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Today In Patriots History August 6: Sam Hunt

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Today in Patriots History
Sam Hunt


Happy 73rd birthday Sam Hunt
Born August 6, 1951 in Longview, Texas
Patriot ILB, 1974-1979; uniform #50
Pats 15th round (374th overall) selection of the 1974 draft, from Stephen F Austin University





Sam Hunt started all but two games during his six years with the Patriots. He is the right inside linebacker, next to Steve Nelson, on the Patriots All-Decade Team of the 1970s.




Hunt played in 84 games for the Pats, plus two more in the playoffs. He had six fumble recoveries and seven interceptions, including one for a touchdown - that saved the 1976 Pats from what would have been an embarrassing loss.


Dec 12, 1976:
Patriots 31, Buccaneers 14 | BucPower.com

Ending their first National Football League season with as many victories as they began, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers achieved perfect imperfection Sunday in a 31-14 loss to the New England Patriots. It was the 14th consecutive Sunday without a victory for the Bucs, setting an NFL record for imperfection.​

But in doing so, the playing with a roster that has been changed more than 50 per cent since the season began because of injuries, gave the playoff-bound and now 11-3 Patriots a run for their pride in front of 41,517 Tampa Stadium customers.​

The Bucs led 14-7 late in the third period on Ed Williams' 17-yard touchdown run and Steve Spurrier's 27-yard scoring toss to Morris Owens, but the Patriots revived themselves in time to score 24 points and dish out a few insults along the way to victory.​

Andy Johnson's nine-yard run with 4:59 left in the third period tied the score at 14. Then linebacker Sam Hunt, who wasn't supposed to play because of a pulled hamstring, intercepted a Spurrier pass and returned it 68 for a touchdown with 6: 15 to play in the fourth period to boost New England into a 21-14 lead.​

John Smith's 30-yard field goal made it 24-14 with 2:41 to play and the Patriots twisted the knife when they called time out with six seconds to play so quarterback Steve Grogan could score from a yard out. Grogan's touchdown run gives him 12 for the season, breaking the previous NFL mark for most touchdowns rushing in a season by a quarterback held by Tobin Rote and Johnny Lujack. On top of that, the Patriots allowed linebacker Steve Zabel, who fancies himself a place-kicker but did no kicking all year, to kick the extra point.​

But there were no complaints about the last-second touchdown from Bucs' Head Coach John McKay, who out his first season in the NFL without a victory: "That doesn't bother me," 'an unusually perturbed McKay 'said after the game.​

New England Coach Chuck Fairbanks apologized to McKay at midfield when it was over. McKay's mood was more a result of his own team's imperfection when it could have had the game safely in hand by halftime. Twice in the first half the Bucs put together long drives and were less than 10 yards from scoring when fumbles stopped them without a point.​

That the Bucs' defense, hit hardest by the injury epidemic, could hold the Patriots' offense to only seven points for the better part of three periods, was a major accomplishment. That score was a 69-yard touchdown run by Johnson in the second period. Johnson gained 127 yards on 14 carries and scored twice for the Patriots, who used fullback Sam Cunningham sparingly because of a bruised shoulder.​

The Patriots, as the American Football Conference wild-card team, travel to Oakland next week for the first round of the playoffs against the Raiders. New England's 11-3 record a complete reversal of last year's 3-13 mark. Should the Bucs be able to pull such a reversal next season, they would be 14-0. But right now, one win would be an improvement. Says McKay, "I think I'll take some time off and go hide somewhere"'​

Sam Hunt Pick-Six - 1976, Patriots vs Buccaneers
Steve Nelson and Steve Zabel, former 1976 Patriots with the commentary



Sept 5, 2004: Catching up with Sam Cunningham | Boston.com

Question: HARDEST HITTER YOU PLAYED AGAINST:
Answer: Sam Hunt





From page 20 of the 1979 New England Patriots Media Guide:

"Big Backer" continued to surprise NFL observers this past season with his ability to move his large frame swiftly against opponents' ground attacks . . . contributed 60 tackles as a dominant factor in Patriots run defense and on several occasions ran down Earl Campbell from behind on sweep plays in the two 1978 meetings between the Patriots and Oilers . . . his 56 tackles in 1977 and great inside teamwork with Steve Nelson was a key factor in the team's number one ranking among AFC run defenses that year . . . his 68 yard interception return versus Tampa was the NFL's third longest of the year and a highlight of his great 1976 season . . . second leading tackler on the Pats in 1975 with 99 stops and tops among the club's inside linebackers in 1974 with 74 tackles . . . was the major surprise of the 1974 draft, stepping into a starting role in the new 3-4 alignment and then gaining All-Rookie Team with Pro Football Weekly and Football Digest . . . also named Rookie of the Year by the 1776 Fan Club . . . four year starter in college and was team co-captain as a senior . . . averaged ten tackles a game in each of his 35 collegiate contests . . . is an avid fisherman



