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Today In Patriots History Jan 18, 2004: Ty Law owns Peyton Manning with 3 picks in AFCCG

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January 18 is a good day in Patriots history, with the Pats beating the Colts in the AFCCG not once, but twice.


Today in Patriots History
Ty Law picks off Peyton Manning three times
Antowain Smith rushes for 100 yards

Adam Vinatieri kicks team-record five field goals
Pats win 14th straight, 24-14 in 2003 AFCCG


Having heard about Colts tight end Marcus Pollard's proclamation that if the Colts kept playing well, the league "might as well just hand us the rings," Belichick disdainfully told his players, "Nobody hands you a ring. I don't care how much money you have, you can't ****ing buy one. You have to play, and you have to earn it." Then, pulling out his 2001 Super Bowl ring and raising it high above his head, Belichick continued, "This has to be earned, and there's only one way to do that. Either they kick your ass, or you kick theirs."


Sunday January 18, 2004 at 3:06
2003 AFC Championship Game at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Tony Dungy
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: New England 3½-point home favorites
TV: CBS. Greg Gumbel, Phil Simms; Armen Keteyian, Bonnie Bernstein
Cloudy, occasional light snow; 32º, 100% humidity, 2 mph wind
Referee: Walt Coleman; time: 3:05; paid attendance: 68,436
Game MVPs: Ty Law, Rodney Harrison, Jarvis Green, Adam Vinatieri
Pats
improve to 16-2; advance to Super Bowl 38 vs Carolina
Colts finish season with a record of 14-5, and an AFCCG participation banner






Key Stat I:
The Colts turn the ball over five times, including four interceptions by Peyton Manning. Ty Law had an amazing day with three picks, and Rodney Harrison had another.

Key Stat II:
Marvin Harrison was limited to just three receptions for 19 yards, plus had one turnover on a fumble (Rodney Harrison once again. He too had a great game, with ten tackles (7 solo), an interception, a forced fumble and a deflected pass).

Key Patriot Stats:
- Manning was sacked four times; Brady sacked zero times
- Antowain Smith: 22 carries for 100 yards
- Troy Brown: 7 receptions for 88 yards
- David Givens: 8 receptions (on 9 targets) for 68 yards and a touchdown



Rodney Harrison picks off a pass intended for overly confident TE Marcus Pollard in the first quarter​


A few notes on this game. First, the final score should have never been this close. The Patriots settled for five field goals - the first four all in the red zone, after the Patriots had first downs on the 16, 13, 12 and 6-yard lines - allowing Indy to stick around. The Pats also had a 1st-and-goal at the eight-yard line, but on third down on the three, Brady was intercepted - another red zone blunder.

The Colts scored with 2:30 to go, then Christian Fauria recovered the onside kick attempt. However, incomplete passes on second and third down meant the Colts only had to use one of their timeouts in that sequence. Ken Walter's punt went into the end zone, a net of only 24 yards. Indy took over with 2:01 to go and two timeouts, but Manning threw four straight incompletions (fittingly the last two were to Pollard). The Colts had to burn their final two timeouts as the Pats played it same, and Vinatieri kicked his fifth red-zone field goal of the game to clinch it.

The five field goals tied an NFL record for most field goals made in a single postseason game (broken by Pittsburgh's Chris Boswell in 2017). It remains a team record for either postseason or regular season. There have only been two other times in franchise history that there have even been five attempts. On Dec 28, 1963 Gino Cappelletti was 4-5 at Buffalo (28, 12, 36, 35, short from 45) and on Dec 28, 1985 Tony Franklin was also 4-5 at NYJ (33, 41, 20, wide left from 41, 26).

The other thing worth mentioning is that this was the game that the Colts complained to the league about how the Patriots were defended against Indy receivers, and GM Bill Polian - who happened to sit on the NFL Competition Committee - heavily influenced the 2004 rule emphasis crackdown on defensive contact. The change would become known as the Ty Law Rule.











Below is an excellent post-game article from Sports Illustrated, from back in the day when SI provided magnificent reading material.
Just ask Indy quarterback Peyton Manning, the league's co-MVP, who spent the first two weekends of these playoffs merrily toying with overmatched opponents. On Sunday the Patriots' Lycra-tight pass coverage and vigorous pass rush often made Manning (23 of 47, 237 yards) resemble a marionette dancing to mariachi music. Thus a Colts team that had not punted while rolling up 79 points in its first two postseason games was bullied into committing five turnovers, including four Manning interceptions.​

Chief among the Peyton Punishers were All-Pro cornerback Ty Law and strong safety Rodney Harrison. Law had three interceptions and put forth one of the most dominating performances by a defensive back in championship game history. Harrison forced a fumble by Indy wideout Marvin Harrison (no relation) and with an end-zone interception on the Colts' first drive allowed New England to seize control less than 12 minutes into the game. Arguably the league's most important off-season acquisition, Harrison, a 10-year veteran, signed with the Patriots in March after being released by the San Diego Chargers, whose front-office employees will soon be receiving thank-you notes from grateful Pats in Houston.​

"When you watch the Colts' offense on film, they make it all look so easy," Harrison said after the game. "But we were determined not to let them come out and ram it down our throats, and that meant we had to beat them up. When I saw our game plan, I knew it was going to be a long day for Peyton."​

As always, the blueprint conceived by New England coach Bill Belichick and his brainy defensive coordinator, Romeo Crennel, contained more wrinkles than a Rolling Stones tour jet. Reasoning that Manning does not throw nearly as well when he can't set his feet and step into his throws, the Pats' twin wizards came up with a 4-2-5 nickel alignment that would pressure Manning by featuring backup defensive end Jarvis Green as a second tackle alongside mammoth veteran Ted Washington. Green, a fourth-round draft choice in 2002, had two sacks and 17 tackles during the entire regular season, during which his twin brother, Jason, and cousin Howard (both former LSU teammates) repeatedly chided him about his lack of impact.​

On Sunday the 6'3" 290-pounder became Jarvis Green the Sack Machine, getting three of the four takedowns of Manning--the first time in Manning's six-year career that any defender has dumped him three times. It helped that the Colts' receivers were getting press coverage like a Michael Jackson court date. "Peyton was patting the ball and then holding it," Green said. "On film you don't see him do that, but our secondary caused him to." Willie McGinest and fellow outside linebacker Mike Vrabel provided additional resistance by peeling back into coverage.​


Jarvis Green with one of his three sacks on Peyton Manning​



The whole week, we were ticked off,” said safety Rodney Harrison, who joined the Patriots this season and will make his second trip to the Super Bowl after doing so with the San Diego Chargers in the 1994 season. “No one gave us the credit, the opportunity. It was all about Peyton Manning. And, like I said before, one guy cannot win a championship. It’s a team.”​

The score would not have been as close had the Patriots been able to capitalize on all their opportunities. They scored only one touchdown, on the opening drive, picking up the rest of their points on a safety and a playoff-record five field goals by Adam Vinatieri, who was unfazed by the sporadic snow flurries throughout the afternoon.​

If only things were so easy for the Colts, whose first eight drives ended like this: interception, interception, safety, fumble, touchdown, punt, interception, interception.

