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Today In Patriots History April 19, 1960: Phil Bissell creates Pat Patriot

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Today in Patriots History
Pat Patriot


April 19, 1960:
Cartoonist Phil Bissell drew what would become known as Pat Patriot as part of his $25-per-day newspaper duties.




Pat gets his name from that first cartoon. Courtesy Phil Bissell


Great article on Bissell with some Patriot history here:
In 1960, Boston Globe cartoonist Phil Bissell, working for $25 a day, was handed an assignment that would change his life—and the lives of fans of the brand-new AFL football team coming to Boston.​

“Sports editor Jerry Nason came to me and he said, ‘They’ve decided to call the team the Boston Patriots. You better have a cartoon ready for tomorrow’s edition.’ I sat down, I drew that cartoon original of Pat in about 45 minutes,” Bissell said. “I thought about it for about two minutes and went to work. I had to get the day’s work out.”​

The whereabouts of that original drawing are a source of some consternation for Bissell.​

“In those days, I was told I worked for the paper, they owned everything I did, and that was all there was to it,” he said. “And I told them at that time, a cartoonist should be able to get his material back, and what they were being paid—what I was being paid—should just be for use of that cartoon.”​

After submitting it for publication, Bissell never saw the original drawing again.​

“When the cartoon appeared in the paper, Nason took it, he gave it—G-A-V-E—he gave it away to Billy Sullivan, who was the owner of the Patriots,” Bissell said.​

To make matters worse, the drawing would meet an untimely demise. As Bissell describes it, “It went up in flames in Billy Sullivan’s summer home on Cape Cod with all the original cover programs.”​

That said, Bissell describes his relationship with Sullivan, who owned the Patriots from 1960 to 1988, as one of the best he’s ever had.​

“When he got the cartoon, he wrote me a very nice letter thanking me because Jerry said I gave my permission for them to have it. It never happened,” Bissell said.​

Upon learning about this miscommunication, Sullivan called Bissell into his office and not only paid him $100 for the use of his illustration, but hired him to create the artwork for the team’s now-famous program covers—placing an inordinate amount of trust in the cartoonist.​

“Billy Sullivan told me, ‘I don’t want to see any of your covers until I enter the stadium, because when I see the covers in the hands of the people, and they are getting a smile out of it, I know the cartoons have been successful,'” Bissell said. “And that’s the way Billy Sullivan worked. He was an awful good egg.”​












For the low, low price of $91.98 (with free shipping!), you can get your very own Phil Bissell paperback book, PatsPa!: 65 Years of Cartoons, Caricatures & Creating a Football Icon. Published in 2014, it is 222 pages long, with a foreward by Gino Cappelletti.

PatsPa!: 65 Years of Cartoons, Caricatures & Creating a Football Icon | Amazon
Renowned cartoonist Phil Bissell shares some of his favorite stories and works (many not seen in print for decades) from his remarkable sixty-five year career. Starting with a Boston newspaper in the early 1950s, he estimates he’s drawn nearly fifty thousand faces in his career including astronauts, presidents and countless hall of fame athletes. Best known as the creator of the New England football team’s Pat Patriot logo, his artwork is featured at the Baseball, Football and Basketball Halls of Fame as well as The Eisenhower and Ford Presidential Libraries and numerous professional sports museums across America.


2007 thread :


2015 thread - @italian pat patriot , how did you like the book?




Oct 10, 2022:
New England Patriots fans liked what they saw Sunday, when the rookie-led team took care of the Detroit Lions, 29-0.​

Another welcomed sight was the old-school logo at midfield and on the players' helmets. The logo depicted the iconic Pat Patriot.​

It was a one-time cartoonist for the Worcester Telegram and Evening Gazette, Phil Bissell, who created the logo. Bissell was a sports and editorial cartoonist for the affiliated papers from 1967 to 1975.​

It was years earlier, while he was working for the Boston Globe, that Bissell came up with the logo, with the player in a tricorne hat.​

In 1960, then working for $25 a day, Bissell was given an assignment to capture the then Boston Patriots, according to sportslogos.net. He came up with a unique image that was synonymous with the team for three decades.​





Dec 1, 2022:



"I just wanted to make a guy that looked like he's ready to go. That he had hands all broken because he was in the trenches digging holes," he said. "He was a real fighter in the trenches, and that's what made him a good Pat."