Nov 23, 2001:

April, 2015:
The Ultimate Player Draft: A Look at Their Player Selection by Range | boston.com
 
Today in Patriots History
A Half Dozen More August 6 Birthdays



Happy 71st birthday Steve Burks
Born August 6, 1953 in Little Rock, Arkansas
Patriot WR, 1975-1977; uniform #82
Pats 4th round (91st overall) selection of the 1975 draft, from Arkansas State

Steve Burks played in 34 NFL games (all with the Pats), primarily on special teams. A versatile all around athlete, the 6'5 wide receiver had 13 receptions for 264 yards, plus four kick returns. His pro football career appears to have been derailed due to a 1976 training camp knee injury, which in those days was not uncommon to never fully recover from.


10/31/2012:
Steve Burks grew up in Cabot and is a 1971 graduate of Cabot High School. At an early age it became obvious that Mr. Burks was a gifted athlete. Not only was Mr. Burks gifted with athleticism, his brother, Reagan, was an Arkansas Razorback under Frank Broyles.​

Cabot was a recruiting stop for most of the top college coaches in America. During Mr. Burks’ senior year he won the state decathlon breaking the record that held for many years. Mr. Burks was the Arkansas Democrat Athlete of the Year and was the 1970’s version of the former Razorback, Matt Jones. Mr. Burks was three years all county in basketball, all state and all star in football, all state and all star in baseball and was drafted by the New York Yankees.​

Mr. Burks spent his collegiate years at Arkansas State as a quarterback. He tied the all time touchdown record in a single game with seven touchdowns and is still the all time ASU scoring leader. Steve was drafted by the New England Patriots and played three years as a wide receiver.​


From page 10 of the 1977 New England Patriots Media Guide:

All-America and all-state at Cabot (Ark.) High . . . won state decathlon and lettered in three sports . . . one of the best offensive players ever to play at ASU . . . played four different positions during varsity career (QB, punter, WR, RB) . . . rushed for 1351 yards on 347 attempts (3.9 avg.) and scored 26 TDs in four-year career . . . punted for last three years (145 punts, 5653 yds., 39.0 avg.) . . . caught 29 passes for 552 yards (19.0 avg.), 4 TDs . . . also team's leading passer last two seasons completing 61 of 134 (45.5 avg.) for 698 yards, 4 TDs, 7 interceptions . . . all-conference punter in 1972 . . . set Southland Conference scoring records in 1973 for one game (42 points on 7 TDs against Abilene Christian) and season (110 pts.) . . . in rookie year played 13 games as WR and special teams man, also caught longest pass of the season with 76-yarder against Dallas . . . in 1976 he was hottest receiver in training camp until knee injury interfered . . . forced him to miss six games, first five of the season.




Happy 30th birthday Eric Lee
Born August 6, 1994 in Panama City, Florida
Patriot LB, 2017; uniform #55
Signed off the Bills practice squad on November 21, 2017

Eric Lee spent 2016 and 2017 on the practice squad for Houston and Buffalo. He was signed off the Bills practice squad to replace Cassius Marsh, who was not working out (and still whines about the Pats to this day). Lee made an immediate impact as an upgrade over Marsh, with eight tackles, one interception, 2.5 sacks, and a pass deflection in his first two games.

The Patriots waived Lee at the end of 2018 training camp and he signed with Detroit, reuniting with Matt Patricia. The Lions released Eric during the 2019 season, and he was re-signed by the Patriots to their practice squad in December. Eric Lee has been out of pro football since that practice squad contract expired on January 13, 2020.


Eric Lee Highlights - at Buffalo 12/03/2017 (1:25)






Dec 3, 2017:

Dec 15, 2017:

Dec 21, 2021:




Happy 31st birthday Donte Montcrief
Born August 6, 1993 in Raleigh, Mississippi
Patriot WR/KR, 2020; uniform #14
Signed as a free agent on November 4, 2020

At the time there were high hopes that the signing of Donte Montcrief, who was previously a starter for the Colts and Jaguars, was a steal for the Patriots. Instead he was just another in a long list of veteran wide receiver signings that did not return to their previous levels of proficiency. In six games with the Patriots, Montcrief had one 15-yard reception, one four-yard carry, and seven kickoff returns. Montcrief had 205 receptions for 2,576 yards (12.6 ypc) and 21 touchdowns over seven NFL seasons.

