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Today In Patriots History April 1: Happy Birthday to Don Hasselbeck

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Today in Patriots History
Don Hasselbeck



Happy 70th birthday to Don Hasselbeck
Born April 1, 1955 in Cincinnati
Patriot tight end, 1977-1983; uniform #80
Selected in the 2nd round (52nd overall) of the 1977 draft, from Colorado
Pats résumé: 7 seasons, 86 games (30 starts); 99 receptions for 1,444 yards (14.6 ypc) with 15 touchdowns; '77 All-Rookie Team; 1 TD in 2 playoff games



With Russ Francis already on the roster, Don Hasselbeck was not prominent in the passing game when he joined the Patriots. Initially he was utilized more as an additional lineman to block in the running game. At 6'7 he did make for a compelling red zone target though; Hasselbeck had four touchdown receptions his rookie season on just nine receptions.

After the end of the 1980 season, Francis suddenly retired at the age of 27, fed up with the Sullivan's cheapness. Russ had been named to the Pro Bowl but did not play due to an injury - and the miserly organization used that as an excuse to not pay him a bonus in his contract for being a Pro Bowler. More egregious was how Francis witnessed the team treat Darryl Stingley after he was paralyzed, attempting to cancel Stingley's life insurance.


Hasselbeck entered the void created by Francis' sudden departure and became the starting tight end in 1981. Despite missing two games with a knee injury, he caught 46 passes, which was just one off of the franchise single season record for a TE at that time. Hasselbeck had 808 yards receiving in '81, setting a team record for a TE. In addition his 17.6 yards per catch was best in the NFL by a tight end that year, and ranked fifth best by any receiver in the league that season.


In the strike shortened 1982 season, Ron Meyer split playing time at tight end between Hasselbeck and Lin Dawson, an '81 draft pick. The following year the Pats added Derrick Ramsey and Brooks Williams to the position, and there was a surplus of youth at the tight end position. Seven-year veteran Hasselbeck was shipped off to Oakland - where he won a super bowl ring with the Raiders. He spent one season each with the Raiders, Vikings and Giants, before retiring after the 1985 season.

Don Hasselbeck had 18 touchdowns in 123 NFL games, averaging 14.4 yards on 107 receptions. He played in 86 games with 30 starts while with the Patriots, with 99 receptions for 1,444 yards. Hasselbeck scored 15 touchdowns for the Patriots and averaged 14.6 yards per reception with the club.




2004 Cincinnati High School Sports Hall of Fame


Without question, Don Hasselbeck is the finest all-around athlete in La Salle High School history. He earned 13 varsity letters with the Lancers and was inducted in 1995 as a charter member of the school's Hall of Fame.​

Don, who graduated from grade school at 6-foot-4, went on to become a Parade High School All-American in football, a collegiate All-American at the University of Colorado, and enjoyed nine seasons in the National Football League with New England, the Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders, Minnesota and the New York Giants.​

Hasselbeck was a two-way starter as tight end and defensive tackle at La Salle where he started for four straight seasons. Only partial statistics could be discovered on Hasselbeck, but he was an all-city selection in both football and basketball as both as junior and senior. He set a school record for 32 receptions for 416 yards as a junior at La Salle. Don was also a four-year starter in track. As an indication of his outstanding athletic ability, as a 6-foot-7 sophomore, he actually won the Greater Cincinnati League high jump title!​



New England Patriots Alumni - Don Hasselbeck
Growing up in football-crazed Ohio, Don had three brothers (and two sisters) and all four boys played. By the time he was in eighth grade, Don was already 6-4 and Dad, a brewery builder, already had thoughts of his boy going to a football powerhouse like Ohio State, Michigan or Notre Dame.
“After I chose Colorado, I don’t think we talked for a year,” recalled Don.​

They eventually made up and Don went on to have a fantastic career as a Buffalo tight end while majoring in Fine Arts/Design. He was drafted by New England in the second round in 1977, where he found himself backing up “All World” tight end Russ Francis.​

Adjusting to the pros and New England wasn’t that simple for Hasselbeck. There wasn’t much in the way of guidance from the team level back then to help players make the jump from college to the pros. Then, there was the conditions of Schaeffer Stadium. Hasselbeck went from a first class program in Colorado to a place where “the weight room was smaller than a one-car garage.”​

