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Today In Patriots History 1986: Squish the Fish Game

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Today in Patriots History
Jan 12, 2025: Mike Vrabel hired to be new head coach
Jan 12, 2024: Jerod Mayo hired to be new head coach



January 12, 2025:
Mike Vrabel hired to be 15th Head Coach in franchise history*








January 12, 2024:
Jerod Mayo hired to be 14th Head Coach in franchise history*











* Does not include interim head coaches
 
They really like that number 12 around Foxboro
 
Today In Patriots History
Squish the Fish Game


Sunday January 12, 1986 at 4:00
1985 AFC Championship Game, at the Orange Bowl
New England Patriots 31, Miami Dolphins 14
Head Coaches: Raymond Berry, Don Shula
Quarterbacks: Tony Eason, Dan Marino
Odds: Miami favored by 5½
Weather: 61°, 12 mph wind, clear
Game MVPs: Tony Eason, Craig James, Patriot defense
Pats improve to 14-5; advance to Super Bowl XX
Dolphins finish season with a record of 13-5


- Patriots win the AFC, improve to 14-5 and advance to Super Bowl 20.
- Dolphins drop to 13-5 and are denied a Super Bowl game and rematch with the Bears.
- Miami was the only team to defeat Chicago that season, keeping the Fins 1972 17-0 season intact.
- Squish the Fish Curse? Since this game the Dolphins have never done better than 1-1 in a postseason, losing their last six straight.
- Miami is 6-14 in the playoffs since this game, has not won a playoff game since 2000, and has missed 19 of the last 23 postseasons.




Full First Half (1 hour, 46 minutes)



Full Second Half (1 hour, 39 minutes)
















Key Stat #1
Turnovers: Miami 6, New England 2
(Fumble recoveries by Julius Adams, Greg Hawthorne, Garin Veris and Lester Williams; interceptions by Raymond Clayborn and Fred Marion)

Key Stat #2
Pats Rushing: 59 for 255 yards
Craig James, Robert Weathers and Tony Collins combined for 253 yards on 50 carries.
Miami Rushing: 13 for 68 yards
[Key Stat #2B, Time of Possession: Pats 39:51, Dolphins 20:09; Pats held the ball for 19 minutes and 42 seconds more than Miami!]







Steve Grogan sparked the run to the Pats first AFC Championship.



Tony Collins, Craig James and Robert Weathers were unstoppable, with 255 yards rushing.



Don Blackmon introduces himself to Dan Marino.



NT Lester Williams holds up the football after one of the six takeaways by the Pats



Linebackers Johnny Rembert and Brian Ingram celebrate after the victory.



An exuberant John Hannah celebrates the first Patriot AFC championship.






New England Patriots vs Miami Dolphins (January 12, 1986) AFC Championship "Pats Win 1st AFC Title"
14:26 Highlight Video



Raymond Berry's Pats - "Bruce and The Benchwarmers" and The Doylettes
2:03 Local Hype Song
 
Today In Patriots History
Tom Brady's near-perfect 26/28 game
Laurence Maroney rushes for 122 yards, TD
Patriots beat Jacksonville, 31-10


Saturday January 12, 2008 at 8:15
2007 Divisional Round Game at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 31, Jacksonville Jaguars 20
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Jack Del Rio
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, David Garrard
Odds: Patriots were favored by 13½
Weather: 37°, 5 mph wind
Game MVPs: Tom Brady, Junior Seau, Rodney Harrison
Pats improve to 17-0; advance to AFCCG versus San Diego
Jaguars finish season with a record of 12-6



Key Stat: Incomplete Passes (2)
Brady was 26-28 for 262 yards, 3 TD, 0 Int, 1 sack (-4 yards) and a 141.4 passer rating.


Highlights:



Jacksonville limited big plays, took Moss out of the game, and put together long scoring drives - nine plays, 11 plays, nine plays, and 13 plays. It didn't matter.​

Tom Brady was just as patient, and more precise, than the Jaguars. Brady completed 26 of 28 passes for 262 yards and three touchdowns. He hit his first 16 throws before Benjamin Watson couldn't corral a catchable ball with 10:27 remaining in the third quarter. The other incompletion was a fourth-quarter drop by Wes Welker.​

An inspired Laurence Maroney had the first 100-yard rushing game of his playoff career (22 rushes for 122 yards and a score), upstaging the much-talked-about Jacksonville tailback tandem of Maurice Jones-Drew and Fred Taylor, who were held to 66 yards on 19 carries by a fired-up Patriots defense.​

Give the Jaguars credit, they made the Foxborough Faithful sweat for a bit, until Rodney Harrison wrapped up the game with another clutch playoff interception with 4:08 left (tying an NFL record with a pickoff in four straight postseason games). That was one of two big mistakes by Jacksonville's David Garrard, who played a solid game (22 of 33 for 278 yards and two touchdowns).​