Nov 4, 2020:

Nov 29, 2020:

Donte Moncrief 53-Yard Kickoff Return | Patriots vs Cardinals (0:42)






Dec 5, 2020:

Dec 19, 2020:




Happy 52nd birthday Ray Lucas
Born August 6, 1972 in Harrison, New Jersey
Patriot QB, 1996; uniform #15
Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 6, 1996

Ray Lucas is the first of more than a dozen players from Rutgers to have played for the Patriots. As a member of the Scarlet Knights he passed for 5,896 yards, averaging 6.5 yards per attempt, with 43 touchdowns and 30 interceptions. Lucas appeared in only two games (on special teams) for the Pats, with no stats. The running quarterback was one of many players that followed Bill Parcells out of Foxboro to sign with the Jets. He had one successful season, going 6-3 as the starter while completing over 59% of his passes, with 14 TD and 7 INT in 1999 as a sub after Vinny Testaverde was injured.


Jan 12, 1997: Ray Lucas (15) making a special teams play against Jacksonville in the AFCCG​


Interesting article on Lucas here:
Ray Lucas - My Life of Dad
His professional football career, however, came to a sudden end at age 30, when a neck injury caused him to collapse on the sideline during training camp. Instructed by NFL doctors that surgery wasn’t an option, Lucas turned to painkillers for relief, but as his tolerance for medication escalated and his NFL insurance coverage expired, he began to plan his suicide.​

. . .​

TR: Do you remember your first official game? What was that experience like for you?​

RL: It was in Green Bay. I was on kickoff coverage. I ran into the wedge and I didn’t know where the hell I was. I actually got into Green Bay’s huddle after I got up off the ground.​

. . .​

AE: Reading the forward by Bill Parcells it seems that he wanted thought very highly of you. For someone with Bill’s influence and respect in the NFL did you feel that having him on your side helped open up some doors during your time in the league?​

RL: First things first. With Coach Parcells, he is a Jersey boy. I am a Jersey boy. There is an unwritten rule that you have to take care of each other. It took me a long time to become a Parcells guy. You have to show him that you have no fear. You have to show him that you are willing do to whatever it takes to be successful.​

People always ask me, how do you become a Parcells guy? The only way that I can explain it is that he will take you to a cliff. He will make you hang off and then step on one of your hands. If you hold on, he will pick you up and put you behind him.​





Happy 59th birthday Brian Kinchen
Born August 6, 1965 in Baton Rouge
Patriot LS, 2003; uniform #46
Signed as a free agent on December 16, 2003

Brian Kinchen played tight end for the Dolphins, Browns/Ravens and Panthers from 1988-2000. He also became a long snapper after joining Carolina in 1999. In 2003 he came out of retirement at the age of 38 to reunite with Bill Belichick when the Pats needed a LS late in the season, after Lonie Paxton and Sean McDermott were both sidelined with injuries. In a bit of forgotten trivia it was actually Kinchen, not Paxton, who snapped the ball on the Adam Vinatieri field goal that won Super Bowl 38 over Kinchen's former team, Carolina.



Must-read article here:
Feb 3, 2017:
Six hours before kickoff, Kinchen took a seat for pregame meal, across from special teams ace Larry Izzo and linebacker Mike Vrabel. He picked up a roll to start off. It felt cold and hard, too difficult to slice with a butter knife. He grabbed his steak knife instead.​

Kinchen had misjudged. His knife slid right through the roll in one swipe—and straight through to the bone on his right index finger, his throwing hand. Vrabel and Izzo laughed out loud. Our only long snapper. And that’s the most important finger on his hand!​

Further down the table, Walter was not the least bit amused. “At that point I gave up on it,” he says. “That was it, I can’t deal with this.”​

Blood spilled out as Kinchen kept clutching the roll. “I was in as much disbelief as when I threw the bad snaps,” Kinchen says. “All I’m thinking is, What is Belichick going to say when he hears this? After all this crud I’ve been doing all week, how is he going to react to this?” Kinchen would eventually need three stitches to close the cut, but it had to wait until after the game. He'd play with butterfly sutures under his glove.​

On the extra point after New England’s second touchdown, his snap bounced two yards in front of Walter. The holder saved it and the kick went through.​

Oct 12, 2007:







Happy 36th birthday Kevin Hughes
Born August 6, 1988 in New Orleans
Patriot OT, 2015 offseason
Signed as a free agent on May 11, 2015

Hughes was signed as a rookie UDFA by the Rams in 2011. He bounced between the offseason and practice squad rosters of the Rams, Chargers, Packers, and Panthers for four years after appearing in three games for St Louis in 2011. The Pats signed him soon after the 2015 NFL draft; he was waived/injured early in training camp and never again played in the NFL.


Kevin Hughes at training camp on August 1, 2015​
 
Sam Hu
Today in Patriots History
Sam Hunt


Happy 73rd birthday Sam Hunt
Born August 6, 1951 in Longview, Texas
Patriot ILB, 1974-1979; uniform #50
Pats 15th round (374th overall) selection of the 1974 draft, from Stephen F Austin University





Sam Hunt started all but two games during his six years with the Patriots. He is the right inside linebacker, next to Steve Nelson, on the Patriots All-Decade Team of the 1970s.




