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Today In Patriots History Aug 18, 2006: Pats sign Junior Seau

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Today in Patriots History
Pats sign Junior Seau


August 18, 2006:
The Patriots sign 37-year old LB Junior Seau



In what was seen by some as a move that smacked of desperation, New England signed future Hall of Famer Junior Seau. Tedy Bruschi was rehabilitating from a broken wrist, and linebackers added the previous year - Monty Beisel, and to a lesser extent Chad Brown - were underwhelming disappointments. At the time most were skeptical that Seau would be able to add much, if anything to a defense that sorely missed Ted Johnson since his retirement after the 2004 season.

Seau had retired in an emotional press conference just four days earlier; this news caught most everyone off guard.

Junior Seau is looking to join the New England Patriots, just three days after the San Diego Chargers threw him a lavish retirement party.


Junior was playing at a high level in his first season with the Patriots, before he broke his arm in a week 12 game against Chicago. The following year he again excelled, as the Patriots won 18 consecutive games in a record-setting year. He was re-signed again late in both the 2008 and 2009 seasons, playing in a total of 38 regular season and four postseason games for the Pats.

Perhaps the saddest thing about not winning Super Bowl 42 is that it denied Junior Seau from ever earning a championship ring. I can't help but wonder if he had achieved that goal, would he have still taken his own life in 2012?


An August 18 Boston.com column by Mike Reiss devoted as much space to two unknown jags as it did to Junior:
The Patriots announced the signing of linebacker Junior Seau today. The team also announced the signing of veteran tight end Chris Luzar and the release of tight end Walter Rasby.​

The 37-year-old Seau has played in 230 games with 227 starts in his NFL career. Seau flew into town late last night and was present at Gillette Stadium today. He projects as an inside linebacker in the team’s 3-4 defense.​


On the same date esteemed sports journalist Len Pasquarelli was not at all impressed with the transaction.
If you enjoy Freezing Cold Takes, this column is for you.
At some point, no matter how insightful the analysis, the attempt at extreme makeover simply comes out like a botched plastic surgery. Usually, people with the Midas touch can still turn garbage into gold. But sometimes, the magic runs out, and things touched by Midas just turn into mufflers.​

The guess here is that the Patriots, no matter how they use their newest linebacker acquisition, won't be able to magically fashion a silk purse from this Seau's ear.​

Why not? Because the future Hall of Fame defender who earlier this week announced his retirement probably should have exited the game two or three seasons ago.​

The Miami Dolphins traded for Seau in 2003 because they valued his leadership. But it's hard to lead from the trainer's room, and when you can't make plays, because of infirmities or the inadequacies that usually accompany the ungraceful realities of the aging process, no one pays attention to you anymore. And so Junior Seau, once The Man among NFL linebackers, had become just another guy.​




















 
Today in Patriots History
Adalius Thomas


Happy 48th birthday to Adalius Thomas
Born August 18, 1977 in Equality, Alabama; hometown Rockford, AL
Patriot linebacker, 2007-2009; uniform #96
Signed as a veteran free agent on March 3, 2007
Pats résumé: three seasons, 39 games (35 starts), 14½ sacks; four playoff games, two sacks


Today's top birthday is eerily similar to the most recent post (Matt Judon). A highly coveted free agent linebacker who had played for the Baltimore Ravens is signed by the Patriots; plays magnificently initially; suffers an injury; and after some acrimony, departs after three seasons.


While Adalius Thomas is most remembered for how things ended poorly with him in Foxboro, it is worth pointing that it wasn't always that way. He was an incredibly athletic defender with Baltimore, capable of playing nearly every position on the field. That versatility is why Bill Belichick was willing to "back up the Brink's truck" to pay him when he hit free agency. Thomas was initially a beast with the Patriots, until he broke his arm against the Bills late in the 2008 season.

Things went south in 2009 for whatever reason. He was a healthy scratch for a game against Tennessee, then was one of three players who were sent home after arriving late to a morning meeting due to a snowstorm. One day after the 2010 draft the Patriots released Thomas. As far as I know no other teams offered him a workout or contract - and his NFL career was over.


