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Today In Patriots History Jan 15, 1982: Ron Meyer hired as Head Coach

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Today in Patriots History
1982: Pats hire Ron Meyer



January 12, 1982:
Ron Meyer is hired to become Head Coach


After some very promising improvement in the late seventies with Chuck Fairbanks as the head coach, Ron Erhardt took over in 1979. The Pats missed the playoffs, going 9-7, 10-6, and then plummeting to 2-14 in 1981. That club may have actually been the best two-win team in NFL history, with eight one-score losses, a point differential of only minus-48 points, and an offense that ranked 9th in yards and 15th in points. But they also lost their last nine games in a row and attendance was down. The final humility was losing in the final week of the season in the Stupor Bowl to 1-14 Baltimore. The Colts had lost 14 straight after a week one win against - yep, the Patriots. Two days later Erhardt was fired, but at least the loss gave the Pats the number one pick in the draft. (Take note, Jerod Mayo.) Perhaps desiring to duplicate the success of Fairbanks, Billy Sullivan decided to go to the college ranks for his new head coach rather than someone with NFL coaching experience.


A native of Westerville, Ohio, where he was born on Feb. 17, 1941, Meyer was class president of his high school and lettered in football, basketball and baseball. Meyer attended Purdue and walked on to the football team and eventually earned a scholarship. As a defensive back, he led the team in minutes played as a junior and senior. A standout both on the field and in the classroom, Meyer was selected to the All-Big 10 Academic Team and won the Nobel Kaiser Award for athletic and academic achievement in 1963.​

Meyer spent six seasons (1965-70) as an assistant coach with his alma mater before leaving college for the NFL ranks as a personnel scout with the Dallas Cowboys. After two seasons with the Cowboys, he was named head coach at the University of Nevada – Las Vegas in 1973. Meyer took over a UNLV squad that had won once in 11 games in 1972 and led the Rebels to an 8-3 record the following year in his first season as a head coach. In 1974, UNLV went undefeated, 11-0, during the regular season and finished runner up in the NCAA Division II National Championship.​


After turning around UNLV, Meyer was hired to become head coach at Southern Methodist. For twenty-plus years SMU had been a doormat in the Southwest Conference, one of the smallest 1-A schools in the country, attempting to compete with traditional powerhouses like Texas, in a conference with other schools that had double or triple the enrollment. But the Mustangs miraculously - or so it seemed at the time - turned things around. In Meyer's fifth season, 1980, SMU went 8-4, tied for second in the SWC and invited to a bowl game for the first time in 12 years. The next year SMU won the Southwest Conference for only the second time since 1948, going 10-1 with a number five final national ranking. There would be no bowl game though, as SMU was on probation for recruiting violations. Turns out that SMU was paying players under the table, and later investigations - for actions while Meyer was there - resulted in the Death Penalty, with SMU barred from playing football for year.


Meyer's first year in New England was the strike-shortened 1982 season. The highlight was the Snow Plow Game that the Patriots won 3-0, causing Don Shula to nearly have a stroke on the field (and leading to his unhealthy hatred of all things Patriots for the rest of his life). The following week the Pats shutout the Seahawks 16-0 in Seattle, for the only back-to-back shutouts in franchise history. The Pats made the expanded playoffs with a 5-4 record before losing to the Dolphins in Miami in the wild card round 28-13. The turnaround resulted in Meyer being named AFC Coach of the Year.




The following year the Pats went 8-8, four games behind Miami in second place in the AFC East, and missing a wild card spot by one game. In 1984 the Patriots were sitting at 5-3, one game behind the Jets, three behind undefeated Miami, and one game in back of Seattle for the last wild card spot. On Wednesday of that week Meyer canned defensive coordinator Rod Rust, blindsiding ownership by not consulting with any of the team's management prior to the decision.

24 hours later, Meyer was fired, replaced by Raymond Berry. After immediately rehiring Rust the new coach went 4-4 the rest of the way, then guided the Patriots to an 11-5 record the following year, winning the franchise's first AFC championship in the Squish the Fish Game.


'It would have been extremely easy to stay status quo,' said Meyer about his sacking of the popular Rust who is highly regarded by the Sullivan family, owners of the Patriots.​

But that move made Meyer's removal imperative, according to **** Steinberg, director of player personnel.​

'This was a more positive way to go than the status quo. They (the team) have played over the distractions up to now, but this last thing we felt was too great a thing to overcome,' said Steinberg.​

Meyer, who on Wednesday said he was 'never opposed to decisive action,' was fired from his first NFL job after guiding the Patriots to an 18-16 record over 2 seasons.​



Berry, a receivers coach for New England in 1978-81, had been out of football since then, working as a sales manager for a Tennessee company. He was given a multi-year pact by the team. Neither length nor salary were disclosed.​

Berry, 51, who had also worked as an assistant in Dallas, Detroit and Cleveland, rehired Rust as his first move in his first job as an NFL head coach -- the Patriots' ninth.​

'Everybody who knows Rod Rust is glad to have him back,' said Berry, who played in the NFL for 13 years with the Baltimore Colts, where he was the favorite target of legendary quarterback Johnny Unitas.​




Patriots general manager Patrick Sullivan told a noon press conference Thursday, 'Yesterday was an extremely difficult day, but I feel we have come out stronger.'​