Hunt played in 84 games for the Pats, plus two more in the playoffs. He had six fumble recoveries and seven interceptions, including one for a touchdown - that saved the 1976 Pats from what would have been an embarrassing loss.


Dec 12, 1976:
Patriots 31, Buccaneers 14 | BucPower.com

Ending their first National Football League season with as many victories as they began, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers achieved perfect imperfection Sunday in a 31-14 loss to the New England Patriots. It was the 14th consecutive Sunday without a victory for the Bucs, setting an NFL record for imperfection.​

But in doing so, the playing with a roster that has been changed more than 50 per cent since the season began because of injuries, gave the playoff-bound and now 11-3 Patriots a run for their pride in front of 41,517 Tampa Stadium customers.​

The Bucs led 14-7 late in the third period on Ed Williams' 17-yard touchdown run and Steve Spurrier's 27-yard scoring toss to Morris Owens, but the Patriots revived themselves in time to score 24 points and dish out a few insults along the way to victory.​

Andy Johnson's nine-yard run with 4:59 left in the third period tied the score at 14. Then linebacker Sam Hunt, who wasn't supposed to play because of a pulled hamstring, intercepted a Spurrier pass and returned it 68 for a touchdown with 6: 15 to play in the fourth period to boost New England into a 21-14 lead.​

John Smith's 30-yard field goal made it 24-14 with 2:41 to play and the Patriots twisted the knife when they called time out with six seconds to play so quarterback Steve Grogan could score from a yard out. Grogan's touchdown run gives him 12 for the season, breaking the previous NFL mark for most touchdowns rushing in a season by a quarterback held by Tobin Rote and Johnny Lujack. On top of that, the Patriots allowed linebacker Steve Zabel, who fancies himself a place-kicker but did no kicking all year, to kick the extra point.​

But there were no complaints about the last-second touchdown from Bucs' Head Coach John McKay, who out his first season in the NFL without a victory: "That doesn't bother me," 'an unusually perturbed McKay 'said after the game.​

New England Coach Chuck Fairbanks apologized to McKay at midfield when it was over. McKay's mood was more a result of his own team's imperfection when it could have had the game safely in hand by halftime. Twice in the first half the Bucs put together long drives and were less than 10 yards from scoring when fumbles stopped them without a point.​

That the Bucs' defense, hit hardest by the injury epidemic, could hold the Patriots' offense to only seven points for the better part of three periods, was a major accomplishment. That score was a 69-yard touchdown run by Johnson in the second period. Johnson gained 127 yards on 14 carries and scored twice for the Patriots, who used fullback Sam Cunningham sparingly because of a bruised shoulder.​

The Patriots, as the American Football Conference wild-card team, travel to Oakland next week for the first round of the playoffs against the Raiders. New England's 11-3 record a complete reversal of last year's 3-13 mark. Should the Bucs be able to pull such a reversal next season, they would be 14-0. But right now, one win would be an improvement. Says McKay, "I think I'll take some time off and go hide somewhere"'​

Sam Hunt Pick-Six - 1976, Patriots vs Buccaneers
Steve Nelson and Steve Zabel, former 1976 Patriots with the commentary



Sept 5, 2004: Catching up with Sam Cunningham | Boston.com

Question: HARDEST HITTER YOU PLAYED AGAINST:
Answer: Sam Hunt





From page 20 of the 1979 New England Patriots Media Guide:

"Big Backer" continued to surprise NFL observers this past season with his ability to move his large frame swiftly against opponents' ground attacks . . . contributed 60 tackles as a dominant factor in Patriots run defense and on several occasions ran down Earl Campbell from behind on sweep plays in the two 1978 meetings between the Patriots and Oilers . . . his 56 tackles in 1977 and great inside teamwork with Steve Nelson was a key factor in the team's number one ranking among AFC run defenses that year . . . his 68 yard interception return versus Tampa was the NFL's third longest of the year and a highlight of his great 1976 season . . . second leading tackler on the Pats in 1975 with 99 stops and tops among the club's inside linebackers in 1974 with 74 tackles . . . was the major surprise of the 1974 draft, stepping into a starting role in the new 3-4 alignment and then gaining All-Rookie Team with Pro Football Weekly and Football Digest . . . also named Rookie of the Year by the 1776 Fan Club . . . four year starter in college and was team co-captain as a senior . . . averaged ten tackles a game in each of his 35 collegiate contests . . . is an avid fisherman



Nov 23, 2001:

April, 2015:
The Ultimate Player Draft: A Look at Their Player Selection by Range | boston.com

Sam Hunt, still one of my favorite Patriots. I bought a Sam Hunt jersey. He looked like he was thundering down the field.
 