The ending was abrupt and excruciating for a Colt team that amassed 913 yards and averaged 39.5 points in playoff victories over Denver and Kansas City.​



On a cold day in New England, Ty Law and the Patriots put Peyton Manning on ice.​

Law intercepted the previously flawless Colts quarterback three times, Rodney Harrison added another, and the Patriots beat Indianapolis 24-14 to advance to their second Super Bowl in three seasons. Jarvis Green had three of New England's four sacks as the constant pressure made the NFL's co-MVP look very average.​

Had New England been able to score down close, it would have been no contest. The Patriots had only one TD, settled for five field goals by Adam Vinatieri and lost the ball at the Indy 5 early in the fourth quarter when Tom Brady threw his first interception in 10 home games this season.​

Things were so bad that when the Colts finally had to punt for the first time in the playoffs, the snap went over the punter's head and resulted in a safety.​

Except when he got close to the goal line, Brady was almost as good in the cold weather as Manning had been in his first two games under far more ideal conditions. He finished 22-of-37 for 237 yards and a 7-yard TD pass to David Givens on the first drive of the game and Antowain Smith added 100 yards on 22 carries.​

The Patriots improved to 16-2 by winning their 14th straight game, the best single-season streak since the perfect Miami Dolphins did it in 1972. With the victory, coach Bill Belichick is 5-0 in the postseason with the Patriots, who won the NFL championship two years ago by beating St. Louis.​

New England dominated early, taking the opening possession right down the field for a touchdown on the pass from Brady to Givens. It was 15-0 at the half on two of Vinatieri's field goals plus the safety on the botched punt.​







Colts vs Patriots 2003 AFC Championship
5:54 Highlight Video





THROWBACK: Brady vs. Manning in the 2003 AFC Championship Game | Patriots
7:13 Patriots Highlight Video





2003 AFC Championship Colts vs Patriots Highlights (CBS Intro) 1st Playoff meeting Brady - Manning
16:32 Highlight Video





2003 AFC Championship Game: Patriots vs Colts
2:04:32 Full Game









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





Patriots Starting Offense:
83 WR Deion Branch
72 LT Matt Light
71 LG Russ Hochstein
67 C Dan Koppen
63 RG Joe Andruzzi
68 RT Tom Ashworth
88 TE Christian Fauria
87 WR David Givens
12 QB Tom Brady
32 RB Antowain Smith
31 FB Larry Centers

Patriots Starting Defense:
91 LDE Bobby Hamilton
92 NT Ted Washington
93 RDE Richard Seymour
55 LOLB Willie McGinest
54 LILB Tedy Bruschi
95 RILB Roman Phifer
50 ROLB Mike Vrabel
24 LCB Ty Law
37 SS Rodney Harrison
26 FS Eugene Wilson
38 RCB Tyrone Poole

Patriots Special Teams:
4 K Adam Vinatieri
13 P Ken Walter
66 LS Lonie Paxton
33 KR Kevin Faulk
80 KR Troy Brown
35 KR Patrick Pass
80 PR Troy Brown
 
A quick link to this thread category has now been added under "History" in the menu. @jmt57
 
The weather that day was a lot like this.
 
Today in Patriots History
LeGarrette Blount runs for 148 yards, 3 TD

Pats win 45-7 in 2nd most lopsided AFCCG ever
Brady throws TD passes to Nate Solder, James Develin, Gronk


Sunday January 18, 2015 at 6:50
2014 AFC Championship Game at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 45, Indianapolis Colts 7
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Chuck Pagano
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Andrew Luck
Odds: Patriots favored by 7
TV: CBS. Jim Nantz, Phil Simms; Tracy Wolfson
Cloudy, overcast; 51º, humidity 71%, 15 mph wind from the SSE, with gusts up to 25 mph
Game MVP: LeGarrette Blount
Pats
improve to 14-4; advance to Super Bowl 49 vs Seattle
Colts finish season with a record of 13-6, and another AFCCG finalist/participation banner


Key Stat I : Andrew Luck

The Indy quarterback was completely neutralized, completing just 12 of 33 passes (36%) for 126 yards, with no touchdowns, two interceptions - and an anemic 23.0 passer rating.

Key Stat II: Colt drives
First Half: punt; muffed punt (turnover); missed FG; punt; TD; kneel down (halftime)
Second Half: punt; interception; punt; interception; punt; end of game

Key Patriot Stats:
- LeGarrette Blount: 30 carries, 148 yards, 3 TD
- Julian Edelman: 10 touches, 110 yards
- Nate Solder and James Develin each with more touchdowns than any Colt not named Zurlon Tipton
- 3rd Quarter Drives: Touchdown, Touchdown, Touchdown, Touchdown



"I only have one thing to say. We're on to Seattle," Belichick said, echoing the statement he repeated several times, "We're on to Cincinnati," after a 41-14 loss at Kansas City dropped the Patriots to 2-2.​

The list of milestones is long:​

• Brady surpassed John Elway for most Super Bowls for a quarterback and tied defensive lineman Mike Lodish for most by any player.​

• Belichick tied Don Shula for most Super Bowls for a coach and broke a tie with Tom Landry with his 21st postseason win.​

• New England tied Dallas and Pittsburgh for most appearances in the big game with eight.​

