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Today In Patriots History July 4: The first Pats Training Camp

Fun historical team facts.
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Oakland Raiders, Kezar Stadium, 10/16/1960
I was fairly certain that was the Raiders, but Kezar Stadium?

Wow, that's a blast from the past. Apparently a new, much smaller "Little Kezar" stadium (for high school and local small colleges) has been built on the same site.






My primary recollection of Kezar Stadium was it being the place where "Scorpio" from Dirty Harry worked and lived.

 
I was fairly certain that was the Raiders, but Kezar Stadium?

Wow, that's a blast from the past. Apparently a new, much smaller "Little Kezar" stadium (for high school and local small colleges) has been built on the same site.






My primary recollection of Kezar Stadium was it being the place where "Scorpio" from Dirty Harry worked and lived.


yeah, no doubt, old school AFL football

Getty Images has some of the pics (can't remember where i got the colorized versions from tbh, didn't save the link *doh* ), but the whole b/w run (8) can be found on the Alamy site... the description says Kezar Stadium

 
Today in Patriots History
Three Posthumous Birthdays, and a Pork Chop



Happy posthumous birthday to Bob Lee, who would have been 89 today
Born July 4, 1935 in East Prairie, Missouri
Died March 4, 2017 at the age of 81 in his hometown Columbia, Missouri
Patriot G, 1960; uniform #60


Robert E Lee was 25 years old when he tried out for the newly founded Boston Patriots. The lineman from the University of Missouri made the roster as a swing tackle, backing up LT George McGee and RT Jerry DeLucca. Lee played in the first eight games of the 1960 season before being cut on November 9, then spent one season in the CFL. After that Bob returned to his native Missouri and worked as a teacher and coach.


Bob Dee, Bob Lee and Bob Fee of the Boston Patriots

The Bobs of Boston | Tales from the AFL

Robert Lee Obituary - Columbia, Missouri
Bob was born July 4, 1935 in East Prairie, Missouri to James Leftwich Lee and Esther Louise Ray. He was raised on the family farm in Southeast Missouri before the family moved to Columbia, Missouri in 1949.​

In 1951, Bob was a starter for the undefeated Hickman High School football team, a feat that would not be repeated by Hickman until 1973, when Bob was serving as an assistant football coach. Bob graduated from Hickman in 1954 where he played football serving as the team’s co-captain, and he also played basketball and participated in track, where he won the state shot put championship in 1954, forty years after his dad won the same title in 1914.​

After graduating from high school, Bob attended the University of Missouri – Columbia, where he played football on athletic scholarship with the Missouri Football Tigers from 1954 to 1957, attaining a bachelor’s degree in secondary physical education in 1959. In 1957, Bob was named “Columbia’s Best College Athlete” by the Downtown Optimist Club and the Columbia Missourian. After graduating from college, Bob played for the NFL’s Boston Patriots in 1960, followed by a stint with the CFL’s Calgary Stampeders in 1961. Thereafter, Bob then completed his Master’s Degree at MU and married Marilyn Arnold on August 1, 1964.​




Happy posthumous birthday to Bobby Cross, who would have been 93 today
Born July 4, 1931 in Ranger, Texas
Died June 18, 1989 at the age of 57 in his hometown Kilgore, Texas
Patriot OT/DT, 1960; uniform #77


Robert Joe 'Bobby' Cross spent seven season in the fifties as a starting left tackle for the Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers and Chicago Cardinals. Cross was also in the CFL, where he was a Grey Cup champion with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 1953. Bobby Cross played in four games for the Pats in 1960, in what turned out to be his final season of pro football.






Happy posthumous birthday to Will Smith, who would have been 43 today
Born July 4, 1981 in Queens, NY
Patriot DE, 2014 off season; uniform #90
Died April 9, 2016 at the age of 34 i his adopted hometown, New Orleans

Signed as an unrestricted veteran free agent on May 5, 2014





Will Smith had been an eight-year starter with New Orleans, but missed all of 2013 with a torn ACL. He had 67.5 sacks for New Orleans, including 13 in 2009 and 10.5 in his Pro Bowl 2006 season. Power hungry Roger Goodell suspended Smith for four games in 2012 in the bounty gate fiasco, a penalty which was overturned on appeal by Paul Tagliabue. The Pats signed Smith in early April of 2014, but he was cut on August 24, inexplicably unable to overcome Zach Moore or Michael Buchanon for a roster spot. Smith was shot and killed in the aftermath of an argument following a fender bender, tragically dead before his 35th birthday.

