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Today In Patriots History July 24: Steve Grogan

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Today in Patriots History
Steve Grogan


Happy 71st Birthday Steve Grogan
Born July 24, 1953 in San Antonio, Texas
Patriot QB, 1975-1990; uniform #14
Pats 5th round (116th overall) selection of the 1975 draft, from Kansas State





Chuck Fairbanks selected Steve Grogan in the fifth round of the 1975 NFL draft out of Kansas State​


Steve Grogan was a model of toughness and longevity, playing in 149 games over his 16-year playing career from 1975-1990. He remains not only a fan favorite for his gritty style but also a favorite among former teammates. An athletic quarterback, Grogan rushed for an NFL record 12 touchdowns in 1976 and for 35 during his career.​

Grogan led the 1976 team to within seconds of the AFC Championship game. That team, which suffered a controversial playoff loss to the Raiders, is considered by many as one of the best in team history. He also helped lead the Patriots to their first AFC Championship in 1985. Grogan ranks among the leaders in team history in nearly every passing category.​

Despite playing quarterback, he was still revered as one of the hardest hitters and toughest players in Patriots history. Grogan was inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame in 1995 after spending parts of three decades with the club.​





Steve Grogan quickly saw action in his rookie season.
He played in 13 games, starting seven of the last eight contests.​


The 1978 Patriots still own owned for an incredible 41 years the record for most rushing yards in a season, and Grogan was a large part of that success. While that offense primarily ran through Sam Cunningham, Grogan added some impressive numbers of his own. On the season, Grogan recorded 539 yards on the ground, becoming one of four members of the 1978 Patriots with 500 or more rushing yards.​

While Grogan was best known for his legs, he still possessed plenty of arm talent. His best statistical season came in 1979 when he threw for 3,286 yards and a league-leading 28 touchdown receptions. His 16.0 yards per completion also led the league.​

Perhaps what defined Grogan the most was his unparalleled toughness. Grogan was arguably the toughest quarterback in the game and played through an endless string of injuries throughout his career. During his 16-year career, Grogan endured five knee surgeries, a cracked fibula, two ruptured disks in his neck, a broken left hand, two separated shoulders, three concussions, and plenty more. Despite all this, nothing could keep Grogan from returning to the field. He had a certain blind fearlessness about him which made him an immediate favorite throughout the New England area.​






Grogan became only the 26th passer in NFL history to throw for over 25,000 yards.​


Aug 21, 2010: Steve Grogan Played 'The Patriots Way' | Joe Gill, for PatsFans.com
Grogan was drafted by Patriots coach Chuck Fairbanks in the fifth round of the 1975 draft out of Kansas State. He was one of the school's all time passing and total offense leaders. Grogan not only beat you with his arm but he was exceptionally quick for a man standing at 6'4".​

The Patriots already had their franchise quarterback in place when he was drafted. Former Heisman Trophy winner, Jim Plunkett had been the Patriots starter for his first four years in the league. However, Coach Fairbanks was not afraid to make a move if a player was under-performing. It didn't matter who he was.​

In 1978, Grogan was part of a lethal rushing attack that amassed an astounding 3,156 yards which is still the most rushing yards by a team in league history. The elusive signal caller contributed 539 yards to the lethal running game. This success on the ground helped lead the Patriots to their first home playoff game.​

Grogan closed the decade with his best passing season. He threw for over 3200 yards and 28 touchdowns. He was becoming a multi threat with his precision passing and his ability to tuck away the ball and run.​






Grogan led the NFL with six game winning drives in 1978, then led the
league in touchdowns, touchdown percentage and yards per catch in '79.​


Longtime quarterback Steve Grogan spent 16 seasons in the NFL, all with the New England Patriots, and played in 149 games under center from 1975 to 1990. At the time of his retirement, Grogan was the Patriots’ all-time leader in passing yards (26,886) and passing touchdowns (182), and he is still fourth in team history with 35 rushing touchdowns during his career. He was inducted to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 1995, and his No. 11 is the only one currently retired by his alma mater, Kansas State.​

For the past 22 years, Grogan has owned and operated Grogan Marciano Sporting Goods in Mansfield, Massachusetts. The store was opened in the 1970s by Peter Marciano, the brother of boxing great Rocky Marciano, and sells equipment and uniforms to youth leagues, high schools and small colleges across southern Massachusetts and Rhode Island.​

On his fondest NFL memories: “Playing in a Super Bowl in January of ‘86 after the ‘85 season was pretty special. Going into the game it didn’t look like I was going to play — Tony Eason was the starter — but I wound up playing most of the game. It wasn’t a very entertaining or fun game to be a part of (Chicago won 46-10), but at least I was a part of it, and that’s pretty special. And then there’s the whole season in ‘76, when I took over the starting job from Jim Plunkett and we went to the playoffs for the first time in over 10 years. That season was pretty special, too. We had a whole bunch of young draft picks and free agents on that roster, with some veteran leadership, and we went from 3-11 in ‘75 to 11-3 in ‘76, and into the playoffs. That whole run was really a lot of fun.”​

On the '85 Bears: “They had a good offense, but their defense was one of the best I ever saw — maybe the best I ever saw. They just had so much talent and they came at you from all kinds of different angles. They played a lot of single coverage and dared you to throw the ball downfield because they knew you weren’t going to have time to. My coaches, after they’d seen the film (of Super Bowl XX) during the offseason, they told me that, in two and a half quarters, I’d thrown the ball 31 times and gotten knocked down on 29 of them. So it made for a long afternoon.”​



Lest anyone think the team’s quarterback was some pretty boy who played the part of a spectator in the proceedings, be advised that Grogan – as gritty a player as this franchise as ever known – was a willing and active participant. Tucking the ball under his arm, Grogan carried it 81 times for 539 yards and five touchdowns that year.​

It was the “Foxboro 500” as the 1978 Patriots became the first team in league history to boast four backs who eclipsed 500 yards in a season.​

Grogan’s passing totals (2,824 yards and 15 touchdowns) may have been extremely modest by today’s standards, but here was a dual threat who more than complemented his arm with his legs, averaging a team-leading 6.7 yards per carry while exceeding 500 yards on the ground in the fourth season of a 16-year career that would lead him into the Patriots Hall of Fame.​