The logo version of Pat Patriot was the Patriots' official insignia until 1993, when it was replaced by the current logo which is known as flying Elvis.​

Bissell does not speak so highly of the present-day Patriots logo.​

"Frankly, the flying Elvis was fine if it was on the car hood or something. But it didn't have any feeling. This guy's got feeling," he said. "That's why he was able to center the ball and do as well as he did."

Those who wore it fondly remember it. Bissell has a football not only signed by former Patriots quarterback Scott Zolak, but Zolak added his own rendition of Pat Patriot.​

He added: "Best logo ever!!"​










 
When people say Pat Patriot has character and Flying Elvis doesn't, this is why...

Pat Patriot will always be a classic, a better mascot, though Flying Elvis has grown on me over the intervening decades since he was introduced.

Both are good, Pat Patriot is just that much better.
 
I knew this day was special.
 



Born in Worcester on Feb. 1, 1926, Bissell went on to have a long career as a cartoonist for multiple editorial publications across New England, including the Boston Globe


Bissell has drawn the likenesses of more than 60,000 athletes and political figures. He’s been drawing all his life, and received his first paycheck at the age of seven.


Education
Student, School Practical Art, Boston, 1948.​
Degree (honorary), Art Instruction School, Minneapolis, 1971.​
Bachelor of Fine Arts (honorary), Lesley University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2007.​

Career
Theatrical and editorial sports cartoonist, Christian Science Monitor, 1949-1953;​
sports cartoonist, Boston Globe, 1953-1965;​
sports and editorial cartoonist, Worcester Telegram and Evening Gazette, 1967-1975;​
sports cartoonist, Boston Herald, 1975-1977;​
editorial cartoonist, Lowell (Massachusetts) Sun, 1980-1987;​
illustrator, cartoonist, Cartoon Corner Syndicate, Rockport, Massachusetts, since 1987.​
Consultant District of Columbia Graphics, Lexington, Massachusetts, since 1987.​
Originator football helmet logo New England Patriots, 1960.​
Portrait artist: City of Lowell Bridge Placque, 1982.​

Achievements
Bissell has been listed as a noteworthy cartoonist by Marquis Who's Who.​

Membership
Member Baseball Writers Association American (honorary life.).​



But Phil did much, much more than design that logo.​

Yes, based in Massachusetts but he covered the entire world of sports, well beyond Boston and football.​



Speaking of Hall of Fames…​


His first sports cartoon was published when he was fourteen. After going to Boston School of Practical Arts, he did a stint in the army. He then became an office boy for the Christian Science Monitor, soon graduating to be their sports cartoonist. He was sports cartoonist for the Boston Herald and Boston Globe (1953-65). He designed the official logo of the Boston Patriots. His cartoon art is on display in the halls of fame for baseball, football, basketball, and hockey.


As mentioned above, Phil was also a political cartoonist.​





Comic Art Fans has a few dozen samples of Phil’s editorial cartoons.​







 
It is an ironic and fitting coincidence that Pat Patriot was born on Patriots Day.

The Battles of Lexington and Concord were fought on April 19, 1775.
The famous "shot heard ‘round the world" marked the start of the Revolutionary War, and resulted in the United States of America.










 
Another good article here, this one focusing on how the Phil Bissell book came to be, as well as his history.