“What do you do? It’s not ‘The Jetsons,’ I can’t jump up and just fly. What the heck am I supposed to do?”


Feb 4, 2010:
Adalius Thomas details falling out -- Mike Reiss, espn
“After the Buffalo game, the first game of the year, something happened and I was like ‘I really don’t understand this,’" Thomas said.​

“I really don’t want to go into it, because I still don’t understand it. I had a meeting and I just really didn’t understand some of the stuff I was being told. So I knew at that point it was bigger than what was on the surface. It was something bigger than that. You guys watch the games. I was used totally differently this year than I was last year before I broke my arm. Even before I came back, I was told that I was going to be used differently.”​


Asked more about the meeting after the Bills game, Thomas said it wasn’t about a specific play but more his overall performance and “whether or not it was sufficient.”​

“It’s the first game back and the way some stuff went down, I just really didn’t understand it,” he said. “It was a confusing meeting to me. I understood some of it, but a lot of it was just confusing and it even got more confusing as the year went on.”​

One theme that came up a few times in the interview -- and seemed to be at the root of Thomas' frustration -- was Thomas pointing out that the coaches critiquing his play weren’t on the field themselves. It sounded like Thomas felt that he was being overcoached.​


“The way they coach things and do things may be totally different than how I see it,” he said. “There is a checks-and-balance system that really is not going to marry up because regardless of what you see as a player on that play, it really doesn’t matter if someone else sees it differently. Unless you’re on the field, there are a million things going on at one time. So when you see something and you go, you don’t have time to sit back and think or whatever.​

“Monday through Saturday is for coaches. Sunday has to be for the player. You do adjustments and everything like that, which is great, but at the same time you can’t coach every single thing during the game. It’s just impossible to do because there are so many things going on. A player can’t tell you every single thing that happens in front of him because it happens so fast and there is the next play. You’re trying to go to the sidelines trying to recap everything and it’s kind of hard to do that.”​



Apr 26, 2010:
Patriots release Adalius Thomas -- Patriots.com
Thomas, 6-2, 270 pounds, originally signed with New England as an unrestricted free agent on March 3, 2007. Last season, he played in 14 games with 11 starts and finished with 31 total tackles, three sacks and two passes defensed. Thomas has played in 135 NFL games and has accumulated 584 tackles, seven interceptions, 17 forced fumbles, six fumble recoveries and 79 special teams tackles.​



Apr 26, 2010:
Jeff Howe with his thoughts:
When asked in February about the tension between Thomas and Belichick, a Patriots source told NESN.com, “Yeah, everybody saw that. That was no secret.”​

Thomas has thrown some passive-aggressive jabs at Belichick through the media — at least twice last season from the Pats’ locker room, and then again during separate interviews with 98.5 The Sports Hub and the Boston Globe — stoking a fire he obviously didn’t want to simmer.​


It wasn’t solely Thomas’ fault, but his constant whining will leave him remembered as the bad guy. Plus, Belichick and the Patriots won three Super Bowls before Thomas arrived — as Thomas’ former Ravens teammate, Ray Lewis, pointed out in 2007 — so the head coach will usually earn the benefit of the doubt in such occasions.​

Still, it just wasn’t the right fit. Thomas signed a $35 million, five-year contract prior to the 2007 season — the most money the Patriots have ever dished out to a free agent — and he played well at the start of his career in New England. He had a 17-game stretch from 2007-08 when he recorded 13 sacks, including his masterful two-sack performance in the Super Bowl.​


But Thomas had only registered three sacks since that point. In that most recent stretch, he played in 17 games, missed seven due to injury and was benched twice. While Thomas has showed he can be a very strong pass rusher, he couldn’t excel with the other responsibilities Belichick levied to his outside linebackers. Credit Belichick with some blame in that regard, too, because he wasn’t always putting Thomas in a position to succeed.​