When all was said and done, the 1978 Patriots had a run-pass mix of 671-390 (the 671 rushing attempts in a season remain a franchise record). Their 3,165 yards on the ground exceeded the previous record of 3,088 yards set by the 1973 Bills in a season in which one back, O.J. Simpson, accounted for 2,003. The ’78 Patriots produced a league-record 181 first downs on the ground and ran for a team-record 30 TDs.​

To put all of this in its proper context, think of it this way: Over the course of the regular season, the 1978 Patriots averaged 41.9 carries and 197.8 yards rushing per game.​

Far more often (11 times) than not (five times), the ’78 Patriots exceeded 200 yards rushing in a regular-season game, peaking with 279 in a 14-10 win at Buffalo on Nov. 5.​





Steve Grogan's stats include 182 passing touchdowns, 35 rushing touchdowns, 26,886 yards passing,
2,176 yards rushing, 14.3 yards per completion, and twenty 4th quarter or overtime game winning drives.
At the time of his retirement, Steve Grogan owned nearly every Patriot passing record.
He is perhaps the last NFL quarterback to call his own plays from the huddle.
There will never - ever - be another NFL QB as tough as Steve Grogan​


Jan 1, 2002:
Did you ever have one of those days that everything just seemed perfect? When the sun shined brightly and you had that little extra spring in your step? And no matter what decisions you made they all seemed to work out in the end?​

On Sept. 9, 1979, Steve Grogan and the New England Patriots had one of those days, and the New York Jets were buried under the avalanche of a record-setting offensive explosion. The Patriots set four team records that day and equaled four more. When the sun officially set on the hapless Jets, the Patriots walked out of Schaefer Stadium with a 56-3 romp and in turn earned the first career victory for Head Coach Ron Erhardt, as well as the No. 7 spot on this top 10 list.

"They just couldn't cover anybody all day long," Grogan remembered. "They played a lot of combination coverages and they kept leaving Harold [Jackson] and Stanley [Morgan] open all day. Ron let me go and I called the game. They kept double teaming Russ [Francis] and I kept going to Harold and Stanley on deep posts for touchdowns."​

Try five touchdowns - covering 208 yards. Basically, the Patriots game plan went something like this: run the ball effectively to start, then have Grogan drop back and figure out which of his targets was being single covered, then loft perfect spirals into their arms for touchdowns.​

The first went to Jackson for 49 yards. Next it was Morgan's turn for 37. Both of those came in the first quarter as the Patriots jumped to a 14-3 lead. The second quarter was more of the same. Morgan grabbed a 50-yarder just behind cornerback Bobby Jackson, who was burned repeatedly in the game. Late in the first half, Harold Jackson started and ended a brief one-play drive with a 44-yard touchdown to give New England a 35-3 halftime lead.​

Jackson added another - for 28 yards - midway through the third quarter and Grogan and the rest of the starters watched from the bench as the backups finished off the Jets.​




1975 to 1990: The Career of Steve Grogan (5:26)





Grogan's Heroes - Steve Grogan Career Highlights (8:02)





1986 Week 16 Pats at Miami; Last Game In Orange Bowl (17:12)






I have never asked ANY sports personality for an autograph..ever.

I would shave my azz and walk upside down dressed in hunter green blubbering "Og Og Og !J-T-S-E" for a Steve Grogan autograph. You have to understand something...I have been a Pats fan since the start. I have been battered and beaten by 2-14 seasons and 52-10 losses and held season tickets for twenty years through the worst of it. Why? You hit me I get back up and I start swinging again...EVERY TIME. You may defeat me but you'll NEVER beat me. I'm not bragging, that's how I was brought up and that is how my friends and my family are. In for a penny, in for a pound. I've lived through shyt in southern New England that would curl most other people from other places' toes. I AM a die hard true blue Patriots HOMER and gd'ed proud of it...and there is no player in Pats history that ever approximated my mindset and that of my friends and family more than STEVE GROGAN. That man IS THE man, a tougher player I HAVE NEVER witnessed. I would be beyond proud to have HIS autograph
 
JMT,
Thanks for this.
So many great memories. Most I’d seen before, but not necessarily all in one place.

Closing w the Joker quote was killer.

J U S T Great.
 
My favorite all time Patriot. He led the charge fearlessly during his career, and if not for Ben Dreith, and cheap and irresponsible Billy Sullivan, at least one, if not more, additional Super Bowl trophies would have their home in Foxborough.
 
Today in Patriots History
Mack Herron


Rest In Peace Mack Herron, who would have turned 76 today
Born July 24, 1948 in Biloxi, Mississippi
Died December 6, 2015 in Chicago at the age of 67
Patriot RB/KR/PR 1973-1975; uniform #42
Signed as a free agent/waiver claim from the CFL on August 9, 1973



At 5 feet 5 inches, Mack Herron was dwarfed by teammates such as offensive lineman Leon Gray


Mack Willie 'Mini-Mack' Herron was a shooting star. The 5'5 170 lb Kansas State product was an incredibly exciting athlete. Herron provided a reason for New England sports fans to be enthusiastic about the Patriots, in a time when Pats recent history consisted of the Clive Rush/John Mazur/Phil Bengtson era (or should I say 'error').




1973 was Herron's first season with the Pats, and he led the NFL with 41 kickoff returns for 1,092 yards, including one touchdown. The following year Herron became a rock star, shattering Gale Sayers' NFL record with 2,444 all-purpose yards. In the first game of the '74 season Herron led the Patriots to a 34-24 victory over Miami - a team that was defending back-to-back Super Bowl championships. The Pats created a buzz not just in New England but nationwide, jumping out to a 5-0 start. Injuries and lack of depth eventually took their toll, but for the first time in eight years the Patriots did not finish the season with a losing record. Herron and Sam Cunningham joined veterans Jim Plunkett and Randy Vataha as legitimate reasons to buy tickets to watch the Patriots.


And then boom, just like that - in the blink of an eye, Mack Herron's time with the Patriots was over.


While diabetes was the official cause of his death, Mack Herron's life was a sad story for the final forty years of his life. It has been reported that he was arrested twenty times due to drugs.


