pats résumé: four seasons, 45 games (20 starts); four interceptions, two fumble recoveries; in on two sacks in one playoff game



Doug Beaudoin played 45 games with 20 starts for the oh-so-close Patriots of the late seventies. In week 8 of '78 he intercepted two Bob Griese passes that led to touchdowns in a 33-24 win that put the Patriots in a first place tie with the Dolphins at 6-2. Injuries limited his playing time the following year; he ended up playing with the Miami in '80, San Diego in '81, and then spent three seasons with Tampa in the USFL.



Defensive back Doug Beaudoin was a ninth-round draft pick out of the University of Minnesota in 1976. Beaudoin played with the Patriots through 1979, with the Dolphins in 1980 and with the Chargers in 1981. From 1983 to 1986 he played with the USFL's Tampa Bay Bandits, and Beaudoin now lives in the Tampa area where he works in sales for the FX Marketing Group. He is one of the more than 4,500 former NFL players who filed suit against the league over concussions and other head injuries.



Beaudoin, a 1972 JHS graduate, was named North Dakota High School Athlete of the Year in '71 after leading the Blue Jays to an 8-1 record in football, a 22-5 mark in basketball and placing second in the Class A state long jump competition. Beaudoin would become a four-year starter at safety in the NCAA's Big Ten Conference for Minnesota, and in 1976 he was drafted by the New England Patriots in the ninth round of a then 17-round NFL Draft—the same draft in which New England selected future NFL Hall of Fame cornerback Mike Haynes fifth overall.​

Nobody was challenging Doug Beaudoin to a friendly game of anything back in 1971. Unless, of course, said challenger was up for a butt whooping. "I could beat just about anybody at anything," Beaudoin said. "Skiing, golf, ping pong. Whatever ...​





Beaudoin played seven seasons in the NFL, five for New England and making stops in Miami and San Diego in '80 and '81, respectively. Beaudoin recorded four interceptions during his NFL run, but was hampered throughout his professional career by an injury suffered during his senior track season at Jamestown High.​

"I'll never forget it," Beaudoin said. "We were running the 440 relay in Valley City and it was about 30 degrees and sleeting. I took the baton for the home stretch, probably ran about 30 yards, and my hamstring snapped. I was probably never the same after that."​

The born athlete said his time in the 40-yard dash fell from approximately 4.40 to 4.60, and hamstring issues would cloud weeks of strong play on the gridiron even as Beaudoin ascended to the sport's highest level. His New England teammate in the secondary, Mike Haynes, brought up Beaudoin's injury-prone legs while the two shared a moment in Canton, Ohio, in 1987.​

Haynes was getting his call to the NFL Hall of Fame.​

"We were sitting there and I was congratulating him on his Hall of Fame career, and he said, "You know what, Doug? If not for your hamstrings, you'd probably be sitting here too," Beaudoin recalled.



June 19, 2021:
During his two years at Jamestown High School, Beaudoin lettered in football, basketball, and track while a student-athlete for the Blue Jays. Beaudoin led the Eastern Dakota Conference (EDC) running backs in 1971 averaging 108.5 yards per game. Beaudoin also paced the East Region in points scored (90) with 15 touchdowns. The former Blue Jay led EDC punters averaging 37.7 yards over 18 kicks.​

Just a couple of months later, Beaudoin helped lead the JHS basketball team to a 22-2 record en route to defeating the undefeated Ft. Yates Warriors. In the spring of his junior year, Beaudoin placed second in the long jump at the Class A State Track and Field Meet.​

"I think I was born with a ball in my hand," Beaudoin said. "I don't care what kind of ball it was — baseball, basketball, football — that's what I was born to do. Back in those days, if you put a ball in my hand, whatever game it was, I think I would beat you."

Beaudoin was selected to the all-state football and basketball teams during both his junior and senior years. Beaudoin was inducted into the Jamestown High School Hall of Fame in 2018.​




The standout's senior year, however, threw a bit of a wrench into post-high school dreams.​

In the spring of 1972, Beaudoin was running the 4X440-yard relay in Valley City. The sleet and misting invoked a pop of Beaudoin's hamstring and the muscle eventually ended up in a ball at the base of his kneecap.​

After the unfortunate mishap, Beaudoin said his athletic talent wasn't quite at the same level, but the persistence was still there.​

On defense, Beaudoin was the second-leading tackler all three years and recorded four interceptions. Beaudoin was named to the 1975 All-Big Ten Football Team being only one of only a handful of players in Gophers' history with four touchdowns and four interceptions.​

"From high school on, it was grit," Beaudoin said. "I was the first one in the training room, I was the last one on the field because it took so much just to try to stay healthy that I did whatever I needed to do to get back on the field."