Brady didn't make any miscues, and he showed his acting skills on a fake direct snap to Kevin Faulk. Brady deftly hid the ball, jumping and turning his back for effect, before finding Welker for a 6-yard touchdown that broke a 14-14 tie with 8:49 left in the third quarter.​


With Brady facing almost no pressure from Jacksonville’s enormous defense until late in the game, the offense was nearly unstoppable, stalling for only two incomplete passes — one a drop — and a missed field goal. And so the Patriots are still racing toward history, beating the Jaguars, 31-20, to advance to the A.F.C. championship game next Sunday in Foxborough. They will play Indianapolis or San Diego, both of which the Patriots have beaten on their way to a 17-0 record.​

Brady is 13-2 in the postseason now, and there have certainly been victories fraught with more drama than this one. But for precision, it will be hard to top Brady’s mastery of Jacksonville, which was bent on taking away his most dynamic weapon — Randy Moss — while ceding large chunks of space in the middle of the field. In a record-setting season, he grabbed another one Saturday. His 92.9 completion percentage broke Phil Simms’ postseason record, 88 percent in Super Bowl XXI.

The Jaguars played a zone defense that eliminated almost all of the big plays that had defined the Patriots’ season, but Brady was 26 of 28 for 262 yards and 3 touchdowns. The Patriots did not punt until 32 seconds remained in the game.​







Full Game:
 
Today In Patriots History
Parcells tops his former assistant Coughlin
Otis Smith's 47-yards scoop and score seals win
Patriots shut down Jacksonville, 20-6


Sunday January 12, 1997 at 4:00
1996 AFC Championship Game at Foxboro Stadium
New England Patriots 20, Jacksonville Jaguars 6
Head Coaches: Bill Parcells, Tom Coughlin
Quarterbacks: Drew Bledsoe, Mark Brunell
Odds: Patriots were favored by 7½
Weather: 23°, 19 mph wind, 9° wind chill
Patriots improve to 13-5 to win the AFC, and advance to Super Bowl 31 in New Orleans vs Green Bay.
Jacksonville had upset Buffalo and then #1 seed Denver to advance to AFCCG in just their second NFL season; the Jaguars finished with a record of 11-8.



Key Stat: Turnovers
Jaguars 4, Patriots 2.
Mark Brunell threw two interceptions, and also lost a fumble.

As a result of the turnovers the Pats were able to overcome their offense converting on just two out of 13 third down opportunities. The Jacksonville defense was strong, limiting Curtis Martin to 59 yards rushing on 19 carries.




Patriots' Defense Freezes Out Upstart Jaguars, 20-6 | Washington Post
New England prevailed in front of 60,190 bundled-up partisans mostly because their defense was able to contain Jaguars quarterback Mark Brunell and their special teams excelled. They had to on a day Patriots quarterback Drew Bledsoe and the NFL's highest scoring offense struggled in 30 mph wind and single digit wind-chill temperatures. Bledsoe fumbled twice, had a pass intercepted and publicly thanked his defense for bailing him out.​

Both teams also had to endure an 11-minute stoppage of play midway through the second period when a fuse blew in a transformer outside the stadium. That dimmed the lights so low game officials ordered both teams to the sidelines while utility workers scrambled to find and ultimately fix the problem.​

There was more than enough high energy provided by a frequently blitzing Patriots defense and a plucky punt team to eventually end the Jaguars' seven-game winning streak, including stunning playoff road upsets against the Buffalo Bills and Denver Broncos. Those two units combined to force four Jacksonville turnovers, manufacturing 17 Patriots points and the clinching score--cornerback Otis Smith's 47-yard fumble recovery and return for one last touchdown and a breathe-easy 14-point lead with 2 minutes 24 seconds remaining.​

"I was coming in to make a routine play [on running back James Stewart] and one of my teammates [end Chris Slade] knocked the ball out," said Smith, cut by the Jets four games into the season and signed by the Patriots to shore up a struggling secondary. "I jumped up to support the play and take away the outside and the ball just sort of bounced up to me. I saw the quarterback there and just cut it back inside and saw all that room.'​

Willie Clay, whose nickname has been "Big Play" since his Georgia Tech days, lived up to that billing when it counted most. The Jaguars, trailing by 13-6, were driving toward a potential tying touchdown and facing a second and goal at the Patriots 5 inside the four-minute mark.​

Brunell was aiming for tight end Derek Brown flashing in front of him across the back of the end zone, but Clay dropped off his own coverage, stepped in front of Brown and made the catch instead with 3:43 left.​




#26. Otis Smith's 47-yard fumble return clinches 1996 AFC Championship - The Patriots were clinging to a 13-6 AFC Championship Game lead over the upset-minded Jacksonville Jaguars when Chris Slade forced a fumble that Otis Smith returned 47 yards for a late fourth quarter touchdown that cemented a berth in Super Bowl XXXI.