Eventually, Hasselbeck made the adjustment, enough so that he was elect a player representative, addressing collective bargaining issues with the team’s management.​




Once football was finished, Don decided to put his education to use and he opened up an architectural design company and also earned his real estate license. He did well with his career choice, but over time, he wasn’t quite getting the enjoyment out of it he would have liked.​

After reading the book, “What Color Is Your Parachute,” Don decided he needed to somehow get back into working with the game once again.​

At the time Reebok was the No. 2 shoe manufacturer behind Nike, and Don saw an opportunity for them to tap into the football market. Reebok gave him a shot and he got a meeting set up with Lou Holtz at Notre Dame. Since then, things have worked out pretty well for Hasselbeck; he is now in charge of Reebok North, serving Maine across to Alaska with 26 sales reps all under his direction.​

Don has also done well as a dad. His three sons, Tim, Matt and Nathaneal, all grew up loving and playing football. Tim and Matt played quarterback at Boston College and in the NFL and Nathaneal is currently a cornerback with Boston College.​























 
Today in Patriots History
Mark Wheeler



Happy 55th birthday to Mark Wheeler
Born April 1, 1955 in San Marcos, Texas
Patriot defensive tackle, 1996-1998; uniform #97
Signed as a four-year veteran, unrestricted free agent on March 21, 1996
Pats résumé: three seasons, 40 games (31 starts); 118 tackles, 5 sacks, 1 FF, 1 FR; 19 tackles in 6 postseason games



Mark Wheeler is part of an answer to New England Patriot history and trivia: he was one of four players lost in free agency that led to the Pats getting a certain compensatory draft pick in the sixth round of the 2000 draft. He was originally a third round draft pick by the Bucs in 1992, from Texas A&M. Wheeler was a starter for four seasons in Tampa, then started at left defensive tackle for two more years in Foxborough.

Wheeler played in 40 games with 31 starts for the Pats, with 118 tackles (77 solo), five sacks, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery. Chad Eaton replaced Wheeler in the starting lineup in '98, and Wheeler departed the following offseason as an unrestricted free agent, signing with Philadelphia. Over the course of eight seasons Mark Wheeler played in 108 NFL games with 77 starts, collecting 16 sacks and 277 tackles (217 solo).















1998 Patriots Media Guide -- page 230-231

 
Today in Patriots History
Bob Soltis



In memory of Bob Soltis, who would have turned 89 today
Born April 1, 1936 in Minneapolis
Died June 26, 2009 at the age of 73 in Chanhassen, Minnesota
Patriot defensive back, 1960-1961; uniform #42

Signed as a free agent on June 24, 1960
Pats résumé: two seasons, 17 games (zero starts); two interceptions, with a long return of 33 yards



An original Boston Patriot, Bob Soltis' pro football career was cut short due to a serious back injury early in the 1961 season. He played in 17 games for the Patriots with two interceptions. Soltis spent much of his post-football career as a sales executive and manager in the computer industry.



1960 Boston Patriots. Front row standing, fourth from left: 24-year old Bob Soltis, #42


Pro Football Archives -- Bob Soltis


1961 Patriots Media Guide

Graduate of North High and the University of MN. Played football for the MN Gophers from 1955 to 1959, drafted by and played for the NY Giants and Boston Patriots. Retired to enjoy his Whitefish Lake home in 2001 following a long career in computer Sales and Management for many companies. Loved spending time traveling with his wife to many world-wide destinations. Bob was an avid book and movie fan and spent may hours following his nephews and nieces sporting events.
 
Today in Patriots History
David Posey



Happy 69th birthday to David Posey
Born April 1, 1956 in Painesville, Ohio; raised in Boca Raton, Florida
Patriot kicker, 1978; uniform #9
Signed as a free agent on October 6, 1978
Pats résumé: one season; 11 games plus one playoff game; one game-winning kick



After John Smith missed all but three games in 1978, the Patriots had a revolving door at the kicker position. Posey only went 11-22 on field goal attempts (including 5-11 from 30-39 yards away), resulting in his NFL career only lasting one season. However, he did connect on the 21 yard game-winning field goal that clinched victory for Pats' first division title in 15 years.