When Thomas stopped playing at a high level on the field, he became testier behind the scenes, and it sounds like he was able to further act out his displeasure after the Patriots lost leaders Rodney Harrison, Tedy Bruschi, Mike Vrabel and Richard Seymour. This wasn’t Thomas’ first temperamental issue, either.​

After leaving the Ravens, he got into a war of words with Lewis, the longtime Baltimore leader who called Thomas a “coward” and noted the Ravens needed to adjust their schemes to coddle Thomas. Sound familiar?​



Apr 26, 2010:
In the end, it was a pairing in which both sides didn't get what they felt was advertised.​

Thomas had issues with his role, expecting to be used as more of a pure pass-rusher, while the Patriots were disappointed with Thomas' production and presence in the locker room.​

Given the timing of the release, it appears the Patriots tried to trade Thomas during the draft and when nothing materialized, they went ahead with the release.​

"After the draft, we talked about the personnel and looked at our roster and so forth, and we made that decision to move on with the players that we have," Belichick told Boston sports radio station WEEI. "He was a good football player, he came in and had a heck of a year for us in '07. Again, at this point in time, we felt like this was the direction we had to go on."​



22:43 Audio from the Ravens' website:
The former Ravens linebacker talks about his fight for voting rights in Georgia, his frustration with the way his NFL career ended, and his many business dealings.​



Former NFL linebacker, Adalius Thomas, spent 10 seasons between the Ravens and the Patriots. Adalius attended The University of Southern Mississippi and was drafted in the 6th round of the 2000 draft. He is a Super Bowl champion, a 2X Pro Bowler, and a 2006 First Team All-Pro selection.​

How has your career been since transitioning out of the league?​

I would say slow because I left the game unexpectedly and when you think you're going to play again and have to sit around and wait for a call, it's a little different than a planned exit. You find yourself working out and doing all the right things and trying to find who you are. You've been doing something since you were a kid and it’s tough trying to understand all the emotional roller coaster moments that you go through with your mental health. You don't understand it, and so the transition was a little tough for me to go through because I thought I could still play the game but was not given the opportunity to play for one more season. It was a tough adjustment for me, and I think that having patience with yourself is very important.​



Thomas was raised by his mother, a seamstress for Russell Athletics, and his father, an electrician, in the tiny town of Rockford, Alabama in Coosa County. Although a talented athlete, the NFL wasn’t something Thomas focused on. For him, football started simply as a way to get a college education, which he knew he wanted as the foundation for his future. In fact he was initially interested in sports administration and chose that as his major at the University of Southern Mississippi. But, as it turned out, football became more than just a means to obtain a college degree.​

Thomas was acutely aware that the end of his football days was always right around the corner. While he was playing, he dabbled in real estate, but upon retiring he knew he wanted something more.​

A friend suggested the restaurant business and Thomas was immediately interested. He ultimately opened a restaurant in Raleigh, North Carolina, which then led to his opening two others, one in Durham, North Carolina and one in Ellicott City, Maryland. He loved the combination of the business and social aspects and the purpose it gave him every day. They all remain open and successful.​



Nov 4, 2015:
Thomas is now co-owner of several restaurants, including Bolt Bistro and Bar in Raleigh, N.C.​



I didn't realize that Deion Sanders refers to himself as "Coach Prime" now.
And apparently most in the sports media do as well!
Gimme a break...
May 30, 2024:
Adalius Thomas, a former NFL standout, has joined the Colorado Buffaloes as a defensive analyst under head coach Deion Sanders. Thomas, who played ten seasons in the NFL with the Baltimore Ravens and New England Patriots, brings a wealth of experience to the team. Sanders and Thomas were teammates with the Ravens in 2004 and 2005, and Sanders praised Thomas as "arguably the smartest football player" he's ever played with. “Played every position on the field and special teams was everything to him. So not only can he help with the defense, but special teams as well, because that’s what he did. That’s where he made his mark when he first got there.”​




May 22, 2025:




2009 Patriots Media Guide






Pro Football Archives -- Adalius Thomas

 
Today in Patriots History
The 1st Pro Football Game in New Orleans


August 18, 1962:
The Houston Oilers host the Boston Patriots in the first Professional Football Game in New Orleans



AFL teams kicked off the 1962 exhibition season on Saturday, August 4th - with the exception of the Patriots and Bills. I have a suspicion a game between those two was postponed, though I have no proof of that claim. The Pats played on each of the next four successive Saturdays - as well as on Wednesday the 15th, in Buffalo. As a result this was the third game that the Patriots played within a span of seven days: the first in Providence, then in Buffalo, and this one in the Big Easy.