 
Today in Patriots History
Jarvis Green



Happy 46th birthday to Jarvis Green
Born Jan 12, 1979 in Donaldsonville, Louisiana
Patriot DE, 2002-2009; uniform #97
Pats 4th round (126th overall) pick in the 2002 draft, from LSU
Pats résumé: 8 seasons, 121 games, 28 sacks, two rings



Jarvis Green ranks 21st all-time in franchise history with 28 sacks. He played in 121 regular season games with 233 tackles, nine forced fumbles, six fumble recoveries and four pass deflections.

The Patriots went 11-4 in 15 postseason games with Jarvis Green. He had five sacks and 27 tackles in the playoffs, with three tackles for a loss. Green earned rings for his play in Super Bowls 38 and 39.

After a knee injury in 2009 and subsequent surgery, Green lost some acceleration and his football career was soon over. At the time he retired Green ranked seventh (now 14th) all time for the Patriots with 24 tackles for a loss. In his post-NFL career he opened a wholesale shrimp business called Oceans97.



Green was born in a Donaldsonville, Louisiana on January 12, 1979, about 35 miles south of Baton Rouge and 65 miles west of New Orleans. Playing football for Donaldsonville High School, Green became one of the school’s brightest stars. Green spent four years on the high school football team, earning Class 3A Defensive MVP as a Senior. His play was impressive enough to earn him a spot on the Louisiana State football team.​

Green spent four seasons at LSU, quickly turning himself into one of the best pass rushers in school history. Immediately making an impact, Green set a freshman record by recording eight sacks in 10 games in his first year.​

Green initially joined the Patriots as a fourth-round pick in the 2002 NFL Draft. Playing in 15 games as a rookie, Green earned a starting spot along the defensive line late in the season. New England went 9-7, just missing the playoffs, but Green performed well during his first year in the league, recording 2.5 sacks, 21 tackles, and one tackle-for-loss.​


Green built on his promising rookie campaign and blossomed into a larger role player during the Patriots’ 2003 championship season. During the regular season, Green recorded two sacks, 17 tackles, and three tackles-for-loss while playing in all 16 games. However, the defensive end saved his best work for the postseason. In the 2003 AFC Championship Game, Green recorded six tackles while taking down Peyton Manning for 2.5 sacks. His performance was a big reason New England managed to make it to their second Super Bowl in three years.​

Green remained in New England for the next six years, playing in a grand total of 121 games. During his eight-year Patriots career, Green recorded 28 sacks, 232 tackles, and 24 tackles-for-loss. Mostly utilized as a role player, Green had a fantastic two-year stretch from 2006 to 2007. Over the course of those two seasons, Green recorded 14 sacks, 72 tackles, and nine tackles-for-loss.​

Green left the Patriots following the 2009 season to sign a four-year, $20 million deal with the Denver Broncos. However, Green’s career with the Broncos ended before it really began. Despite his lofty contract, the eight-year NFL veteran didn’t make the team out of camp. Green spent the majority of the 2010 season out of football before landing on the Houston Texans late in December. Signed as an emergency depth piece following an injury to Mario Williams, Green didn’t even play a snap with the Texans.​



Jarvis Green didn’t exactly part ways with Bill Belichick and the Patriots on the best of terms.​

The two-time Super Bowl champion defensive end, who’d finished the 2009 season with 36 tackles and a sack, was offered a four-year extension from the Patriots. He turned it down.​

The move is on his small list of regrets.​

“I should have took it,” he reflects. “My sports agent, he got into it with Belichick. It was more or less, you know, you should fire your agent. I can’t get into details, but a lot of s*** happened between Belichick and Denver.”​


You might not think it was the worst move on his part at the time. He was, after all, offered more money to go to Denver than many of us will make in our lifetimes. Denver isn’t an awful place to live in or to be a pro athlete. And he knew Broncos coach Josh McDaniels, the Pats’ former (and now current) offensive coordinator.​

But Green, who is prone to using colorful language in an entertaining way, describes his short stint in Denver as a “****show”.​

It started out promising. After having stem cell work done on his deteriorating knee, he was having the training camp of his life.​

“When I went in the off season, I was number one. When we used to practice these one-on-ones, I was the one who’d get the best guy on the Denver team. I get him lined up, I kill him! I remember calling Pepper Johnson, saying this is my best off season ever. I’m killing these guys. They can’t even keep up with me.​

“I go in to training camp, I’m the sixth string D-line man. I’m like, what the hell just happened? But they knew. They saw my knee kind of tripping in film. They saw that I had something going on with my knee.”​