It has been a long time between divisional championships for the New England Patriots — 15 years, in fact, and a different league. But yesterday the Patriots clinched the American Conference's Eastern Division title with a 26-24 triumph in the last seconds over the Buffalo Bills and guaranteed themselves a berth in the National Football League divisional playoffs on Dec. 30 and 31.​

Patriot Field Goal Decisive

The Patriots, who were division champions in 1963 in the American Football League, used a 2I‐yard field goal by David Posey with eight seconds left to play to subdue the Bills at Foxboro, Mass. They gained their 11th victory against four defeats.​

Posey's kick ended a 53‐yard drive in eight plays in the final minute and a half. Buffalo had taken a 24‐21 lead with 4:39 left to go on a 21‐yard touchdown pass from Joe Ferguson to Frank Lewis. The Patriots then drove to the Buffalo 2‐yard line but lost the ball on a fumble by Sam Cunningham. The Bills took an intentional safety and kicked the ball to the Patriots, who took over on their own 47‐yard line and marched to the narrow triumph.​

New England rushed for 249 yards to tie the N.F.L. record for most rushing yardage by a team in a season with 3,088. The record was set by the Bills in 1973 when O.J. Simpson wound up with 2,003 yards, the N.F.L. individual mark.​




Sportswriter Dan Jenkins didn't think much of the 1978 season. Had he waited a few more days to publish his column, he could have added the Sullivans suspending and reinstating Chuck Fairbanks to his airing of grievances. As it was, the Pats still made his list twice.

Take Dallas, for example. Please. The Super Bowl champions lost four times with big Nielsens. In fact, the vaunted Cowboys might not have won even one important game before a nationwide audience had it not been for the ineptitude of New England Placekicker David Posey, plus a couple of zebras who helped the Cowboys preserve their 17-10 victory. That Tony Dorsett gained 1,325 yards was undoubtedly a shock statistic to most followers of the sport. How could Dorsett have gained 1,325 yards when he quite obviously spent most of his time fumbling, oversleeping or arguing with Tom Landry? . . .

• Coach John McVay of the New York Giants standing idly by and allowing Quarterback Joe Pisarcik to fumble away a sure victory over Philadelphia when there was only enough time left in the game to reach in your pocket for the car keys. The Giants, who have had only two winning seasons in 15, reacted to this in their usual inept way by canning McVay's offensive coordinator, Bob Gibson.​

• Oakland's Ken Stabler, deciding not to throw an interception, for a change, kept the ball on the ground for the intentional triple-fumble touchdown that beat San Diego.​

• Denver and Atlanta winning games on last-play field goals when the kickers got another chance after they had missed their first ones.​

• Assorted NFL cheerleaders posing in the nude, rolling undercover cops and causing almost as much embarrassment to some owners as the NFC Central.​

• Carroll Rosenbloom becoming the only man ever to make a sympathetic figure out of George Allen by firing his new coach after two exhibition games.​

• Such stars as O. J. Simpson, Bert Jones, Bob Griese, Chuck Foreman and Ken Anderson missing parts of the season because of injuries. Not to mention approximately 200 other players who were lost for the season.​

• Chicago's Walter Payton gaining the most secretive 1,395 yards in history, because the Bears experimented with a no-quarterback offense under new Coach Neill Armstrong, who viewed Payton more as a decoy than a runner.​

• Cleveland Cornerback Ron Bolton, following a near-riot in Municipal Stadium after the Browns had lost their second straight game as the result of a controversial call in the waning moments, saying of the officials, "They're the only guys who can rob you and then get a police escort out of the stadium."​

•Last year's NFL scoring leader, Errol Mann of the Raiders, missing extra points in five different games and more field goals than Al Davis could count.​

• David Sims of Seattle leading the NFL in touchdowns; Jim Zorn of Seattle becoming the best lefthanded quarterback since, well, Ken Stabler; and Steve Largent of Seattle becoming the new Raymond Berry by catching an AFC-high 71 passes for 1,168 yards—while all the big names were on vacation.​

• New England blowing its opening game to Washington at home, partly because an unidentified Patriot left a playsheet in the Redskins' dressing room.