I don't have much other information other than the fact the Oilers won 20-10. Five-time AFL All-Star WR Charley Hennigan caught a touchdown pass for Houston - thrown by HB Billy Cannon. That surely thrilled the crowd; Cannon grew up in Baton Rouge and won the 1959 Heisman Trophy playing for LSU. When Cannon signed with the Oilers in 1960 it was the first $100,000 contract in the history of pro football - and gave the new league some needed legitimacy.

At the end of the season the Oilers won the AFL East for the third straight time. After winning the first two AFL championships, Houston lost to the Dallas Texans in the first-ever double-overtime game in pro football history.


The two teams split their series in 1962 with the home team winning each time. The Pats won 34-21 in week two, and the Oilers took the week 11 rematch 21-17, in the midst of a season-ending seven-gam winning streak to finish 11-3.




9/16/1962 Houston Oilers at Boston Patriots highlights, American Football League Week 2
5:16 Highlight Video




I am guessing that the Patriots chartered a bus to and from the airport to hotel as well as the stadium. The reason I say that is because when the AFL played their 1964 All-Star game in New Orleans, the city received some notoriety. Specifically, the city was slow to integrate - and the black football players were unable to get cabs from the airport, were expected to stay in different hotels as their teammates, and were unable to dine in the same restaurants. The players, including Pats RB Larry Garron and DT Houston Antwine formed a boycott, forcing the game to be moved to Jepperson Field in Houston. I recall rumors that certain Boston sportwriters, who voted on membership to the New England Patriots Hall of Fame, remembered the incident and didn't care for his attitude, preventing 'Twine from entry into the Hall until after his death.


On August 18, 1962, the Houston Oilers and Boston Patriots squared off in an exhibition contest at Tad Gormley Stadium. It was well attended by 31,000 fans, the largest ever American Football League preseason game crowd. Keep in mind 7,000 additional were turned away due to capacity restrictions.​

It was the very first taste of professional football in the Crescent City, sending out a message loud and clear to the pro football world that New Orleans was ready to have a team of its own.​

Understanding the requirements to be an NFL city, Dixon reached out to the local African-American community, including a meeting with prominent black leaders like future mayor Ernest “Dutch” Morial and Avery Alexander. The NFL had a written rule that all games will be desegregated, with no partiality to race, color or creed. Dixon offered to work closely with the black community to ensure they would be treated fairly.​


The trouble for the 20 black football players surfaced as soon as they stepped off the plane at New Orleans International Airport. It was Jan. 9, 1965, and the men were in town to play in the American Football League All-Star Game. But before 24 hours had transpired, events got so insufferably bad they all left.​

White passengers watched as groups of African-Americans came out to the same curb as them and actually tried to hail cabs – their white cabs. And after 250 years of segregation, whites were making no concessions.​

“The white players were going out, getting in cabs, and taking off, going to the hotels,” recalled Bobby Bell, the Kansas City Chiefs linebacker and future Hall of Famer. “When the black players would go out to get a cab, the white cabbie would say, ‘No can do.’ I guess we were out at the airport a couple of hours.”​

Sid Blanks, the Houston Oilers rookie halfback, found one cab after another cruising right on by. Although Blanks had captained the otherwise all-white Texas A&I team, the 21-year-old was being introduced to a new life experience in the South.​

“I finally got a skycap to tell me, ‘You need to get the right cab, because you’re colored.’ I said, ‘What do you mean?’ He said, ‘They won’t pick you up … It’s a little different here. If you’re colored, you just can’t ride in any cab,’ ” Blanks said.​