March 16, 2013:
Wednesday about 10:30 a.m. Herron was behind the wheel of a tan 2003 Chevrolet Impala when a police officer saw the car stop. . .​

Herron was arrested in May of 2011, also for drug charges, authorities said.​

Chicago police saw Herron, who was 62 at that time, at the back door of an abandoned building in the 1600 block of South Drake Avenue in the North Lawndale neighborhood about 3 p.m. on May, 6, 2011, according to a police report.​

As the officers approached, Herron, whose address at that time was in the 1800 block of South Hamlin Avenue, dropped a tinfoil packet holding 0.20 of a gram of heroin, police said.​

Herron has been arrested dozens of times since he left football and has at least seven felony convictions, prosecutors said.​


Dec 7, 2015:
Herron signed with the Patriots in 1973 after two seasons with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League. The 5-foot-5-inch, 175-pound back was affectionately nicknamed "Mini Mack" for his diminutive size and became a fan favorite for his electrifying returns and explosive offensive contributions, despite only playing in New England for two-and-a-half seasons (1973-75).​

In his first season with the Patriots, he led the NFL in kickoff return yardage (1,092) and broke eight Patriots return records while totaling 1,839 all-purpose yards in 1973, second only to O.J. Simpson that year. In 1974, his legend grew when he finished ahead of Sam Cunningham as the team's leading rusher with 824 yards and seven touchdowns while also leading the team with 38 receptions, including a team-high five receiving touchdowns. He also led the team in kickoff and punt returns. That year, he finished with 2,444 all-purpose yards for the Patriots, which broke Gale Sayers' 1966 NFL single-season all-purpose yardage record of 2,440 yards.​

Born on July 24, 1948 in Biloxi, Miss., he grew up on Chicago's West Side and was a football standout at Farragut High School. He played his college ball at Kansas State and had a sensational senior season when he led the Wildcats in rushing and led the Big 8 Conference in receiving. He scored 21 touchdowns as a senior, which ranked second in the nation behind Oklahoma's Heisman Trophy winner, Steve Owens. Drafted in the sixth round of the 1970 NFL draft by the Atlanta Falcons, Herron opted for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers instead, where he twice led the CFL in all-purpose yardage.​



There have been several recent deaths of former Boston greats, but this one hurt a little more.​

I wondered why. Why did this feel like a punch to the gut?​

Then it him me. It was about the time Herron arrived in 1973 that pro football started to matter to me.​

I had already been hooked on the Red Sox (see 1967 Impossible Dream) and the Bruins (I remember where I was when they won the Cup in 1970). One of my early recollections of caring about the Patriots was when they hired Chuck Fairbanks before the 1973 season and drafted a pair of superstars in John Hannah and Sam “Bam” Cunningham.​

But my favorite player was the 5-foot-5 running back, “Mini” Mack Herron. But what made Herron special wasn’t just his size, but his “all-purpose” yards as a rusher, receiver, punt returner and kick returner. It mattered to me, and only me, that Herron led the league in a somewhat meaningless stat.​

Like Danny Woodhead nearly four decades later, Herron was hard to tackle because he was so small and played with his shoulders even lower. Herron and “Sam Bam” were a great duo.​

What I realized on Monday, upon hearing about Herron’s passing, was something “kids” under the age of 25 could never understand. The Patriots were bad, sometimes embarrassing, but it didn’t matter. There was something about the hope, probably because under Fairbanks the talent level grew.​





Jan 7, 2016:


Mack Herron with his sister at their family home in January 2015

Chicago native Mack “Mini-Mack” Herron used money he made playing professional football to help buy a house for his mother on the city’s West Side in the 1970s.​

The prospect of losing the home to an alleged reverse mortgage scam may have contributed to his death at age 67 last month, according to relatives.​

“He was packing his bags,” said Barbara Herron, younger sister of the former Farragut High School great. “I didn’t know he was packing his things until after he had passed.”​

Herron first burst into prominence at Farragut, where he starred in baseball, basketball and track in addition to his gridiron heroics.​

He continued to stand out at Hutchinson Junior College and Kansas State University, finishing fourth in the nation in touchdowns in 1969. He played professionally for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the CFL and the New England Patriots, where in 1974 he set a single-season record for all-purpose yardage.​

He used some of the money from his football career to help purchase the home in the 1800 block of S. Hamlin Ave.​

Herron’s years on the gridiron took a toll on his body, as did his drug use that led to repeated arrests. Barbara Herron said that at the time of his death her brother was diabetic and dealing with memory loss caused by a football-related head injury.​

But he was also impacted by the strain of potentially being homeless, she said.​

In 2010, Herron’s mother Effie Herron had taken out a reverse mortgage on her home, which had been paid off for years.​





John Hannah (73), Sam Cunningham (39) and mack Herron (42)









When he was still alive many on this forum was pretty harsh and unforgiving of Herron's drug addiction:
 
Here are some more short (2-4 min) 1974 videos of Mack Herron with the Patriots.

He was so impactful at that time that he is a member of the Patriots All-1970s Team, despite only playing with New England for two seasons.


9/15/74, Dolphins at Patriots week 1 34-24 victory


9/15/74, Dolphins at Patriots (21:28 longer version)


9/22/74, Patriots at Giants week 2 28-20 win


11/3/74, Bills at Patriots week 8 29-28 loss


12/8/74, Steelers at Patriots, week 13 21-17 loss
 
Three more videos from the Patriots of that era:


10/12/75, Patriots at Bengals:


Chuck Fairbanks 3-4 defense 6:03 highlight video


1974 New England Patriots Highlights (24:15)
 
Today in Patriots History
Bill McPeak


In memory of Bill McPeak, who would have turned 98 today
Born July 24, 1926 in New Castle, Pennsylvania
Died May 7, 1991 at the age of 64 in Foxboro
Patriots Director of Pro Scouting, 1979-1990

Signed as Director of Pro Scouting on July 23, 1979



From the 1990 Patriots Media Guide:
Keeping track of pro football talent for the Patriots' organization is one of the NFL's most knowledgeable football men, Bill McPeak.​

A star at the University of Pittsburgh, McPeak played defensive end for the Pittsburgh Steelers as a defensive end from 1949-57. During that span, he played in the 1953, 1954 and 1957 Pro Bowls. During the final two years of his tenure at Pittsburgh, McPeak began his 7-year NFL coaching career. In 1959, he joined the Washington Redskins, styinh with the 'Skins until 1965. Of his seven seasons with that club, the final five were as head coach. Included on his staff at Washington was player personnel director Bucko Kilroy, now the Patriots' Vice President.​