• The Atlanta Falcons finding a placekicker (Tim Mazzetti) in a bar.​

• Washington beating Dallas 9-5 in a touchdownless game on Monday night to raise its record to 5-0, and beating Detroit to go 6-0, but then losing eight of its next 10 games—prompting the supporters of $250,000-per-year bench warmer Quarterback Billy Kilmer to suggest that the Redskins wouldn't have collapsed had Kilmer been playing instead of Joe Theismann, which is what would have happened if George Allen had still been eating ice cream in D.C. What they overlook is that if George Allen had been in D.C, the Redskins probably wouldn't have won the first six.​

• The 49ers' Freddie Solomon dropping four passes for a total of at least 130 yards in a single game, proving that if he were the sky, he could probably drop the Goodyear blimp.​






Pro Football Archives -- David Posey

 
Today in Patriots History
Brian Dowling



Happy 78th birthday to Brian Dowling
Born April 1, 1947 in Cleveland
Patriot quarterback, 1970-1973; uniform #14
Signed as a free agent on April 9, 1970
Pats résumé: 25 games (zero starts); 29-54 (54%), 383 yards (7.1 yards/attempt), 2 TD, one pick; 35 yards rushing, 3 TD



Brian Dowling is most well known for being the inspiration of "BD" in Doonesbury comic strip. He was Yale's quarterback in 'The Game' in 1968, the 29-29 tie versus my distant cousin Vic Gatto and Harvard.




Character forever linked to tie game Yale 'lost' to Harvard in '68


Football's Unforgettable Tie


Yale quarterback Brian Dowling refused to lose





BD was with the Patriots for two seasons, appearing in 25 games with no starts. He completed 29 of 54 passes (54%) for 383 yards with two touchdowns and one interception. Dowling spent much of his post-football professional career as an an insurance industry consultant, working with a venture capitalist in the Boston area.




Brian Dowling, the former Yale All America quarter back, discusses plays with Patriots coach Clive Rush at the UMass training site in Amherst.
Dowling is seeking a spot on the Boston squads. 7/27/1970







1973 Patriots Media Guide -- page 22-23

Pro Football Archives -- Brian Dowling

Pro Sports Transactions -- Brian Dowling


 
Today in Patriots History
Chris Eitzmann



In memory of Chris Eitzmann, who would have turned 48 today
Born April 1, 1977; from Hardy, Nebraska
Died December 29, 2021 at the age of 44 after suffering from CTE
Patriot tight end, 2000; uniform #46

Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent from Harvard on April 25, 2000
Pats résumé: one season, five games (one start)



The Harvard grad was once a roommate with Tom Brady. The 6-5, 255 pound tight end began the season on the practice squad, and was elevated to the active roster on October 21. He played in five games during Bill Belichick's first season as head coach of the Patriots, with one start. Eitzmann landed on injured reserve on December 1; he was released as part of final camp cuts on September 2, 2001.

Chris Eitzmann later spent time with the Browns and played for Frankfurt in NFL Europe, but did not appear in any more NFL games. He moved back to Nebraska and became a financial advisor after retiring from football. In 2007, he completed his MBA at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College. Eitzmann died from alcohol poisoning in 2021 at age 44, after suffering from CTE in the last years of his life.




Sept 6, 2000:
Patriots sign tight end Chris Eitzmann to practice squad | Patriots.com

Sept 26, 2004:

Sept 29, 2016:

Jan 2, 2023:





Pro Football Archives -- Chris Eitzmann







 
Today in Patriots History
More April 1 Trivia


April 1, 1977:
Patriots sign LB Dave Wasick

The Chiefs selected Wasick in the sixth round of the 1975 draft, from San Jose State. He spent the '75 season on IR with Kansas City, '76 on IR with the Jets, and he hit the trifecta when the Pats placed him on IR on August 11, 1977. Wasick spent the 1979 offseason with the 49ers, but he never did get into a regular season NFL game.

This guy was a bit difficult to track down because Pro Sports Transactions alternately misspells his name as David Warich / David Warick while with the Patriots. According to the San Jose Spartans website he was a 1974 Pacific Coast Athletic Conference defensive player of the year as a defensive tackle. Looks like he became an attorney post-NFL.