Aug 1, 2014:




Dec 12, 2012:

Dec 12, 2016:

Jan 11, 2021:


Will Smith (91) with a strip-sack on Tom Brady, in an August 9, 2012 preseason game between the Saints and Patriots:







Happy 38th birthday to Terrance Knighton
Born July 4, 1986 in Hartford
Patriot DT, 2016 off season; uniform #96
Signed as a free agent on March 31, 2016

Terrance 'Pot Roast' Knighton is a New England native, having grown up in Windsor CT. He played in 108 games for Jacksonville, Washington and Denver from 2009 to 2015. The Pats signed the free agent to a one-year, $4.5 million contract three weeks after the onset of free agency.

At the time it was envisioned that the Patriots would have a powerful rotation of Knighton, Malcom Brown and Alan Branch that could keep all three fresh and productive. Knighton struggled a bit in the Pats second preseason game, and after not playing a single down in the third game the writing was on the wall.




Considering that Anthony Johnson made the initial roster over Knighton(!), I can't help but wonder if the size of the contract was the deciding factor in the roster decision, more so than Pork Chop's challenge to adapt to a two-gap defense. After not playing at all in 2016, Knighton officially retired in 2017.

June 10, 2015:

Aug 29, 2016:

Aug 29, 2016:




Other 4th of July pro football players with New England area connections:

- Floyd Little (1942-2021); born and raised in New Haven, the Hall of Fame running back went to five Pro Bowls, scored 52 touchdowns and totaled 8,741 yards from scrimmage with Denver from 1967-1975.

- Red O'Neill (1898-1955); the UConn Huskie grad played center for the Hartford Blues in 1926, and later had a prominent career in medicine. The Red O'Neill Award is given annually to a former UConn student-athlete who has gone on to distinguish him/herself in his/her chosen career.

- Lou Daukas (1921-2005); this Nashua native was a co-captain at Cornell, and played center and linebacker for Brooklyn after returning from WWII.



In addition to Floyd Little, some other notable pro football players born on the 4th:

- La'Roi Glover, 50 (7/4/74); DT went to six consecutive Pro Bowls from 2000 to 2005 with the Saints and Cowboys. Since retiring he has been the defensive line coach for the Jets, Chargers, and now St Louis of the United Football League.

- Erich Barnes (1935-2022); six-time Pro Bowl corner for the Giants and Browns had 45 career interceptions.

- Rick Casares (1931-2013); this bruising fullback was named to the Pro Bowl in each of his first five seasons, and led the NFL in rushing in 1956.

- Emerson Boozer, 81 (7/4/43); Jet running back led the AFL in touchdowns in rushing touchdowns in 1967, and the NFL in total touchdowns in 1972.

- Josh McCown, 45 (7/4/79); journeyman QB with a penchant of signing with bad teams (Raiders, Browns, Bucs, Jets) had a 23-53 starting record over 16 NFL seasons.

- Todd Marinovich, 55 (7/4/69); former Raider QB is Exhibit A of the perils that happen to the children of overzealous sports parents.
@jmt57

Great, Great stuff. Keeping us posters in tune until training camp! Question didn't kinghton go on to be a force at DT for Broncos??
 
we were Porkchop's last stop... he was in Denver & Washington before he came here and got kicked to the curb
Thank you Pape! For some reason I just had him as a great player in Denver... maybe it was just that one game of his life he had against us... while in Denver...
 
Today in Patriots History
July Transactions


For an obvious holiday reason there are no July 4 Pats transactions. There are, however, several past events of an indeterminate exact date sometime during the month of July for the Patriots franchise.


July, 2009:
Bob Quinn is promoted to Assistant Director of Pro Personnel

Quinn was a grad assistant at UConn from 1998-99. He joined the Pats as a Player Personnel Assistant in 2000, then worked his way up as a Pro Scout (2002-03), Regional Scout (2004-07), National Scout (2008), Assistant Director of Pro Personnel (2009-11) and Director of Pro Scouting (2012-15) before working with Matt Patricia as Detroit's general manager (2016-20). Bob Quinn is now with the Browns as their Senior Personnel/Coaching Executive.

The Detroit Lions will name Patriots director of pro scouting Bob Quinn as their new general manager.​

A native of Norwood, Mass., Quinn has been with the Patriots since Bill Belichick got hired in 2000. He’s risen up the ranks and held several different titles. He served as a scout on the pro, regional and national level for the Pats from 2002-2008. He got promoted to assistant director of pro personnel in 2009.​

In 2012, he became the team’s director of pro scouting, replacing Jason Licht, who is now the general manager for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.​




July, 2005:
Adam Peters is promoted to Pro Scout

Peters had been with the Patriots as a scout since 2003. He worked with Denver in various scouting positions from 2009-16, with the 49ers as VP of Player Personnel and as Assisstant GM from 2017-23, and is now Washington's general manager. Peters had been rumored to be in the running for the Pats GM position this past offseason.