Brady passed Peyton Manning (6,800 yards) for most yards passing in the postseason with 7,017. ... In four games against the Pats, Luck has thrown six touchdowns and 10 interceptions. ... Indianapolis kicker Adam Vinatieri set an NFL record with his 30th postseason game, one more than Jerry Rice, but missed a 51-yard field goal attempt. ... The Patriots improved to 17-4 in home playoff games.​



New England Beats Indianapolis 45-7 In AFC Championship
As a cold rain poured down, the New England Patriots crushed the Super Bowl dreams of the Indianapolis Colts with a 45-7 victory.​

The Patriots established their lead early, scoring two touchdowns in the first quarter. The Colts scored one touchdown in the second quarter, but after a Patriots field goal, New England still entered halftime 10 points in the lead.​

A heavy storm began moving into Gillette Stadium, where the Patriots were hosting the Colts, as the home team proceeded to transform their strong lead into a commanding one. The Patriots scored three touchdowns in the third quarter and entered the final quarter leading 38-7.​



Their first drive of the second half, dominated by Blount's powerful running, ended in an unlikely touchdown for tackle Nate Solder, who had reported as an eligible receiver and caught Brady's pass before rumbling 14 yards into the endzone.​

After a quick three-and-out by the Colts, Brady led the Patriots on another ruthless drive, which saw Rob Gronkowski haul in a five-yard touchdown pass from Brady.​

And worse would follow less than a minute later when Luck was picked off by Darrelle Revis and one play later Blount saw off a series of would-be tacklers to score from 13 yards out.​

The Colts offense continued to stall in the fourth quarter and Brady was able to pick off their defense at will, mainly on short-range passes, with Julian Edelman the main recipient.​

But it was Blount, who scored four touchdowns against the Colts in the play-offs last season, who added his third score from a couple of yards out to make it 45-7.​



After Week 4 this season, the idea was introduced that the New England Patriots had a quarterback controversy and the franchise’s long run of success might be ending.​

The Patriots had been thumped by the Miami Dolphins and Kansas City Chiefs. Quarterback Tom Brady wasn’t playing well and some wondered whether rookie Jimmy Garoppolo’s time was arriving before anyone expected.​

Now, Brady will become the first quarterback to start in six Super Bowls.​



For Colts quarterback Andrew Luck, it was the worst game of his three-year career and the fourth rout in his four career games against the Patriots, all by at least three touchdowns. He completed 12 of 33 passes for 126 yards.​





Jamie Collins hurdles Andrew Luck after he intercepted the Colts QB.



LT Nate Solder scores on a 16-yard reception. The only reception of his NFL career gave the Pats a 24-7 lead.



LeGarrette Blount ran roughshod on the Colts, to the tune of 148 yards (4.9 ypc) and three touchdowns.



The Patriot defense limited Indy to 3-11 on third down, and a mere 209 total yards of offense.



Rob Ninkovich had two pass deflections to go along with this hit on Andrew Luck.



Julian Edelman had nine catches (on 11 targets) for 98 yards, a 12-yard run, and 71 yards on three punt returns.



While the Colts expected a run up the middle, James Develin caught a pass to the right for a TD and a 14-0 lead.



Chuck Pagano: too bad, so sad.







Colts vs. Patriots AFC Championship Game highlights | NFL
5:05 NFL Highlight Video








This of course was also the game that Ryan Grigson, Bob Kravitz and others conspired to
attempt to frame the Patriots - while forgetting about grade school science and the Ideal Gas Law.​



Pats Fans: How Strong is the Curse of Deflategate?



Photo Galleries:


More Headlines that tell the story:




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




Patriots-Colts Injury Reports:

Patriots-Colts Rosters & Depth Charts:

Patriots Media Dept Post-Game Notes:
- The victory earned the Pats their eighth Super Bowl berth, tying NE with Dallas and Pittsburgh for most in NFL history
- Patriots set NFL record with sixth Super Bowl appearance in a 15-year span
- Robert Kraft's seven conference championships are the most by an owner in the Super Bowl era
- Patriots tie Oakland for fourth-most appearnces in a conference championship game, with 11
- Pats move into third-place tie for best playoff winning percenatge (mimimum 15 games), at .600




Patriots Starting Offense:
19 WR Brandon LaFell
47 TE Michael Hoomanawanui
77 LT Nate Solder
63 LG Dan Connolly
62 C Ryan Wendell
67 RG Josh Kline
76 RT Sebastian Vollmer
87 TE Rob Gronkowski
11 WR Julian Edelman
12 QB Tom Brady
34 RB Shane Vereen

Patriots Starting Defense:
50 LDE Rob Ninkovich
75 LDT Vince Wilfork
96 RDT Sealver Siliga
95 RDE Chandler Jones
91 LLB Jamie Collins
54 RLB Dont'a Hightower
24 LCB Darrelle Revis
23 SS Pat Chung
32 FS Devin McCourty
39 RCB Brandon Browner
25 DB Kyle Arrington

Patriots Special Teams:
3 K Stephen Gostkowski
6 P Ryan Allen
48 LS Danny Aiken
80 KR Danny Amendola
11 PR Julian Edelman
 
Today in Patriots History
Other January 18 Happenings


January 18, 1989:
A $50,000 damage suit was filed against Andre Tippett for allegedly injuring a man when a fight broke out during a charity basketball game two years prior.

Between the distant pre-internet age as well as nature of this event, I was not able to find any other mention of this incident, other than the single sentence above that was on Pro Sports Transactions. I will say that it seems very much out of character for Tippett, who is a black belt and would have just finished his seventh season with the Patriots. Since retiring after the 1993 season Tippett has worked as the Executive Director of Community Affairs for the Patriots.





January 18, 2008:
Safety Mel Mitchell is ruled out for the AFCCG with a biceps injury

Mitchell was originally a 2002 fifth round pick by the Saints out of Western Kentucky. He was placed on IR on January 24, and never played in the NFL again after the 2007 season. Mitchell played in ten regular season games for the Pats plus the AFCDG win versus Jacksonville, registering 11 tackles, ten solo.





January 18, 2011:
After the shocking AFCDG loss to the Jets two days earlier, the Patriots signed the following players to futures contracts: TE Carson Butler, QB Jonathan Crompton, WR Darnell Jenkins, WR Buddy Farnham, DL Marlon Favorite, DB Thad Turner and DB Ross Ventrone.