Sullivan was reportedly deeply upset with Meyer's action three days after the team gave up a club record 552 yards to the Miami Dolphins.​

Sullivan flew back from New Orleans mid-day Wednesday after Rust was fired by Meyer. Sullivan called Berry at his Medfield, Mass., home before meeting with Meyer at 5 p.m. at the stadium. Berry was offered the job Wednesday night and Meyer was informed Thursday morning by Sullivan of the ouster.​

Asked why he did not fire Meyer Wednesday night since Berry had already accepted the job offer, Sullivan said, 'I was not in the mood, it had been a difficult day.'​


At the time the firing of a head coach was a rarity. Team owners had to have patience with head coaches; there were no quick turnarounds in the era before the salary cap and free agency. Meyer never had a losing season as head coach of the Patriots, and at the time his .545 career winning percentage was the best in franchise history (fifth now, behind Mike Vrabel's .824, Bill Belichick's .687, Pete Carroll's .563 and Raymond Berry's .552). Meyer later became head coach for the Colts; in his first full season, 1987, turned Indy around from a 3-13, fifth place finish to 9-6, first place in the AFC East. That earned Meyer his second AFC Coach of the Year honor.




One very important note regarding the hire of Ron Meyer: he brought with him an assistant from SMU - an offensive line coach by the name of Dante Scarnecchia. Scar followed Meyer to Indianapolis for the 1989-90 seasons but thankfully returned to New England in 1991.


 
And thus the ground-work for the 1985 AFC champs was laid... Same as Chuck Fairbanks a decade earlier, Meyer brought a first-hand wealth of knowledge about future in-coming college prospects with him... Still made some bone-headed picks during those 3 drafts too, sadly... I saw the PO-clincher in '82 while home on Christmas/New Year's leave... And my brother told me that the Herald ran a Special Edition the day that Rod Rust was justifiably ****-canned in '84; same as it did less than two years later for Len Bias
 
And thus the ground-work for the 1985 AFC champs was laid... Same as Chuck Fairbanks a decade earlier, Meyer brought a first-hand wealth of knowledge about future in-coming college prospects with him... Still made some bone-headed picks during those 3 drafts too, sadly... I saw the PO-clincher in '82 while home on Christmas/New Year's leave... And my brother told me that the Herald ran a Special Edition the day that Rod Rust was justifiably ****-canned in '84; same as it did less than two years later for Len Bias
In some ways Meyer reminds me of Pete Carroll, even though they had far different personalities.

Both were canned by the Pats despite not having losing records.
Both were disliked by the fans, and to a certain degree, by the players.
And both had a lot of success in college - then got out of town before the NCAA violation repercussions hit.
 
January 15 is a slow news day in Patriots history, so here are a few artifacts from the previous two days.


January 13, 2009:
New England Patriots Vice President of Player Personnel Scott Pioli is hired as General Manager of the Kansas City Chiefs

One of Pioli's first tasks was to fire Herm Edwards. A month later he traded for Pats QB Matt Cassel and OLB Mike Vrabel.


January 13, 2010:
Junior Seau announces his retirement on Inside the NFL
This came three days after the Ravens ran over the Patriots 33-14 in the wild card, the day when Ray Rice ran 83 yards for a touchdown on the first play of the game.


January 13, 2013:
Patriots 41, Houston Texans 28 in AFCDG

This was a rematch of the Letterman Game from six weeks earlier. Shane Vereen scored three touchdowns and had 124 yards from scrimmage, Wes Welker had eight catches for 131 yards, Aaron Hernandez had six receptions for 85 yards, and Stevan Ridley scored twice. Tom Brady threw for 344 yards and three TDs, becoming became the winningest quarterback in NFL playoff history with his 17th postseason win, breaking a tie with Joe Montana. Rob Ninkovich made a couple of crucial plays, intercepting a Matt Schaub pass and also recovering an onside kick. The aftermath of the game was not all jubilation, however. Rob Gronkowski - who had broken his forearm on a fluke play in week 11 against the Colts on an extra point - re-injured the same forearm, requiring surgery and sidelining him for the remainder of the postseason.


January 13, 2018:
Patriots 35, Tennessee Titans 14 in AFCDG

The Patriot defense led the way, sacking Marcus Mariota eight times to set a franchise playoff record. Tennessee RB Derrick Henry had rushed for 156 yards the previous week against KC - but on this day the Pats limited him to just 28 yards on 12 carries. Six different players had sacks, led by Deatrich Wise and Geneo Grissom with two each. The defense forced three straight 3-and-outs (all for negative yardage) to open the second half, with the Patriots then going on two long scoring drives that chewed up over 11 minutes off the clock to put the game away. The Patriot defense was immense, forcing seven punts and a turnover on downs on the Titans first nine possessions. Tom Brady passed for 337 yards and three touchdowns; it was his tenth career postseason game with at least three touchdown passes, moving him past Joe Montana for the most in NFL history. Danny Amendola led the Patriots with 11 catches for 112 yards, while Dion Lewis totaled 141 yards from scrimmage. The victory sent New England to the AFC championship game for a record-setting seventh consecutive season.