“I have two real sons, Steve and Chris, and I consider Pat to be my third son,” Bissell said one afternoon recently while sitting in his living room.​

So, on April 18, 1960 — interestingly enough, the 185th anniversary of Paul Revere’s legendary midnight ride — Bissell sat down at his desk in the Globe newsroom. Within 45 minutes, he had come up with the rendering of the grizzled and intense Colonial soldier hiking the football, That cartoon was on the front page of the Globe the next day.​

“I drew him and I named him and then he was stolen from me by Jerry Nason,” Bissell said, referring to then-Globe Sports Editor Jerry Nason. “I sat down and within 45 minutes it was ready to go to press.”​

According to Bissell and his account in his book, Nason took the original drawing and gave it as a gift to Sullivan, who then decided that the Pat Patriot logo would be the Patriots’ official logo for the 1961 season — replacing the hideous tri-corner cap logo the team wore in its inaugural season.​

“The following Monday, I received a phone call from Pat’s new parent thanking me for releasing my son to him,” Bissell wrote in his book. “I held back my tears as I informed Mr. Sullivan that I never offered to give him up or was I even given the chance to hug him, just once, before he ended up in his new parents’ arms.”​

Sullivan, he wrote, ultimately paid him $100 to use Pat as the team logo.​

 
Today in Patriots History
In memory of a Hall of Famer


Pat Patriot shares his birthday with the Voice of the Patriots.


Gil Santos
Born April 19, 1938, in Acushnet
Died April 19, 2018, in Raynham at the age of 80






Gil Santos was the voice of the Patriots for 36 seasons – touching five decades. The venerable Santos called 743 career Patriot games and earned the moniker “Voice of the New England Patriots.” Patriots owner and CEO Robert Kraft surprised Santos with the announcement that the legendary radio broadcaster would become the 20th person to be inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame and just the second non-player to earn the honor as a contributor for his off-field contributions to the team. It is the highest honor the team can bestow an individual.

Santos began calling games for the Boston Patriots at Fenway Park in 1966. For the first five seasons, he provided color analysis alongside veteran play-by-play man Bob Starr. When the team moved to Foxborough in 1971, Santos moved into his current role as play-by-play voice of the Patriots (1971-79).

WBZ lost the Patriots radio rights in the 1980s, but got them back in 1991 at which time it returned Santos to his natural position as Voice of the New England Patriots, a position he held for the 22 more seasons until his retirement following the 2012 season. The veteran play-by-play broadcaster was also the sports director of WBZ News Radio in Boston, where he earned dozens of awards and honors for his reporting, sportscasting and play-by-play excellence.

He retired from WBZ after 38 years in 2009 and was inducted into the Massachusetts Broadcasters Hall of Fame that year. In addition to his work at WBZ, the skilled play-by-play broadcaster also called basketball games for the Boston Celtics and Providence Friars, as well as football games for the Penn State Nittany Lions, Boston College Eagles, Brown Bears and Boston Breakers of the USFL. Inducted 2013.















 
Today in Patriots History
Mark van Eeghen


Happy 73rd birthday to Mark van Eeghen
Born April 19, 1952 in Cambridge; raised in Cranston
Patriot fullback, 1982-1983; uniform #34
Claimed off waivers from Oakland on September 7, 1982
Pats résumé: two seasons, 24 games (16 starts); 744 yards rushing (4.2 ypc); 12 receptions (9.7 ypc); three touchdowns




Mark K. van Eeghen was born in Cambridge Mass, grew up in Cranston RI, and went to college at Colgate. While he spent his last two NFL seasons in Foxboro, van Eeghen is primarily known as an Oakland running back. The Raiders released him when they drafted Marcus Allen, and the Pats picked him up at the age of 30. Van Eeghen spent eight seasons with the Raiders and was a Pro Bowler when he led the AFC in rushing in 1977. Mark was the leading rusher in Super Bowl 15 when Jim Plunkett threw three touchdown passes, and Tom Flores' club defeated **** Vermeil's Philadelphia Eagles 27-10.


In his time with the Patriots van Eeghen appeared in 24 games with 16 starts, totaling 860 yards from scrimmage with three touchdowns. In the 1982 Snow Plow Game he rushed for 100 yards on 22 carries as the Patriots beat Miami 3-0.


A bit of trivia: his daughter Amber was a Patriot cheerleader, and later married Dan Koppen. In his post-NFL career van Eeghen returned to Rhode Island, working in commercial insurance and then commercial real estate.