January 18, 2013:
Patriots safety Steve Gregory and kicker Stephen Gostkowski each were fined $15,750 for unnecessary roughness in last Sunday's divisional-round win over the Texans.​
Gregory's fine was for striking an opponent in the head/neck area. He was penalized on the play.​
Gostkowski's fine was for a horse-collar tackle on a kickoff return and he also was penalized on the play.​
Players received a $22,000 share for participating in the playoff game.​




January 18, 2022:
Some random OL by the very Ivy-preppy name of Arlington Hambright is signed to a futures/reserve contract




January 18, 2023:
Some random LB from Rutgers by the name of Olakunle Fatukasi is signed to a futures/reserve contract




January 18, 2025:
The New England Patriots have conducted their second interview for their vacant offensive coordinator position. According to a report by Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, the team met with current Los Angeles Chargers passing game coordinator Marcus Brady on Friday.​
With Brady and Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Thomas Brown both being interviewed, the Patriots appear to have satisfied the requirement stipulated by the NFL’s Rooney Rule.​
A former collegiate quarterback himself, Brady went on to play seven seasons in the Canadian Football League — winning three Grey Cups in the process.​
Brady’s coaching career then began in the CFL in 2009 before he was hired by the Indianapolis Colts in 2018 as their assistant quarterbacks coach under head coach Frank Reich. Brady held the role for two years before being promoted to offensive coordinator replacing Nick Sirianni.​
In Brady’s first year as OC, the Colts offense finished ninth in the league averaging 25.1 points per game with Carson Wentz under center. Transitioning to Matt Ryan the following year, the offense plummeted which led to a head coaching change and Brady’s dismissal.​
Brady then joined Sirianni in Philadelphia where he spent two seasons as an offensive assistant before joining the Chargers this past season under Jim Harbaugh.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Tony McGee



Happy 77th birthday to Tony "Mac the Sack" McGee
Born Jan 18, 1949 in Battle Creek, Michigan
Patriot defensive end, 1974-1981; uniform #78
Acquired on Sept 10, 1974 from Chicago for a 1975 8th and 1976 3rd round draft pick
Pats résumé: 8 seasons, 121 games (including 2 playoff games), 77 sacks; Patriots All-1970s Team



Consisting of Julius Adams, Ray Hamilton, Mel Lunsford and Tony McGee, the New England defensive line was a formidable group in the late seventies. McGee also spent three NFL seasons each with Chicago ('71-'73) and Washington ('82-'84), and is unofficially credited with 106.5 sacks in his career. (Sacks did not become an official statistic until 1982; as a frame of reference, Hall of Famer Andre Tippett had 100 career sacks.) McGee and Adams are the defensive ends on the New England Patriots All-Decade Team of the 1970s.

McGee earned one super bowl ring with Washington in 1982, after having one stolen from him by Ben Dreith in 1976. He finished his 14-year NFL career at the age of 35 in 1984, and the following year McGee formed Redskins Magazine Inc, which was later renamed Pro Football Plus - which is still going strong today on YouTube and MASN (DC's verson of NESN).



Tony McGee #71 & #78 Football Highlights from 1971 to 1983
10:15 Highlight Video








McGee was a player at the University of Wyoming when an ugly and mostly forgotten incident took place. The Cowboys played Brigham Young every year, and in 1968 BYU's all-white squad had hurled racial slurs and cheap shots at black Wyoming players during their game. Just prior to playing BYU again a year later, 14 players approached the Wyoming head coach about wearing black armbands as a form of protest. That group not only did not get the support from the head coach they were seeking - they were all immediately kicked off the team. Wyoming had been ranked #16, but lost its final four games without those 14 men; a year later they fell to 1-9.

The defensive end transferred to now defunct Bishop College in Texas. The situation in Wyoming caused him to fall from a first round draft pick to the third round, due to gossip and assumptions that McGee must have been a troublemaker. He went on to play in 212 NFL games, and in two Super Bowls. In his post-NFL career he started a physical therapy business in the Virginia suburbs of DC, which he ran for 13 years before selling to a health care firm. Since 1987 McGee has hosted Pro Football Plus, a DC-based weekly television show that is also available on YouTube.










The Black 14
27:52 Wyoming PBS television documentary
In a seminal moment in Wyoming's history, in October of 1969, 14 African American Wyoming Cowboy football players were summarily dismissed from the team by then head football Coach Lloyd Eaton. 50 years later, on the campus of UW, the Black 14 were honored and heard an apology from the University of Wyoming.





Tony McGee Pro Football Plus TV Show Week 19 2024 25 (2nd Round of Playoffs)
56:02 Weekly Sports Program
Sports show covering the Washington Commanders and the NFL, with former NFL players and sports analysts each week. Tony McGee Pro Football Plus TV Show brings you all the sports action, and interviews, through their sports lenses with Host Tony McGee.











 
I can’t believe that 2003 AFCCG was almost 22 years ago. I still watch that game on YouTube occasionally. Those 2003 & 2004 teams were some of the best teams in NFL history. Went 34-4 over those two years (when counting playoffs & SBs). A loss almost shocking in those 2 years. .895 win percentage, insane.
 
I can’t believe that 2003 AFCCG was almost 22 years ago. I still watch that game on YouTube occasionally. Those 2003 & 2004 teams were some of the best teams in NFL history. Went 34-4 over those two years (when counting playoffs & SBs). A loss almost shocking in those 2 years. .895 win percentage, insane.
Fun trivia factoid to keep in your back pocket about that season:

Q.: What team/head coach/QB was the last one to defeat the Patriots in the 2003 season?

A: Washington, week four, dropping the Pats to 2-2.

The HC?
Steve Spurrier, who advanced to 3-1 - then had a 4-game losing streak, a 3-game losing streak, and another 3-game losing streak - to end the year at 5-11, fired after the season to end his brief two-year NFL career.

The QB?
2002 1st round draft pick Patrick Ramsey, who was 10-22 for 147 yards in that win, and was 10-14 as an NFL starting QB.
 