January 13, 2019:
Patriots 41, San Diego Chargers 28 in AFCDG

Sony Michel ran for 129 yards and three touchdowns as the Pats jumped out to a 35-7 halftime lead, cruising to their eighth straight AFC championship game. Tom Brady went 34-44 for 343 yards, James White tied an NFL playoff record with 15 receptions, and Julian Edelman had 151 yards on nine catches. The Patriots scored touchdowns on each of their first four possessions before the Chargers forced a three-and-out. But the punt was muffed, and after a challenge it was New England's ball on the 35. Four plays later the Patriots found the end zone again, making the score 35-7 late in the first half.


January 13, 2025:
New head coach Mike Vrabel holds his initial press conference



Happy 71st birthday to Mike Wheeler, born January 13, 1955 in Memphis, Tennessee

Wheeler played in 73 games for the Pats from 1978 to 1983, at tackle, center and guard.

 
January 14, 1960:
Ed McKeever appointed general manager

McKeever was the Pats first GM, retaining those duties for four years before head coach Mike Holovak also assumed the duties of GM in 1964. McKeever requested the move into the role of Director of Player Personnel so he could focus on scouting, then returned home to Baton Rouge in 1968, scouting college players in the southeast for the Patriots until 1971.



January 14, 2006:
Denver Broncos 27, New England Patriots 13 in AFCDG

The Game that Ben Watson ran down Champ Bailey.


Denver was leading 10-6 late in the third quarter when the Patriots started a drive at their own 22 following a punt. On the first three plays Tom Brady completed passes of 33 yards to Troy Brown, 26 yards to Deion Branch, and nine yards to David Givens. Corey Dillon ran five yards off left tackle on the following play to give the Patriots a first and goal at the five yard line.

A false start, a five yard completion to Branch and an incomplete pass to Givens set up third and goal at the five. On a safety blitz Brady rolled to his right and threw off his back foot for Troy, not getting enough zip on the ball. Champ Bailey stepped in front for the interception. With the line of scrimmage so close to the pick, it only took a few steps for him to be past most would-be tacklers. Kevin Faulk had a chance at the 45, but Bailey side stepped him and had a clear path for the end zone.

Then Watson made his famous effort play - but what usually gets lost in the story is the fact that the Patriots should have got the ball back, rather than Denver scoring from the one-yard line to take a commanding 17-6 lead.

From below are four revealing, tell-tale still photos:
What if Ben Watson's play against Denver was called correctly?






Clearly the ball went of bounds in the end zone (and not the one yard line), which would have given the Patriots possession at the twenty, with the score still 10-6. Whether or not the Pats would have used that play as an emotional lift to victory is impossible to say. There was also another highly questionable call when Brady emerged from the pile with the ball, yet the officials awared possession to the Broncos as a fumble.

The harsh reality is the Patriots made bad plays near the end of the first half that cost them ten points. A Kevin Faulk fumble gave Denver the ball at the New England 40, and on the next play Asante Samuel had a bad pass interference giving the Broncos first down at the one, leading to a touchdown. Ellis Hobbs fumbled the ensuing kickoff, gifting Denver with another three points. Then early in the fourth quarter Adam Vinatieri missed a 43-yard field goal, followed by Troy Brown muffing a punt. Three plays later Denver scored another touchdown, and the Broncos had an insurmountable 18-point lead.


January 14, 2007:
Patriots 24, San Diego Chargers 21 in AFCDG

The number four seed New England Patriots knocked off the team with the NFL's best record, 24-21 in San Diego. The Chargers were extremely confident - perhaps overconfident - and seemed to be in denial, unable to grasp the reality they had lost to a better team that day.

The one iconic play in this game happened with 6:20 left to play, and San Diego leading 21-13. The Patriots were facing a 4th-and-5 on the Charger 41 yard line. The pass was intercepted by Marlon McCree, who could have either just knocked the pass down, or fallen to the ground with the ball to put the Charger offense on the field. Instead he attempted to run with the ball out of a crowd, even though there was little to no daylight. Troy Brown made the game-saving play, knocking the ball out of McCree's hands to set up the crucial fumble recovery by Reche Caldwell.

With a fresh set of downs and renewed confidence the Pats quickly scored against a demoralized and unfocused Charger defense. On the extra point attempt the snap went to Kevin Faulk, who was standing next to Brady, and he quickly burst up the middle for two points to tie the score.

The Patriot defense forced a three and out, then a 49-yard completion to Caldwell set up Stephen Gostkowski's game winning 31 yard field goal with 1:14 to play. San Diego was able to move into New England territory, but Nate Kaeding's 52 yard field goal attempt went wide.

After the game was over league MVP LaDainian Tomlinson had to be restrained, and complained incessantly about the Patriots mocking Shawne Merriman by mimicking his lights-out dance. LT whined that the Patriot celebration was not 'classy'. What a hypocrite! In other words it is okay for Merriman to mock an opposing team, but when the shoe is on the other foot he cries foul? The Patriots would have never done that if not for the serial steroid abuser Merriman's childish antics happening first. Memo to Tomlinson: people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.


January 14, 2010:
Patriots announce the resignation of defensive coordinator Dean Pees

The Pats would not officially have another DC until 2012, when 38-year old Matt Patricia was given the title after eight seasons as a position coach, primarily linebackers. Pees would proceed to work as DC for the Ravens (2012-17), Titans (2018-19) and Falcons (2021-22).