Feb 14, 2005:
A Patriots cheerleader: Catching up with Mark van Eeghen -- Boston.com
He was a local product who starred out on the west coast, but had the opportunity to close out his career back home.​

“I definitely enjoyed coming back to (New England) to play,” said Van Eeghen. “I went out to California and had a wonderful experience there, but that being said home is home. When things were winding down out there the opportunity became available here in New England and it just was an awesome opportunity.​

“Those were the Ron Meyer years and it was a chance to play with some truly great players and great individuals. Also, the ability to get into my car and be thirty minutes from home was a very good experience.”​


These days, Van Eehgen still resides in Cranston with his wife Nancy, who was his high school sweetheart. The two will have been married thirty years this April and have three daughters Brooke, 28, Kady, 26 and Amber, 24.​

Currently, like father, like daughter, his youngest daughter Amber has followed his footsteps and is a cheerleader for the Patriots.​

“I am exceptionally proud of her,” said Van Eeghen. “When she went to tryout for the first time two years ago there were 24 openings for over 400 people trying out. Not fearing to fail, doing her best and seeing what happens I am proud of her for doing that. She put it all on the line.​

“She is really enjoying the experience, not only enjoying the dancing which she has done all through her life, but the camaraderie with her teammates, the chance to travel and to represent the team. She’s been on the team two years and they have not lost a home game and she’s been to two Super Bowls.”​


For work, Van Eeghen works in the Property Casualty insurance business for The Andover Companies located in Andover, Massachusetts where he is a field rep. He is responsible for the state of Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts territories.​

As far as the current Patriots, Van Eeghen follows the team closely and is very excited about the team's third Super Bowl appearance in four years.​

“I’m so excited and it’s been a wonderful thing to watch and develop from 2001 when they upset the Rams,” said Van Eeghen. “Little did we know back then they were laying the foundation for what has developed. The consistency is what’s huge to me and they rarely lay an egg, especially in a game that means something. That’s a tough thing to do in sports, especially at that level.​
























 
Today in Patriots History
Chase Winovich


Happy 30th birthday to Chase Winovich
Born April 19, 1995 in Jefferson Hills, Pennsylvania
Patriot edge, 2019-2021; uniform #50
New England's third round selection (77th overall) of the 2019 draft, from Michigan
Pats résumé: three seasons, 45 games (9 starts); 11 sacks, 85 tackles; 23 QB hits, 10 tackles for a loss



On April 26, 2019 the Patriots traded down, sending their second round pick (#64 overall, used for WR D.K. Metcalf) to Seattle. In return New England received the Seahawks' third round pick (#77 overall, used on Chase Winovich) and their fourth round pick (#118 overall, used on offensive lineman Hjalte Froholdt).

Ouch.


In three seasons Chase Winovich played in 45 games with nine starts in three seasons for New England. After registering 11 sacks, 22 QB hits and ten tackles for a loss in his first two seasons, his production plummeted to zero sacks, zero tackles for a loss and one QB hit in 2021. He was traded to Cleveland for linebacker Mack Wilson on March 16, 2022.

Winovich played in eight games for the Browns in 2022, spending much of the season on injured reserve. He hit free agency and signed with Houston the following year, but was released in late August after beginning training camp on PUP. Miami quickly signed him to their practice squad, and he was elevated twice, getting a mere five snaps on defense as well as 47 snaps on special teams in three games.

That was it for Winovich. The Dolphins released him on October 17, 2023 - and he retired from the NFL eight days later.




Winovich said he learned early on in the NFL that players were replaceable and that while violence adds excitement for the league, it poses a risk for players.​

The former NFL player recalled going to the NFLPA (NFL Players Association) director and asking about the replacement time if he were to be hit by a bus, to which he was told it could be less than two minutes, leading Winovich to recognize his own value.​

"I'm using my body to destroy things. I feel that I can use my mind which is much more limitless than our physical bodies to create something that my likeness and my performance on the field enhances and helps promote," Winovich said.​


Winovich said that sometimes it's important to give your body a break and that's what retiring from the NFL was ultimately about for him.​

"Honestly, whenever I came into the NFL, I found myself in this position where no matter how much money I made, no matter how much external validation, love that I received, I found that it was really just trying to fill a void within my own heart, that no matter how many dump trucks I backed into it and just tried to fill it up with, that there was no way it was ever going to be filled."​

The former NFL player also shares more on the struggles NFL players face in finding their self-worth and tips he has for athletes and everyone.​

"Now I'm in a great position and loving myself the way I'm supposed to and having a great time."​




According to his LinkedIn profile, Winovich is now CEO of Signet Signing, an "E-Signature App for Athletes, Artists, And Entrepreneurs with customizable templates" that "facilitates world class legal protection through a silky smooth E-Signing experience."