Today in Patriots History
Jermaine Wiggins



Happy 51st birthday to Jermaine Wiggins
Born Jan 18, 1975 in East Boston
Patriot tight end, 2000-2001; uniform #85
Claimed off waivers from the Jets on Nov 28, 2000
Pats résumé: 2 seasons, 20 games (8 starts), 5 TD; 3 playoff games, 14 receptions; one super bowl ring



The graduate of East Boston High School and Bridgton Academy in Maine is remembered not for his 20 regular season games with the Patriots, but for the 2001 postseason. Wiggie had the game of his life in the divisional round Snow Bowl game against Oakland, a dream come true for an undrafted local journeyman. Wiggins had ten receptions that night, four of which came on the fourth quarter drive that ended with Tom Brady scoring on a six yard run, to cut the deficit to three points. Wiggins then had three more catches on the game winning drive that culminated with Adam Vinatieri's improbable field goal, including a clutch six-yard reception on 3rd-and-five. Not finished, Wiggins then came up big on the final drive of Super Bowl 36, making a catch with 21 seconds remaining to set up another iconic Vinatieri game-winning field goal.

Over a seven-year NFL career Wiggins played in 107 games, with 2,141 yards receiving and 14 touchdowns. He also had 24 receptions in nine postseason games and played in two super bowls: with the Pats against the Rams in SB 36, and against the Pats while with Carolina two years later. In his post-NFL life Wiggins became a regular on Boston area radio and television sports shows, and became head coach at Brockton High School.




















 
January 18 is a good day in Patriots history, with the Pats beating the Colts in the AFCCG not once, but twice.


Today in Patriots History
Ty Law picks off Peyton Manning three times
Antowain Smith rushes for 100 yards

Adam Vinatieri kicks team-record five field goals
Pats win 14th straight, 24-14 in 2003 AFCCG


Having heard about Colts tight end Marcus Pollard's proclamation that if the Colts kept playing well, the league "might as well just hand us the rings," Belichick disdainfully told his players, "Nobody hands you a ring. I don't care how much money you have, you can't ****ing buy one. You have to play, and you have to earn it." Then, pulling out his 2001 Super Bowl ring and raising it high above his head, Belichick continued, "This has to be earned, and there's only one way to do that. Either they kick your ass, or you kick theirs."


Sunday January 18, 2004 at 3:06
2003 AFC Championship Game at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Tony Dungy
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: New England 3½-point home favorites
TV: CBS. Greg Gumbel, Phil Simms; Armen Keteyian, Bonnie Bernstein
Cloudy, occasional light snow; 32º, 100% humidity, 2 mph wind
Referee: Walt Coleman; time: 3:05; paid attendance: 68,436
Game MVPs: Ty Law, Rodney Harrison, Jarvis Green, Adam Vinatieri
Pats
improve to 16-2; advance to Super Bowl 38 vs Carolina
Colts finish season with a record of 14-5, and an AFCCG participation banner






Key Stat I:
The Colts turn the ball over five times, including four interceptions by Peyton Manning. Ty Law had an amazing day with three picks, and Rodney Harrison had another.

Key Stat II:
Marvin Harrison was limited to just three receptions for 19 yards, plus had one turnover on a fumble (Rodney Harrison once again. He too had a great game, with ten tackles (7 solo), an interception, a forced fumble and a deflected pass).

Key Patriot Stats:
- Manning was sacked four times; Brady sacked zero times
- Antowain Smith: 22 carries for 100 yards
- Troy Brown: 7 receptions for 88 yards
- David Givens: 8 receptions (on 9 targets) for 68 yards and a touchdown



Rodney Harrison picks off a pass intended for overly confident TE Marcus Pollard in the first quarter​


A few notes on this game. First, the final score should have never been this close. The Patriots settled for five field goals - the first four all in the red zone, after the Patriots had first downs on the 16, 13, 12 and 6-yard lines - allowing Indy to stick around. The Pats also had a 1st-and-goal at the eight-yard line, but on third down on the three, Brady was intercepted - another red zone blunder.

The Colts scored with 2:30 to go, then Christian Fauria recovered the onside kick attempt. However, incomplete passes on second and third down meant the Colts only had to use one of their timeouts in that sequence. Ken Walter's punt went into the end zone, a net of only 24 yards. Indy took over with 2:01 to go and two timeouts, but Manning threw four straight incompletions (fittingly the last two were to Pollard). The Colts had to burn their final two timeouts as the Pats played it same, and Vinatieri kicked his fifth red-zone field goal of the game to clinch it.

The five field goals tied an NFL record for most field goals made in a single postseason game (broken by Pittsburgh's Chris Boswell in 2017). It remains a team record for either postseason or regular season. There have only been two other times in franchise history that there have even been five attempts. On Dec 28, 1963 Gino Cappelletti was 4-5 at Buffalo (28, 12, 36, 35, short from 45) and on Dec 28, 1985 Tony Franklin was also 4-5 at NYJ (33, 41, 20, wide left from 41, 26).

The other thing worth mentioning is that this was the game that the Colts complained to the league about how the Patriots were defended against Indy receivers, and GM Bill Polian - who happened to sit on the NFL Competition Committee - heavily influenced the 2004 rule emphasis crackdown on defensive contact. The change would become known as the Ty Law Rule.











Below is an excellent post-game article from Sports Illustrated, from back in the day when SI provided magnificent reading material.
Just ask Indy quarterback Peyton Manning, the league's co-MVP, who spent the first two weekends of these playoffs merrily toying with overmatched opponents. On Sunday the Patriots' Lycra-tight pass coverage and vigorous pass rush often made Manning (23 of 47, 237 yards) resemble a marionette dancing to mariachi music. Thus a Colts team that had not punted while rolling up 79 points in its first two postseason games was bullied into committing five turnovers, including four Manning interceptions.​

Chief among the Peyton Punishers were All-Pro cornerback Ty Law and strong safety Rodney Harrison. Law had three interceptions and put forth one of the most dominating performances by a defensive back in championship game history. Harrison forced a fumble by Indy wideout Marvin Harrison (no relation) and with an end-zone interception on the Colts' first drive allowed New England to seize control less than 12 minutes into the game. Arguably the league's most important off-season acquisition, Harrison, a 10-year veteran, signed with the Patriots in March after being released by the San Diego Chargers, whose front-office employees will soon be receiving thank-you notes from grateful Pats in Houston.​

"When you watch the Colts' offense on film, they make it all look so easy," Harrison said after the game. "But we were determined not to let them come out and ram it down our throats, and that meant we had to beat them up. When I saw our game plan, I knew it was going to be a long day for Peyton."​