Should Pats Steal Adam Peters from 49ers? | Bleacher Report



July, 2004:
Pats hire Matt Patricia as an offensive coaching assistant

His previous experience was all at the college level, where he had been a grad assistant at RPI (1996) and Syracuse (2001-03), and a defensive line coach at Amherst (1999-2000).



July, 2003:
24-year old Adam Peters (see above) is hired as a Scouting Assistant

Peters was a backup defensive end at UCLA before hanging up his cleats due to players like DeShaun Foster being "bigger, stronger, faster, and better than me in everything". He did remain as a grad assistant, which led to his career in the NFL. Pats executives Scott Pioli and Jason Licht visited UCLA in 2002. Peters, substituting for his boss who was out of town, provided them film and other information on the school's NFL draft prospects. Pioli, impressed by Peters' football smarts, recruited him to join the Patriots.



July, 2000:
24-year old Bob Quinn (see above) is hired off the Uconn campus to be a Personnel Assistant

Brian Daboll is hired as a Defensive Coaching Assistant

Daboll had been a volunteer assistant at William & Mary in 1997 and a grad assistant under Nick Saban at Michigan State from 1998-99.




July, 1999:
Patriots sign Derrick Shepard

The defensive lineman from Georgia Tech was initially signed as an undrafted rookie by the Dolphins the previous year. The pats waived him near the start of training camp, on August 1. That ended his NFL career, but not his pro football career. Shepard moved indoors, playing in the Arena Football League in 2000-01, AF2 from 2002-06, the NIFL (National Indoor Football League) in '06 and the CIFL (Continental Indoor Football league) in 2010. Shepard also worked in the NIFL as a head coach from 2009-11 and defensive line coach from 2012-14.

Not to be confused with the wide receiver of the same name who died at age 35 playing racquetball.



July, 1992:
Pats sign Al Golden


The undrafted tight end from Penn State spent the entire 1992 season on the Pats practice squad. After being waived he returned to New Jersey and took a job as a high school football offensive coordinator, kicking off his coaching career. Golden proceeded to the college ranks the following year. Among his multiple stops were as a linebackers coach for Tom O'Brien at Boston College from 1997 to 1999. He was head coach at Temple (2006-10), University of Miami (2011-15), position coach for the Lions and Bengals (2016-21), defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Notre Dame (2022-23), and is now the head coach for the Fighting Irish.




July, 1988:
Billy Sullivan and Sullivan Brother Printers (owned by Joseph Sullivan) transfer ownership of the New England Patriots to Victor Kiam in exchange for $84 million.

The sale did not include Foxboro Stadium, which Sullivan lost in a bankruptcy sale to paper and packaging executive Robert Kraft. Kiam was President and CEO of Remington Products, which he had purchased in 1979 after his wife bought him his first electric shaver. His leveraged buyout of Remington made Kiam a rich man. Remington, which had lost $30 million in the previous three years, made a profit in his first year as owner. Kiam had become famous as the spokesman for the Remington shaver; his television ad catchphrase, "I liked it so much, I bought the company", made him a household name.

Sullivan Brother Printers was a market leading company that printed sports event programs and pari?mutuel tickets, with eight plants throughout the US.



July, 1986:
Rod Humenuik is promoted to offensive coordinator

John R 'Rod' Humenuik was a tackle at USC in the late fifties, and played for Winnipeg in the CFL from 1960-62. He had a lengthy coaching career prior to arriving in New England, including four years as an offensive line coach for John Mckay at USC. New head coach Raymond Berry hired Humenuik the previous year as offensive line coach. Prior to that he worked for the Chiefs, where that club drastically improved in sacks allowed (from 46 to 33). This was an area Berry sought to improve on: the Pats had given up 67 sacks in 1984, the season that Berry replaced Ron Meyer as head coach.

Humenuik worked for the Patriots through the 1992 season, at which point Bill Parcells replaced **** MacPherson and cleaned house.




July, 1981:
Pats re-sign Mark Buben

A native of Methuen and Tufts grad, the defensive end played in all 16 games in '79 and '81, while spending 1980 on IR. His last stop in the NFL was with the Browns in 1982, and then played in the USFL from 1983 to 1985.



July, 1979:
Pats sign undrafted rookie Mark Buben (see above)



July, 1976:
Patriots release Bill DuLac
Patriots sign free agents Clarence McCartney and Matt Williams
Pats re-sign Tom Sherman

Dulac was a guard who played in 26 games for the Pats. The Rams traded him to New England in 1973 for Hall of Fame CB Herb Adderley. McCartney had been signed by the Giants as an undrafted rookie in 1975; he never played in the NFL, nor did Williams.

Sherman was a backup QB who had the unenviable task of replacing Babe Parilli on a Patriots team that simultaneously got old and slower. In seven starts in 1968 Sherman went 1-6, throwing 12 touchdowns after Mike Holovak realized that Mike Taliaferro (4 TD, 15 interceptions in the first seven games) was not the answer to Parilli's departure. He later played in the WFL and CFL, and returned to the Pats seven years later. he was waived as part of final roster cuts in September, ending his pro football career.