Today in Patriots History
Other August 6 Birthdays



Happy 45th birthday Seth Wand
3rd round (75th overall) selection of the 2003 draft

April 26, 2003:
The Patriots traded the draft pick that would be used on Wand (3.75), along with the Pats 2003 2nd round pick (41st overall, Bennie Joppru) to the Houston Texans in exchange for Houston's 2003 2nd round pick (36th overall, Eugene Wilson) and 2003 4th round pick (117th overall, Dan Klecko).

Wand started 18 games over a five-year career with three different teams. Joppru was a tight end whose only NFL stats were a few special teams tackles, and played in only one game for the Texans.


Yes, the Patriots won that trade.



Happy 26th birthday Dezmon Patmon
6th round (212th overall) selection of the 2020 draft

April 25, 2020:
The Patriots traded up, sending the draft pick that would be used for Patmon (6.212) and the next pick, 6.213 (Jordan Glasgow) to Indianapolis for an earlier sixth round pick (#182 overall, Mike Onwenu).

Patmon had four receptions in ten NFL games, and last played in 2022. Glasgow appeared in 25 games for the Colts, but has not played since 2021. Onwenu has played in 64 games and just signed a contract with $36.5 million guaranteed.


Yes, the Patriots won that trade as well.




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

Trev Faulk, 43 (8/6/81)
Cousin to Kevin Faulk
Middle linebacker from LSU played in 29 games for the Rams in 2004-05.

Mike Evans, 78 (8/6/46)
Boston College, class of '68
This Mike Evans was a center, not a wide receiver. He was a ninth round (232nd overall) selection of the 1968 draft by his hometown team, Philadelphia. Evans was the Eagles starting center from 1968 to 1973.

Brendan McCarthy (8/6/45-8/26/97)
Born in Boston; Boston College, class of '68
Running back for the Falcons and Broncos was originally a 4th round pick by Green Bay in 1968.

Diamond Ferri, 43 (8/6/81)
Born in Stoneham; Everett High School, class of '99
Safety played briefly with the Arizona Cardinals 18 years ago.




Some other pro football players sharing this birth date:

Ken Riley, (1947-20208)
Pro Bowl CB started 201 games for the Bengals from 1969-1983, recording 65 interceptions. He was finally inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2023 - posthumously.

Ed Husmann (1931-2018)
The three-time AFL All-Star DT with the Houston Oilers played in 142 games from 1953 to 1965.

Bruce Van Dyke, 80 (8/6/44)
The guard played in 128 games from 1966-76, mostly with the Steelers.

Kareem Hunt, 29 (8/6/95)
Good running back; bad human being.

Bruce Miller, 37 (8/6/87)
Holds an obscure record of longest amount of time away from football and then returning (post-WWII). Miller missed four full seasons after an arrest for felony assault charges, then returned to play at age 33 in 2020.

Snitz Snyder (1905-1983)
What's not to love about a fullback named Snitz?

Mike Frederick, 52 (8/6/72)
Frederick was part of a lopsided trade between the 49ers and Browns. In 1995 San Francisco sent their first round pick (30th overall), 4th rounder (119th overall) and their 1996 first round pick all to Cleveland in order to move up to the 10th overall pick of the draft.

San Francisco used that selection on WR J.J. Stokes who had a good but not great career (though he did pick up a ring after appearing in two 2003 games with the Pats).

Initially Cleveland (ie, Bill Belichick and Ozzie Newsome) looked as though they lost out in the trade. The first round pick was LB Craig Powell; he played in only three games as a rookie and was a draft bust, appearing in just 14 NFL games with zero starts over his career. The third round pick was Frederick, who was a backup DE as a rookie and started only 12 games over a five year career.

The final draft pick, that 2006 first rounder was used a year later after the Browns became the Baltimore Ravens: Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Lewis.

Most importantly, let's never forget: RLKAG
 
Today in Patriots History
RIP, **** Rehbein


August 6, 2001:
Patriots QB coach **** Rehbein passes away due to a heart condition at the young age of 45. He is most well known for being the primary staff member to lobby for the Pats to draft Tom Brady.





https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/27...mily-of-papa-angel-to-cherish-20-years-later/
The suspension-of-disbelief part comes into play when we mull the sobering reality that **** Rehbein never lived to witness Brady’s epic ascendancy. During training camp in Brady’s second season — on Aug. 6, 2001, 20 years ago this week — Rehbein lost consciousness while undergoing a stress test at Massachusetts General Hospital. The doctors couldn’t bring him back. He was 45 years old, leaving his wife, Pam, and two daughters, Betsy, 16 at the time, and Sarabeth, 12.​

Rehbein had been a trim, healthy-looking man who watched what he ate and liked to work out. But what outsiders couldn’t have known is that he had been diagnosed with cardiomyopathy in 1988, or that the trip to Mass General had been arranged after he had collapsed while running on a treadmill a day earlier.​