As always, the blueprint conceived by New England coach Bill Belichick and his brainy defensive coordinator, Romeo Crennel, contained more wrinkles than a Rolling Stones tour jet. Reasoning that Manning does not throw nearly as well when he can't set his feet and step into his throws, the Pats' twin wizards came up with a 4-2-5 nickel alignment that would pressure Manning by featuring backup defensive end Jarvis Green as a second tackle alongside mammoth veteran Ted Washington. Green, a fourth-round draft choice in 2002, had two sacks and 17 tackles during the entire regular season, during which his twin brother, Jason, and cousin Howard (both former LSU teammates) repeatedly chided him about his lack of impact.​

On Sunday the 6'3" 290-pounder became Jarvis Green the Sack Machine, getting three of the four takedowns of Manning--the first time in Manning's six-year career that any defender has dumped him three times. It helped that the Colts' receivers were getting press coverage like a Michael Jackson court date. "Peyton was patting the ball and then holding it," Green said. "On film you don't see him do that, but our secondary caused him to." Willie McGinest and fellow outside linebacker Mike Vrabel provided additional resistance by peeling back into coverage.​


Jarvis Green with one of his three sacks on Peyton Manning​



The whole week, we were ticked off,” said safety Rodney Harrison, who joined the Patriots this season and will make his second trip to the Super Bowl after doing so with the San Diego Chargers in the 1994 season. “No one gave us the credit, the opportunity. It was all about Peyton Manning. And, like I said before, one guy cannot win a championship. It’s a team.”​

The score would not have been as close had the Patriots been able to capitalize on all their opportunities. They scored only one touchdown, on the opening drive, picking up the rest of their points on a safety and a playoff-record five field goals by Adam Vinatieri, who was unfazed by the sporadic snow flurries throughout the afternoon.​

If only things were so easy for the Colts, whose first eight drives ended like this: interception, interception, safety, fumble, touchdown, punt, interception, interception.

The ending was abrupt and excruciating for a Colt team that amassed 913 yards and averaged 39.5 points in playoff victories over Denver and Kansas City.​



On a cold day in New England, Ty Law and the Patriots put Peyton Manning on ice.​

Law intercepted the previously flawless Colts quarterback three times, Rodney Harrison added another, and the Patriots beat Indianapolis 24-14 to advance to their second Super Bowl in three seasons. Jarvis Green had three of New England's four sacks as the constant pressure made the NFL's co-MVP look very average.​

Had New England been able to score down close, it would have been no contest. The Patriots had only one TD, settled for five field goals by Adam Vinatieri and lost the ball at the Indy 5 early in the fourth quarter when Tom Brady threw his first interception in 10 home games this season.​

Things were so bad that when the Colts finally had to punt for the first time in the playoffs, the snap went over the punter's head and resulted in a safety.​

Except when he got close to the goal line, Brady was almost as good in the cold weather as Manning had been in his first two games under far more ideal conditions. He finished 22-of-37 for 237 yards and a 7-yard TD pass to David Givens on the first drive of the game and Antowain Smith added 100 yards on 22 carries.​

The Patriots improved to 16-2 by winning their 14th straight game, the best single-season streak since the perfect Miami Dolphins did it in 1972. With the victory, coach Bill Belichick is 5-0 in the postseason with the Patriots, who won the NFL championship two years ago by beating St. Louis.​

New England dominated early, taking the opening possession right down the field for a touchdown on the pass from Brady to Givens. It was 15-0 at the half on two of Vinatieri's field goals plus the safety on the botched punt.​







Colts vs Patriots 2003 AFC Championship
5:54 Highlight Video





THROWBACK: Brady vs. Manning in the 2003 AFC Championship Game | Patriots
7:13 Patriots Highlight Video





2003 AFC Championship Colts vs Patriots Highlights (CBS Intro) 1st Playoff meeting Brady - Manning
16:32 Highlight Video





2003 AFC Championship Game: Patriots vs Colts
2:04:32 Full Game









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





Patriots Starting Offense:
83 WR Deion Branch
72 LT Matt Light
71 LG Russ Hochstein
67 C Dan Koppen
63 RG Joe Andruzzi
68 RT Tom Ashworth
88 TE Christian Fauria
87 WR David Givens
12 QB Tom Brady
32 RB Antowain Smith
31 FB Larry Centers

Patriots Starting Defense:
91 LDE Bobby Hamilton
92 NT Ted Washington
93 RDE Richard Seymour
55 LOLB Willie McGinest
54 LILB Tedy Bruschi
95 RILB Roman Phifer
50 ROLB Mike Vrabel
24 LCB Ty Law
37 SS Rodney Harrison
26 FS Eugene Wilson
38 RCB Tyrone Poole

Patriots Special Teams:
4 K Adam Vinatieri
13 P Ken Walter
66 LS Lonie Paxton
33 KR Kevin Faulk
80 KR Troy Brown
35 KR Patrick Pass
80 PR Troy Brown


What makes the loss in the 2006 AFCC hurt even more is that it would've given the Pats an Undefeated record vs the Indy bloodClots & PayaTon in the POs, both at home And on the road
 
Today in Patriots History
Jermaine Wiggins



Happy 51st birthday to Jermaine Wiggins
Born Jan 18, 1975 in East Boston
Patriot tight end, 2000-2001; uniform #85
Claimed off waivers from the Jets on Nov 28, 2000
Pats résumé: 2 seasons, 20 games (8 starts), 5 TD; 3 playoff games, 14 receptions; one super bowl ring



The graduate of East Boston High School and Bridgton Academy in Maine is remembered not for his 20 regular season games with the Patriots, but for the 2001 postseason. Wiggie had the game of his life in the divisional round Snow Bowl game against Oakland, a dream come true for an undrafted local journeyman. Wiggins had ten receptions that night, four of which came on the fourth quarter drive that ended with Tom Brady scoring on a six yard run, to cut the deficit to three points. Wiggins then had three more catches on the game winning drive that culminated with Adam Vinatieri's improbable field goal, including a clutch six-yard reception on 3rd-and-five. Not finished, Wiggins then came up big on the final drive of Super Bowl 36, making a catch with 21 seconds remaining to set up another iconic Vinatieri game-winning field goal.