July, 1975:
The Patriots signed 14 players sometime prior to training camp in 1975: RB Bobby Anderson (5 games), S Bob Kroll, S Dave McCurry (2 games), NT David Tipton (12 games), LB Greg Battle, RB Jimmy Edwards, Penn State WR Jim Scott, Holy Cross WR/TE Mark Sheridan, Temple QB Marty Ginestra, Northwestern S Pete Wessel, WR Richard Williams, RB Bob Hunt, Syracuse RB Roger Praetorius, and former Packer Ron Bullock.



July, 1973:
Pats sign free agent safety Sandy Durko

A sixth round draft pick by Cincinnati in 1970 out of USC, Durko played in 25 games for the Pats in 1973-74, with three interceptions.




July, 1972:
New England signs undrafted rookie LB **** Blanchard, of Tulsa

Blanchard played in all 14 games with one start in '72. He was cut the next year, then played one season in the WFL. he is one of eleven players to wear the #49 for the Patriots.




July, 1971:
Patriots sign free agent Rocky Bleier

Bleier had played for the Steelers in 1968, then served in Viet Nam the following year. He was out of football in '69 recovering from injuries, and the Pats made a slick move to sign him. Unfortunately Art Rooney seet-talked/strong-armed Billy Sullivan into trading him to Pittsburgh for a bag of footballs, and the rest is history.

The Pats also signed RB Jack Maitland, a Williams grad and former Colt who played in 27 games in a backup/special teams role in '71-'72. In addition the Patriots signed third-year free agent vet Roland Moss, who played in 14 games with six starts as a blocking tight end.



July, 1969:
Pats release Bob Tucker, and sign Gary Bugenhagen and Clarence Scott

Tucker proceeded to play in the NFL for 12 seasons with the Giants and Vikings, catching 422 passes and scoring 28 touchdowns. Bugenhagen was the Pats starting left guard in 1970, but he only played in the NFL for two seasons. There were two Clarence Scotts - both defensive backs, and both played in this time period for the Pats. This was the original Clarence Scott, a safety from Morgan State who played in 43 games for the Patriots from 1969-72.



July, 1968:
Pats sign Bob Tucker, Tom Sherman and William Porter to contracts



July, 1967:
The Patriots sign Terry Swanson

A punter from UMass via Belmont High School, Swanson averaged 40.0 yards per punt for the Pats in 1967-68.



July, 1966:
Boston signs Ed Khayat, James Purvis, Joe Avezzano and William Johnson to contracts



July, 1965:
Undrafted rookie Tom Hennessey is signed

The CB was a Brookline native who went to Holy Cross. He played in every game in '65 and '66, with 8 interceptions.



July, 1962:
Pats sign free agent QB Don Allard

The Somerville native and former New York Titan played in four games for the Patriots, then played in the ACFL until 1965.



July, 1960:
The Patriots make a wise move and sign Gino Cappelletti, a former QB in the CFL who was working as a bartender in his brother's tavern in Minnesota.

The Pats also signed Jack Atchason, Phil Bennett, Joe Biscaha, Bill Brown and Fred Bruney. Bruney was named to two AFL All-Star teams, with eight picks playing safety for the Pats from 1960-62.
 
Today in Patriots History
July Transactions


For an obvious holiday reason there are no July 4 Pats transactions. There are, however, several past events of an indeterminate exact date sometime during the month of July for the Patriots franchise.


July, 2009:
Bob Quinn is promoted to Assistant Director of Pro Personnel

Quinn was a grad assistant at UConn from 1998-99. He joined the Pats as a Player Personnel Assistant in 2000, then worked his way up as a Pro Scout (2002-03), Regional Scout (2004-07), National Scout (2008), Assistant Director of Pro Personnel (2009-11) and Director of Pro Scouting (2012-15) before working with Matt Patricia as Detroit's general manager (2016-20). Bob Quinn is now with the Browns as their Senior Personnel/Coaching Executive.

The Detroit Lions will name Patriots director of pro scouting Bob Quinn as their new general manager.​

A native of Norwood, Mass., Quinn has been with the Patriots since Bill Belichick got hired in 2000. He’s risen up the ranks and held several different titles. He served as a scout on the pro, regional and national level for the Pats from 2002-2008. He got promoted to assistant director of pro personnel in 2009.​

In 2012, he became the team’s director of pro scouting, replacing Jason Licht, who is now the general manager for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.​




July, 2005:
Adam Peters is promoted to Pro Scout

Peters had been with the Patriots as a scout since 2003. He worked with Denver in various scouting positions from 2009-16, with the 49ers as VP of Player Personnel and as Assisstant GM from 2017-23, and is now Washington's general manager. Peters had been rumored to be in the running for the Pats GM position this past offseason.

