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Today In Patriots History Jan 24, 1973: WBZ-TV reports Pats hiring Chuck Fairbanks

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Officially the Patriots hired Fairbanks two days later, but it was on this day that the news broke on WBZ-TV channel 4's local news show. (Bob Lobel, perhaps?) For all those that say the hiring of Bill Parcells brought credibility to the Patriots, I would remind them that the Pats had been to the Super Bowl a few years prior to Tuna signing a contract. The addition of Fairbanks was just as big to the franchise, if not bigger. It took Fairbanks longer to turn the team around, but unlike Parcells, Fairbanks coached in an era with no salary cap and no true free agency - critical components that made turnarounds take much longer, with far more difficulty than in the 90s and beyond.



Today in Patriots History
January 24, 1973: news breaks that the Pats
will hire Chuck Fairbanks as Head Coach


Fairbanks Is Reported Ready to Join Patriots
BOSTON, January 24 (AP)—Chuck Fairbanks, who led the resurgence of football at Oklahoma, has accepted a job offer from the, New England Patriots of the National Football League, WBZ television reported tonight.​

The report did not specify whether Fairbanks would be hired as coach and general manager or only as head coach.​




After seven years of awful to average-at-best drafts had left the Patriot roster devoid of talent, in new GM/HC Chuck Fairbanks' first draft the team selected John Hannah, Sam Cunningham and Darryl Stingley. The next year they drafted Steve Nelson, Andy Johnson and Sam Hunt. Then in '75 the Pats added Russ Francis, Rod Shoate and Steve Grogan. For most teams a three-year stretch like that would be extremely impressive, but the Patriots were not done yet - hitting gold the following year.


Grogan had performed well enough in relief of injured Jim Plunkett for Fairbanks to put the number one overall pick from the 1971 draft on the market. Three days prior to the 1976 draft the trade was made, with the Pats receiving two first round selections in the upcoming draft, first and second round 1977 picks, and a backup QB for good measure. Those four draft picks turned out to be center Pete Brock, safety Tim Fox, running back Horace Ivory, and cornerback Raymond Clayborn, who was belatedly voted in to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 2017. That group of four went on to play a combined 482 games for the Patriots.





In Fairbanks first season the Pats only went 5-9, but the improvement was already apparent. The offense improved from 24th to 16th in points scored, while the defense rose from 26th to 16th. The next year Fairbanks installed his 3-4 defense and the team started out at a league best 6-1, before injuries were too much to overcome. Still, the 7-7 finish was the first non-losing record since just missing out on a chance at the first super bowl in 1966, ending a streak of seven consecutive losing seasons.

1975 saw a player strike over the Sullivan's miserly negotiating tactics that led to a canceled preseason game, and a distraction that could not be overcome. Unfortunately this was just a foreshadowing of events to follow a couple years later.






In '76 the Pats went 11-3, making the playoffs for the first time in 13 years. The team ranked second in scoring offense and third in turnover differential. The Pats led the league with 5.0 yards per rush, and had not lost a game since October. Then came the Ben Dreith game, arguably the most egregiously one-sided officiated game in the history of the NFL (if not all sports). With Pittsburgh decimated by injuries and the AFC vastly superior to the NFC that year, the Raiders-Patriots game was the de facto league championship game. Yes, it still bothers me to this day.

Fairbanks then worked out contract extensions for Hannah and Leon Gray, two future Patriot Hall of Famers. The Sullivans screwed Fairbanks over however, not approving the deals and forcing him to renege on the contracts. Hannah and Gray walked out on the team during preseason and did not return until week four. The Pats had lost two games to below average teams by that time and never recovered, going 7-3 the rest of the way to finish 9-5 in 1977 - but missing the playoffs.




In 1978 Fairbanks worked out a contract extension with Stingley, just prior to his being viciously hit and paralyzed by Jack Tatum in a preseason game. When the Sullivans refused to honor that verbal commitment, it was the final straw; Fairbanks started looking for another job. The team won the AFC East, but then word leaked out that Fairbanks had been hired by the University of Colorado. Billy Sullivan suspended Fairbanks prior to the final game of the season, making the OC the head coach when the Pats had the ball, and the DC the head coach when on defense. The ridiculous arrangement predictably failed, and Fairbanks was allowed to return and coach the first home playoff game in franchise history. Under gloomy skies a lethargic and distracted team was defeated by Earl Campbell, Dan Pastorini and Bum Phillips' Houston Oilers on new years eve of 1978. With that loss, the Fairbanks-era was over.