 
Today in Patriots History
Other April 19 Birthdays


Happy 27th birthday to Lil'Jordan Humphrey
Born April 19, 1998 in Southlake, Texas
Patriot wide receiver, 2022; uniform #83
Signed as a free agent on June 16, 2022
Pats résumé: one season, six games (two starts); two receptions for 20 yards


"Lil" is a misnomer, as the receiver is 6'4, 225 pounds. Humphrey bounced back and forth between the practice squad and active roster in 2022, until he was released on November 15. In six games he was on the field for 128 offensive snaps, and 24 on special teams. He began his pro football career as an undrafted rookie out of Texas with the Saints in 2019; after leaving New England he has also been with the Broncos and Giants. Over the course of six NFL seasons Humphrey has appeared in 58 games, with 62 receptions for 770 yards and seven touchdowns.








Happy 28th birthday to Malcolm Perry
Born April 19, 1997 in Fort Campbell, Kentucky
Patriot wide receiver, 2021; uniform #19
Signed as a free agent on September 1, 2021
Pats résumé: zero games played


5'9, 190 lb Malcolm Perry was a 2020 7th round draft pick by Miami, from Navy. The Pats signed him after he was a victim of final roster cuts in 2021, but he landed on injured reserve ten days later. He was released in mid-November, then spent the remainder of the season on the Saints practice squad. The Patriots re-signed him to a futures contract on January 11, 2022; he was placed on the reserve/retired list at the start of training camp on July 22.


Malcolm Perry at minicamp on June 8, 2022




One other pro football player born on this date with a New England connection:

Joe Scibelli (April 19, 1939 - December 11, 1991)
Born in Springfield; Springfield Cathedral High School; American International College

Joseph Albert Scibelli was a western Mass native: born in Springfield, graduated from Springfield Cathedral High School, and attended American International College in Springfield. He transferred to Notre Dame and then spent 15 years at right guard for the Los Angeles Rams. Scibelli played in 202 NFL games, plus six playoff games for the Rams. He died at the age of 52 in Boston in 1991.





1963: Scibelli (#71) leads the way blocking for **** Bass
 
Today in Patriots History
A good trade and two bad trades
More April 19 trivia


April 19, 2004:
Cincinnati trades Corey Dillon to the Patriots for a second round draft pick.

Clock-Killin' Corey Dillon ressponded by being named to his fourth Pro Bowl in 2004, rushing for 1,635 yards and 12 touchdowns as the Patriots defeated Philadelphia 24-21 for their third Super Bowl championship.

It was never about a bad attitude; it was always just about playing for a bad team and bad ownership.










Pioli also stated that he and Belichick secretly met with Dillon in order to get to know him a little bit prior to making the trade. Since he was still under contract with the Bengals at that time, now that this news is public, will Goodell's Goon Squad take draft picks away from the Patriots for tampering? Or has the statute of limitations expired?




April 19, 1991:
Thanks to the disastrous 1-15 1990 Rod Rust/Zeke Mowatt season, the Patriots owned the first overall pick of the 1991 draft. But thanks to the then current state of the franchise, the consensus number one draft pick - Notre Dame wide receiver Raghib "Rocket" Ismail made it clear that he would play in the CFL rather than with the Patriots. Rather than take the next best player - and with plenty of spots on the roster in need of an upgrade - new CEO and GM Sam Jankovich, previously the athletic director at the University of Miami, traded down.