The NFL noticed the Blue Jay alum's perseverance.​

After his four seasons in Minnesota, Beaudoin was drafted by the New England Patriots as a safety in the ninth round of the 1976 NFL draft. Beaudoin remained on the Patriot roster for five years. During the 1976-77 season, he was a leading team player averaging over 25 yards per return on kickoffs and second-leading special team tackles.​

In 1978, Beaudoin was the third leading tackler on defense and second in interceptions with three. Beaudoin made a pair of interceptions in the Patriots' 33-24 win over the Miami Dolphins that propelled the team into the playoffs. The Patriots qualified for the AFC Divisional Playoffs in the 1976 and 1978 seasons.​

"As you get older you realize how much you miss it," Beaudoin said. "(The best part) was competing and the friendships you build through fighting the battles with these guys. Every Sunday you build some really special friendships that you will never lose."​

In 1980, Beaudoin played for the Miami Dolphins, followed by the San Diego Chargers in 1981. He joined the Tampa Bay Bandits of the new USFL in 1982 and played until the league came to an end in 1985. He retired from football following the 1985 season.​




January 28, 2014:
You really can't believe anything the league says, anything Goodell says, but they're allegedly trying to make the game safer. Now would they have tried to make the game safer without a $785 million judgment? No. It's called cover your ass.​

I feel pretty fortunate when I look around at 59 and see the damage that a lot of my peers are going through and have gone through over the last 10, 15, 20 years. Am I concerned? Hell yes. You know, your decision-making process is sketchy is best. My memory is not good. I do feel depressed more often than I should. So yeah, I'm really concerned. I did have an MRI where they came back and basically said they didn't see any problems with the MRI, but I guarantee you I have CTE. Unfortunately we're not going to know it until I'm dead.​

I am at 59 years old, still gainfully employed. And I've been in sales, basically, since I got out of the league. Went from the brokerage business, which is basically glorified sales, to a marketing company here that is basically sales. I'm not nearly as good of a salesman as I was five years ago, 10 years, 15 years ago. I have cue cards all over my office reminding me what the hell I'm doing. I used to be able to sell a couple projects at one time. Now I can only sell one project at a time because I can't remember the other project and what exactly I need to know.​

We're not looking for sympathy. I'm not looking for anybody to feel sorry for me because, as I said, I feel fortunate and I'd do it again. But am I concerned going forward, where five years from now it's going to be completely worse and it's going to be tougher and tougher to stay employed? Yeah. Yeah, I'm concerned about that.​






I think it was a game against Earl Campbell where we've got 10-yard running head starts, so it's you and him, and you just go like a heat-seeking missile and hit whatever's moving and you take a knee. As his knee's coming up, to the crown of your head, it knocks you silly.​

Now, the one that's the most memorable is one I suffered in the USFL. And I think I remember this because it was the last one. I played seven years in the NFL and three years in the USFL. I think we were playing Jim Kelly's team, Houston, and the tight end ran across the middle and, once again, we're both running full speed and we hit each other. And I remember lying on the field. This was my 10th year of professional football. Not much was moving. I was tingling all over. My head was ringing. And they went through about three commercials and I was still on the field, and I just remember lying there going, "I can't do this anymore." And it was toward the end of the season, 10th year, so your body's run down and beat up to begin with. And it took probably five to eight minutes to get the feeling in all your extremities: your legs and your neck and your arms. And I finally got up, got back to the locker room and said, "Enough's enough. Your body can only take so much."​











Doug finished his pro football career with the Tampa Bay Bandits of the USFL in 1985. He remained in the area, first working for a brokerage, then working as the VP of Sales and Entertainment for the FX Marketing Group in Tampa until his retirement a couple years ago. FX was a sports marketing/management and publishing firm specializing in client & event management.











 
Today in Patriots History
Rickie Harris



Happy 83rd birthday to Rickie Harris
Born May 15, 1943 in St Louis; hometown Los Angeles, California
Patriot safety, 1971-1972; uniform #25
Claimed off waivers from Washington on September 1, 1971
Pats résumé: two seasons, all 28 games (21 starts); three interceptions, three fumble recoveries



After graduating from high school Rickie Calvin Harris spent two years at East Los Angeles Junior College, then two at the University of Arizona. The 5'11, 182 pounder led the NCAA in 1973 with an average of 17.4 yards per punt return. Undrafted out of Arizona, Harris spent his first six NFL seasons with Washington. As a rookie he led the league with 12.2 yards per punt return. Over those six years he averaged 8.4 yards on 119 punt returns, with three touchdowns. Harris also averaged 22.8 yards on 102 kickoff returns. On the flip side he had one play that he would prefer that we forget about. In a December 11, 1966 34-31 win at Dallas, Harris set an NFL record for worst all-time punt return: a loss of 28 yards.