Buffalo Bills fullback Cookie Gilchrist summoned up a sense of humor. When told he had to find a “colored cab,” Gilchrist quipped: “I don’t care what color the taxi is – I just want to get to my hotel.”​

Gilchrist got his ride downtown but only because the cabbie spotted a white man – Bills quarterback Jack Kemp. The driver told Gilchrist he’d let him get in so long as Kemp was the one who hired the taxi. This, apparently, resulted from a new (or perhaps temporary) Taxicab Bureau policy that gave drivers with the proper permit the option of transporting black and white passengers – but only if the party who hailed the cab was from the hack’s own race.​

Although they had been assured by organizers of the all-star game that the welcome mat would be rolled out, the players were already on their way to taking the unprecedented step of calling a boycott. The cabbies had laid the groundwork and the hotels followed suit.​

The West team was stationed at the Roosevelt Hotel, grudgingly integrated just weeks earlier following the signing of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. . . .​

The American Football League scheduled its annual All-Star game for Saturday, January 16, 1965, to be played at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana. This contest came just ten days after the city had hosted the first completely integrated Sugar Bowl game without incident. Syracuse, whose roster included eight African American players, lost to Louisiana State 13-0 in that game.​

This seemed to bode well for the city. New Orleans had been vocal about its attempt to attract a professional football franchise whether in the AFL or the National Football League. Those aspirations received a major setback in the days to come as the AFL All-Stars began to arrive at the airport.​

The AFL players were assured by Dave Dixon, head of the group sponsoring and promoting the game that the city was safe and there would be no problems. Running Back Clem Daniels of the Oakland Raiders explained, “they told us (to) bring your wife and kids. There will also be a golf tournament. It sounded like a big picnic.”​

It eventually turned into a nightmare as many of the black players were left stranded at the airport for hours when they arrived in town. Once in the city African American players were refused cab service and in some cases those who were given rides were dropped off miles from their destinations.​

Other players were refused admittance to nightspots and restaurants, while nearly all were subjected to tongue-lashings and to a hostile atmosphere on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter while sightseeing. The situation became so uncomfortable for the black players who clearly felt unwelcome that most simply returned to their hotels.​

Later, all 21 African American players who were scheduled to suit up met at the Roosevelt Hotel, the headquarters for the East team. The group discussed in great detail the treatment they had received and with a vote decided to walk out on the All-Star game.​

“The majority ruled. We felt we couldn’t perform 100% under the current circumstances,” said Buffalo Bills end Ernie Warlick. “Actually this came as a complete surprise to us. We were led to believe that we could relax and enjoy ourselves in New Orleans just like other citizens.”​

Some players were more vocal than others about the adverse conditions and discriminatory practices experienced in New Orleans. But, in the end Warlick and other black All-Stars, came together. Finding the situation unacceptable, the players decided that they would not play in the All-Star as long as it was to be hosted in New Orleans.​
 
Today in Boston Sports History
Tony C Beaned


August 18, 1967:
California Angels pitcher Jack Hamilton beans Red Sox RF Tony Conigliaro


















 
Today in Patriots History
More August 18 Birthdays



In memory of Jess Richardson, who would have turned 95 today
Born Aug 18, 1930 in Philadelphia
Died June 17, 1975 at the age of 44 from kidney disease, in Philadelphia
Patriot DT 1962-1964; uniform #75



Jesse Richardson played for eight seasons with the Eagles before playing for the Pats for three years. He played in 42 games (36 starts) for the Boston Patriots, plus two playoff games, with 6½ sacks. Over the course of his career Richardson played in 139 regular season games and three postseason games.

Richardson may be most well known for being the last lineman to play pro football without a faceguard.