As Pam and the kids retreated to their North Attleboro home to pick up the pieces after ****’s tragic death, the mournful Patriots picked up the pieces after losing their quarterback coach. The team left the position vacant for the 2001 season.​

**** wasn’t there, then, when Brady took over as the Patriots’ starting quarterback after the crushing Mo Lewis hit that landed veteran Drew Bledsoe in the hospital in September. . . . . . . . .​


But to ****’s kids, Betsy and Sarabeth, it’s as though their dad has been there every step of the way. The two women, both now married with children of their own, are unabashed Tom Brady fans, and not just because he’s a great quarterback. The bonus to Brady’s success is that their own kids are being given a precious gift: A chance to celebrate their grandfather’s success in real time each time Brady does something magical on the football field.​

And along the way, the late **** Rehbein has earned a new title: Papa Angel.​

He is Papa Angel to Pam, to Betsy, to Sarabeth.​

And, especially, he is Papa Angel to the grandchildren he never lived to see.​

Papa Angel.

Is there a cooler grandpa handle than that?​





https://riponredhawks.com/news/2021/7/29/football-ripons-100-for-100-****-rehbein-77.aspx
**** Rehbein '77 was a football lifer. A two-time First Team All-American and three-time First Team All-Conference performer as an offensive lineman for Ripon College, he built a life out of the game he loved, going on to serve as an assistant coach in the National Football League (NFL) for 21 years across four different teams until his untimely death in 2001. One of Rehbein's most notable contributions to the sport came many years after playing his final game at Ripon's Ingalls Field, when he played an integral role in New England Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick drafting future NFL Hall of Fame quarterback Tom Brady in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft.​

But before he became a successful assistant in the NFL, Rehbein was one of the finest players Ripon's football team had ever seen before or since as one of just three players in program history to earn All-American honors more than once, doing so in each of his final two seasons. Playing center as the anchor of Ripon's offensive line, Rehbein started every game of his career. During his senior season, Rehbein was paramount in Ripon leading the Midwest Conference in both rushing yards per game (251) and total offensive yards per game (417). His domination on the gridiron landed Rehbein in the Ripon College Athletics Hall of Fame, with his induction occurring in 1997.​

A Criminal Justice major from De Pere, Wis., Rehbein was the only Division-II or Division-III player from a Wisconsin school to earn All-American honors during his senior season. What ended as a storied collegiate career almost never happened at Ripon. As student-athlete at De Pere High School, Rehbein had thoughts of playing football at a large university, but turned down an opportunity to attend the University of Minnesota, which he never regretted.​

"I've played a lot more here than my friends who went to big schools," Rehbein is on record as saying during his time as a Ripon College student-athlete. "I've learned a lot more playing here than I would have warming the bench somewhere else."​

After Rehbein's graduation in 1977, he pursued his dream of playing professional football, participating in the Green Bay Packers' training camp that summer. He did not make their final roster, as he was cut by Packer great and then-Head Coach Bart Starr. Two years later, Rehbein again found himself with an opportunity in the NFL - this time as a coach, with Starr hiring him as the Packers' Special Teams Coach.​

After serving in that role for four seasons with the Packers, Rehbein worked one year for the USFL's Los Angeles Express, before being hired as an assistant coach for the Minnesota Vikings, including as Assistant Offensive Coordinator for two years. He then worked as an assistant in many roles for the New York Giants, prior to being hired by the Patriots in 2000 as the team's quarterbacks coach.​

One of his first jobs in that new role, as requested by first-year Head Coach Bill Belichick, was to find a developmental quarterback that could be a project behind starter Drew Bledsoe. That project turned out to be Michigan's Tom Brady, who Rehbein lobbied for during draft meetings at every opportunity.​

After flying to Michigan to scout Brady during his senior season, along with then-Patriots linebackers coach Rob Ryan, Rehbein was sold.​

"**** had an unbelievable vision for him. I remember flying on the way back home and **** was talking, 'This is my guy. I love this guy," recalled Ryan. Rehbein raved about Brady to his wife Pam and spent parts of the next several months advocating for him to Belichick and the rest of the front office.​

"**** loved Brady. He loved the quarterback's potential, his awareness, and his ability to find receivers all over the field," one of ****'s closest friends and then-Patriots offensive coordinator Charlie Weis said. "**** was certain Brady could be an NFL star and he was never afraid to offer an opinion unlike many other assistant coaches."​

Rehbein's wish came to fruition with the 199th overall pick in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL draft when the Patriots selected Brady, who would go on to appear in 10 super bowls, winning seven, while setting numerous NFL records including most wins by an individual player in league history.​