The first thing he did was fix a Patriots draft system that was pretty much broken at that time. In his first draft Fairbanks landed HOF OL John Hannah, RB Sam Cunningham, WR Darryl Stingley as well as NT ‘Sugar Bear’ Ray Hamilton. A year later he brought in LB Steve Nelson, RB Andy Johnson and LB Sam Hunt. The core of his teams in New England was being put together. Russ Francis and Steve Grogan joined the team in 1975.​


The Patriots had six-straight losing seasons prior to Fairbanks’ arrival, and hadn’t been to the playoffs in ten years. By 1976 the Patriots had (at that time) their best team ever, handing the eventual Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders their only loss of the season. Oakland would win the re-match in the playoffs in a hard fought game that featured a marginal roughing the passer penalty on Sugar Bear Hamilton on a third-and-18 incomplete pass that would set Oakland up for the 24-21 win.​

But to this day, many believe the ’76 Pats teams was one of their best ever, even if they didn’t even make it to the Super Bowl. Before that, the Patriots truly were nobodies in the NFL landscape. If we really want to talk about a coach who put the Patriots on the map, Fairbanks would have to be the original choice.​


The fact that Billy ****ing Sullivan is in the NEP HOF and Chuck Fairbanks isn't is, in the words of former President Jimmy Carter, a Disgrace to the Human Race.
- captain stone


Fairbanks was the best drafter the team ever had. I dearly wish he had more time with the Pats to see what he could have ultimately built them into.

But Sullivans gotta Sullivan...
-turkeyneck










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1:46 Game Highlight Video



1976 New England Patriots
1:21:41 Season Highlights



1976 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "Second Revolution"
21:48 Season Highlights



1978 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "How The East Was Won"
22:08 Season Highlights













 
Today in Patriots History
Hank Bullough



In memory of Hank Bullough, who would have turned 92 today
Born Jan 24, 1934 in Scranton, Pennsylvania; raised in Canton, Ohio
Died Nov 24, 2019 at the age of 85
Patriot Defensive Line Coach, 1973-1975
Patriot Defensive Line Coach and Assistant Head Coach, 1976-1977
Patriot Defensive Coordinator, 1978-1979

Hired as an assistant coach on Feb 14, 1973
Pats résumé: seven seasons, during which time the team ascended from the worst in the NFL to one of the best



Hank Bullough is a major influence in NFL history, the architect of the 3-4 Fairbanks-Bullough defense. Bullough was a coach in New England for six seasons. Prior to that he had won a ring in Super Bowl V as the linebackers coach for Baltimore. After the Sullivans chose Ron Erhardt to succeed Chuck Fairbanks as head coach, Bullough became the defensive coordinator for the Bengals. While there in '81 Cincy made it to the Super Bowl, losing to the 49ers by five points due to four turnovers; in '83 the Bengals had the NFL's #1 ranked defense.


Recurring scheme: Making the switch to the 3-4 defense is an old trick for Patriots - Sept 5, 2003
Bullough said he suggested it to Fairbanks prior to the 1974 season.​

"We were the first," claimed Bullough. "We had gone through a tough season in '73 and our defensive line wasn't very good. We had drafted Steve Nelson and Sam Hunt and they were two good-looking kids at linebacker, and I said to Chuck, `Let's go to the 3-4,' and that's what we did."​

Nelson had played the 3-4 at North Dakota State for four years. Hunt was also a big, raw linebacker out of Stephen F. Austin, and the two young guys were in the middle with Steve King and veteran George Webster on the outside.​

"It worked out well because we had Ray [Hamilton] at the nose and we brought in Mel Lunsford the year before from Washington in a trade, and Mel was decent against the run," said Bullough. "We had acquired Tony McGee from Chicago in '74 and he played the end on passing downs, and we had Julius Adams playing the other side."​

The Patriots went 7-7 that season, and really struggled in '75 with a 3-11 record. But by `76, with the infusion of rookies Tim Fox and Mike Haynes in the defensive backfield and talented Steve Zabel at outside linebacker, the Patriots had a standout defense.​

"The 3-4 definitely allowed you to have good matchups on defense," said Nelson.​

To this day, Bullough says of the 3-4, "It's the best defense in football."​


Hank Bullough was an offensive guard and defensive tackle at Michigan State in the early fifties, where he played alongside Chuck Fairbanks. His first coaching position was at his alma mater, where he served for 11 seasons. In 1970, he became linebackers coach for the Baltimore Colts under head coach Don McCafferty. During that time the Colts won a Super Bowl and the following year had the NFL's #1 ranked defense.