McPeak joined the Detroit Lions in 1967 as offensive coordinator, a post he held until he went to the Miami Dolphins in 1973.​

While with the Dolphins as an offensive coach, the Dolphins won Super Bowl VIII, their second consecutive Super Bowl win and third consecutive Super Bowl appearance.​

After suffering a serious illness during the 1974 offseason, McPeak remained out of the NFL on a full-time basis until being named to his present position on July 23, 1979.​

When first named as general manager on April 6, 1979, Bucko Kilroy stated that one of his top priorities was to hire a pro scout, and he was elated to have the qualified McPeak join the Patriots' organization. Since that time, McPeak has been responsible for scouting present and prospective professional football talent both on film and in game situations.​



While he was in Detroit, Bill McPeak had a role in the film version of George Plimpton's Paper Lion



From the 1968 film Paper Lion: Bill McPeak and Alan Alda​



Bill McPeak, head coach of the Washington Redskins from 1961 to 1965 and for the last dozen years the director of professional scouting for the New England Patriots, died of a heart attack Tuesday at his home in Foxboro, Mass., Patriots officials said. He was 64 years old and had recently retired.​

A native of New Castle, Pa., he was a star end at the University of Pittsburgh. He was a 14th-round draft pick of the Steelers, played defensive end for Pittsburgh from 1949 to 1957 and was selected for the Pro Bowl three times. After his playing career, he continued with the Steelers as an assistant and was named head coach of the Redskins at the age of 35.​

With Washington, Mr. McPeak compiled a 21-46-3 record, coaching such stars as Sonny Jurgensen, Sam Huff and Bobby Mitchell. He was an assistant with the Detroit Lions and Miami Dolphins from 1967 to 1974, when he suffered a stroke. After five years of rehabilitation, he joined the Patriots.​






From his Wikipedia page:
He was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 16th round of the 1948 NFL Draft, playing nine seasons for them. During the final two years of his playing career he also became an assistant coach for the team. He also was the head coach of the Washington Redskins and offensive coordinator of the Miami Dolphins.​

In 1959, McPeak joined the Washington Redskins as an assistant under head coach Mike Nixon. After Nixon's dismissal following the 1960 NFL season, McPeak was promoted to head coach and general manager, and remained in that position until 1965.[2] Although the Redskins did not have a winning season under McPeak with an overall 21-46-3 record, the team acquired players, many of whom would become future Hall of Famers, that would eventually play a part in their later winning years. They include Sonny Jurgensen Bobby Mitchell, Charley Taylor, Jerry Smith, Len Hauss, and Chris Hanburger.

After spending the 1966 season as a color commentator for St. Louis Cardinals games on CBS, McPeak joined the Detroit Lions as an offensive coordinator in 1967, a position he held until 1972 when he moved on to the Miami Dolphins to replace Howard Schnellenberger who became head coach of the Baltimore Colts. His tenure in Miami would last for only two seasons due to complications suffered after a stroke, which he spent several years recovering from. He would later join the New England Patriots after returning to health, where he became director of scouting for twelve years.​

McPeak died of a heart attack on May 7, 1991, at the age of 64 at his home in Foxboro, Massachusetts.​



Bill McPeak's full coaching record:
















March 31, 1964: Washington GM Bill McPeak with QB Sonny Jurgensen.
McPeak pulled off a blockbuster trade that worked in his team's favor, sending QB Norm Snead to Philadelphia for Jurgensen.​
 
Today in Patriots History
Steve Grogan


Happy 71st Birthday Steve Grogan
Born July 24, 1953 in San Antonio, Texas
Patriot QB, 1975-1990; uniform #14
Pats 5th round (116th overall) selection of the 1975 draft, from Kansas State





Chuck Fairbanks selected Steve Grogan in the fifth round of the 1975 NFL draft out of Kansas State​


Steve Grogan was a model of toughness and longevity, playing in 149 games over his 16-year playing career from 1975-1990. He remains not only a fan favorite for his gritty style but also a favorite among former teammates. An athletic quarterback, Grogan rushed for an NFL record 12 touchdowns in 1976 and for 35 during his career.​

Grogan led the 1976 team to within seconds of the AFC Championship game. That team, which suffered a controversial playoff loss to the Raiders, is considered by many as one of the best in team history. He also helped lead the Patriots to their first AFC Championship in 1985. Grogan ranks among the leaders in team history in nearly every passing category.​

Despite playing quarterback, he was still revered as one of the hardest hitters and toughest players in Patriots history. Grogan was inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame in 1995 after spending parts of three decades with the club.​





Steve Grogan quickly saw action in his rookie season.
He played in 13 games, starting seven of the last eight contests.​


The 1978 Patriots still own owned for an incredible 41 years the record for most rushing yards in a season, and Grogan was a large part of that success. While that offense primarily ran through Sam Cunningham, Grogan added some impressive numbers of his own. On the season, Grogan recorded 539 yards on the ground, becoming one of four members of the 1978 Patriots with 500 or more rushing yards.​

While Grogan was best known for his legs, he still possessed plenty of arm talent. His best statistical season came in 1979 when he threw for 3,286 yards and a league-leading 28 touchdown receptions. His 16.0 yards per completion also led the league.​

Perhaps what defined Grogan the most was his unparalleled toughness. Grogan was arguably the toughest quarterback in the game and played through an endless string of injuries throughout his career. During his 16-year career, Grogan endured five knee surgeries, a cracked fibula, two ruptured disks in his neck, a broken left hand, two separated shoulders, three concussions, and plenty more. Despite all this, nothing could keep Grogan from returning to the field. He had a certain blind fearlessness about him which made him an immediate favorite throughout the New England area.​






Grogan became only the 26th passer in NFL history to throw for over 25,000 yards.​


Aug 21, 2010: Steve Grogan Played 'The Patriots Way' | Joe Gill, for PatsFans.com
Grogan was drafted by Patriots coach Chuck Fairbanks in the fifth round of the 1975 draft out of Kansas State. He was one of the school's all time passing and total offense leaders. Grogan not only beat you with his arm but he was exceptionally quick for a man standing at 6'4".​

The Patriots already had their franchise quarterback in place when he was drafted. Former Heisman Trophy winner, Jim Plunkett had been the Patriots starter for his first four years in the league. However, Coach Fairbanks was not afraid to make a move if a player was under-performing. It didn't matter who he was.​