Two days befor the 1991 draft the Patriots traded away the #1 pick of the draft to the Dallas Cowboys, who used that selection on DT Russell Maryland. In exchange the Pats receive the #11 pick (OT Pat Harlow), a second (#41, FS Jerome Henderson), CB Ron Francis, OLB David Howard and ILB Eugene Lockhart. It was a lopsided value in Dallas' favor, but all the other teams knew the Pats didn't want the pick. In reality Jankovich should have demanded a 1992 first rounder as part of the trade, rather than the extra bodies. No offense to Harlow or the others, but this was not a good trade - even if Maryland did not live up to his draft status.

Maryland may not have lived up to the expectations that come with being a number one pick, but he was still better than the sum of what the Pats received in return. Harlow was a four-year starter at right tackle before Bill Parcells replaced him with Max Lane in '95. Tuna traded Harlow to Oakland for a 2nd, which seemed like a great deal. However, Parcells traded that 2nd for a 3rd, 4th, and 5th, and none of those three ever did anything. Henderson was a free safety who was sent packing early in his third season, Howard and Lockhart were old linebackers that lasted two seasons before retiring, and Francis never played another down in the NFL.

It was not a good trade, though somewhat salvaged by Harlow's contributions.




April 19, 1973
Pats trade Jim Cheyunski, Halvor Hagen and Mike Montler to Buffalo for Edgar Chandler, Jeff Lyman and Wayne Patrick.

This was far worse than the 1991 trade. Montler would be part of the offensive line that paved the way to OJ Simpson setting an NFL record by rushing for 2003 yards in 14 games that season. He would play center for six more years, four as part of the offensive line that was blocking for OJ's record setting years in Buffalo.

Cheyunski had been the Patriots starting middle linebacker for the last four seasons. He would continue as a good starter for four more years, two each with the Bills and Colts; Hagen provided Buffalo with quality depth.

Meanwhile Chandler lasted just one season at MLB, then never played again - while neither Lyman nor Patrick never played a single down for the Pats.

The net total of the players acquired for the Patriots was one season (12 games, 11 starts) - while Buffalo's net was nine seasons, 105 games and 83 starts.

This was one of the worst trades in Pats history - which says a lot considering all the competition for that dishonor.



Aug 29, 1971: Jim Cheyunski (#50) with the stop for no gain on Rams RB Bob Thomas
 
Today in Patriots History
Drafts and other April 19 trivia


April 19, 1969:
Boston re-signs right guard Len St. Jean

Formerly a lumberjack by trade in Michigan’s north woods, and formerly a defensive lineman, St Jean made 1966 East All-Star team in his first full year on offense. He never missed a single game in his ten years with the Patriots (1964-1973). Not bad at all for a ninth round draft pick from Northern Michigan.







April 19, 1970:
Patriots re-sign DE Mel Witt and OT Paul Feldhausen

'Marvelous Mel' Witt was a 5th round pick in 1967 from Arlington State (now Texas-Arlington) who got some playing time as a starter in 1968 when Larry Eisenhauer was injured. The previous season Witt put such a hard hit on Len Dawson that it knocked the hall of fame quarterback out for five games. Witt played in 35 games for the Pats, including all 14 in 1970 - but never played again after being released prior to the start of the 1971 season.

On a side note, Mel Witt also played for the Quincy Giants of the Atlantic Coast Football League in 1969 - should have been the same time PatFanKen played with them.

As for Feldhausen, he did not make the roster; he only played in two games with the Pats, in 1968. Feldhausen also played in the ACFL, for Lowell in 1968 and Quincy in 1969.





April 19, 1988:
Free agent Jason Staurovsky is signed to a one-year contract

The 5'9 kicker from Tulsa would spend four seasons with the Patriots, though 1990 was the only time he was the Pats kicker for all 16 games. Fourth round draft pick Teddy Garcia initially won the roster spot, but he was so bad -- 6-13 on field goal attempts, 11-16 on extra points -- that the Patriots re-signed Staurovsky halfway through the season. Staurovsky did not have the strongest leg, but he kept coming back in relief of inaccurate or injured kickers; in 40 games he connected on 50 field goals and 57 extra points for the Pats from 1988 to 1991.





April 19, 1994:
New England re-signs ERFAs Terry Ray and Mark Staten. Ray was a strong safety who played in 63 games for the Pats from 1993 to 1996; Staten never played in the NFL.