As defensive coordinator for the Patriots in the 1970s, Bullough is credited (along with his college teammate Fairbanks) with being a significant figure in bringing the 3–4 defense to the NFL. After Fairbanks was suspended prior to the final game of the 1978 season, Bullough and fellow assistant Ron Erhardt were named co-head coaches. After the season Patriots owner Billy Sullivan appointed Erhardt head coach instead of Bullough. Bullough would remain defensive coordinator for one more season with the Patriots.

In 1980, new Cincinnati Bengals head coach (and former Green Bay Packers teammate) Forrest Gregg wooed Bullough to install the 3–4 defensive system in Cincinnati. Two seasons later the Bengals would go to the Super Bowl where they fell just short against the San Francisco 49ers. While with the Bengals, Bullough also tutored **** LeBeau who not only would succeed Bullough as defensive coordinator but, took his ideas and expanded them, with his innovative 3–4 zone blitz scheme.

Bullough also served as defensive coordinator for the Packers in 1984. He was named the head coach for the Pittsburgh Maulers of the USFL for the 1985 season, but the team folded and the league collapsed. Bullough moved on to the Buffalo Bills, where he replaced Kay Stephenson for the final 12 games of the 1985 season as head coach. Bullough returned to Green Bay as their DC for four seasons, spent one year in the same position with the Lions, and wrapped up his coaching career in 1994 at the age of 60 as an assistant with Michigan State.



The article below gives a good historical timeline on the evolution of the 5-2 Oklahoma defense, and tracking of defensive influences throughout the careers of Jimmy Johnson and Bill Parcells.


The link to a primer on defensive fronts and strategies below is broken, but this excerpt remains:
3 Philosophies of the 3-4 defense


The Fairbanks-Bullough 3-4 features 3 defensive linemen. The Tackles are head up on the Guards in 4-techniques, and the Nose Guard is in a head-up 0 Technique on the Center. Two Linebackers are in 30-Techniques over the Guards, and two more Linebackers are outside, somewhere between 1×1 and 3×3 off of the End Man on the Line of Scrimmage (which can vary much more depending on the offensive formation).​

The Defensive Linemen are playing a 2-gap technique, attacking and reading the Defensive Linemen. One of the Linebackers will be included in the pass rush in most cases. This version of the 3-4 Defense matches up well with Cover 2 and Quarters coverages because of its 7 man front.​



Here are a couple of 2011 articles by former PatsFans forum member (and current Patriots.com writer) Mike Dussault, looking at Bullough's defensive philosophy.



When people think of the 3-4, they associate it with Pittsburgh’s Zone Blitzing scheme. Pittsburgh’s Zone Blitz 3-4 is just one of three versions of this defense. The other two versions of this defense that are used much more than the Zone Blitz are the Phillips 3-4 and the Fairbanks-Bullough 3-4 [which the Patriots run]. Not all 3-4 defenses are created equal, nor are the players that play in these systems.​

Despite the fact that the Bullough can be confusing, the system relies on a lot on “bend; don’t break” thinking. The system will often give up short yards in the run, and blitzes are not common. The idea is that the longer the offense is on the clock, the longer it takes them to score, and the more plays the offense risks an interception, fumble, or a fourth down.​

The key to the success of Belichick’s style is flexibility of personnel. To be able to switch from a 4-3 to a 3-4 to a dime defense and all points in between requires versatility at nearly every position. Players have to be able to run and cover and hit. Linemen have to be strong enough to hold the point in the 3-4, but get upfield in a 4-3. Defensive backs have to be very good in zone coverage but competent in man coverage when needed. It requires special skills, but also an above-average football IQ. Compared with the base Dungy-Kiffin scheme, which probably started with as little as three or four fronts and a couple of zone coverages, Belichick’s hybrid is a maze meant to confuse and confound.​



Within Patriot folklore Bullough is most well known for part of the fiasco of the 1978 season. Head coach Chuck Fairbanks had had enough of Billy Sullivan's cheapness and meddling from his sons, and word got out that Fairbanks had accepted a position with the University of Colorado. Sullivan fired/suspended Fairbanks - eight days before they were about to play a postseason game. Rather than name a single interim head coach, the mind trust decided to have Bullough be the head coach when the Pats were on defense, and Ron Erhardt the head coach when the team was on offense.

Typical idiotic bizarreness for the Sullivan-era Patriots.



Hank Bullough suffered a stroke in 2014, but his children and grandchildren remained quite athletic.

His son Chuck was a linebacker from Michigan State that was drafted by Philadelphia in 1992, and later played for Miami and Indianapolis. Chuck has been coaching since 1997 and has been the senior defensive analyst for LSU since 2022. Chuck's son/Hank's grandson Max was also a linebacker from Michigan State. Max played for the Houston Texans from 2014-2017, and has been coaching college football since 2019 for Cincinnati, Alabama, Notre Dame, and is now the co-defensive coordinator/linebackers coach at Michigan State. And another grandson, Riley, was also a Michigan State linebacker who made it to the NFL, playing a few seasons for Tampa Bay.