January 14, 2012:
Patriots 45, Denver Broncos 10 in AFCDG

The taming of Tebowmania.

Less than two minutes in, the Pats were up by a touchdown. Less than six minutes later, they were up by two. Over the final 2½ minutes of a freakishly good first half, they scored two more to go up by 28 points. Denver couldn't cover or tackle All-Po TE Rob Gronkowski, who tied a postseason mark with three touchdown catches, all in the opening half. Tom Brady toyed with the Broncos, throwing more TD passes than Tim Tebow had completions (three) in the first 30 minutes. Brady's sixth TD of the game was to his other tight end, Aaron Hernandez, as he tied Steve Young and Daryle Lamonica for the most touchdown passes in a postseason game.

Of the 55 games ever played between these two teams, this game was the largest margin of victory ever by the Pats, and tied with a game from 1961 for the most ever scored by the Patriots against the Broncos.


January 14, 2016:
Darius Fleming suffers 22 stitches rescuing a woman from a burning car

Shortly after, Albert Breer falsely accuses the backup OLB of fabricating the story, turning Fleming's life upside down.



January 14, 2017:
Patriots 34, Houston Texans 16 in AFCDG

Dion Lewis set an NFL postseason record by being the only player to ever score touchdowns three different ways: running, receiving, and on a kickoff return. Lewis finished with 188 all-purpose yards, Julian Edelman had eight catches for 137 yards, Chris Hogan had four receptions for 95 yards, and the Pats picked off three Brock Osweiler passes - one each by Devin McCourty, Logan Ryan and Duron Harmon.










January 14 Birthdays:
Happy 42nd birthday to Brandon Meriweather, born Jan 14, 1984 in Apopka, Florida
Two-time Pro Bowl strong safety played in 64 regular season games plus five more in the postseason, with 12 interceptions.

Happy 54th birthday to Kyle Brady, born Jan 14, 1972 in New Cumberland, Pennsylvania
Tight end played the last of his 13-year NFL career with the Pats in 2007, playing in 14 games (nine starts) in the regular season, plus three postseason games (with two more starts).
 
Today in Patriots History
Worst playoff loss of Belichick's career
Buffalo stampedes Pats 47-17 in Wild Card

Bills set NFL record, scoring TDs on every possession



Saturday January 15, 2022 at 8:15
2021 AFC Wild Card Game at Highmark Stadium
Buffalo Bills 47, New England Patriots 17
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Sean McDermott
QBs: Mac Jones, Josh Allen
Odds: Buffalo 4-point home favorites
TV: CBS. Ian Eagle, Charles Davis; Evan Washburn
Clear, cold, 7º; humidity 68%, 7 mph wind from the ENE; wind chill minus-6º
Referee: Brad Allen; time 2:56; paid attendance: 69,188
Game MVPs: Josh Allen, Devin Singletary
Patriots finish 10-8, three more wins than in 2020 (7-9)
Bills advance to 12-6; go to Kansas City the following week for the 2021 AFCDG



The Patriots got off to another slow start, a recurring issue throughout much of the 2021 season. Buffalo sprinted out to a 14-0 first quarter lead as the defense looked slow and inexcusably flat. The Bills literally had their way with the New England defense, scoring touchdowns on all seven of their offensive possessions (excluding an end of game kneel down).


Consider some of the Buffalo offensive stats:
482 Total Yards - Buffalo outgained the Pats by 177 yards!
174 Yards Rushing (6 yards per carry)
Zero Interceptions
Zero Fumbles
Zero Sacks Allowed
Only four incomplete pass attempts
6-7 on third down - the only time they didn't convert was an end-of-game kneel down
8.9 yards per play
Five Touchdown Passes
157.6 Passer Rating
Zero Punts


The game is noteworthy for being the final postseason game of Bill Belichick's NFL career.











The Bills emasculated the Patriots in the wild card round of the NFL playoffs Saturday night, throttling their AFC East rival, 47-17, at a frigid Highmark Stadium to bring New England's season to an utterly disappointing end.​

The Patriots' defense didn't even look like it made the trip to Buffalo. The Bills humiliated New England from the outset, gashing the Patriots by scoring touchdowns on their first seven possessions – five of those scoring drives covered over 70 yards.​

The Bills didn't even attempt a punt for the second straight game against the Patriots. By the end of the contest, the Bills racked up 482 total yards of offense and averaged 8.9 yards per play.​

Throughout the season, New England's defense showed an inability to get off the field and it couldn't stop Buffalo with the Bills going 6-for-7 on third downs – the only time they didn't pick up a third down came on a kneel down to end the game.​

There were plenty of issues with the Patriots' defense. Cornerbacks Myles Bryant and Joejuan Williams were outmatched and got burned in the secondary time and time again as did Pro Bowler J.C. Jackson. The Patriots' pass rush was also unable to get to Josh Allen, giving him plenty of time to carve up the defense.​