Should Pats Steal Adam Peters from 49ers? | Bleacher Report



July, 2004:
Pats hire Matt Patricia as an offensive coaching assistant

His previous experience was all at the college level, where he had been a grad assistant at RPI (1996) and Syracuse (2001-03), and a defensive line coach at Amherst (1999-2000).



July, 2003:
24-year old Adam Peters (see above) is hired as a Scouting Assistant

Peters was a backup defensive end at UCLA before hanging up his cleats due to players like DeShaun Foster being "bigger, stronger, faster, and better than me in everything". He did remain as a grad assistant, which led to his career in the NFL. Pats executives Scott Pioli and Jason Licht visited UCLA in 2002. Peters, substituting for his boss who was out of town, provided them film and other information on the school's NFL draft prospects. Pioli, impressed by Peters' football smarts, recruited him to join the Patriots.



July, 2000:
24-year old Bob Quinn (see above) is hired off the Uconn campus to be a Personnel Assistant

Brian Daboll is hired as a Defensive Coaching Assistant

Daboll had been a volunteer assistant at William & Mary in 1997 and a grad assistant under Nick Saban at Michigan State from 1998-99.




July, 1999:
Patriots sign Derrick Shepard

The defensive lineman from Georgia Tech was initially signed as an undrafted rookie by the Dolphins the previous year. The pats waived him near the start of training camp, on August 1. That ended his NFL career, but not his pro football career. Shepard moved indoors, playing in the Arena Football League in 2000-01, AF2 from 2002-06, the NIFL (National Indoor Football League) in '06 and the CIFL (Continental Indoor Football league) in 2010. Shepard also worked in the NIFL as a head coach from 2009-11 and defensive line coach from 2012-14.

Not to be confused with the wide receiver of the same name who died at age 35 playing racquetball.



July, 1992:
Pats sign Al Golden


The undrafted tight end from Penn State spent the entire 1992 season on the Pats practice squad. After being waived he returned to New Jersey and took a job as a high school football offensive coordinator, kicking off his coaching career. Golden proceeded to the college ranks the following year. Among his multiple stops were as a linebackers coach for Tom O'Brien at Boston College from 1997 to 1999. He was head coach at Temple (2006-10), University of Miami (2011-15), position coach for the Lions and Bengals (2016-21), defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Notre Dame (2022-23), and is now the head coach for the Fighting Irish.




July, 1988:
Billy Sullivan and Sullivan Brother Printers (owned by Joseph Sullivan) transfer ownership of the New England Patriots to Victor Kiam in exchange for $84 million.

The sale did not include Foxboro Stadium, which Sullivan lost in a bankruptcy sale to paper and packaging executive Robert Kraft. Kiam was President and CEO of Remington Products, which he had purchased in 1979 after his wife bought him his first electric shaver. His leveraged buyout of Remington made Kiam a rich man. Remington, which had lost $30 million in the previous three years, made a profit in his first year as owner. Kiam had become famous as the spokesman for the Remington shaver; his television ad catchphrase, "I liked it so much, I bought the company", made him a household name.

Sullivan Brother Printers was a market leading company that printed sports event programs and pari?mutuel tickets, with eight plants throughout the US.



July, 1986:
Rod Humenuik is promoted to offensive coordinator

John R 'Rod' Humenuik was a tackle at USC in the late fifties, and played for Winnipeg in the CFL from 1960-62. He had a lengthy coaching career prior to arriving in New England, including four years as an offensive line coach for John Mckay at USC. New head coach Raymond Berry hired Humenuik the previous year as offensive line coach. Prior to that he worked for the Chiefs, where that club drastically improved in sacks allowed (from 46 to 33). This was an area Berry sought to improve on: the Pats had given up 67 sacks in 1984, the season that Berry replaced Ron Meyer as head coach.

Humenuik worked for the Patriots through the 1992 season, at which point Bill Parcells replaced **** MacPherson and cleaned house.




July, 1981:
Pats re-sign Mark Buben

A native of Methuen and Tufts grad, the defensive end played in all 16 games in '79 and '81, while spending 1980 on IR. His last stop in the NFL was with the Browns in 1982, and then played in the USFL from 1983 to 1985.



July, 1979:
Pats sign undrafted rookie Mark Buben (see above)



July, 1976:
Patriots release Bill DuLac
Patriots sign free agents Clarence McCartney and Matt Williams
Pats re-sign Tom Sherman

Dulac was a guard who played in 26 games for the Pats. The Rams traded him to New England in 1973 for Hall of Fame CB Herb Adderley. McCartney had been signed by the Giants as an undrafted rookie in 1975; he never played in the NFL, nor did Williams.