All in the family: The Bulloughs are the 'First Family of Football' at Michigan State





There was even a bit of discussion on Bullough's defense here on the PatsFans message board, from 2009:














12/18/1978 New England Patriots at Miami Dolphins highlights, National Football League Week 16
Miami Dolphins in rarely seen navy blue jerseys



 
This game turned out to be the 17th and final episode of the long-running, media-hyped series with roman numerals, Brady vs Manning. (For the record, Brady won the serires 11-6).

Hopefully I am not a jinx for pointing this out, but this was also the most recent time that the Patriots played a playoff game at Denver. Similar to tomorrow's game, the Patriots were not only favored, but they also trotted out a legend as honorary captain: Ty Law.



Today in Patriots History
Gronk's 8 catches for 114 yards, TD not enough
Gostkowski's missed PAT, no run game critical
Von Miller, Broncos D wins 2015 AFCCG 20-18



Sunday January 24, 2016 at 3:05 (1:05 local time)
2015 AFC Championship Game at Sports Authority Field
Denver Broncos 20, New England Patriots 18
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Gary Kubiak
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: New England 3-point road favorites
TV: CBS. Jim Nantz, Phil Simms; Tracy Wolfson, Evan Washburn, Jay Feely, Mike Carey
Sunny, 46º, 6 mph wind from the north, gusts up to 12 mph
Referee: Ed Hochuli; time: 3:29; paid attendance: 77,112
Game MVPs: Pats - Gronk, Jamie Collins; Broncos - Von Miller, C.J. Anderson
Pats
finish the 2015 season with a 13-5 record, wondering 'what if?'
Broncos improve to 14-4; advance to Super Bowl 50 vs 17-1 Carolina Panthers in Santa Clara




On a 4th-and-10 with 1:34 left to play, Tom Brady connected on a 40 yard pass play to Rob Gronkowski, giving the Pats first and goal at the ten yard line. Brady hit Gronk again for the touchdown with twelve seconds to play, but a two-point conversion attempt to force overtime failed.



There was much second guessing after the game due to the Patriots twice going for it in the red zone in the fourth quarter - and failing both times. This was also the game when Stephen Gostkowski missed an extra point early; had that attempt been good then the Patriots would not have needed to go for two at the end of the game.

But looking back, the biggest problem was the Pats running game, and play calling. The Patriots had only 14 unproductive run calls, with Brandon Bolden (5 carries, 12 yards), James White (5 carries, 11 yards) and over-the-hill Steven Jackson (4 carries, 8 yards) going nowhere. With Dion Lewis going on IR on Nov 9, then LeGarrette Blount also landing on IR on Dec 16, the backfield was in dire straits. That resulted in the desperation move to sign Jackson on Dec 22, after having not played in 365 days. Meanwhile the Pats ran 61 pass plays (27-56, 48%, plus four sacks and one scramble). The result was Brady being knocked down nearly as often (twenty times) as he completed a pass.



Consider that Tom Brady was sacked four times and hit 20 times in all by the Broncos in Sunday's AFC title game -- the most any NFL quarterback has been hit in any game this season -- and it could be considered a minor miracle that the Patriots even had a chance to tie the game late in the fourth quarter with a two-point conversion. . .​

More specifically, it was a Broncos interior defensive line that had its way with its counterpart on the other side of the line of scrimmage. It was Denver edge rushers Von Miller and DeMarcus Ware who timed center Bryan Stork's snaps and sliced into the Patriots backfield almost unimpeded. It was coverage that had Patriots pass-catchers Julian Edelman and Rob Gronkowski locked down for large chunks of the game.​

All of it combined to make Brady's day miserable. Not only was he on his back once out of every three drop-backs, he finished the game 27-for-56 for 310 yards, one touchdown and two picks. He had a quarterback rating of 56.4, which was his lowest mark of the season.​

Brady, of course, wasn't without fault. His struggles weren't entirely precipitated by what his teammates could or couldn't do, either up front or in the secondary. His second-quarter interception, thrown right into Miller's numbers, was on him. And he knew it. That set up a touchdown from Peyton Manning to tight end Owen Daniels three plays later, giving the Patriots a 14-6 lead.​

In the second half, Brady and the Patriots did what they could to slow down Denver's unrelenting rush. They tried to switch up their cadences. They tried to attack Broncos linebackers in one-on-one coverage on running back James White.​