Brady did not start in an NFL game until 2001 after serving as the Patriots fourth-string QB as a rookie and sitting behind Bledsoe for the first couple games of the 2001 season, before the latter suffered a major injury. Unfortunately, Rehbein never got to see his pet project play in an NFL game, as he passed away unexpectedly due to the heart condition cardiomyopathy during training camp in 2001, a season that would culminate in Brady's first career Super Bowl victory.​

"This is a very difficult day for the New England Patriots and everyone who had the pleasure of knowing **** Rehbein," Belichick said at the time of ****'s death. "**** was the kindest and most decent of men, who cherished his family and his career as an NFL coach. He was respected and admired professionally, by players and coaches alike and he'll be deeply missed."​




https://www.espn.com/nfl/playoffs/2...ein-championed-tom-brady-new-england-patriots

https://www.masslive.com/sports/201...ngland-patriots-quarterbacks-coach-alive.html



**** Rehbein with wife Pam and daughter Betsy, center, during a cruise around Manhattan in 1997, when he was an assistant for the Giants




Former Patriots quarterbacks coach **** Rehbein between his daughters Betsy (left) and Sarabeth (right) in 1999.​
 
Today in Patriots History
August 6th News



Aug 6, 2024:



Aug 6, 2018:
Malcolm Mitchell's time with the Patriots has come to an end. The Patriots have released the wide receiver.​

The Patriots drafted Mitchell in the fourth round of the 2016 NFL Draft, and he's battled injuries throughout his brief NFL career. But he had developed a nice rapport with quarterback Tom Brady when he was on the field, turning in a solid rookie campaign with 32 receptions for 401 yards and four touchdowns in 12 regular season games. He had his best game when it mattered most, catching six passes for 70 yards in New England's epic comeback win over the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI.​

But Mitchell missed all of last season with a knee injury and underwent another procedure on his knee just a few weeks ago. It appears he's not healthy enough for the Patriots to keep him on their roster, even with a shortage at wide receiver on the depth chart.​

It's a disappointing end for a player who once had a lot of promise in a Patriots uniform.​

The New England Patriots aren't done restructuring their receiving corps.​

In the latest move to reshuffle its set of pass catchers, the team released Malcolm Mitchell on Monday.​

A fourth-round pick out of Georgia in 2016, Mitchell showed promise as a rookie by hauling in 32 catches for 401 yards and four touchdowns. But he spent all of last season on injured reserve with a knee injury and was held out of the team's offseason program. He also underwent another procedure on his knee in late July.​

The move is just the latest shift for a Patriots wide receiver room that has seen plenty of offseason upheaval. New England also released Jordan Matthews last Wednesday, just short of four months after he signed with the team, with an injury settlement. The Patriots subsequently signed veteran Eric Decker.​

New England also dealt Brandin Cooks to the Los Angeles Rams in April. Cordarrelle Patterson arrived via trade in March to join a group that returns Julian Edelman (returning from a torn ACL in 2017), Chris Hogan, Phillip Dorsett and Kenny Britt, among others.​






Aug 6, 2015:
The Patriots training camp roster shuffling continued Thursday with the team announcing the signings of offensive lineman Mark Asper and tight end Mason Brodine. Terms of those deals were not announced. They also released offensive lineman Harlan Gunn.​

Asper, 29, 6-6, 321 pounds, spent time on the Dolphins and Giants practice squads last season. Brodine, 27, 6-7, 270, was on injured reserve with the Rams last season. Gunn was claimed off waivers from the Falcons earlier this week.​



Aug 6, 2011:
The Patriots made two minor roster moves on Saturday, waiving cornerback Thad Turner and waiving/injured offensive lineman Kyle Hix. Both players were considered longshots to make the 53-man roster.​

Turner was signed to the Patriots' practice squad on November 9, 2010 after signing with the Colts as an undrafted free agent the previous spring. He was re-signed to a future contract on January 17.​

An undrafted free agent out of Texas, Hix had missed the past five training camp practices with an undisclosed injury. By being waived/injured, Hix will be placed on the Patriots' injured reserve list if he is not first claimed by another team off waivers.​



Aug 6, 2010:
The Patriots announced tonight that running back Thomas Clayton, a longshot to make the roster, has been released. The move was made to make room for safety Josh Barrett, who was claimed off waivers from the Denver Broncos.​

Clayton, who was drafted out of Kansas State by the San Francisco 49ers in the sixth round of the 2007 draft, spent all of 2007 and the first 14 weeks of 2008 on the 49ers practice squad. Clayton was signed to San Francisco's active roster for the final two games of 2008 but was placed on injured reserved for the 2009 season.​

The Patriots signed the 5-foot-11, 250-pound Clayton on June 11. He has been sidelined for 11 of the team's training camp practices with an undisclosed injury.​



Aug 6, 2009:
Guard Al Johnson was released by the Patriots. The offensive lineman joined the Pats on March 16 after spending the previous season with the Dolphins. Johnson had not participated in training camp due to an undisclosed injury. He and the Patriots reached an injury settlement before parting ways.