Sherman was a backup QB who had the unenviable task of replacing Babe Parilli on a Patriots team that simultaneously got old and slower. In seven starts in 1968 Sherman went 1-6, throwing 12 touchdowns after Mike Holovak realized that Mike Taliaferro (4 TD, 15 interceptions in the first seven games) was not the answer to Parilli's departure. He later played in the WFL and CFL, and returned to the Pats seven years later. he was waived as part of final roster cuts in September, ending his pro football career.




July, 1975:
The Patriots signed 14 players sometime prior to training camp in 1975: RB Bobby Anderson (5 games), S Bob Kroll, S Dave McCurry (2 games), NT David Tipton (12 games), LB Greg Battle, RB Jimmy Edwards, Penn State WR Jim Scott, Holy Cross WR/TE Mark Sheridan, Temple QB Marty Ginestra, Northwestern S Pete Wessel, WR Richard Williams, RB Bob Hunt, Syracuse RB Roger Praetorius, and former Packer Ron Bullock.



July, 1973:
Pats sign free agent safety Sandy Durko

A sixth round draft pick by Cincinnati in 1970 out of USC, Durko played in 25 games for the Pats in 1973-74, with three interceptions.




July, 1972:
New England signs undrafted rookie LB **** Blanchard, of Tulsa

Blanchard played in all 14 games with one start in '72. He was cut the next year, then played one season in the WFL. he is one of eleven players to wear the #49 for the Patriots.




July, 1971:
Patriots sign free agent Rocky Bleier

Bleier had played for the Steelers in 1968, then served in Viet Nam the following year. He was out of football in '69 recovering from injuries, and the Pats made a slick move to sign him. Unfortunately Art Rooney seet-talked/strong-armed Billy Sullivan into trading him to Pittsburgh for a bag of footballs, and the rest is history.

The Pats also signed RB Jack Maitland, a Williams grad and former Colt who played in 27 games in a backup/special teams role in '71-'72. In addition the Patriots signed third-year free agent vet Roland Moss, who played in 14 games with six starts as a blocking tight end.



July, 1969:
Pats release Bob Tucker, and sign Gary Bugenhagen and Clarence Scott

Tucker proceeded to play in the NFL for 12 seasons with the Giants and Vikings, catching 422 passes and scoring 28 touchdowns. Bugenhagen was the Pats starting left guard in 1970, but he only played in the NFL for two seasons. There were two Clarence Scotts - both defensive backs, and both played in this time period for the Pats. This was the original Clarence Scott, a safety from Morgan State who played in 43 games for the Patriots from 1969-72.



July, 1968:
Pats sign Bob Tucker, Tom Sherman and William Porter to contracts



July, 1967:
The Patriots sign Terry Swanson

A punter from UMass via Belmont High School, Swanson averaged 40.0 yards per punt for the Pats in 1967-68.



July, 1966:
Boston signs Ed Khayat, James Purvis, Joe Avezzano and William Johnson to contracts



July, 1965:
Undrafted rookie Tom Hennessey is signed

The CB was a Brookline native who went to Holy Cross. He played in every game in '65 and '66, with 8 interceptions.



July, 1962:
Pats sign free agent QB Don Allard

The Somerville native and former New York Titan played in four games for the Patriots, then played in the ACFL until 1965.



July, 1960:
The Patriots make a wise move and sign Gino Cappelletti, a former QB in the CFL who was working as a bartender in his brother's tavern in Minnesota.

The Pats also signed Jack Atchason, Phil Bennett, Joe Biscaha, Bill Brown and Fred Bruney. Bruney was named to two AFL All-Star teams, with eight picks playing safety for the Pats from 1960-62.
it's cool finding what are basically "A cup of coffee" Patriot players and then seeing them mentioned in your posts... Can't find em all, but I'm trying...

Mark Buben


Clarence Scott


Ed Khayat


Terry Swanson
 
Today in Patriots History
July Transactions


For an obvious holiday reason there are no July 4 Pats transactions. There are, however, several past events of an indeterminate exact date sometime during the month of July for the Patriots franchise.


July, 2009:
Bob Quinn is promoted to Assistant Director of Pro Personnel

Quinn was a grad assistant at UConn from 1998-99. He joined the Pats as a Player Personnel Assistant in 2000, then worked his way up as a Pro Scout (2002-03), Regional Scout (2004-07), National Scout (2008), Assistant Director of Pro Personnel (2009-11) and Director of Pro Scouting (2012-15) before working with Matt Patricia as Detroit's general manager (2016-20). Bob Quinn is now with the Browns as their Senior Personnel/Coaching Executive.