But the most glaring problem facing New England's defensive unit is its severe lack of speed. The Patriots looked like they were moving in slow motion as Buffalo's speedy skill position players flew past them. In one instance, Isaiah McKenzie took a swing pass behind the line of scrimmage and bolted 19 yards down the sideline. That kick-started a drive in which the Bills covered 89 yards in four plays.​

Just an absolutely deplorable performance from New England's defense.​




After gaining so much ground during Mac Jones' rookie season, the New England Patriots faltered at the finish.​

Jones and the Patriots made strides turning around their season following a 2-4 start, putting together a seven-game win streak to make the playoffs for the first time in two seasons since Tom Brady left New England for Tampa Bay.​

But their progress stalled after a 14-10 win at Buffalo in Week 13 put them atop the division standings. The Patriots struggled coming out of their bye week, losing three of four, before suffering their worst postseason defeat since a 46-10 loss to the 1985 Chicago Bears.​

The loss was the most lopsided in the playoffs during Bill Belichick's tenure, which began in 2000, and second-worst overall after Buffalo opened the 2003 season with a 31-0 victory.​


Suddenly, the tables have begun turning on a proud Patriots franchise which won 17 division titles and six Super Bowls under Belichick, and was 35-5 against Buffalo from 2000 to 2019. New England has now dropped four of the last five meetings with Buffalo, which has staked its claim to the division by winning two straight titles.​

The Bills dominated the Patriots in this one, much like they were once dominated by New England.​

Buffalo became the NFL's first team to score touchdowns on each of its seven possessions not ending with a kneeldown. And the 47 points scored were the most against a Belichick-coached Patriots team.​

Jones was the first rookie quarterback to start a playoff game for the Patriots. He finished 24 of 38 passing for 232 yards with two touchdowns, and was intercepted twice while taking two sacks.​

The Patriots fell to 4-7 this season when failing to score first and 2-7 when going scoreless in the first quarter.​




The various headlines - local, upstate New York, and national - say it all:




















Buffal Bills Drives
#QuarterTimeLOSPlaysLengthNet YdsResult
1115:00BUF 3095:1570Touchdown
215:40BUF 20105:0080Touchdown
3213:23BUF 19106:0381Touchdown
423:44BUF 1141:5189Touchdown
5312:53BUF 4264:0558Touchdown
634:12BUF 2395:5077Touchdown
7410:13NWE 3931:3639Touchdown
841:44BUF 2331:44-2End of Game



Box Score, Halftime & Full Game Summaries, Team & Individual Stats, Drive Charts and Full Play-by-Play:



Patriots-Bills Injury Reports:

Patriots-Bills Rosters and Depth Charts:

Patriots Media Dept Post-Game-Notes:
- Pats-Bills met for the third time in a span of 41 days
- Kickoff temperature of 7º was the third coldest in team history
- Devin McCourty makes his 24th postseason start, tied with Breet Favre and Gene Upshaw for fourth-most in NFL history
- Matthew Slater had two special team tackles, making it 24 career ST tackles, most in team history
- Slater broke a tie with Larry Izzo for most career ST tackles in NFL history, since the statistic was tracked beginning in 1994
- Mac Jones is the first Patriots rookie QB to make a start in the postseason
- Justin Herron started at LT in place of injured Isaiah Wynn
- JoeJuan Williams started his second NFL game at CB, in place of injured Jalen Mills
- 17 Patriot players made their postseason debuts



Patriots Starting Offense:
15 WR Nelson Agholor
75 LT Justin Herron
67 LG Ted Karras
60 C David Andrews
69 RG Shaq Mason
77 RT Trent Brown
81 TE Jonnu Smith
16 WR Jakobi Meyers
10 QB Mac Jones
37 RB Damien Harris
85 HB Hunter Henry

Patriots Starting Defense:
93 LDE Lawrence Guy
92 NT Davon Godchaux
91 RDE Deatrich Wise
53 LLB Kyle Van Noy
8 MLB Ja'Whaun Bentley
54 RLB Dont'a Hightower
33 LCB Joejuan Williams
23 SS Kyle Dugger
32 FS Devin McCourty
41 RCB Myles Bryant
27 NB J.C. Jackson

Patriots Special Teams:
6 K Nick Folk
7 P Jake Bailey (also kickoffs)
49 LS Joe Cardona
80 KR Gunner Olszewski
-- PR none
 
Here is a look at what else the forum was talking about on the fifteenth of January over the years.

January 15, 2024:


January 15, 2022:



January 15, 2019:
https://www.patsfans.com/new-englan...son-thinks-patriots-cheated-in-sb-36.1146861/


January 15, 2018:


January 15, 2017:


January 15, 2016:


January 15, 2015:


January 15, 2014:


January 15, 2013:


January 15, 2012:
 
Aside from there only being one single January 15th football game for the Patriots, this date is devoid of famous birth dates as well.


Happy 37th birthday to Chris White
Born January 15, 1989 in Mobile, Alabama; hometown Ocean Springs, Mississippi
Patriot ST/OLB, 2013-2014; uniform #59
Claimed off waivers from Detroit on September 1, 2013
Pats résumé: two seasons, 29 games plus five postseason games; one ring


Chris White was originally a sixth round draft pick by Buffalo in 2011, from Mississippi State. After two seasons with the Bills he was traded to Detroit for QB Thad Lewis; the Patriots picked him up off waivers less than a week later.