Still, he was rightly displeased at a demotion without warning or explanation. “I got released the day before cut day. When I left, I didn’t say bye to anyone.”​

After similar fruitless visits with the Browns and Texans…Green describes his three weeks in Texas as a vacation…he “limped out of the office” in Houston and retired.​



Although he grew up within a few hours of the Gulf of Mexico, Donaldsonville, Louisiana native Jarvis Green never knew anything about shrimp (other than the fact that he found it delicious), a major industry on the gulf coast. Now he’s on his way to becoming a shrimp mogul with his company, Oceans 97.​

But before shrimp, there was football. A fourth-round Draft pick by the New England Patriots in 2002, the defensive end, a two-time Super Bowl champion (XXXVIII and XXXIX), Green spent eight years in Foxboro before briefly spending time with the Houston Texans in 2010, his final year in the NFL.​


While football provided the ability to obtain a scholarship, even that almost didn’t happen. The NFL was never a childhood dream and at first, Green’s mother didn’t really want her sons playing. The oldest, Aaron, snuck off and played football for half a season before his family discovered what he was doing. And Green quit after his first day playing in the seventh grade. But then someone else saw something in him, and that changed his life.​

“My coach, he had coached my older brother, he was the one who ran me down, and he was screaming at me, ‘Don’t be a goddamn quitter,” Green recalled. “‘What if I tell your family you’re a quitter?’”​

Green quickly decided he wasn’t a quitter and stayed on the team, ultimately laying down the foundation for his future. Green went off to LSU where in spite of becoming the team’s fourth all-time sack leader, he never let his focus on academics waver.​

Majoring in construction engineering and construction management, Green chose keeping up with his studies so he could graduate on time over a full-press preparation for the Combine, a decision he said probably lowered his Draft status, but that he has never regretted.​

“I could have done better (at the Combine),” he said. “But I walked across the stage with my degree.”​
That focus on planning for life didn’t change once he was in the NFL. Although he quickly became a reliable member of the Patriots defense, he never allowed himself to get comfortable. After his second and third seasons, he did internships at a Rolls Royce dealership in Massachusetts to start educating himself about the business world.​

“I always said, ‘I’ve got to have a plan A, B, C and D.’ I was nervous every day.”​


Then, shortly after he retired from the NFL, his current career in the shrimp industry presented itself. Green was building a hotel in North Dakota when he was approached with an idea from an acquaintance. Green had previously run a restaurant in New Orleans, and was familiar with the insular nature of the shrimp industry, which initially caused him to hesitate.​

“I didn’t want to sell any shrimp and step on toes,” he said. “But, [the friend] said, ‘We’ll teach you to go to Boston. I worked for six months for free. Did the whole Forrest Gump thing. Mopped, swept floors, took the heads off the shrimp. I went from there to work in the freezer. I learned the business from the ground up. The boats, being on the docks, learning how to buy. And For me being African-American in the shrimp business. I stick out like a sore thumb.”​

But that didn’t stop him, and seven years later taking all the knowledge he gained learning the business from the ground up, Green is now running his own shrimp distribution company, Oceans 97.​



The first thing Jarvis Green wants to know, as we sit across the table from each other in the faculty cafeteria at Babson College, is which of the many nearby schools-that-start-with-the-letter-B houses my radio station.​

“Oh, Boston University?” He says. “I’m trying to do something with Boston University.”​

The next thing I know, we’re talking about Green’s plans to sell pre-cooked shrimp to college students with “value added sauce packets” so they “can’t mess it up.”​

And if those aren’t phrases you’d expect to hear from a former defensive end, you’re not alone.​

"I used to play football in the NFL. Won my two Super Bowls. I never thought I’d be doing this, you know. Learning price points. Understanding what it costs to get a shrimp out of the water."​











43:39 Audio Podcast:
Pats from the Past, Episode 22: Jarvis Green - Patriots.com
Former Patriots defensive end Jarvis Green is our guest on this episode of Pats from the Past. Jarvis discusses the differences and similarities after playing for both Coach Nick Saban and Bill Belichick, what sacking Peyton Manning twice in the 2003 AFC Championship game meant to him, life as an entrepreneur after football and more.




41:45 Interview:
Champion On and Off the Field: Jarvis Green's Life After the NFL | Insightful Player Part 1
 
Today in Patriots History
Dan Klecko



Happy 44th birthday to Dan Klecko
Born Jan 12, 1981 in Colts Neck, New Jersey
Patriot DT, 2003-2005; uniform #90
Pats 4th round (117th overall) pick in the 2003 draft, from Temple
Pats résumé: 3 seasons, 29 games, two rings



Dan Klecko played in 29 regular season games for the Patriots, with three starts. He earned rings from Super Bowls 38 and 39, then received a third in SB 41 when the Colts beat the Bears. Over six NFL seasons Klecko played in 63 regular season games and eight playoff games for New England, Indianapolis and Philadelphia.