Jess Richardson "Last of an Era" | Helmut Hut
High school star, collegiate standout, a pro football draft choice with a career that spanned twelve seasons, and a respected coaching resume that had more longevity than most, gave Jesse Richardson a luster appreciated by all who knew him and perhaps envied by some. However if ever a man had to deal with setback and sorrow, Richardson proved he was a resilient individual who could in fact overcome the worst that life and athletics could throw at him.​

A two-way line standout at Philadelphia’s Roxborough High School, he enjoyed a high school career that brought honors and recognition of his talent that has left him on a number of “All Time…” all star lists for both Pennsylvania and Philadelphia area high school football players. As the leader for the Roxborough 49ers, he earned All Public School honors and a scholarship to the University of Alabama where he lettered for three seasons and was a key component as a defensive guard in the Tide’s 61-6 win over Syracuse in the January 1st, 1953 Orange Bowl. The decisive victory was termed “the most lopsided win in bowl history” to that point in time and Richardson enjoyed national exposure as it was the inaugural television broadcast of a major college bowl game. “Big Jess” became an eighth round draft pick of his hometown Philadelphia Eagles and his 6’2”, 235 pound frame quietly but very effectively controlled the interior of the Eagles line for many seasons. Richardson suffered a devastating injury that tore knee ligaments early in 1957, the type of injury that was most often not resolved with the available surgical techniques.​

Against all odds, he battled back, strengthened his knee and lower body, and was again in the starting lineup for the ’58 season. In order to be as fast and quick as possible, Richardson played with minimal protection. He would not wear pads under his uniform and insisted on the smallest sized shoulder pads that would fit his muscular torso. As part of his “sleek and swift” approach to the game and his appearance, he refused to wear a facemask, even after the National Football League rules were changed to include it as a mandatory part of the game uniform. Richardson would go through most of his entire career without a mask and retire as the last NFL lineman with that distinction. As noted football researcher and author John Maxymuk pointed out in the very first sentences about Richardson in his book, Eagles By The Numbers, “Even though he was the last lineman in the league to play without wearing a facemask, Jess Richardson never lost a tooth. His nose wasn’t so lucky. He broke that so many times that he would reset it himself by going in the shower, smearing his nose with Vaseline, and rubbing up and down along the sides of his nose till he felt everything was back in place.” In addition to his desire to move as fast as possible, Richardson believed that a facemask would interfere with his peripheral vision because of his “deep-set, narrow eyes.” Whatever his true motivation, Big Jess was “grandfathered” by the league and was never required to don a mask.​

Interestingly, for a player who went about the business of raising Hell in the middle of the defensive line of a rugged if unspectacular 1950’s Eagles defense, Richardson, even without facial protection, was known to engage in some “extracurricular” activity that included an errant elbow or punch. Filling out to 260 pounds, he was the Eagles Defensive Most Valuable Player in 1955, and came back from his horrid 1957 injury with a Second Team All Pro nomination and Pro Bowl appearance in ’59. Helping the more heralded Chuck Bednarik, Maxie Baughn, Bob Pellegrini, and Tom Brookshier on Philly’s run to the 1960 NFL Championship, Jess suffered through the death of his seven week old infant just days prior to the game with the Packers. He still played and helped to secure the crown for the Eagles. During the latter part of 1961, new Coach Nick Skorich removed Richardson as a starter and then cut him in ‘62’s training camp. Jess immediately hooked onto the Boston Patriots squad, fought through a bout of hepatitis, and became a contributor along the defensive front. Despite advancing age, Jess’ willingness to mix it up in the middle of the action didn’t change. Because he was guilty of physical contact with an official during a “discussion” over a call, he was tossed from the game and hit with what was then a record $500.00 fine. So popular was this rather under publicized defensive lineman, that the Boston fans passed the hat around the stadium and presented Jess with the fine money after the game. His injuries finally caught up with him. He saw limited action in the Patriots’ loss to the Chargers in the 1963 AFL Championship game, and finally called it quits at the conclusion of the ’64 season. He continued to serve the franchise as their defensive line coach until leaving for a similar position with the ’71 Eagles under head coach and former Philadelphia teammate Ed Khayat.​






Happy 69th birthday to Dave Browning
Born Aug 18, 1956 in Spokane, Washington
Patriot DE, 1983; uniform #74
Signed as a free agent September 27, 1983

David Browning was a second round draft pick by Oakland in '78, and was part of the Raiders SB 15 winning team. After five seasons with the Raiders, he played in the final twelve games for Ron Meyer's 1983 8-8 club. During what turned out to be his last season in the NFL, he had two of his 21.5 sacks for the Pats. After that he played in the USFL for a couple of years. Browning plated in a total of 77 regular season NFL games (59 starts) from 1978-1983, plus the four 1980 postseason games with the Raiders.