The Detroit Lions will name Patriots director of pro scouting Bob Quinn as their new general manager.​

A native of Norwood, Mass., Quinn has been with the Patriots since Bill Belichick got hired in 2000. He’s risen up the ranks and held several different titles. He served as a scout on the pro, regional and national level for the Pats from 2002-2008. He got promoted to assistant director of pro personnel in 2009.​

In 2012, he became the team’s director of pro scouting, replacing Jason Licht, who is now the general manager for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.​




July, 2005:
Adam Peters is promoted to Pro Scout

Peters had been with the Patriots as a scout since 2003. He worked with Denver in various scouting positions from 2009-16, with the 49ers as VP of Player Personnel and as Assisstant GM from 2017-23, and is now Washington's general manager. Peters had been rumored to be in the running for the Pats GM position this past offseason.

Should Pats Steal Adam Peters from 49ers? | Bleacher Report



July, 2004:
Pats hire Matt Patricia as an offensive coaching assistant

His previous experience was all at the college level, where he had been a grad assistant at RPI (1996) and Syracuse (2001-03), and a defensive line coach at Amherst (1999-2000).



July, 2003:
24-year old Adam Peters (see above) is hired as a Scouting Assistant

Peters was a backup defensive end at UCLA before hanging up his cleats due to players like DeShaun Foster being "bigger, stronger, faster, and better than me in everything". He did remain as a grad assistant, which led to his career in the NFL. Pats executives Scott Pioli and Jason Licht visited UCLA in 2002. Peters, substituting for his boss who was out of town, provided them film and other information on the school's NFL draft prospects. Pioli, impressed by Peters' football smarts, recruited him to join the Patriots.



July, 2000:
24-year old Bob Quinn (see above) is hired off the Uconn campus to be a Personnel Assistant

Brian Daboll is hired as a Defensive Coaching Assistant

Daboll had been a volunteer assistant at William & Mary in 1997 and a grad assistant under Nick Saban at Michigan State from 1998-99.




July, 1999:
Patriots sign Derrick Shepard

The defensive lineman from Georgia Tech was initially signed as an undrafted rookie by the Dolphins the previous year. The pats waived him near the start of training camp, on August 1. That ended his NFL career, but not his pro football career. Shepard moved indoors, playing in the Arena Football League in 2000-01, AF2 from 2002-06, the NIFL (National Indoor Football League) in '06 and the CIFL (Continental Indoor Football league) in 2010. Shepard also worked in the NIFL as a head coach from 2009-11 and defensive line coach from 2012-14.

Not to be confused with the wide receiver of the same name who died at age 35 playing racquetball.



July, 1992:
Pats sign Al Golden


The undrafted tight end from Penn State spent the entire 1992 season on the Pats practice squad. After being waived he returned to New Jersey and took a job as a high school football offensive coordinator, kicking off his coaching career. Golden proceeded to the college ranks the following year. Among his multiple stops were as a linebackers coach for Tom O'Brien at Boston College from 1997 to 1999. He was head coach at Temple (2006-10), University of Miami (2011-15), position coach for the Lions and Bengals (2016-21), defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Notre Dame (2022-23), and is now the head coach for the Fighting Irish.




July, 1988:
Billy Sullivan and Sullivan Brother Printers (owned by Joseph Sullivan) transfer ownership of the New England Patriots to Victor Kiam in exchange for $84 million.

The sale did not include Foxboro Stadium, which Sullivan lost in a bankruptcy sale to paper and packaging executive Robert Kraft. Kiam was President and CEO of Remington Products, which he had purchased in 1979 after his wife bought him his first electric shaver. His leveraged buyout of Remington made Kiam a rich man. Remington, which had lost $30 million in the previous three years, made a profit in his first year as owner. Kiam had become famous as the spokesman for the Remington shaver; his television ad catchphrase, "I liked it so much, I bought the company", made him a household name.

Sullivan Brother Printers was a market leading company that printed sports event programs and pari?mutuel tickets, with eight plants throughout the US.



July, 1986:
Rod Humenuik is promoted to offensive coordinator

John R 'Rod' Humenuik was a tackle at USC in the late fifties, and played for Winnipeg in the CFL from 1960-62. He had a lengthy coaching career prior to arriving in New England, including four years as an offensive line coach for John Mckay at USC. New head coach Raymond Berry hired Humenuik the previous year as offensive line coach. Prior to that he worked for the Chiefs, where that club drastically improved in sacks allowed (from 46 to 33). This was an area Berry sought to improve on: the Pats had given up 67 sacks in 1984, the season that Berry replaced Ron Meyer as head coach.

Humenuik worked for the Patriots through the 1992 season, at which point Bill Parcells replaced **** MacPherson and cleaned house.




July, 1981:
Pats re-sign Mark Buben

A native of Methuen and Tufts grad, the defensive end played in all 16 games in '79 and '81, while spending 1980 on IR. His last stop in the NFL was with the Browns in 1982, and then played in the USFL from 1983 to 1985.