April 19, 1995:
Patriots re-sign restricted free agent linebacker Todd Collins

Collins was a third round 1992 draft pick from Carson-Newman (via both Georgia and Tennessee), who had emerged as the starter at right inside linebacker opposite Vincent Brown. He did not report to training camp and was placed on a reserved-did not report list, missing the entire 1995 season. Collins returned the following season, and was a starter for the next three years.

Todd Collins' biggest claim to fame is being the player who left in free agency that resulted in the Pats receiving the compensatory draft pick that was used to select Tom Brady.






April 19, 2000:
Patriots sign 19 undrafted rookie free agents

The only name from the long list of UDFAs I recognized was Lonie Paxton, from Sacramento State and the Big Sky Conference in the FCS. The player who invented the Snow Angel celebration earned three super bowl rings while playing in all but three games over his nine years with the Patriots.






April 19, 2001:
ERFA WR Shockmain Davis is re-signed to a one-year contract.

While his name is awesome, his performance was not. In 12 games with the Patriots, Shockmain had just two receptions on 11 targets, for 12 yards.




April 19, 2002:
Free agent RT Grant Williams is re-signed to a one-year contract.

Rookie Tom Ashworth would take his palce on the line, and Williams was traded to the Rams for a 7th round draft pick during training camp.




April 19, 2005:
RFA WR David Givens is re-signed to a on-year contract; he would depart to Tennessee in free agency a year later.
ERFA DB Guss Scott is re-signed to a one-year contract; the third round bust of the 2004 draft appeared in just six games for the Pats.
RFA DE Jarvis Green is re-signed to a one-year contract; Green was a quality lineman for the Pats from 2002 to 2009.




April 19, 2010:
New England re-signs restricted free agent Pierre Woods to a one-year contract.

The backup linebacker and special teamer played in 61 regular and post season games for the Patriots.




April 19, 2017:
Aaron Hernandez dies at the age of 27 at the Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center, Lancaster, MA






Today in Patriots History
April 19 draft results


April 19, 1997:
The NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting, better known as the 1997 NFL Draft
The Theatre at Madison Square Garden in New York
Day One, Rounds 1-3

The draft is noteable for the Jets trading down twice in the first round - first passing on future Hall of Fame OT Orlando Pace with the #1 overall pick, then also passing on future Hall of Fame OT Walter Jones with the #6 pick. The Jete finally selecte LB James Farrior with the #8 pick, but let him walk in free agency a few years later after barely using him - and he became a 10-year starter for the Steelers.


1.29 - CB Chris Canty, Kansas State
Canty lasted just two seasons with the Pats, with one pick, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries.

2.59 - DL Brandon Mitchell, Texas A&M
Mitchell played in 62 games over five seasons with the Pats, earning a ring from Super Bowl 36.

3.61 - this pick was one of four the Patriots received from the Jets as compensation for their signing/tampering with Bill Parcells.
Unfortunately the Pats did not do much with those picks, selecting Shaw, Damon Denson, Tony Simmons and Andy Katzenmoyer.

3.61 - RB Sedrick Shaw, Iowa
Shaw rushed for 236 yards and no touchdowns over two seasons with the Patriots.

3.89 - S Chris Carter, Texas
Carter played in 47 games with 15 starts over three seasons with the Pats, with three interceptions and two fumble recoveries.




April 19, 1998:
The NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting, better known as the 1998 NFL Draft
The Paramount Theatre at Madison Square Garden in New York
Day Two, Rounds 4-7

4.115 - DT Leonta Rheams, Houston - one season, six games, zero starts
5.145 - LB Ron Merkerson, Colorado - zero NFL games
6.176 - RB Harold Shaw, Southern Mississippi - three seasons, 22 touches, 77 yards from scrimmage
7.211 - G Jason Anderson - BYU - two seasons, 16 games, zero starts

On the previous day the Patriots drafted RB Robert Edwards, S Tebucky Jones, WR Tony Simmons, TE Rod Rutledge, FB Chris Floyd and DE Greg Spires.




Overall neither of these were particularly productive drafts for Bobby Grier and Pete Carroll.
 
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