In 1978, Grogan was part of a lethal rushing attack that amassed an astounding 3,156 yards which is still the most rushing yards by a team in league history. The elusive signal caller contributed 539 yards to the lethal running game. This success on the ground helped lead the Patriots to their first home playoff game.​

Grogan closed the decade with his best passing season. He threw for over 3200 yards and 28 touchdowns. He was becoming a multi threat with his precision passing and his ability to tuck away the ball and run.​






Grogan led the NFL with six game winning drives in 1978, then led the
league in touchdowns, touchdown percentage and yards per catch in '79.​


Longtime quarterback Steve Grogan spent 16 seasons in the NFL, all with the New England Patriots, and played in 149 games under center from 1975 to 1990. At the time of his retirement, Grogan was the Patriots’ all-time leader in passing yards (26,886) and passing touchdowns (182), and he is still fourth in team history with 35 rushing touchdowns during his career. He was inducted to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 1995, and his No. 11 is the only one currently retired by his alma mater, Kansas State.​

For the past 22 years, Grogan has owned and operated Grogan Marciano Sporting Goods in Mansfield, Massachusetts. The store was opened in the 1970s by Peter Marciano, the brother of boxing great Rocky Marciano, and sells equipment and uniforms to youth leagues, high schools and small colleges across southern Massachusetts and Rhode Island.​

On his fondest NFL memories: “Playing in a Super Bowl in January of ‘86 after the ‘85 season was pretty special. Going into the game it didn’t look like I was going to play — Tony Eason was the starter — but I wound up playing most of the game. It wasn’t a very entertaining or fun game to be a part of (Chicago won 46-10), but at least I was a part of it, and that’s pretty special. And then there’s the whole season in ‘76, when I took over the starting job from Jim Plunkett and we went to the playoffs for the first time in over 10 years. That season was pretty special, too. We had a whole bunch of young draft picks and free agents on that roster, with some veteran leadership, and we went from 3-11 in ‘75 to 11-3 in ‘76, and into the playoffs. That whole run was really a lot of fun.”​

On the '85 Bears: “They had a good offense, but their defense was one of the best I ever saw — maybe the best I ever saw. They just had so much talent and they came at you from all kinds of different angles. They played a lot of single coverage and dared you to throw the ball downfield because they knew you weren’t going to have time to. My coaches, after they’d seen the film (of Super Bowl XX) during the offseason, they told me that, in two and a half quarters, I’d thrown the ball 31 times and gotten knocked down on 29 of them. So it made for a long afternoon.”​



Lest anyone think the team’s quarterback was some pretty boy who played the part of a spectator in the proceedings, be advised that Grogan – as gritty a player as this franchise as ever known – was a willing and active participant. Tucking the ball under his arm, Grogan carried it 81 times for 539 yards and five touchdowns that year.​

It was the “Foxboro 500” as the 1978 Patriots became the first team in league history to boast four backs who eclipsed 500 yards in a season.​

Grogan’s passing totals (2,824 yards and 15 touchdowns) may have been extremely modest by today’s standards, but here was a dual threat who more than complemented his arm with his legs, averaging a team-leading 6.7 yards per carry while exceeding 500 yards on the ground in the fourth season of a 16-year career that would lead him into the Patriots Hall of Fame.​

When all was said and done, the 1978 Patriots had a run-pass mix of 671-390 (the 671 rushing attempts in a season remain a franchise record). Their 3,165 yards on the ground exceeded the previous record of 3,088 yards set by the 1973 Bills in a season in which one back, O.J. Simpson, accounted for 2,003. The ’78 Patriots produced a league-record 181 first downs on the ground and ran for a team-record 30 TDs.​

To put all of this in its proper context, think of it this way: Over the course of the regular season, the 1978 Patriots averaged 41.9 carries and 197.8 yards rushing per game.​

Far more often (11 times) than not (five times), the ’78 Patriots exceeded 200 yards rushing in a regular-season game, peaking with 279 in a 14-10 win at Buffalo on Nov. 5.​





Steve Grogan's stats include 182 passing touchdowns, 35 rushing touchdowns, 26,886 yards passing,
2,176 yards rushing, 14.3 yards per completion, and twenty 4th quarter or overtime game winning drives.
At the time of his retirement, Steve Grogan owned nearly every Patriot passing record.
He is perhaps the last NFL quarterback to call his own plays from the huddle.
There will never - ever - be another NFL QB as tough as Steve Grogan​


Jan 1, 2002:
Did you ever have one of those days that everything just seemed perfect? When the sun shined brightly and you had that little extra spring in your step? And no matter what decisions you made they all seemed to work out in the end?​

On Sept. 9, 1979, Steve Grogan and the New England Patriots had one of those days, and the New York Jets were buried under the avalanche of a record-setting offensive explosion. The Patriots set four team records that day and equaled four more. When the sun officially set on the hapless Jets, the Patriots walked out of Schaefer Stadium with a 56-3 romp and in turn earned the first career victory for Head Coach Ron Erhardt, as well as the No. 7 spot on this top 10 list.

"They just couldn't cover anybody all day long," Grogan remembered. "They played a lot of combination coverages and they kept leaving Harold [Jackson] and Stanley [Morgan] open all day. Ron let me go and I called the game. They kept double teaming Russ [Francis] and I kept going to Harold and Stanley on deep posts for touchdowns."​

Try five touchdowns - covering 208 yards. Basically, the Patriots game plan went something like this: run the ball effectively to start, then have Grogan drop back and figure out which of his targets was being single covered, then loft perfect spirals into their arms for touchdowns.​

The first went to Jackson for 49 yards. Next it was Morgan's turn for 37. Both of those came in the first quarter as the Patriots jumped to a 14-3 lead. The second quarter was more of the same. Morgan grabbed a 50-yarder just behind cornerback Bobby Jackson, who was burned repeatedly in the game. Late in the first half, Harold Jackson started and ended a brief one-play drive with a 44-yard touchdown to give New England a 35-3 halftime lead.​

Jackson added another - for 28 yards - midway through the third quarter and Grogan and the rest of the starters watched from the bench as the backups finished off the Jets.​




1975 to 1990: The Career of Steve Grogan (5:26)





Grogan's Heroes - Steve Grogan Career Highlights (8:02)





1986 Week 16 Pats at Miami; Last Game In Orange Bowl (17:12)


he kinda look like a better looking peyton manning
 
Today in Patriots History
Schindler's List and other July 24 Birthdays


Happy 70th Birthday to Steve Schindler
Born July 24, 1954 in Caldwell, New Jersey
Patriot guard, 1980-1981 offseasons
Signed as a free agent on April 25, 1980

Schindler was on Denver's list: Steve was selected by the Broncos as the 18th overall pick of the 1977 draft. The Patriots owned the very next selection, and chose WR Stanley Morgan. The two had very different career paths. Schindler only lasted two seasons in the NFL, playing 28 games with four starts at guard for Denver.