The 6'5, 305 pound veteran had spent six seasons in the NFL, playing for the Dallas Cowboys (2003-06), Arizona Cardinals (2007) and the Dolphins (2008).



Aug 6, 2007:
The Patriots announced the release of running back Quadtrine Hill today. Hill was a longer shot to earn a roster spot.​

Hill, 24, was signed to the Patriots practice squad on January 4, 2007 and was a member of the practice squad during last season’s playoffs. The 6-foot-2-inch, 230-pound running back was signed to the Patriots’ active roster on January 23, 2007. Hill was originally signed by the Houston Texans as a rookie free agent on May 4, 2006. He was released by the Texans on June 15, 2006 and was signed by the Chicago Bears on August 21, 2006. Hill was released by Chicago on August 24, 2006.​





Aug 6, 2004:
The New England Patriots released three players today: offensive tackle James Williams, quarterback Kurt Kittner and defensive lineman DeVonte Peterson. The team's training camp roster now consists of 84 players, including those carrying NFL Europe roster exemptions.​

Williams, 36, was signed by the Patriots on July 28, 2004. He is a veteran of 12 NFL seasons, playing in 166 games with 143 starts for the Chicago Bears from 1991-2002. The 6-foot-7-inch, 332-pound lineman started at right tackle in 134 consecutive games for the Bears, including every game in his final eight seasons in Chicago. He earned a Pro Bowl nod following the 2001 campaign, a season in which he also earned All-Pro honors from the Associated Press.​

Kittner, 24, was signed by the Patriots on July 15, 2004. He is in his third NFL season after spending the first two years of his pro career with the Atlanta Falcons. In 2003, the 6-foot-2-inch, 221-pound quarterback started four games for the Falcons while playing in a total of seven contests. He finished the season completing 44 of 114 passes for 391 yards and two touchdowns. Kittner was selected by the Falcons in the fifth round (158th overall) of the 2002 NFL Draft.​

Peterson, 26, was signed by the Patriots on June 22, 2004. He was originally signed by the Buffalo Bills as an undrafted free agent on April 27, 2001. The 6-foot-2-inch, 275-pound defensive tackle has also spent time with the Indianapolis Colts and played in NFL Europe for the Scottish Claymores in 2002.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Gerald Phelan



Aug 6, 1997:
The Patriots waive CB Curtis Jones, an undrafted rookie CB from Howard.
From a 7/16/97 article:
But many of the other 26 first-year players expected to report for this afternoon's physicals and conditioning run aren't in such a fortunate position.​

Curtis Jones, a free-agent cornerback from Howard University, for one, knows he is facing an uphill battle to win a job.​

"I just want a chance to compete, to give it everything I can," he said after picking up the key to his dorm room. "I feel like I learned a lot during two mini-camps. Now I'm ready to get it on. This going to be the biggest challenge I've ever faced, but I can't wait to get started."​

New coach Pete Carroll and his assistants also are itching to turn the key to the "on" position because, as linebackers coach Dante Scarnecchia pointed out, nobody enjoys an NFL camp more than an NFL coach.​

"You have time to go over things in detail and to fine-tune everything you've been talking about for months," he said. "It's a good time of year for us."​



The Patriots also waived another player from Howard, RB Rupert Grant.

"Dogghead" Grant had originally been signed as undrafted rookie by the Pats on May 1, 1995. He appeared in seven games for the Patriots in '95, then spent the second half of the season on the practice squad. An injury very early in the following training camp resulted in his spending the 1996 season on injured reserve. Grant was a fullback/linebacker in the Arena Football League from 1999 to 2007 with the Nashville Kats, Detroit Fury and Orlando Predators.




WR Michael Dritlein clears waivers and is placed on injured reserve with a fractured collarbone.
See the August 5 entry for more on the Washburn University product.




Aug 6, 1985:
Fourth round draft pick Gerald Phelan dislocates his left kneecap in a training camp practice.

There were high hopes for the wide receiver from Boston College who is most well known for being on the receiving end of Doug Flutie's Hail Mary pass to upset the Miami Hurricanes, in what is probably the most iconic play in the history of college football.

The extent of the injury was devastating: it ended Phelan's pro football career before it had a chance to begin. In his post-football career Phelan has been a long-time sales executive at RR Donnelly, North America's largest commercial printer.







Aug 6, 1980:
New England signs free agent safety Jimmy Stewart

The actor's namesake was an eighth round (201st overall) selection of the 1977 draft by New Orleans, from Tulsa. He played in nine games for the Saints in '77, and five for the Lions in '79, with four starts. I'm not sure of the specifics, but the Pats placed Stewart on injured reserve four days later, and he never again played in the NFL.
 
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