Bill Belichick occasionally utilized him in a Mike Vrabel type role as an eligible receiver on offense, where he caught all three passes thrown his way in 2004. Unfortunately his most memorable play came against the Patriots when he caught a Peyton Manning pass in the AFCCG, tying the game at 21.

Klecko now works with a financial investment firm that includes a division that focuses on professional entertainers and athletes. He also handles pre and post game analyst duties for the Eagles radio network. His father Joe was a defensive end in the NFL with the Jets from 1977-88, going to four Pro Bowls.











 
Today in Patriots History
Neil Graff



Happy 75th birthday to Neil Graff
Born Jan 12, 1950 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Patriot QB 1974-1975; uniform #15
Signed as a free agent on April 9, 1974
Pats résumé: 2 seasons, 15 games (2 starts), 2 TD, 3 Int, 4 sacks



Neil Graff was originally a 16th round (414th overall) selection of the 1972 draft by the Vikings, out of Wisconsin. He spent '72 on the Minnesota taxi squad, then went back to college in 1973. The Patriots then signed Graff as a free agent in 1974. He served as the backup to Jim Plunkett as well as the holder on field goal and extra point attempts.

Graff started the first two games of the 1975 season for the Patriots , a 7-0 loss to the Oilers and a 22-14 loss to Miami. The quarterback went 18-35 for 221 yards, with two touchdowns (to Randy Vataha and Russ Francis) and three picks.

A combination of factors led to Graff starting those games. Jim Plunkett had separated his shoulder in the preseason on a blindside hit by San Diego defensive end Coy Bacon, and was unable to play. Rookie Steve Grogan was already a fan favorite, but was still far too raw to start. The relationship between Chuck Fairbanks and Plunkett was not good at all, and Plunkett's skill set did not match Fairbanks' vision of the offense. Plunkett was rushed back too soon, Grogan eventually took over - and with the benefit of hindsight, it is no surprise at all that the 1975 Patriots finished 3-11, after a very promising 1974 season when they went 7-7.

On April 30, 1976 the Seattle Seahawks took Graff as part of the expansion draft. He also later spent time with Pittsburgh and Green Bay.





Graff started 33 straight games at Wisconsin. He was the Badgers' MVP and all-Big Ten as a senior. He led the Big Ten in passing and total offense as a junior. He set school records for career passing yards (3,699) and touchdown passes (23) as well as single-game TD passes (4) and passing efficiency (259.9).​

At Lincoln High, Graff was all-state in football and basketball two years and he had NCAA Division I scholarship offers in both sports. He led Lincoln to the mythical state football title as a junior and helped the Patriots to a runner-up finish in basketball as a senior.​

He was named the High School Football Player of the Decade for the 1960s by the Rapid City Journal. Graff was chosen as one of South Dakota's top 50 athletes of the 20th Century by Sports Illustrated. He is a member of the Lincoln High Hall of Fame.​


Neil Graff (CRD# 1544136) is an Investment Advisor Representative working at United Planners' Financial Services Of America in Sioux Falls, SD and has over 33 years of experience in the finance industry. He has taken additional exams to become a Certified Financial Planner (CFP®).​

CFP professionals must pass the comprehensive CFP Certification Examination, pass CFP Board's Fitness Standards for Candidates and Registrants, agree to abide by CFP Board's Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility and Rules of Conduct which put clients' interests first and comply with the Financial Planning Practice Standards.​


Graff was drafted in the 16th round of the NFL draft in 1972. He spent six years with five teams, including the Minnesota Vikings. He played quarterback behind such greats as Fran Tarkenton in Minnesota, Terry Bradshaw in Pittsburgh and Jim Plunkett in New England.​

“I really see my lot in life as the guy who has pushed the former great quarterbacks into the Hall of Fame,” jokes Graff, 64.​

From an early age, he played many sports. In fact, “mixing it up” played a role in his athleticism.​

“I got my start as a quarterback in seventh grade when Coach Don Erickson chose the guy with the biggest hands,” Graff recalls.​

Graff not only played quarterback for the Lincoln Patriots from 1966-68, he was a three-sport athlete, adding basketball and baseball.​

“I would play basketball all winter long outside in the driveway using three basketballs,” Graff says. “When one basketball got too cold and wouldn’t bounce, I’d take it in the house and get another one.”​

Now retired from the NFL, life after football means living a legend.​

Graff’s name is now on an annual trophy. The Neil Graff award, known as the Graffy, is given each year to the most underappreciated, underrated Seattle Seahawk. Graff played quarterback for the 1976 Seattle Seahawks, battling for the top spot against Jim Zorn. After playing in only three preseason games, he was traded to Pittsburgh. But many thought Graff should have been the quarterback. In 2001, the Seattle fans started a website to select the most underappreciated Seahawk and named the award after him.​