Steve Schindler was signed by the Pats as a free agent early in 1980. He was placed on injured reserve on August 13, and was never able to completely recover well enough to play football again. Schindler was inducted into the Boston College Varsity Club Athletic Hall of Fame in 1998.







Happy 79th Birthday to Mo Moorman
Born July 24, 1945 in Louisville
Patriot guard, 1971
Acquired via trade with KC on Sept 23, 1971

Mo Moorman was a first round draft pick by the Chiefs in 1968, from Texas A&M. Two weeks into the 1971 season the Pats traded a 1972 second round pick to Kansas City for Moorman. He never played for the Pats, and after being released Moorman returned to KC to play the final nine games of the season there. From 1968 to 1973 Moorman played in 72 games with 68 starts at right guard, and was part of the Chiefs Super Bowl iV championship team.





Happy 29th Birthday to Montravius Adams
Born July 24, 1995 in Americus, Georgia
Patriot DT, 2021 offseason
Signed as a free agent on March 19, 2021

Adams was a third round draft pick from Auburn by Green Bay in 2017. He has played in 85 NFL games with 25 starts for the Packers, Saints, and his present team, the Steelers. Adams was part of the Pats roster cuts on August 31, 2021.

Patriots Sign DL Montravius Adams and LB Raekwon McMillan | Patriots.com
At Auburn, Adams was a second-team All-American and a two-year starter in the rugged SEC. At the 2017 Scouting Combine, he was the fastest 300-pounder. Those two highlights on the resume didn’t mean a thing in the NFL, though. Adams’ four-year totals were 44 tackles, 1.5 sacks and four tackles for losses.​

Three picks after the Packers selected Adams, Detroit landed big-play receiver Kenny Golladay. Within 10 picks of the Adams selection, Tennessee landed explosive tight end Jonnu Smith and the Saints grabbed pass rusher Trey Hendrickson.​

In 2020, Adams had 11 tackles in 130 snaps in eight games before being shut down for the season with a toe injury. When he played, he was a factor. He averaged 11.8 snaps per tackle.​

Adams played in only seven games as a rookie and eight games in 2020. In between, he played in 30 games but posted only three starts.​

Adams’ departure was yet another blow to Green Bay’s horrendous 2017 draft. In the final draft conducted by the late Ted Thompson, the Packers selected cornerback Kevin King instead of All-Pro T.J. Watt with their first pick. Of the 10 draft picks that year, only Pro Bowl running back Aaron Jones remains on the team.​




Happy 26th Birthday to Josh Hammond
Born July 24, 1998 in Hallandale, Florida
Patriot WR, 2022 offseason
Signed as a free agent on July 29, 2022

The Pats waived Hammond at the end of camp in 2022. He has appeared in two NFL games, for the Jaguars in 2021.

Hammond, 24, originally entered the NFL as a rookie free agent in 2020. He signed with the Jaguars out of Florida on April 27, 2020.​

He spent the majority of the past two seasons on Jacksonville’s practice squad. Hammond was elevated to the active roster for two games last season, seeing limited action against the Jets and Colts.​

The Jaguars waived him on May 16, and the Eagles claimed Hammond off waivers before cutting him on July 26.​

The Patriots also activated center David Andrews and punter Jake Bailey after they passed physicals, allowing them to return to practice.​




Happy 45th Birthday to Malaefou MacKenzie
Born July 24, 1979 in Western Samoa
Patriot FB, 2004 offseason
Signed as a free agent on January 5, 2004

Matthew Mark Maleafou Anesi MacKenzie was a 7th round draft pick by Jacksonville in 2003, from USC. He was cut at the end of training camp by the Pats in 2004, and spent a short time on the team's practice squad. MacKenzie played in one NFL game, for the Jaguars in 2003.

Patriots Name Nick Caserio Director of Pro Personnel; Add 12 Free Agents to Roster | Patriots.com

It's doubtful, though, that the Patriots will be comfortable with a 1-2 punch of Kevin Faulk and Mike Cloud, so they need another feature tailback. According to some reports, they are still $2 million over the salary cap, even though cutting Lawyer Milloy in September freed up some space.​

The Patriots will either address this need through free agency or in April's NFL draft. They already signed Malaefou Mackenzie, Frank Moreau and fullback Philip Crosby last week, but the chances of either of those street free agents making the team this summer is slim to none.​

Rookie Malaefou Mackensie has a good name but little shot to stick.​




Other NFL players with a New England connection born on July 24:

- Bob Kuziel, 74 (7/24/50); born in New Haven
Center was a 3rd round pick out of Pitt by New Orleans in 1972. He played in 90 NFL games from '72-'80, mostly for Washington. he later became Regional Vice President for Principal Financial Group in Baltimore.

- Jovan Belcher (1987-2012); University of Maine
Linebacker played in 59 games (44 starts) for the Chiefs from 2009-12.

- Will Poole, 43 (7/24/81); Boston College
Will transferred from BC to USC, where he was a 4th round pick by the Dolphins in 2004.

- Andre Ramsey, 37 (7/24/87); born in Portsmouth NH
Tackle from Ball State played in two games for the Bills in 2009.

- Frank Sachse (1917-1989); 1945 Boston Yanks
Threw three touchdown passes in his three NFL seasons as a blocking back (1943-45). Sachse was also a guard with the Oshkosh All-Stars for two seasons in the National Basketball League. Both sports careers were sandwiched around five years serving in World War 2.

- Don Eliason (1918-2003); Boston Yanks
Eliason had a career with distinct similarities to Frank Sachse's. The end from Hamline College spent one season in the NFL before serving in the US Army for four years in WWII. Eliason played for the Boston Yanks in 1946, and also played for the Boston Celtics in their inaugural 1946-47 season, in what was then known as the Basketball Association of America,





Other pro football players born on this date include:

- Willie Davis (1934-2020)
Hall of Fame defensive end was a member of five Green Bay Packers championship teams in the sixties.