Jan 27, 2009:
Where Are They Now? Small town outshines big time for ex-Husky -- Seattle PI
Dave Browning lives in Mica, Wash., a town with a post office and not much more. It's just 15 miles from where he was raised. He has 10 acres, or about 750 fewer than he and two brothers once tended.​

Browning, 52, once played in the Rose Bowl, Super Bowl and USFL championship game -- just missing out on a rare title trifecta -- before returning to his Eastern Washington roots.​

There's always something else he could be doing. On the family farm in nearby Fairfield, Browning operated heavy machinery when he was 10. He and brothers Dean and Dan annually were responsible for 100 head of beef and 400 tons of hay once in high school. Each hay bale needed to be handled seven times to move it from the field to a trailer and into the barn.​

A tall, rangy kid could turn strong and muscular without ever walking into a weight room.​

Browning lives in Mica with his wife of 20 years, Leslie. He drives a truck for a Spokane cement company. He owns three Icelandic horses and rides every weekend during the summer months. He prefers the simple life. Sadly, there have been excruciating complications along the way.​





Other players born on Aug 18 with a New England connection:

-Taylor Moton, 31 (1994)
Draft pick trade
The Pats traded the 64th overall pick of the 2017 draft to Carolina on 3/10/17, which the Panthers used to select Moton. In return the Pats received Kony Ealy and another draft pick - which was traded again. Eventually the Patriots used the picks to select Derek Rivers and Antonio Garcia. Moton is now entering his ninth season as the starting right tackle for Carolina.

- Dan Orlovsky, 42 (1983)
Born in Bridgeport; Shelton (CT) High School; UConn
While he is most well known for inadvertently running out of the back of the end zone during Indy's Suck for Luck season, the career backup QB did enough to collect paychecks for 12 full NFL seasons.

- Les Olsson (1909-1972)
Boston Redskins, 1934-36
Les Olsson started at RG in 57 games over five seasons, plus two championship games - including Washington's 28-21 victory over the Bears in 1937.

- Nate Freese, 35 (1990)
Boston College
The kicker was a 7th round draft pick by the Lions in 2014. His NFL career ended abruptly after four missed field goals in his first three games.




Some other notable pro football players sharing this birth date:

- Greg Pruitt, 74 (1951)
Browns RB had three consecutive seasons with 1,000+ yards rushing, then was named to his fifth Pro Bowl with Oakland at the age of 32, when he led the NFL in punt returns.

- Brian Mitchell, 57 (1968)
Washington KR/PR/RB led the NFL in All-Purpose Yardage four times from 1994-1998. His 23,330 career all purpose yards is a mere 216 yards fewer than record holder Jerry Rice. At that time his 2,477 all-purpose yards in 1994 was the second most in a single season in NFL history.

- Matt Snell, 84 (1941)
The three-time Pro Bowl fullback had far more to do with the outcome the historic Super Bowl III than Joe Namath did. Snell ran for 121 yards and a touchdown that day to propel the Jets to a 16-7 upset over the Colts.

- Jeremy Shockey, 45 (1980)
The brash tight end from the University of Miami had 547 receptions and 37 TD from 2002-2011.

- Dontari Poe, 35 (1990)
Two-time pro bowl NT played in 128 games from 2012-20, mostly with the Chiefs, with 20½ sacks.

- Bart Scott, 45 (1980)
Highly opinionated ****head linebacker played in 172 games from 2002-12, for the Ravens and Jete, of course.
 
Today in Patriots History
More August 18 News


August 18, 2002:
Here's a must-read from some fan by the name of Ian Logue, on his first game at Gillette Stadium.





August 18, 2003:




August 18, 2021:
Bill Belichick wins a sports Emmy



 
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