Football has taken a toll on Graff’s body. He has had both knees replaced, and an MRI revealed four areas of his brain with a potential to cause problems.​



 
Today in Patriots History
Onree Jackson



Happy 78th birthday to Onree Jackson
Born January 12, 1947; from Brighton, Alabama
Patriot QB, 1969 offseason
Pats 5th round (110th overall) selection of the 1969 draft, from Alabama A&M
Pats résumé: first black quarterback of a HBCU to be drafted as a QB by a professional football league



6'5 Onree Jackson was a three year starting quarterback in college and two-time conference MVP. He was the franchise's first African American quarterback and first quarterback to be drafted by the NFL from a historically black college or university as a QB. (Pete Hall was drafted to play end and Eldridge ****ey to be a wide receiver; Willie Thrower and Sandy Stephens were undrafted. Jim Harris was selected three rounds later by Buffalo from Grambling. He would become the first African American to begin the season as a starting quarterback in the NFL.)

Player Personnel Director Rommie Loudd said that 'Jackson could be the Willie Mays of pro football'. However new Patriot head coach Clive Rush wanted everything to be like it was the previous year with the Jets, often telling Jackson 'Joe (Namath) wouldn't do that'. He chose to make Jet backup Mike Taliaferro the starting quarterback and went so far to say that Jackson ''was behind three other quarterbacks''. The Pats would go 5-16 before Rush was fired.

Jackson was waived before the season began and never returned to the NFL. He played briefly for the minor league Alabama Hawks then spent the rest of his working life as a football coach and teacher in Huntsville, Alabama.






When the New England Patriots take the field Thursday night (9/22/2016) with starting quarterback Jacoby Brissett, former Alabama A&M quarterback Onree Jackson will have a little smile on his face.​

Jackson, who led the 1966 Bulldogs to an unbeaten regular season and the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship, was drafted by the then-Boston Patriots of the old American Football League in 1967. When his name was announced, Jackson became the first black quarterback of a predominantly black university to be drafted as a quarterback by a professional football league.​

The reason he will be smiling is Brissett will become the first black starting quarterback for the Patriots.​

"Things are a lot different now than they were then," Jackson said. "You expect a black quarterback to be in a lot of games.​

"I was one of the pioneers … I took the first step."​

Jackson was released by the Patriots, though, before the regular season.​


Long before Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes, or even Warren Moon and Randall Cunningham, it was Onree Jackson who blazed the trail for black quarterbacks in the NFL.​

It happened 51 years ago when the Boston Patriots selected Jackson in the fifth round of the 1969 NFL Draft.​

It was suggested at the time that Jackson could become the “Willie Mays of Football” given his impressive skill set. But even with that moniker and eye-opening potential, Jackson never played a single snap in the NFL, as he was released before the 1969 regular season.​

Still, he made an impact.​

Jackson is viewed as one of the best to ever play at Alabama A&M and even led his team to a championship victory. He also won the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Overall Player of the Year award in both 1967 and 1968, ultimately becoming the first player to ever attend an all-black school to be selected by a pro football team.​

It wasn’t crazy to think Jackson might thrive with the Patriots, who were led to a 4-10 record in 1969 by coach Clive Rush and quarterback Mike Taliaferro. Instead, he’s a classic case of “what if,” although his accomplishment of reaching the NFL with the Patriots shouldn’t go unnoticed.​



Onree Jackson, center, was a member of the undefeated 1966 Alabama A&M football team.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Henry Thomas



Happy 60th birthday to Henry Thomas
Born January 12, 1965 in Houston
Patriot DT/NT, 1997-2000; uniform #95
Signed as a veteran free agent on June 12, 1997
Pats résumé: 4 seasons, all 64 games (52 starts), 4 forced fumbles, 2 interceptions, 1 pick-six



Henry Thomas grew up in Houston, where his father owned and operated a barbecue restauant for 17 years. He was a two-time all-city and all-district defensive tackle and tight end, and also lettered in track, throwing the discus and shot put. He was a four-year letterman at LSU, where he was all-SEC and AP all-american honorable mention; he once blocked two field goals in a game against Notre Dame. The Vikings drafted Thomas in the third round (72nd overall) in the 1987 draft.

In 1988 Thomas led the NFL with four forced fumbles, and a year later he and Keith Millard combined for 27 sacks - the most by a DT tandem since the NFL began recording sack totals in 1982. While with Minnesota he was named to the Pro Bowl in 1991 and 1992. Thomas and John Randle combined for 21½ sacks in 1993, second most for teammates in the NFL that year. The Vikings placed the franchise tag on Thomas in 1994, and then he signed with Detroit as a free agent in 1995.