- **** Harris, 87 (7/24/37)
In a four year span from 1960 to 1963 he had 25 interceptions, five pick-sixes - including three in 1961 - was twice named first team All-AFL, and was part of San Diego's 1963 championship team.
Great article below about the early American Football League days, including the 1963 Pats-SD championship game:
https://talesfromtheamericanfootballleague.com/an-interview-with-the-chargers-****-harris/

- Maurkice Pouncey and Mike Pouncey, 35 (7/24/89)
The twin brothers were both centers, and both selected in the first round - in 2010, and 2011. Between the two of them they have 13 Pro Bowl awards and started in 248 games.

- Kevin Hardy, 51 (7/24/73)
The second overall pick of the 1996 draft played in 134 games at linebacker for the Jaguars, Cowboys and Bengals.

- Donte Whitner, 39 (7/24/85)
The strong safety was the eighth overall pick of the 2006 draft by Buffalo; he was named to the Pro Bowl in 2012 for the 49ers, and 2014 with Cleveland.
 
Today in Patriots History
July 24 Pats News


July 24, 2019:
G/C Brian Schwenke retires on the eve of training camp. The backup interior lineman joined the team during its 2018 training camp and appeared in three regular season games before he was placed on injured reserve in November. Prior to playing for the Patriots, Schwenke played five seasons with the Titans.

Eight year veteran TE Lance Kendricks is signed.


July 24, 2018:


July 24, 2016:

July 24, 2012:

July 24, 2008:
Fifteen-page photo gallery of the first day of training camp: Pats training camp | boston.com

July 24, 2005:
McNeil, 25, was signed by the Patriots on April 30, 2005. The 6-foot-1-inch, 305-pound defensive lineman was originally signed as an undrafted free agent by the Philadelphia Eagles following the 2004 NFL Draft. He was with the Eagles through the 2004 preseason before being released on Sept. 5, 2004. McNeil attended Auburn University and started 47 of 51 games on the Tigers' defensive line from 2000-03.​

July 24, 1997:
 
Today in Patriots History
Steve Grogan


Happy 71st Birthday Steve Grogan
Born July 24, 1953 in San Antonio, Texas
Patriot QB, 1975-1990; uniform #14
Pats 5th round (116th overall) selection of the 1975 draft, from Kansas State





Chuck Fairbanks selected Steve Grogan in the fifth round of the 1975 NFL draft out of Kansas State​


Steve Grogan was a model of toughness and longevity, playing in 149 games over his 16-year playing career from 1975-1990. He remains not only a fan favorite for his gritty style but also a favorite among former teammates. An athletic quarterback, Grogan rushed for an NFL record 12 touchdowns in 1976 and for 35 during his career.​

Grogan led the 1976 team to within seconds of the AFC Championship game. That team, which suffered a controversial playoff loss to the Raiders, is considered by many as one of the best in team history. He also helped lead the Patriots to their first AFC Championship in 1985. Grogan ranks among the leaders in team history in nearly every passing category.​

Despite playing quarterback, he was still revered as one of the hardest hitters and toughest players in Patriots history. Grogan was inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame in 1995 after spending parts of three decades with the club.​





Steve Grogan quickly saw action in his rookie season.
He played in 13 games, starting seven of the last eight contests.​


The 1978 Patriots still own owned for an incredible 41 years the record for most rushing yards in a season, and Grogan was a large part of that success. While that offense primarily ran through Sam Cunningham, Grogan added some impressive numbers of his own. On the season, Grogan recorded 539 yards on the ground, becoming one of four members of the 1978 Patriots with 500 or more rushing yards.​

While Grogan was best known for his legs, he still possessed plenty of arm talent. His best statistical season came in 1979 when he threw for 3,286 yards and a league-leading 28 touchdown receptions. His 16.0 yards per completion also led the league.​

Perhaps what defined Grogan the most was his unparalleled toughness. Grogan was arguably the toughest quarterback in the game and played through an endless string of injuries throughout his career. During his 16-year career, Grogan endured five knee surgeries, a cracked fibula, two ruptured disks in his neck, a broken left hand, two separated shoulders, three concussions, and plenty more. Despite all this, nothing could keep Grogan from returning to the field. He had a certain blind fearlessness about him which made him an immediate favorite throughout the New England area.​






Grogan became only the 26th passer in NFL history to throw for over 25,000 yards.​


Aug 21, 2010: Steve Grogan Played 'The Patriots Way' | Joe Gill, for PatsFans.com
Grogan was drafted by Patriots coach Chuck Fairbanks in the fifth round of the 1975 draft out of Kansas State. He was one of the school's all time passing and total offense leaders. Grogan not only beat you with his arm but he was exceptionally quick for a man standing at 6'4".​

The Patriots already had their franchise quarterback in place when he was drafted. Former Heisman Trophy winner, Jim Plunkett had been the Patriots starter for his first four years in the league. However, Coach Fairbanks was not afraid to make a move if a player was under-performing. It didn't matter who he was.​

In 1978, Grogan was part of a lethal rushing attack that amassed an astounding 3,156 yards which is still the most rushing yards by a team in league history. The elusive signal caller contributed 539 yards to the lethal running game. This success on the ground helped lead the Patriots to their first home playoff game.​

Grogan closed the decade with his best passing season. He threw for over 3200 yards and 28 touchdowns. He was becoming a multi threat with his precision passing and his ability to tuck away the ball and run.​






Grogan led the NFL with six game winning drives in 1978, then led the
league in touchdowns, touchdown percentage and yards per catch in '79.​


Longtime quarterback Steve Grogan spent 16 seasons in the NFL, all with the New England Patriots, and played in 149 games under center from 1975 to 1990. At the time of his retirement, Grogan was the Patriots’ all-time leader in passing yards (26,886) and passing touchdowns (182), and he is still fourth in team history with 35 rushing touchdowns during his career. He was inducted to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 1995, and his No. 11 is the only one currently retired by his alma mater, Kansas State.​