In 2013 White played in all 16 games with the Patriots and was on the field for 328 special team snaps (67%), as well as both playoff games (40 ST snaps, 70%). He had nine tackles (five solo) as the Pats went 13-5.

White appeared in 13 games the following season, missing three games late in the year with an ankle injury. He was on the field for 257 special team snaps and seven defensive snaps in the regular season, making seven tackles. White made four more tackles in the postseason, earning a ring from Super Bowl 49 versus Seattle. The Pats released White on August 10, to make room for a running back named Tony Creecy. White never caught on with another team after that.







Happy 75th birthday to Bill DuLac
Born January 15, 1951 in Detroit; hometown Harper Woods, Michigan
Patriot guard, 1973-1975; uniform #68
Acquired in trade with Los Angeles Rams on July 24, 1973
Pats résumé: two seasons, 26 games (two starts)


Bill DuLac was a seventh round draft pick by the Rams in 1973, from Eastern Michigan. The Patriots traded him to Green Bay on August 9, 1973, just 16 days after acquiring him from the Rams. DuLac spent the 1973 season the taxi squad for Dallas, then re-signed with the Patriots when the Cowboys cut him at the end of their 1974 training camp.

DuLac played in 13 games with one start for the Patriots in both 1974 and 1975. He was released on July 1, 1976.

William DuLac - E-Club Athletic Hall of Fame | Eastern Michigan University Eagles




Perhaps of more interest is how Bill DuLac ever even came to be a New England Patriot.

Herb Adderley is a Hall of Fame cornerback; one of just four players at that time (five now: TB12) to win six NFL championships. Adderley played from 1961 to 1969 for Vince Lombardi and the Packers, then for Tom Landry in Dallas for three seasons. After being benched late in the 1972 season he was dealt to the Patriots for nothing more than a tenth round draft pick just before the start of training camp.


After this things get murky. It appears as though Adderley never reported to the Patriots, so they traded his rights to the Rams in exchange for DuLac. Wikipedia makes no mention of the Patriots in their Herb Adderley bio, stating he refused to report to the Rams. Pro Sports Transactions says that the Rams waived Adderley with an injury settlement two weeks after the trade with the Pats.




Happy 59th birthday to Fred DeRiggi
Born January 15, 1967 in Scranton, Pennsylvania
Patriot nose tackle, 1991; uniform #71
Signed to the practice squad November 11, 1990; signed to active roster Dec 22, 1990
Pats résumé: one season, two games


Fred DeRiggi was originally a seventh round draft pick by the Bills in 1990, from Syracuse. He played in the final two games of the forgettable 1990 season for Rod Rust. DeRiggi was with the Pats for the 1991 offseason but was released as part of roster cutdowns in late August - even though at that point he was reunited with his college coach, **** MacPherson.


Rob Drummond can still clearly remember the vibe the last time Syracuse shared a football field with the folks from Louisiana State.​

"They were just so arrogant leading up to that game," Drummond recalled Tuesday evening. "We got the same feeling from them that we got the year before from Auburn at the Sugar Bowl.​

"You know, they were from the SEC. They had the best conference in the land. They played the tougher schedule. The world revolved around them. All that stuff. Their thing was they were the ones who weren't going to lose to the team from the north."​

Drummond, the former Orange running back (via Jamesville-DeWitt High School), was speaking of the 1989 Hall of Fame Bowl in Tampa where 17th-ranked SU took on No. 16 LSU … and beat it 23-10 before a New Year's Day (plus one) gathering of 51,112.​

The two schools, which will meet again on Saturday afternoon in the Carrier Dome, haven't butted heads since. And there may have been a reason beyond geography.​

Hard feelings, anyone?​

"We didn't care if we won the game," said Drummond, who gained 122 yards (on 23 carries) and scored two touchdowns en route to winning the affair's Most Valuable Player award. "We just wanted to beat them up physically and show them that we could play football up north, too."​

Wait. The goal was to batter the SEC co-champion Tigers, first … and out-score them, second?​

"Correct," Drummond declared. "And we did beat them up. From the very first play. We knocked, like, five of their guys out of the game."​

But back in January of '89 things were different. SU, on a 25-4-1 run, had traveled to Tampa with a program stocked with 16 athletes who'd eventually suit up in the NFL. And 11 of them saw the field down there in Florida.​

Drummond, David Bavaro, Rob Burnett, Frank Conover, Fred DeRiggi, John Flannery, Daryl Johnston, Rob Moore, Markus Paul, Todd Philcox, Terry Wooden. Each a future pro, they all played that day, 27 seasons ago, against the Tigers, and the stats they compiled were remarkable ones as the Orangemen outrushed LSU 208-76 in yardage, nearly doubled it in first downs (24-14) and shut it out in both the first and fourth quarters.​


Aug 19, 1991: Four players cut by Patriots - Hartford Courant
The Patriots cut their roster to 68 Monday by releasing four players, including Southington's Rob Thomson.​

Thomson, a free safety, signed with the Patriots as a free agent April 27. Thomson was a two-year starter for Syracuse and was the team's third-leading tackler in 1990.​

The Patriots also released tight end Randy Bethel, a 10th-round pick in April's draft, free-agent nose tackle Fred DeRiggi and free agent wide receiver Brian Wiggins.​