Harris was used sparingly on returns with the Patriots, but saw plenty of playing time at safety. He appeared in all 28 regular season games over two seasons for the Pats, with 21 starts. Harris had three interceptions during his time with New England, then spent two years in the WFL: 1975 for Florida Blazers, and 1976 with the Memphis Southmen.

Over eight NFL seasons Rickie Harris played in 111 games with 15 interceptions with one pick-six. He also averaged 22.8 yards on 102 kick returns and 8.0 yards on 82 punt returns - with touchdowns of 57, 52 and 85 yards.


Most Blazers players—a mix of NFL refugees like Harris and rookies right out of college—didn’t get paid for weeks at a time. Some didn’t get paid at all. Yet head coach Jack Pardee, forced to pay for locker room toilet paper out of his own pocket, used victimhood to bind his squad. The Blazers made it all the way to World Bowl I, the first and only WFL championship game.

The specific tale I’d been chasing for years held that just before kickoff of that big game, one of the unpaid Blazers took a stand on behalf of his penniless brothers by snatching the coin from the coin toss—-and keeping it. I’d heard long ago that Harris, the Blazers’ defensive captain, was that guy.

Yup, says Harris: “They called ‘Heads!’ and I scooped it up and said, ‘At least I get paid this week!’” We’re both laughing at the punchline.



 
Today in Patriots History
A couple of coaches


In memory of Don Shinnick, who would have turned 91 today
Born May 15, 1935 in Kansas City; hometown San Pedro, CA
Died Jan 20, 2024 in Modesto, California
Patriots linebacker coach, 1985-1999

Hired on January 9, 1985; fired on February 27, 1990
Pats résumé: four seasons as a coach with the Patriots



Don Shinnick was the outside linebacker for the Baltimore Colts from 1957 to 1969, winning three NFL championships. He played in 166 games and still to this day hold the NFL record for most interceptions by a linebacker, with 37. Prior to joining the Patriots he was a defensive backs coach for the Bears and Cardinals, a linebackers coach for the Raiders, and the head coach for Central Methodist University in Missouri.










Happy 40th birthday to Thomas Brown
Born May 15, 1986 in Tucker, Georgia
Patriots passing game coordinator and tight ends coach, 2025-present

Hired on January 27, 2025
Pats résumé: headed into his second season as a coach with the Patriots






 
Today in Patriots History
Cups of Coffee



Happy 30th birthday to Andrew Beck
Born May 15, 1996 in Tampa
Patriot fullback/tight end, 2019 offseason; uniform #86

Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 2, 2019
Pats résumé: one full offseason, preseason and training camp



Shortly after the 2019 NFL Draft, the New England Patriots brought in 12 undrafted free agents. Based entirely on signing bonus alone, Andrew Beck was the most highly sought-after of the group.​

Because Beck is guaranteed his $115,000 signing bonus, he was the favorite among the 12 UDFAs to make the 53-man roster. But that’s when it was assumed he was going to play tight end, which remains a position of uncertainty for the Patriots.​

Beck, who played tight end and H-back in college at Texas, was moved to fullback in New England. Since he’s playing behind roster anchor James Develin, Beck has become something of a forgotten man this summer. But maybe he shouldn’t be.​

Patriots projected starting tight end Ben Watson is suspended the first four games of the season. It won’t exactly be difficult for the Patriots to trim players at tight end with Matt LaCosse, Stephen Anderson, Lance Kendricks and Ryan Izzo filling out the depth chart. Tight end almost certainly will be a position less featured in the Patriots’ offense since Rob Gronkowski’s retirement.​








On the offensive side of things, the Patriots began their day with the release of tight end/fullback Andrew Beck. An undrafted free agent out of Texas, the 23-year-old Beck had two carries for seven yards and one nine-yard catch in three preseason appearances. His lone action in Thursday's finale came with a four-yard rush.​



The Patriots were a mess at tight end in 2019, having to lure 39-year old Ben Watson out of retirement to be their starter. Beck was signed to a three year contract that included a $15,000 signing bonus and $115,000 guaranteed. Despite all that, Beck was unable to beat out Matt LaCosse and Ryan Izzo for a roster spot, and was waived at the end of training camp. He was claimed by Denver, and appeared in 66 games for the Broncos from 2019-2023.

The decision to move Beck from tight end to fullback was a head scratcher, even without the benefit of hindsight. There was a desperate need at tight end, while the team was good at fullback with James Develin on the roster. Ben Watson was the leading tight end that season - with a mere 17 receptions for 173 yards and no touchdowns.

Andrew Beck has now played in 87 NFL games for the Broncos, Texans, Packers and Jets as a blocking tight end and fullback. He is currently a free agent.