It worked to a certain extent. Brady finished with 213 yards in the second half, but the Patriots couldn't muster scoring chances late without staring down desperate fourth-down situations. Their first two failed, leaving them down 20-12 with 1:52 left in the fourth quarter.​



On an unseasonably warm afternoon in which the Patriots never led, Sunday’s AFC Championship game wasn’t decided until the final seconds. A 4-yard touchdown pass from Tom Brady to Rob Gronkowski on fourth down — after a 40-yard completion on another fourth-down play — brought the Patriots within 2 points with 12 seconds left. But the 2-point try failed, Brady’s pass intended for Julian Edelman was tipped by former Patriot Aqib Talib and intercepted by Bradley Roby.​









Live Blogs:







2015 AFC Championship Game: Patriots @ Broncos (Condensed)
8:33 Highlight Video



The FINAL Brady vs Manning Game! (Patriots vs. Broncos 2015, AFC Championship)
18:56 Highlight Video



2015 AFC Championship Game: Patriots @ Broncos
2:21:27 Full Game





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



Patriots-Broncos Injury Reports:

Patriots-Broncos Rosters and Depth Charts:

Patriots Media Dept Post-Game Notes:




Patriots Starting Offense:
80 WR Danny Amendola
85 TE Michael Williams
76 LT Sebastian Vollmer
67 LG Josh Kline
66 C Bryan Stork
69 RG Shaq Mason
61 RT Marcus Cannon
87 TE Rob Gronkowski
11 WR Julian Edelman
12 QB Tom Brady
28 RB James White

Patriots Starting Defense:
50 LDE Rob Ninkovich
97 LDT Alan Branch
90 RDT Malcom Brown
95 RDE Chandler Jones
91 LB Jamie Collins
54 LB Dont'a Hightower
21 LCB Malcolm Butler
26 RCB Logan Ryan
30 NB Duron Harmon
23 SS Patrick Chung
32 FS Devin McCourty

Patriots Special Teams:
3 K Stephen Gostkowski
6 P Ryan Allen
49 LS Joe Cardona
82 KR Keshawn Martin
80 PR Danny Amendoal
11 PR Julian Edelman
 


















 
Today in Patriots History
January 24 Birthdays


Happy 35th birthday to Duron Harmon
Born January 24, 1991 in Dover DE
Patriot Safety, 2013-2019; uniform #30 (2013-17); #21 (2018-19)
Selected in the 3rd round (91st overall) of the 2013 draft, from Rutgers


Duron Harmon was inactive for the first game of his pro football career (9/8/2013 vs Buffalo). He then played in 128 consecutive Patriot games afterwards over seven years (111 regular season games, 17 postseason games).

During those 111 games he had 3,809 snaps on defense, and 501 on special teams.

Defensive Snap Counts (and percentage)
2013: 427 (39%)
2014: 280 (26%)
2015: 601 (55%)
2016: 506 (49%)
2017: 702 (66%)
2018: 636 (61%)
2019: 657 (65%)

In his seven seasons Harmon had 17 interceptions, 28 passes defensed and three fumble recoveries. He also had 175 tackles (137 solo).

Over the course of the 17 playoff games Harmon played the Patriots were 13-4. He registered four postseason interceptions: late in the third quarter of the 2014 divisional round win off Joe Flacco; late in the fourth quarter to seal the win in the 2016 divisional round win over Houston; on the two yard line off Nick Foles in Super Bowl 52; and a year ago in the fourth quarter against the Titans.

Harmon has earned three Super Bowl rings, for the victories over the Seahawks, the Falcons and the Rams. On March 18, 2020 the Patriots traded Harmon and a 7th round draft pick to Detroit for a 5th round pick. He started all 16 games in 2020 for the Lions, all 17 for for Atlanta in 2021, and 16 games for Las Vegas in 2022. The Rutgers alum (presumably) finished his NFL career in 2023, with three games for Chicago and four games for Cleveland. Harmon played in 168 regular season NFL games, with 7,280 defensive snaps and 24 interceptions.











Happy 35th birthday to Michael Buchanan
Born January 24, 1991 in Homewood, Illinois
Patriot DE, 2013-2014; uniform #99
Pats 7th round (226th overall) selection of the 2013 draft, from Illinois

The Patriots acquired the draft pick used on Buchanan as part of the trade that sent Aqib Talib from Tampa to Foxboro. Buchanan played in 15 games his rookie season, registering two sacks and a fumble recovery. He also played in the two 2013 playoff games, and appeared in three games the following year before landing on IR with an ankle injury. He was waived on May 7, 2015 but he did get a ring for being part of the 2014 super bowl champions.