1977 Patriots Media Guide -- page 34





April 1, 1991:
Patriots sign free agent QB Hugh Millen, free agent RB Victor Jones, and Plan B free agent FB Ivy Joe Hunter

Millen was 5-15 in two seasons in New England, throwing 17 touchdowns and 28 interceptions.

Jones was waived on August 26 and never played for the Pats. He played in 75 NFL games with one start as a backup and special teamer.

Hunter started 11 games in '91, with 18 carries and nine receptions. At least he had a cool name.




April 1, 1992:
Pats sign free agent WR Alex Johnson and free agent G Larry Williams

Johnson was released on September 1, never playing for the Pats. He played in five NFL games, all in 1991 for the Oilers.

Williams played in 13 games with nine starts for the Patriots in '92. He played in 61 NFL games, mostly with the Browns.




April 1, 1993:
New England trades WR Irving Fryar to Miami for a 1993 second round pick, and a 1994 third

Fryar was a #1 pick who never lived up to his draft status with the Patriots, making more news for off field indiscretions. As soon as he was traded his career improved, because, of course.

The draft picks were used on Todd Rucci ('93), and a draft bust by the name of Joe Burch ('94).

No quarterback? No problem. The Patriots don’t have any wide receivers, anyway.​
Thursday, the Patriots traded Irving Fryar, their only distinguished wide receiver.​
Fryar, 30, was sent to the Miami Dolphins for two draft picks — a second-round choice in 1993 and a third-round pick in ’94.​
At a press conference in Miami, Fryar said he was ecstatic to be joining the Dolphins, who have one of the NFL’s most prolific passers in quarterback Dan Marino.​
Thursday, the Patriots traded Irving Fryar, their only distinguished wide receiver. Fryar, 30, was sent to the Miami Dolphins for two draft picks. . .​





The Miami Dolphins gave Dan Marino a top-flight receiver Thursday when they acquired Irving Fryar from the New England Patriots in exchange for two draft picks.​
Fryar, 30, had been New England's best wide receiver.​
He led the Patriots with 55 catches for 791 yards in 1992, after catching a career- high 68 for 1,014 yards in 1991. In nine years in New England, Fryar caught 363 passes for 5,726 yards.​
The Dolphins are rebuilding their receiving corps in anticipation of losing Mark Clayton to free agency. They signed former New York Giants receiver Mark Ingram as a free agent last month. They will team with holdover Mark Duper to give Marino at least three quality wide receivers.​
New England finished 2-14 last year, and new Patriots Coach Bill Parcells has been cleaning out some of his veterans. Fullback John Stephens was traded Tuesday to Green Bay, and they are trying to deal quarterback Hugh Millen.​




April 1, 1999:
The Patriots receive a seventh round compensatory pick for the loss of free agents Keith Byars and Sam Gash[/b]

The Pats used that draft pick on Marshfield native Sean Morey. The special team specialist had a nice NFL career; unfortunately it was with the Eagles, Steelers and Cardinals, after the Pats gave up on him.




April 1, 2002:
Patriots re-sign ERFA long snapper Lonie Paxton

Mr. Snow Angel won two more rings, snapping in 155 regular and postseason games with the Patriots.




April 1, 2005:
Free agent cornerback Omare Lowe signs with Seattle

Lowe played in three games for the Pats in 2004, and 43 NFL games from 2002 to 2008.




April 1, 2008:
RG Nick Kaczur is arrested


Kaczur remained the starter at right guard through the 2009 season. He played in 68 games (62 starts) from 2005 to 2009 for the Pats.
 
Today in Patriots History
More Recent April 1 Trivia


April 1, 2016:
Safety Patrick Chung re-signed to a one-year contract extension




April 1, 2019:
Unrestricted free agent OT Cedrick Lang is signed to a one-year, $500k contract

Lang was waived on August 31. He had previously spent time with the Giants, Broncos and Vikings, and later with the Colts - but never got on the field in a regular season NFL game.




April 1, 2020:
QB Cody Kessler is released

This turned out to be the final stop of the USC quarterback's NFL career. A third round pick by the Browns in 2016, Kessler went 0-8 with six TD and two picks as a rookie on Hue Jackson's pitiful 1-15 team.




April 1, 2025:


 
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