Happy 40th birthday to Marcus Thigpen
Born May 15, 1986 in Detroit
Patriots PR/KR/WR/RB, 2014 practice squad; uniform #33

Signed to the practice squad on September 3, 2014
Pats résumé: one week on the practice squad



Sept 3, 2014:
The New England Patriots swapped out three practice squad players Wednesday, cutting quarterback McLeod Bethel-Thompson, safety Kanorris Davis and defensive back Daxton Swanson in favor of offensive lineman Chris Barker, tight end Allen Reisner and running back Marcus Thigpen.​

Thigpen, a former Miami Dolphin, is the most notable signee. He appeared in all 32 games the past two years, mostly as a return specialist. In those two years, he amassed 2,490 return yards and scored two touchdowns.​



The Patriots open the season with the Dolphins and Vikings and, coincidence or not, they’ve added a pair of players recently dropped by those teams to their practice squad.[/INDENT}

Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald reports that former Dolphins running back/kick returner Marcus Thigpen has made a move within the division and Doug Kyed of NESN reports that former Vikings tight end Allen Reisner has also joined the team.​

Thigpen is the second former Dolphin to land in New England this week, joining safety Don Jones in the trip from South Florida. He returned a punt and a kickoff for touchdowns in 2012, but didn’t have the same impact in those roles last year. Reisner has 15 games of experience over the last three seasons and caught seven passes for 53 yards.​


Sept 16, 2014:
The team announced that they signed linebacker Darius Fleming, offensive lineman Caylin Hauptmann and defensive lineman Kona Schwenke.​

To make room, the Pats released defensive lineman Cameron Henderson and running back Marcus Thigpen. The third spot opened when the Indianapolis Colts signed defensive tackle Kelcy Quarles off of the Patriots practice squad on Tuesday.​


Over four NFL seasons 5'9, 193 lb Marcus Arnette Thigpen averaged 9.7 yards on 95 punt returns and 23.7 yards on 107 kick returns with the Dolphins, Bucs, Bills and Raiders.






Happy 56th birthday to Artie Smith
Born May 15, 1970 in Stillwater, Oklahoma
Patriots defensive end, 1998 offseason

Signed as a free agent on March 11 1998
Pats résumé: one offseason



Artie Enlow Smith was a 5th round draft pick by the 49ers out of Louisiana Tech in 1993. The Bengals claimed him off waivers in '94, and he was their starting right defensive end through '96. Artie had been out of the NFL for a full season when the Patriots signed him. (Smith did play for Rhein Fire in Europe in the interim.)

On August 25, 1998 the Pats traded Smith to Dallas in exchange for the ever-popular, ambiguous "future considerations". Overall he played in 73 NFL games with 34 starts, making 105 tackles and 4½ sacks - and won a super bowl ring as a rookie in 1993 with the 49ers.



 
Today in New England Football History
May 15 Birthdays


Other NFL May 15 birthdays with a New England connection:


QB Josh Johnson, 40 (May 15, 1986)
Draft pick trade
April 27, 2008: Pats trade up, sending their 2008 5th round draft pick (160th overall, Josh Johnson) and a 2008 7th round pick to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for their 2008 5th round pick (153rd overall, Matthew Slater).

Good trade by the Patriots.

If it seems like it was decades ago when Josh Johnson was the Bucs quarterback, that's because it was. He has changed uniforms 22 times and counting (plus stints in the AAF and XFL). Joshua Javon Johnson is somehow still in the league, playing in five games with two starts for Washington in 2025. Johnson got his second win as a starting NFL quarterback last year, bringing his career record up from 1-8 to 2-9. Despite more interceptions (18) than touchdowns (14), Johnson was signed in March by the Bengals to be their potential fallback when Joe Burrow gets injured again.





LB/C/FB Pete Lamana (May 15, 1921 - August 7, 2007)
Born in Bristol CT; Springfield Cathedral High School; Boston University
Played in 35 games for the Chicago Rockets in the forties before the AAFC merged with the NFL.




OL Butch Spagna (May 15, 1897 - Dec 11, 1948)
Raised in Avon Mass; Avon High School; Brown University
Played in 32 games starting in the earliest days of pro football, from 1920-1925.




QB Cliff Olander, 71 (May 15, 1955
Born in Hartford
A fifth round pick in 1977, he played in 15 games over three seasons with the Chargers. Cliff later won the Grey Cup with Edmonton in the CFL, and then played in the USFL.




OL Joe Murphy (May 15, 1897 - May 22, 1940)
Born in Concord NH; went to Worcester Academy, Hebron Academy, Harvard and Dartmouth
Another player from the genesis of pro football, Joe played eight games at guard in 1920-21 for the Canton Bulldogs and Cleveland Indians.




RB Swede Ellstrom (May 15, 1906 - April 25, 1994)
Old defunct professional Boston football teams
Marvin Lawrence Ellstrom was a wingback for the 1934 Boston Redskins and 1936 Boston Shamrocks.
 

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