The Patriots must reduce their roster to 60 by 4 p.m. today.​

Dykes undergoes surgery

Wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes, injured in Saturday night's 46-0 loss to Phoenix, underwent surgery on his fractured right kneecap. Dykes, who was a starter, is expected to miss the entire season.​

Dykes' injury moves second-year player Greg McMurtry into a starting position along with Irving Fryar. McMurtry, a third-round pick out of Michigan, caught 22 passes for 240 yards last season as a rookie.​






And some draft-pick-trade trivia involving players born on January 15:

Eric Kelly, 48 (Jan 15, 1977)
Third round (69th overall) pick of the 2001 draft

On April 21, 2001 the Patriots traded their third round (#69) pick of the 2001 draft to Minnesota, moving down 17 spots while adding a fourth round pick. The Pats used 3.86 to select CB Brock Williams, and 4.119 TE Jabari Holloway.

Neither Williams nor Holloway ever registered a single stat with the Patriots.

Williams dressed for the first game of 2001, then tore his ACL. The following offseason he was limited with an ankle injury before being released on Sept 1, 2002. He went on to play 12 NFL games with the Bears and Raiders.

Holloway began the 2001 training camp on the PUP list, then was placed on injured reserve for the '01 season. He was waived a year later on Aug 25, 2002. The tight end played for two seasons with Houston, with 15 receptions and no touchdowns.

Kelly was a starter for two season with the Vikings, then asked for his release in the 2004 offseason after his playing time had dwindled. The Texans claimed Kelly off waivers, then released him when he refused to renegotiate his contract and take a pay cut. Kelly signed with the Bears but he was cut at the end of 2004 training camp, and he never played in the NFL again.



Travis Lewis, 38 (Jan 15, 1988)
Seventh round (223rd overall) pick of the 2012 draft

The names in these trades (and six degrees of Travis Lewis) get a bit more interesting.

On Sept 4, 2010 the Patriots acquired this draft pick plus LB Tracy White from Philadelphia in exchange for a 2012 sixth round pick. White would go on to play 42 games over three seasons with the Pats.

A month later New England traded a 7th round 2012 draft pick (#223 overall) to Minnesota along with Randy Moss, in exchange for a 2011 third round pick. That pick was used to select QB Ryan Mallett.

In 2012 the Vikings made a draft day trade with Detroit, receiving a fourth round pick from the Lions. That fourth was one of four draft picks that Minnesota sent to New England in exchange for the Patriots' first round pick, 29th overall; the Viking used that on Cordarrelle Patterson.

The Patriots used the picks they recieved on Jamie Collins, Logan Ryan and Josh Boyce.

The Pats also later packaged a seventh round pick they received in the Minnesota trade with Jeff Demps, to trade for Tampa Bay RB LeGarrette Blount.




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

Fran Morelli (1939-2008)
Born in Medford; Medford High School
Tackle for the New York Titans in 1962

Obituary:
He was traded to the Oakland Raiders but due to injury moved onto teaching and coaching. He was a successful football coach and English teacher at Waltham and Woburn High Schools. Later, Fran held several executive positions in the Wine and Spirits industry with companies such as Fleishmann's, Publicker, Standard Brands, and SoGrape.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Worst playoff loss of Belichick's career
Buffalo stampedes Pats 47-17 in Wild Card

Bills set NFL record, scoring TDs on every possession



Saturday January 15, 2022 at 8:15
2021 AFC Wild Card Game at Highmark Stadium
Buffalo Bills 47, New England Patriots 17
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Sean McDermott
QBs: Mac Jones, Josh Allen
Odds: Buffalo 4-point home favorites
TV: CBS. Ian Eagle, Charles Davis; Evan Washburn
Clear, cold, 7º; humidity 68%, 7 mph wind from the ENE; wind chill minus-6º
Referee: Brad Allen; time 2:56; paid attendance: 69,188
Game MVPs: Josh Allen, Devin Singletary
Patriots finish 10-8, three more wins than in 2020 (7-9)
Bills advance to 12-6; go to Kansas City the following week for the 2021 AFCDG



The Patriots got off to another slow start, a recurring issue throughout much of the 2021 season. Buffalo sprinted out to a 14-0 first quarter lead as the defense looked slow and inexcusably flat. The Bills literally had their way with the New England defense, scoring touchdowns on all seven of their offensive possessions (excluding an end of game kneel down).


Consider some of the Buffalo offensive stats:
482 Total Yards - Buffalo outgained the Pats by 177 yards!
174 Yards Rushing (6 yards per carry)
Zero Interceptions
Zero Fumbles
Zero Sacks Allowed
Only four incomplete pass attempts
6-7 on third down - the only time they didn't convert was an end-of-game kneel down
8.9 yards per play
Five Touchdown Passes
157.6 Passer Rating
Zero Punts


The game is noteworthy for being the final postseason game of Bill Belichick's NFL career.