Over a seven-year NFL career Wiggins played in 107 games, with 2,141 yards receiving and 14 touchdowns. He also had 24 receptions in nine postseason games and played in two super bowls: with the Pats against the Rams in SB 36, and against the Pats while with Carolina two years later. In his post-NFL life Wiggins became a regular on Boston area radio and television sports shows, and became head coach at Brockton High School.





















Pats should've kept Wiggie here for another couple of years so he could've won another ring and not been on the losing end of a SB like he was when he played us as a member of the 2003 Panthers.
 
During pregame yesterday I saw Ty Law talking to Gonzalez. Would love to know what he told him.
 
January 18 is a good day in Patriots history, with the Pats beating the Colts in the AFCCG not once, but twice.


Today in Patriots History
Ty Law picks off Peyton Manning three times
Antowain Smith rushes for 100 yards

Adam Vinatieri kicks team-record five field goals
Pats win 14th straight, 24-14 in 2003 AFCCG


Having heard about Colts tight end Marcus Pollard's proclamation that if the Colts kept playing well, the league "might as well just hand us the rings," Belichick disdainfully told his players, "Nobody hands you a ring. I don't care how much money you have, you can't ****ing buy one. You have to play, and you have to earn it." Then, pulling out his 2001 Super Bowl ring and raising it high above his head, Belichick continued, "This has to be earned, and there's only one way to do that. Either they kick your ass, or you kick theirs."


Sunday January 18, 2004 at 3:06
2003 AFC Championship Game at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Tony Dungy
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: New England 3½-point home favorites
TV: CBS. Greg Gumbel, Phil Simms; Armen Keteyian, Bonnie Bernstein
Cloudy, occasional light snow; 32º, 100% humidity, 2 mph wind
Referee: Walt Coleman; time: 3:05; paid attendance: 68,436
Game MVPs: Ty Law, Rodney Harrison, Jarvis Green, Adam Vinatieri
Pats
improve to 16-2; advance to Super Bowl 38 vs Carolina
Colts finish season with a record of 14-5, and an AFCCG participation banner






Key Stat I:
The Colts turn the ball over five times, including four interceptions by Peyton Manning. Ty Law had an amazing day with three picks, and Rodney Harrison had another.

Key Stat II:
Marvin Harrison was limited to just three receptions for 19 yards, plus had one turnover on a fumble (Rodney Harrison once again. He too had a great game, with ten tackles (7 solo), an interception, a forced fumble and a deflected pass).

Key Patriot Stats:
- Manning was sacked four times; Brady sacked zero times
- Antowain Smith: 22 carries for 100 yards
- Troy Brown: 7 receptions for 88 yards
- David Givens: 8 receptions (on 9 targets) for 68 yards and a touchdown



Rodney Harrison picks off a pass intended for overly confident TE Marcus Pollard in the first quarter​


A few notes on this game. First, the final score should have never been this close. The Patriots settled for five field goals - the first four all in the red zone, after the Patriots had first downs on the 16, 13, 12 and 6-yard lines - allowing Indy to stick around. The Pats also had a 1st-and-goal at the eight-yard line, but on third down on the three, Brady was intercepted - another red zone blunder.

The Colts scored with 2:30 to go, then Christian Fauria recovered the onside kick attempt. However, incomplete passes on second and third down meant the Colts only had to use one of their timeouts in that sequence. Ken Walter's punt went into the end zone, a net of only 24 yards. Indy took over with 2:01 to go and two timeouts, but Manning threw four straight incompletions (fittingly the last two were to Pollard). The Colts had to burn their final two timeouts as the Pats played it same, and Vinatieri kicked his fifth red-zone field goal of the game to clinch it.

The five field goals tied an NFL record for most field goals made in a single postseason game (broken by Pittsburgh's Chris Boswell in 2017). It remains a team record for either postseason or regular season. There have only been two other times in franchise history that there have even been five attempts. On Dec 28, 1963 Gino Cappelletti was 4-5 at Buffalo (28, 12, 36, 35, short from 45) and on Dec 28, 1985 Tony Franklin was also 4-5 at NYJ (33, 41, 20, wide left from 41, 26).

The other thing worth mentioning is that this was the game that the Colts complained to the league about how the Patriots were defended against Indy receivers, and GM Bill Polian - who happened to sit on the NFL Competition Committee - heavily influenced the 2004 rule emphasis crackdown on defensive contact. The change would become known as the Ty Law Rule.











Below is an excellent post-game article from Sports Illustrated, from back in the day when SI provided magnificent reading material.
Just ask Indy quarterback Peyton Manning, the league's co-MVP, who spent the first two weekends of these playoffs merrily toying with overmatched opponents. On Sunday the Patriots' Lycra-tight pass coverage and vigorous pass rush often made Manning (23 of 47, 237 yards) resemble a marionette dancing to mariachi music. Thus a Colts team that had not punted while rolling up 79 points in its first two postseason games was bullied into committing five turnovers, including four Manning interceptions.​

Chief among the Peyton Punishers were All-Pro cornerback Ty Law and strong safety Rodney Harrison. Law had three interceptions and put forth one of the most dominating performances by a defensive back in championship game history. Harrison forced a fumble by Indy wideout Marvin Harrison (no relation) and with an end-zone interception on the Colts' first drive allowed New England to seize control less than 12 minutes into the game. Arguably the league's most important off-season acquisition, Harrison, a 10-year veteran, signed with the Patriots in March after being released by the San Diego Chargers, whose front-office employees will soon be receiving thank-you notes from grateful Pats in Houston.​

"When you watch the Colts' offense on film, they make it all look so easy," Harrison said after the game. "But we were determined not to let them come out and ram it down our throats, and that meant we had to beat them up. When I saw our game plan, I knew it was going to be a long day for Peyton."​

As always, the blueprint conceived by New England coach Bill Belichick and his brainy defensive coordinator, Romeo Crennel, contained more wrinkles than a Rolling Stones tour jet. Reasoning that Manning does not throw nearly as well when he can't set his feet and step into his throws, the Pats' twin wizards came up with a 4-2-5 nickel alignment that would pressure Manning by featuring backup defensive end Jarvis Green as a second tackle alongside mammoth veteran Ted Washington. Green, a fourth-round draft choice in 2002, had two sacks and 17 tackles during the entire regular season, during which his twin brother, Jason, and cousin Howard (both former LSU teammates) repeatedly chided him about his lack of impact.​