July, 1979:
Pats sign undrafted rookie Mark Buben (see above)



July, 1976:
Patriots release Bill DuLac
Patriots sign free agents Clarence McCartney and Matt Williams
Pats re-sign Tom Sherman

Dulac was a guard who played in 26 games for the Pats. The Rams traded him to New England in 1973 for Hall of Fame CB Herb Adderley. McCartney had been signed by the Giants as an undrafted rookie in 1975; he never played in the NFL, nor did Williams.

Sherman was a backup QB who had the unenviable task of replacing Babe Parilli on a Patriots team that simultaneously got old and slower. In seven starts in 1968 Sherman went 1-6, throwing 12 touchdowns after Mike Holovak realized that Mike Taliaferro (4 TD, 15 interceptions in the first seven games) was not the answer to Parilli's departure. He later played in the WFL and CFL, and returned to the Pats seven years later. he was waived as part of final roster cuts in September, ending his pro football career.




July, 1975:
The Patriots signed 14 players sometime prior to training camp in 1975: RB Bobby Anderson (5 games), S Bob Kroll, S Dave McCurry (2 games), NT David Tipton (12 games), LB Greg Battle, RB Jimmy Edwards, Penn State WR Jim Scott, Holy Cross WR/TE Mark Sheridan, Temple QB Marty Ginestra, Northwestern S Pete Wessel, WR Richard Williams, RB Bob Hunt, Syracuse RB Roger Praetorius, and former Packer Ron Bullock.



July, 1973:
Pats sign free agent safety Sandy Durko

A sixth round draft pick by Cincinnati in 1970 out of USC, Durko played in 25 games for the Pats in 1973-74, with three interceptions.




July, 1972:
New England signs undrafted rookie LB **** Blanchard, of Tulsa

Blanchard played in all 14 games with one start in '72. He was cut the next year, then played one season in the WFL. he is one of eleven players to wear the #49 for the Patriots.




July, 1971:
Patriots sign free agent Rocky Bleier

Bleier had played for the Steelers in 1968, then served in Viet Nam the following year. He was out of football in '69 recovering from injuries, and the Pats made a slick move to sign him. Unfortunately Art Rooney seet-talked/strong-armed Billy Sullivan into trading him to Pittsburgh for a bag of footballs, and the rest is history.

The Pats also signed RB Jack Maitland, a Williams grad and former Colt who played in 27 games in a backup/special teams role in '71-'72. In addition the Patriots signed third-year free agent vet Roland Moss, who played in 14 games with six starts as a blocking tight end.



July, 1969:
Pats release Bob Tucker, and sign Gary Bugenhagen and Clarence Scott

Tucker proceeded to play in the NFL for 12 seasons with the Giants and Vikings, catching 422 passes and scoring 28 touchdowns. Bugenhagen was the Pats starting left guard in 1970, but he only played in the NFL for two seasons. There were two Clarence Scotts - both defensive backs, and both played in this time period for the Pats. This was the original Clarence Scott, a safety from Morgan State who played in 43 games for the Patriots from 1969-72.



July, 1968:
Pats sign Bob Tucker, Tom Sherman and William Porter to contracts



July, 1967:
The Patriots sign Terry Swanson

A punter from UMass via Belmont High School, Swanson averaged 40.0 yards per punt for the Pats in 1967-68.



July, 1966:
Boston signs Ed Khayat, James Purvis, Joe Avezzano and William Johnson to contracts



July, 1965:
Undrafted rookie Tom Hennessey is signed

The CB was a Brookline native who went to Holy Cross. He played in every game in '65 and '66, with 8 interceptions.



July, 1962:
Pats sign free agent QB Don Allard

The Somerville native and former New York Titan played in four games for the Patriots, then played in the ACFL until 1965.



July, 1960:
The Patriots make a wise move and sign Gino Cappelletti, a former QB in the CFL who was working as a bartender in his brother's tavern in Minnesota.

The Pats also signed Jack Atchason, Phil Bennett, Joe Biscaha, Bill Brown and Fred Bruney. Bruney was named to two AFL All-Star teams, with eight picks playing safety for the Pats from 1960-62.
Victor Kiam - I still remember his TV Commercials when he would come on and say "Hi my name is Victor Kiam. . ." (Man, those were not good times to be a Patriot Fan - and I think Lisa Olson says hi.) LOL

Trading Rocky Bleier (for next to nothing) to the Steelers where he became a football legend was not very bright but perhaps doing things like this is why the Patriots 2 and 12 record in 1970 won them the Number 1 Pick to select Jim Plunkett in the 1971 Draft.

Thanks again for the trip down memory lane and for those of us who witnessed some of this first hand, it might give us a little perspective about how things regarding the Patriots over the past 3 or 4 years are really not as bad as they could be. . .LOL
 
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