Happy birthday to Gary Jeter, who would have been 71 today
Born January 24, 1955 in Weirton, West Virginia
Patriot DE, 1989; uniform #99
Signed as a veteran free agent in 1989

The Patriots signed Jeter at the age of 34 for what would be his final year in the NFL. He played in 14 games, with seven sacks for New England. Jeter had been the fifth overall pick of the 1977 draft, splitting twelve seasons with the Giants and Rams. He passed away in 2016 at the age of 61.




Happy 33rd birthday to Anthony Johnson
Born January 24, 1993 in Baton Rouge
Patriot DT, 2016; uniform #96
Signed May 9, 2016 as a free agent

Johnson split 2016 between the practice squad and active roster, appearing in four games with one start. He is credited with eight tackles and two QB hits in those games. From 2014-2018 Johnson played in 22 NFL games, also spending time with Miami, Washington, the Jets and the Colts.




Happy 54th birthday to Jay 'Sky' Walker
Born January 24, 1972 in Los Angeles
Patriot QB, 1994-95
Pats 7th round (198th overall) selection of the 1994 draft, from Howard

Walker spent 1994 on the practice squad and was allocated to Barcelona for the WLAF in '95. While there he once played in a game when he had to pass on every offensive play, due to no running backs on the roster being available. Walker later spent two seasons as a backup QB in Minnesota; he is now a state representative in Maryland, and owner of a financial services firm.





Other January 24 pro football birthdays with a New England connection:

Dorsett Davis, 47 (1979)
Draft Day Trade
In 2002 the Pats traded a third round draft pick (later used on Davis) and a first (QB Patrick Ramsey) to Washington to move up from #30 overall to #21, selecting TE Daniel Graham. Davis played in 14 NFL games for the Broncos in 2003.

Greg Jerman, 47 (1979)
Born in Hyannis
Played on the offensive line for Miami and Buffalo from 2002-2005.

Tyler Catalina, 33 (1993)
Born in Worcester; Wachusett Regional High School
Offensive lineman was with Washington, Minnesota and Carolina from 2017-2019.

**** Smith (1912-1980)
Boston Redskins center, 1933.

Mike Purdy (1895-1950)
Dean Academy (now Dean College) in Franklin, MA; Brown University
Blocking back and wingback for three seasons in the early twenties.
 
Today in Patriots History
January 24 Trivia and Transactions


January 24, 2026:
Mack Hollins is activated off Injured Reserve, one day ahead of the AFCCG victory at Denver

The wide receiver had been placed on IR due to an abdominal injury on December 27, a day before the week 17 game at the Jets.






January 24, 2025:
Jabrill Peppers is found not guilty of assault and battery charges and cocaine possession stemming from an incident at his apartment in Braintree on October 5, 2024. Peppers was placed on the commissioner's exempt list, which barred him from attending both practice and games, due to his being arrested for domestic violence and possession of coke on October 9. After missing eight games, Peppers was removed from the exempt list on November 25, leading to speculation that the prosecution did not have a winnable case.

Peppers testified again on his own behalf on Friday, maintaining his innocence, even telling the court that he followed advice he was given as a rookie when it came to dealing with a woman who was “acting erratic.”​

He grabbed his phone, and hit record.​

That was the point that he made, and it sounds like it might have contributed to the outcome of his case.​



Riley Larkin is hired as an offensive assistant

Larkin comes to New England from Ohio State where he worked as a program assistant on offense under head coach Ryan Day and offensive coordinator Chip Kelly. Larkin worked with Ohio State quarterbacks this past season. Following the Buckeyes National Championship, Ohio State quarterback Will Howard credited Larkin for his development.​

“If it weren’t for me coming here to Ohio State and getting developed by Coach Day and Coach Kelly and Billy Fessler and Riley (Larkin) and all the guys in that room, man, I really wouldn’t be the player that I am right now,” Howard said.​

Larkin has several connections to the Patriots new staff. Mike Vrabel worked with Day (and tangentially, with Larkin) at Ohio State. Larkin was also a quarterback at John Carroll, which is where Josh McDaniels went to school. When McDaniels was previously in New England, the Patriots had a pipeline from John Carroll. McDaniels, Nick Caserio, Nick Caley, Dave Ziegler, and Jerry Schuplinski all had a connection to John Carroll before working with the Patriots.​


The Patriots announce they are 'parting ways' with QB coach T.C. McCartney

This was a fait accompli, as the Pats had hired Ashton Grant to be the new QB coach 24 hours earlier. McCartney was unemployed in 2025.