Thomas got off to a great start with the Patriots, allaying concerns that after ten NFL season he may be over the hill. In week one of the 1997 season Thomas forced and recovered a fumble off QB Stan Humphries as the Pats blew out the Chargers, 41-7. For his first season with the Patriots, Thomas recorded seven sacks, which were the most by a Patriot defensive tackle since Ray Hamilton had eight in 1980.

The following year Thomas led the Pats with 6½ sacks to become the first interior defensive lineman to lead the team in sacks in 29 years - since AFL great Houston Antwine led the Pats in sacks in 1969. On Oct 4, 1998, Thomas had a crucial 24-yard pick-six off Danny Wuerffel in a 30-27 win at New Orleans over Mike Ditka's Saints. Henry Thomas had three sacks on Dec 13, 1998 at St. Louis, which was at that time the second most in franchise history. A year later, in 1999 Henry led all Patriot defensive linemen with 87 tackles, including 56 solo stops.



After starting all but one game for his first three years in New England for Pete Carroll, a now 35-year old Thomas saw his playing time dwindle in 2000 under new head coach Bill Belichick. Former Jet Bobby Hamilton was signed and took over many of his snaps, as Thomas started only five games that year. The Patriots released Henry on March 13, 2001, thus ending his pro football career.


Nov 12, 2000: Bill Belichik with Henry Thomas (95) and Brandon Mitchell during a 19-11 loss at Cleveland.​


Henry Thomas played in 213 NFL games, with 93½ sacks and 1,006 tackles. He also had three sacks and two fumble recoveries in 13 playoff games. Thomas had 21 sacks and 237 tackles in 64 regular season games for the Patriots, with four forced fumbles, three fumble recoveries, two interceptions and one touchdown. Thomas also had twelve tackles in three postseason games for the Pats.


Despite his lengthy and productive career, I do feel bad for Henry Thomas. He played in the NFCCG as a rookie, but never again went that far in the postseason during his NFL career. He just missed two New England Patriot teams that made it to the Super Bowl: the Pats won the AFCCG and then lost to Green Bay under Bill Parcells the year before he arrived, and the Patriots won Super Bowl 36 eleven months after he was re;eased by Bill Belichick.
 
@jmt57 I appreciate your time and effort into putting these threads together.

While the current-day NEP is a mess, this franchise has a rich history few others have.

Thanks for bringing it back for us to soak in.

-RW
 
Today In Patriots History
Squish the Fish Game


Sunday January 12, 1986 at 4:00
1985 AFC Championship Game, at the Orange Bowl
New England Patriots 31, Miami Dolphins 14
Head Coaches: Raymond Berry, Don Shula
Quarterbacks: Tony Eason, Dan Marino
Odds: Miami favored by 5½
Weather: 61°, 12 mph wind, clear
Game MVPs: Tony Eason, Craig James, Patriot defense
Pats improve to 14-5; advance to Super Bowl XX
Dolphins finish season with a record of 13-5


- Patriots win the AFC, improve to 14-5 and advance to Super Bowl 20.
- Dolphins drop to 13-5 and are denied a Super Bowl game and rematch with the Bears.
- Miami was the only team to defeat Chicago that season, keeping the Fins 1972 17-0 season intact.
- Squish the Fish Curse? Since this game the Dolphins have never done better than 1-1 in a postseason, losing their last six straight.
- Miami is 6-14 in the playoffs since this game, has not won a playoff game since 2000, and has missed 19 of the last 23 postseasons.




Full First Half (1 hour, 46 minutes)



Full Second Half (1 hour, 39 minutes)
















Key Stat #1
Turnovers: Miami 6, New England 2
(Fumble recoveries by Julius Adams, Greg Hawthorne, Garin Veris and Lester Williams; interceptions by Raymond Clayborn and Fred Marion)

Key Stat #2
Pats Rushing: 59 for 255 yards
Craig James, Robert Weathers and Tony Collins combined for 253 yards on 50 carries.
Miami Rushing: 13 for 68 yards
[Key Stat #2B, Time of Possession: Pats 39:51, Dolphins 20:09; Pats held the ball for 19 minutes and 42 seconds more than Miami!]







Steve Grogan sparked the run to the Pats first AFC Championship.



Tony Collins, Craig James and Robert Weathers were unstoppable, with 255 yards rushing.



Don Blackmon introduces himself to Dan Marino.



NT Lester Williams holds up the football after one of the six takeaways by the Pats



Linebackers Johnny Rembert and Brian Ingram celebrate after the victory.



An exuberant John Hannah celebrates the first Patriot AFC championship.






Highlight Video:

In those days it was impossible to find any Pats gear; every year the Sears Catalog would come and feature t-shirts and other stuff only from Dallas, Chicago, NY Giants, Jets and a few others. For this game they sould cheap ass "Squish the Fish T-Shirts" that were practically thread bear. I wore that sucker out, that game gave us old time fans hope that things could sometimes get better.