On Sunday the 6'3" 290-pounder became Jarvis Green the Sack Machine, getting three of the four takedowns of Manning--the first time in Manning's six-year career that any defender has dumped him three times. It helped that the Colts' receivers were getting press coverage like a Michael Jackson court date. "Peyton was patting the ball and then holding it," Green said. "On film you don't see him do that, but our secondary caused him to." Willie McGinest and fellow outside linebacker Mike Vrabel provided additional resistance by peeling back into coverage.​


Jarvis Green with one of his three sacks on Peyton Manning​



The whole week, we were ticked off,” said safety Rodney Harrison, who joined the Patriots this season and will make his second trip to the Super Bowl after doing so with the San Diego Chargers in the 1994 season. “No one gave us the credit, the opportunity. It was all about Peyton Manning. And, like I said before, one guy cannot win a championship. It’s a team.”​

The score would not have been as close had the Patriots been able to capitalize on all their opportunities. They scored only one touchdown, on the opening drive, picking up the rest of their points on a safety and a playoff-record five field goals by Adam Vinatieri, who was unfazed by the sporadic snow flurries throughout the afternoon.​

If only things were so easy for the Colts, whose first eight drives ended like this: interception, interception, safety, fumble, touchdown, punt, interception, interception.

The ending was abrupt and excruciating for a Colt team that amassed 913 yards and averaged 39.5 points in playoff victories over Denver and Kansas City.​



On a cold day in New England, Ty Law and the Patriots put Peyton Manning on ice.​

Law intercepted the previously flawless Colts quarterback three times, Rodney Harrison added another, and the Patriots beat Indianapolis 24-14 to advance to their second Super Bowl in three seasons. Jarvis Green had three of New England's four sacks as the constant pressure made the NFL's co-MVP look very average.​

Had New England been able to score down close, it would have been no contest. The Patriots had only one TD, settled for five field goals by Adam Vinatieri and lost the ball at the Indy 5 early in the fourth quarter when Tom Brady threw his first interception in 10 home games this season.​

Things were so bad that when the Colts finally had to punt for the first time in the playoffs, the snap went over the punter's head and resulted in a safety.​

Except when he got close to the goal line, Brady was almost as good in the cold weather as Manning had been in his first two games under far more ideal conditions. He finished 22-of-37 for 237 yards and a 7-yard TD pass to David Givens on the first drive of the game and Antowain Smith added 100 yards on 22 carries.​

The Patriots improved to 16-2 by winning their 14th straight game, the best single-season streak since the perfect Miami Dolphins did it in 1972. With the victory, coach Bill Belichick is 5-0 in the postseason with the Patriots, who won the NFL championship two years ago by beating St. Louis.​

New England dominated early, taking the opening possession right down the field for a touchdown on the pass from Brady to Givens. It was 15-0 at the half on two of Vinatieri's field goals plus the safety on the botched punt.​







Colts vs Patriots 2003 AFC Championship
5:54 Highlight Video





THROWBACK: Brady vs. Manning in the 2003 AFC Championship Game | Patriots
7:13 Patriots Highlight Video





2003 AFC Championship Colts vs Patriots Highlights (CBS Intro) 1st Playoff meeting Brady - Manning
16:32 Highlight Video





2003 AFC Championship Game: Patriots vs Colts
2:04:32 Full Game









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





Patriots Starting Offense:
83 WR Deion Branch
72 LT Matt Light
71 LG Russ Hochstein
67 C Dan Koppen
63 RG Joe Andruzzi
68 RT Tom Ashworth
88 TE Christian Fauria
87 WR David Givens
12 QB Tom Brady
32 RB Antowain Smith
31 FB Larry Centers

Patriots Starting Defense:
91 LDE Bobby Hamilton
92 NT Ted Washington
93 RDE Richard Seymour
55 LOLB Willie McGinest
54 LILB Tedy Bruschi
95 RILB Roman Phifer
50 ROLB Mike Vrabel
24 LCB Ty Law
37 SS Rodney Harrison
26 FS Eugene Wilson
38 RCB Tyrone Poole

Patriots Special Teams:
4 K Adam Vinatieri
13 P Ken Walter
66 LS Lonie Paxton
33 KR Kevin Faulk
80 KR Troy Brown
35 KR Patrick Pass
80 PR Troy Brown

Great stuff. Thanks. A couple of things that I noticed;

Chris Berman calling the Pats TE by the name Christian Eufauria. That's one of his best.

Peyton's body language was terrible. He looked like he was going to cry.

Troy Brown is my favorite Patriot.

Rodney said something that might explain why he isn't already in the HOF. He complained about the Pats getting no respect because it all went to Peyton Manning.
 
Today in Patriots History
Jermaine Wiggins



Happy 51st birthday to Jermaine Wiggins
Born Jan 18, 1975 in East Boston
Patriot tight end, 2000-2001; uniform #85
Claimed off waivers from the Jets on Nov 28, 2000
Pats résumé: 2 seasons, 20 games (8 starts), 5 TD; 3 playoff games, 14 receptions; one super bowl ring



The graduate of East Boston High School and Bridgton Academy in Maine is remembered not for his 20 regular season games with the Patriots, but for the 2001 postseason. Wiggie had the game of his life in the divisional round Snow Bowl game against Oakland, a dream come true for an undrafted local journeyman. Wiggins had ten receptions that night, four of which came on the fourth quarter drive that ended with Tom Brady scoring on a six yard run, to cut the deficit to three points. Wiggins then had three more catches on the game winning drive that culminated with Adam Vinatieri's improbable field goal, including a clutch six-yard reception on 3rd-and-five. Not finished, Wiggins then came up big on the final drive of Super Bowl 36, making a catch with 21 seconds remaining to set up another iconic Vinatieri game-winning field goal.

Over a seven-year NFL career Wiggins played in 107 games, with 2,141 yards receiving and 14 touchdowns. He also had 24 receptions in nine postseason games and played in two super bowls: with the Pats against the Rams in SB 36, and against the Pats while with Carolina two years later. In his post-NFL life Wiggins became a regular on Boston area radio and television sports shows, and became head coach at Brockton High School.




















I met Wiggins at a golf tourney and had my picture taken with him while I wore his huge SB ring.
 
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