T.C. McCartney won’t return to the Patriots next fall. The 35-year-old exits with offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt, whom he followed to New England from Cleveland.​

On Tuesday, the Patriots hired veteran offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Josh McDaniels. Mike Vrabel and McDaniels will continue to fill out the Patriots new offensive staff. On Thursday, the team hired Ashton Grant to be their new quarterbacks coach.​

McCartney and Van Pelt are among several assistants leaving New England. That list also includes offensive line coach Scott Peters, receivers coach Tyler Hughes, tight ends coach Bob Bickell, running backs coach Taylor Embree, assistant receivers coach Tiquan Underwood, offensive assistant Michael McCarthy, and others.​




January 24, 2024:
Michael Jordan is signed to a futures/reserve contract

The guard (football, not hoops) began the season on the practice squad, moving up to the active roster three times. Over the course of the 2024 season Jordan played in twelve games with eleven starts, before moving on to Tampa Bay in 2025.





January 24, 2023:
Bill Murray is signed to a futures/reserve contract

Another former Patriot with a more famous namesake, the finely mustachioed guard from William and Mary has been involved in 16 transactions with the Patriots from 2020 to 2025 - while appearing in one 2022 where he was on the field for three special team snaps.






January 24, 2013:
DE Marcus Benard, FB James Develin, WR Jeremy Ebert, WR Andre Holmes, QB Mike Kafka, DL Tracy Robertson, LB Jeff Tarpinian signed to reserve/futures contracts

Considering how few players that are signed to futures/reserve ever contribute, this group as a whole was pretty damn good. Develin stands out the most: he proceeded to play in 85 regular season games plus 14 postseason games with the Patriots, winning three super bowl championships.





January 24, 2008:
Mel Mitchell is placed on injured reserve

The safety from Western Kentucky spent all of 2006 on IR, as well as finishing 2008 on injured reserve. In 2007 Mitchell made 11 tackles while playing in ten games for the Pats.





January 24, 2005:
Patriots waive Antwan Harris

The three-time super bowl winning safety is known for two iconic postseason plays. He is best remembered for taking a lateral from Troy Brown after a blocked field goal, then running 49 yards for a TD in the 2001 AFCCG against Pittsburgh. Then in In Super Bowl 36 he made another crucial play, forcing a fumble by overconfident Rams WR Ricky ('tonight a dynasty is born') Proehl, which was recovered by Terrell Buckley and returned to the Rams 25-yard line. That set up the Pats only offensive touchdown of the game, a pass from Tom Brady to David Patten that upped the Pats lead to 14–3.










January 24, 1972:
A third round draft pick was received from the LA Rams as "additional compensation" for the loss of free agent Phil Olsen

The Patriots were fortunate with Pete Rozelle's decision in this case. Merlin's brother was drafted fourth overall by the Pats in 1970, but spent the season on IR. Billy Sullivan botched the timing of sending Olsen a new contract, making him a free agent. He signed with the Rams, but this was in the days before true free agency. That got Sullivan off the hook, because LA would have to give the Patriots whatever Rozelle deemed as proper compensation. The owners didn't like the concept of players moving freely, so teams signing a free agent had to provide compensation, stifling their value.


The Pats used that draft pick on a defensive end from Colorado State by the name of Jim White. He played in 13 games with six starts for John Mazur, then was let go as part of final roster cuts by Chuck Fairbanks in 1973.

White died in September of 1981 in Denver. His death was caused by liver cancer, which had been attributed to steroids. This made White the first NFL player to have died primarily due to steroid use.

 
Officially the Patriots hired Fairbanks two days later, but it was on this day that the news broke on WBZ-TV channel 4's local news show. (Bob Lobel, perhaps?) For all those that say the hiring of Bill Parcells brought credibility to the Patriots, I would remind them that the Pats had been to the Super Bowl a few years prior to Tuna signing a contract. The addition of Fairbanks was just as big to the franchise, if not bigger. It took Fairbanks longer to turn the team around, but unlike Parcells, Fairbanks coached in an era with no salary cap and no true free agency - critical components that made turnarounds take much longer, with far more difficulty than in the 90s and beyond.



Today in Patriots History
January 24, 1973: news breaks that the Pats
will hire Chuck Fairbanks as Head Coach


Fairbanks Is Reported Ready to Join Patriots
BOSTON, January 24 (AP)—Chuck Fairbanks, who led the resurgence of football at Oklahoma, has accepted a job offer from the, New England Patriots of the National Football League, WBZ television reported tonight.​

The report did not specify whether Fairbanks would be hired as coach and general manager or only as head coach.​




After seven years of awful to average-at-best drafts had left the Patriot roster devoid of talent, in new GM/HC Chuck Fairbanks' first draft the team selected John Hannah, Sam Cunningham and Darryl Stingley. The next year they drafted Steve Nelson, Andy Johnson and Sam Hunt. Then in '75 the Pats added Russ Francis, Rod Shoate and Steve Grogan. For most teams a three-year stretch like that would be extremely impressive, but the Patriots were not done yet - hitting gold the following year.