That game was televised, as it was away, but almost all home games were blacked out as they never met the criteria to be televised locally. So my walkman was my friend..

The League and the game was much different then, but it was always about football which so many of us followed from TC at Bryant College until the last game..
 
Today in Patriots History
More January 12 Trivia



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

Dave Puzzuoli, 64 (Jan 12, 1961)
Born in Greenwich CT; Stamford (CT) Catholic High School
Phillip David Puzzuoli was a sixth round 1983 draft pick by the Browns, out of Pitt. The nose tackle played in 77 games for Cleveland from 1983 to 1987, with 18½ sacks, missing only the three 'replacement players' games during the 1987 strike. Puzzuoli provided a strong inside pass rush, his landmark moment being the sack of John Elway that temporarily derailed "The Drive" in the 1986 AFC Championship Game against the Denver Broncos.

In his post-football life Puzzuoli hooked up with some friends, and ended up becoming a sales executive for MRI scanners.



Ken Kaplan, 65 (Jan 12, 1960)
Born in Boston; grew up in Brockton; Brockton High School; University of New Hampshire
The Tampa Bay Bucs drafted Kaplan in the sixth round, 158th overall in the 1983 draft. The offensive tackle played in 35 NFL games for Tampa, Green Bay and New Orleans from 1983-1985.


Rick Concannon (Jan 12, 1908 - June 17, 1986)
Born and raised in Waltham; Waltham High School; Dean Academy (now Dean College)
The G/T played for the Staten Island Stapletons and Boston Yanks from 1932 to 1936.


Tyler Murphy, 33 (Jan 12, 1992)
Born and raised in Wethersfield CT; Wethersfield High School; Boston College
Murphy was a quarterback at Florida, who transferred to BC for his senior year. He broke Doug Flutie's school record for rushing yards by a quarterback (both single-season and career), and broke the ACC single-season rushing record by a QB with 1,079 yards gained. Murphy was signed in 2015 by Pittsburgh as an undrafted rookie, who converted him to wide receiver. He appeared in only two NFL games - ironically, as a backup quarterback after a Ben Roethlisberger injury.


Lou Jennings (Jan 12, 1904 - Oct 25, 1957)
Providence Steamroller
The native American end/center played in the early days of pro football, for the 1929 Providence Steamroller and 1930 Portsmouth Spartans.

 
Today in Pro Football History
More January 12 Trivia



Other noteable pro football players born on this date:

Drew Pearson, 74 (Jan 12, 1951)
Hall of Fame WR had 7,822 yards receiving and 48 TD with Dallas from 1973-1983.

Chad Greenway, 42 (Jan 12, 1983)
Pro Bowl linebacker played in 156 games with the Vikings from 2007 to 2016.

Mac Speedie (Jan 12, 1920 - March 12, 1993)
Hall of Fame end for the Browns led the league in catches four times and receiving yards twice, winning four AAFC titles with Cleveland and one more once the team merged into the NFL in 1950.

Tom Dempsey (Jan 12, 1947 - April 4, 2020)
Amazed the sports world when he kicked a record-setting 63 yard field goal in 1970 - a milestone that would not be broken for 43 years. Not bad for a guy born with no toes on his kicking foot.
 
For the younger crowd, that entire game is on youtube.

If you want to watch what pure, "beat the **** out your opponent looks like" pay attention to what the Pats O line did to the Miami D.
That game was the game that changed myself
I never expected that win
At that time i was only able to buy american newspapers in the very few available places...

James Collins Clayborn Eason Adams Hannah...

One of my favourite wins ever
 
In those days it was impossible to find any Pats gear; every year the Sears Catalog would come and feature t-shirts and other stuff only from Dallas, Chicago, NY Giants, Jets and a few others.
My first Pats Gear was given me by a supplier that went to NY...i asked him to buy me "something" of the New England Patriots...when he returned to Italy he told me that he was so stressed as he tried to find something in every possibile place ruining his trip...ah ah ah ah... nothing at all...
He was able to find miracously a red hat with Pat Patriot logo and Patriots name on it...
I was so HAPPY to have it...
 
Last edited:
It is a fun thread…


…if you, uh…




 
For the younger crowd, that entire game is on youtube.

If you want to watch what pure, "beat the **** out your opponent looks like" pay attention to what the Pats O line did to the Miami D.
I seem to remember the Pats kickoff team scoring a TD or two in those playoffs. I'm not sure if it was vs Miami, the Jets or the Raiders but it's something that you very rarely see.
 
@jmt57 I appreciate your time and effort into putting these threads together.

While the current-day NEP is a mess, this franchise has a rich history few others have.

Thanks for bringing it back for us to soak in.

-RW
If only they had kept the logo.
 
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