For the past 22 years, Grogan has owned and operated Grogan Marciano Sporting Goods in Mansfield, Massachusetts. The store was opened in the 1970s by Peter Marciano, the brother of boxing great Rocky Marciano, and sells equipment and uniforms to youth leagues, high schools and small colleges across southern Massachusetts and Rhode Island.​

On his fondest NFL memories: “Playing in a Super Bowl in January of ‘86 after the ‘85 season was pretty special. Going into the game it didn’t look like I was going to play — Tony Eason was the starter — but I wound up playing most of the game. It wasn’t a very entertaining or fun game to be a part of (Chicago won 46-10), but at least I was a part of it, and that’s pretty special. And then there’s the whole season in ‘76, when I took over the starting job from Jim Plunkett and we went to the playoffs for the first time in over 10 years. That season was pretty special, too. We had a whole bunch of young draft picks and free agents on that roster, with some veteran leadership, and we went from 3-11 in ‘75 to 11-3 in ‘76, and into the playoffs. That whole run was really a lot of fun.”​

On the '85 Bears: “They had a good offense, but their defense was one of the best I ever saw — maybe the best I ever saw. They just had so much talent and they came at you from all kinds of different angles. They played a lot of single coverage and dared you to throw the ball downfield because they knew you weren’t going to have time to. My coaches, after they’d seen the film (of Super Bowl XX) during the offseason, they told me that, in two and a half quarters, I’d thrown the ball 31 times and gotten knocked down on 29 of them. So it made for a long afternoon.”​



Lest anyone think the team’s quarterback was some pretty boy who played the part of a spectator in the proceedings, be advised that Grogan – as gritty a player as this franchise as ever known – was a willing and active participant. Tucking the ball under his arm, Grogan carried it 81 times for 539 yards and five touchdowns that year.​

It was the “Foxboro 500” as the 1978 Patriots became the first team in league history to boast four backs who eclipsed 500 yards in a season.​

Grogan’s passing totals (2,824 yards and 15 touchdowns) may have been extremely modest by today’s standards, but here was a dual threat who more than complemented his arm with his legs, averaging a team-leading 6.7 yards per carry while exceeding 500 yards on the ground in the fourth season of a 16-year career that would lead him into the Patriots Hall of Fame.​

When all was said and done, the 1978 Patriots had a run-pass mix of 671-390 (the 671 rushing attempts in a season remain a franchise record). Their 3,165 yards on the ground exceeded the previous record of 3,088 yards set by the 1973 Bills in a season in which one back, O.J. Simpson, accounted for 2,003. The ’78 Patriots produced a league-record 181 first downs on the ground and ran for a team-record 30 TDs.​

To put all of this in its proper context, think of it this way: Over the course of the regular season, the 1978 Patriots averaged 41.9 carries and 197.8 yards rushing per game.​

Far more often (11 times) than not (five times), the ’78 Patriots exceeded 200 yards rushing in a regular-season game, peaking with 279 in a 14-10 win at Buffalo on Nov. 5.​





Steve Grogan's stats include 182 passing touchdowns, 35 rushing touchdowns, 26,886 yards passing,
2,176 yards rushing, 14.3 yards per completion, and twenty 4th quarter or overtime game winning drives.
At the time of his retirement, Steve Grogan owned nearly every Patriot passing record.
He is perhaps the last NFL quarterback to call his own plays from the huddle.
There will never - ever - be another NFL QB as tough as Steve Grogan​


Jan 1, 2002:
Did you ever have one of those days that everything just seemed perfect? When the sun shined brightly and you had that little extra spring in your step? And no matter what decisions you made they all seemed to work out in the end?​

On Sept. 9, 1979, Steve Grogan and the New England Patriots had one of those days, and the New York Jets were buried under the avalanche of a record-setting offensive explosion. The Patriots set four team records that day and equaled four more. When the sun officially set on the hapless Jets, the Patriots walked out of Schaefer Stadium with a 56-3 romp and in turn earned the first career victory for Head Coach Ron Erhardt, as well as the No. 7 spot on this top 10 list.

"They just couldn't cover anybody all day long," Grogan remembered. "They played a lot of combination coverages and they kept leaving Harold [Jackson] and Stanley [Morgan] open all day. Ron let me go and I called the game. They kept double teaming Russ [Francis] and I kept going to Harold and Stanley on deep posts for touchdowns."​

Try five touchdowns - covering 208 yards. Basically, the Patriots game plan went something like this: run the ball effectively to start, then have Grogan drop back and figure out which of his targets was being single covered, then loft perfect spirals into their arms for touchdowns.​

The first went to Jackson for 49 yards. Next it was Morgan's turn for 37. Both of those came in the first quarter as the Patriots jumped to a 14-3 lead. The second quarter was more of the same. Morgan grabbed a 50-yarder just behind cornerback Bobby Jackson, who was burned repeatedly in the game. Late in the first half, Harold Jackson started and ended a brief one-play drive with a 44-yard touchdown to give New England a 35-3 halftime lead.​

Jackson added another - for 28 yards - midway through the third quarter and Grogan and the rest of the starters watched from the bench as the backups finished off the Jets.​




1975 to 1990: The Career of Steve Grogan (5:26)





Grogan's Heroes - Steve Grogan Career Highlights (8:02)





1986 Week 16 Pats at Miami; Last Game In Orange Bowl (17:12)


I ran into Grogan at the Hilltop in Saugus right after he lost his starting job. He was NOT a happy camper. His friend (agent?) gave us an apology for the way he stormed right past us when I tried to say hello.

I still get sick over the idea that Cam Newton tied Grogan's Pats TD rushing record for QBs. That should not have been allowed to happen.
 
"...Happy 79th Birthday to Mo Moorman
Born July 24, 1945 in Louisville
Patriot guard, 1971
Acquired via trade with KC on Sept 23, 1971

Mo Moorman was a first round draft pick by the Chiefs in 1968, from Texas A&M. Two weeks into the 1971 season the Pats traded a 1972 second round pick to Kansas City for Moorman. He never played for the Pats, and after being released Moorman returned to KC to play the final nine games of the season there. From 1968 to 1973 Moorman played in 72 games with 68 starts at right guard, and was part of the Chiefs Super Bowl iV championship team."

- What a ****ing horrible HORRIBLE ****ing trade that was.
 
I always love those shots of Grogan with the neck roll. I was only 10 in 1990, so my earliest memories of Grogan were when he was in the 'beat-up' phase of his career.
 
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