Grogan had performed well enough in relief of injured Jim Plunkett for Fairbanks to put the number one overall pick from the 1971 draft on the market. Three days prior to the 1976 draft the trade was made, with the Pats receiving two first round selections in the upcoming draft, first and second round 1977 picks, and a backup QB for good measure. Those four draft picks turned out to be center Pete Brock, safety Tim Fox, running back Horace Ivory, and cornerback Raymond Clayborn, who was belatedly voted in to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 2017. That group of four went on to play a combined 482 games for the Patriots.





In Fairbanks first season the Pats only went 5-9, but the improvement was already apparent. The offense improved from 24th to 16th in points scored, while the defense rose from 26th to 16th. The next year Fairbanks installed his 3-4 defense and the team started out at a league best 6-1, before injuries were too much to overcome. Still, the 7-7 finish was the first non-losing record since just missing out on a chance at the first super bowl in 1966, ending a streak of seven consecutive losing seasons.

1975 saw a player strike over the Sullivan's miserly negotiating tactics that led to a canceled preseason game, and a distraction that could not be overcome. Unfortunately this was just a foreshadowing of events to follow a couple years later.






In '76 the Pats went 11-3, making the playoffs for the first time in 13 years. The team ranked second in scoring offense and third in turnover differential. The Pats led the league with 5.0 yards per rush, and had not lost a game since October. Then came the Ben Dreith game, arguably the most egregiously one-sided officiated game in the history of the NFL (if not all sports). With Pittsburgh decimated by injuries and the AFC vastly superior to the NFC that year, the Raiders-Patriots game was the de facto league championship game. Yes, it still bothers me to this day.

Fairbanks then worked out contract extensions for Hannah and Leon Gray, two future Patriot Hall of Famers. The Sullivans screwed Fairbanks over however, not approving the deals and forcing him to renege on the contracts. Hannah and Gray walked out on the team during preseason and did not return until week four. The Pats had lost two games to below average teams by that time and never recovered, going 7-3 the rest of the way to finish 9-5 in 1977 - but missing the playoffs.




In 1978 Fairbanks worked out a contract extension with Stingley, just prior to his being viciously hit and paralyzed by Jack Tatum in a preseason game. When the Sullivans refused to honor that verbal commitment, it was the final straw; Fairbanks started looking for another job. The team won the AFC East, but then word leaked out that Fairbanks had been hired by the University of Colorado. Billy Sullivan suspended Fairbanks prior to the final game of the season, making the OC the head coach when the Pats had the ball, and the DC the head coach when on defense. The ridiculous arrangement predictably failed, and Fairbanks was allowed to return and coach the first home playoff game in franchise history. Under gloomy skies a lethargic and distracted team was defeated by Earl Campbell, Dan Pastorini and Bum Phillips' Houston Oilers on new years eve of 1978. With that loss, the Fairbanks-era was over.


The first thing he did was fix a Patriots draft system that was pretty much broken at that time. In his first draft Fairbanks landed HOF OL John Hannah, RB Sam Cunningham, WR Darryl Stingley as well as NT ‘Sugar Bear’ Ray Hamilton. A year later he brought in LB Steve Nelson, RB Andy Johnson and LB Sam Hunt. The core of his teams in New England was being put together. Russ Francis and Steve Grogan joined the team in 1975.​


The Patriots had six-straight losing seasons prior to Fairbanks’ arrival, and hadn’t been to the playoffs in ten years. By 1976 the Patriots had (at that time) their best team ever, handing the eventual Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders their only loss of the season. Oakland would win the re-match in the playoffs in a hard fought game that featured a marginal roughing the passer penalty on Sugar Bear Hamilton on a third-and-18 incomplete pass that would set Oakland up for the 24-21 win.​

But to this day, many believe the ’76 Pats teams was one of their best ever, even if they didn’t even make it to the Super Bowl. Before that, the Patriots truly were nobodies in the NFL landscape. If we really want to talk about a coach who put the Patriots on the map, Fairbanks would have to be the original choice.​
















‘Roughing the Passer’ The Patriots Raiders Playoff Game What Raider fans never talk about
2:48 Video



11/7/1976 Buffalo Bills at New England Patriots highlights, National Football League Week 9
1:46 Game Highlight Video



1976 New England Patriots
1:21:41 Season Highlights



1976 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "Second Revolution"
21:48 Season Highlights



1978 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "How The East Was Won"
22:08 Season Highlights















Ernie Adams was on the '77 staff!
 
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