The Bills emasculated the Patriots in the wild card round of the NFL playoffs Saturday night, throttling their AFC East rival, 47-17, at a frigid Highmark Stadium to bring New England's season to an utterly disappointing end.​

The Patriots' defense didn't even look like it made the trip to Buffalo. The Bills humiliated New England from the outset, gashing the Patriots by scoring touchdowns on their first seven possessions – five of those scoring drives covered over 70 yards.​

The Bills didn't even attempt a punt for the second straight game against the Patriots. By the end of the contest, the Bills racked up 482 total yards of offense and averaged 8.9 yards per play.​

Throughout the season, New England's defense showed an inability to get off the field and it couldn't stop Buffalo with the Bills going 6-for-7 on third downs – the only time they didn't pick up a third down came on a kneel down to end the game.​

There were plenty of issues with the Patriots' defense. Cornerbacks Myles Bryant and Joejuan Williams were outmatched and got burned in the secondary time and time again as did Pro Bowler J.C. Jackson. The Patriots' pass rush was also unable to get to Josh Allen, giving him plenty of time to carve up the defense.​

But the most glaring problem facing New England's defensive unit is its severe lack of speed. The Patriots looked like they were moving in slow motion as Buffalo's speedy skill position players flew past them. In one instance, Isaiah McKenzie took a swing pass behind the line of scrimmage and bolted 19 yards down the sideline. That kick-started a drive in which the Bills covered 89 yards in four plays.​

Just an absolutely deplorable performance from New England's defense.​




After gaining so much ground during Mac Jones' rookie season, the New England Patriots faltered at the finish.​

Jones and the Patriots made strides turning around their season following a 2-4 start, putting together a seven-game win streak to make the playoffs for the first time in two seasons since Tom Brady left New England for Tampa Bay.​

But their progress stalled after a 14-10 win at Buffalo in Week 13 put them atop the division standings. The Patriots struggled coming out of their bye week, losing three of four, before suffering their worst postseason defeat since a 46-10 loss to the 1985 Chicago Bears.​

The loss was the most lopsided in the playoffs during Bill Belichick's tenure, which began in 2000, and second-worst overall after Buffalo opened the 2003 season with a 31-0 victory.​


Suddenly, the tables have begun turning on a proud Patriots franchise which won 17 division titles and six Super Bowls under Belichick, and was 35-5 against Buffalo from 2000 to 2019. New England has now dropped four of the last five meetings with Buffalo, which has staked its claim to the division by winning two straight titles.​

The Bills dominated the Patriots in this one, much like they were once dominated by New England.​

Buffalo became the NFL's first team to score touchdowns on each of its seven possessions not ending with a kneeldown. And the 47 points scored were the most against a Belichick-coached Patriots team.​

Jones was the first rookie quarterback to start a playoff game for the Patriots. He finished 24 of 38 passing for 232 yards with two touchdowns, and was intercepted twice while taking two sacks.​

The Patriots fell to 4-7 this season when failing to score first and 2-7 when going scoreless in the first quarter.​




The various headlines - local, upstate New York, and national - say it all:




















Buffal Bills Drives
#QuarterTimeLOSPlaysLengthNet YdsResult
1115:00BUF 3095:1570Touchdown
215:40BUF 20105:0080Touchdown
3213:23BUF 19106:0381Touchdown
423:44BUF 1141:5189Touchdown
5312:53BUF 4264:0558Touchdown
634:12BUF 2395:5077Touchdown
7410:13NWE 3931:3639Touchdown
841:44BUF 2331:44-2End of Game



Box Score, Halftime & Full Game Summaries, Team & Individual Stats, Drive Charts and Full Play-by-Play:



Patriots-Bills Injury Reports:

Patriots-Bills Rosters and Depth Charts:

Patriots Media Dept Post-Game-Notes:
- Pats-Bills met for the third time in a span of 41 days
- Kickoff temperature of 7º was the third coldest in team history
- Devin McCourty makes his 24th postseason start, tied with Breet Favre and Gene Upshaw for fourth-most in NFL history
- Matthew Slater had two special team tackles, making it 24 career ST tackles, most in team history
- Slater broke a tie with Larry Izzo for most career ST tackles in NFL history, since the statistic was tracked beginning in 1994
- Mac Jones is the first Patriots rookie QB to make a start in the postseason
- Justin Herron started at LT in place of injured Isaiah Wynn
- JoeJuan Williams started his second NFL game at CB, in place of injured Jalen Mills
- 17 Patriot players made their postseason debuts



Patriots Starting Offense:
15 WR Nelson Agholor
75 LT Justin Herron
67 LG Ted Karras
60 C David Andrews
69 RG Shaq Mason
77 RT Trent Brown
81 TE Jonnu Smith
16 WR Jakobi Meyers
10 QB Mac Jones
37 RB Damien Harris
85 HB Hunter Henry

Patriots Starting Defense:
93 LDE Lawrence Guy
92 NT Davon Godchaux
91 RDE Deatrich Wise
53 LLB Kyle Van Noy
8 MLB Ja'Whaun Bentley
54 RLB Dont'a Hightower
33 LCB Joejuan Williams
23 SS Kyle Dugger
32 FS Devin McCourty
41 RCB Myles Bryant
27 NB J.C. Jackson

Patriots Special Teams:
6 K Nick Folk
7 P Jake Bailey (also kickoffs)
49 LS Joe Cardona
80 KR Gunner Olszewski
-- PR none


2021: Fools' Gold.

2025: ?
 
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