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Today In Patriots History June 1, 2001: Pats hire Nick Caserio

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Today in Patriots History
Nick Caserio



June 1, 2001:
Bill Belichick hires Nick Caserio as a Personnel Assistant.
Earlier that year he was a grad assistant at Central Michigan, and held the same position the previous two seasons for Saginaw Valley State.





Patriots Today - Inside the Draft Room
1:43 video of the Pats 1st round pick, April 22, 2010



Nick Caserio's résumé with the Patriots:
2001: Personnel Assistant
2002: Offensive Coaching Assistant
2003: Scout
2004-2006: Director of Pro Personnel
2007: Wide Receivers Coach
2008-2020: Director of Player Personnel
Six-Time Super Bowl Champion


Feb 4, 2013:
Meet Nick Caserio, undercover architect of New England Patriots -- Patriots.com
"He's kind of a weird guy, quirky, not much personality, just a hyper-intense guy," one rival personnel executive said. "He's done a lot of different things. He's done coaching, he's done college, he's done pro. He seems real stiff, a little weird and I don't know if those qualities lend themselves to being a general manager, but he's really smart when it comes to football."​

If that sounds like it could be a description of a scouting-side version of Bill Belichick, well, that's probably not by mistake either.​

The former John Carroll University quarterback (one of his receivers there was New England offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels) rose to the top of the team's personnel department in 2009, after Scott Pioli, then vice president of the player personnel, left to become the Kansas City Chiefs' general manager. He'd previously moved back and forth between scouting and coaching. In his new role, Caserio was charged with leading a youth movement as many of the championship foundation pieces of the 2000s retired.​

The promotion -- part of a transition that passed coveted draft-room seats from Pioli and Thomas Dimitroff (who left to become the Atlanta Falcons' GM) to Caserio and new college director Jon Robinson -- had to be earned, of course, and it was.​




April 30, 2014:


April 22, 2015:


April 19, 2016:



How the Patriots Scout Top NFL Prospects | Do Your Job
Jan 12, 2019 Video by the New England Patriots; 14:53



April 23, 2020:


Nick Caserio Recaps Day 1 of the Draft | Press Conference
April 24, 2020 video by the New England Patriots; 17:45















 
Today in Patriots History
Foxboro Stadium is Demolished



June 1, 2002:
The demolition of Foxboro Stadium, which had begun in February a couple weeks after the AFCCG victory over Pittsburgh, was officially completed.



















On February 18, 2002 the demolition of Foxboro Stadium commenced, one month after the last game at the old stadium occurred. On that night clutch field goals by Adam Vinatieri in a blinding snowstorm resulted in the Patriots defeating Oakland. That historic playoff game is known as the Snow Bowl in New England; to everybody else it is the Tuck Rule Game.


Construction began on June 15, 2000 for CMGI Field. The company with the naming rights was an internet incubator that unfortunately had a penchant for backing the wrong horse. For example, they operated companies like Alta Vista (rather than Google) and uBid (instead of eBay). Those wrong choices resulted in their stock price dropping from $160 to $40. This in turn caused the dot com to quickly bail from the naming right in order to stop the financial bleeding, and Boston-based Gillette, prior to their acquisition by Proctor & Gamble, stepped in to fill that void by purchasing the naming rights.


 
While we are on the subject, I would like to share a few outstanding comments on the old stadium from a 2020 thread:



Supafly:
Nice memory. I have a set of cufflinks that are from the last game that I keep meaning to put in some type of display box, but keep forgetting. I think they’d look nice on a shelf somewhere in the home office.


Clonamery:
What? You don’t have the other goalpost? Would look freakin’ awesome in the “home office.” Cuff links.


denverpatsfan:
Loved that old stadium. It had character and was loud unlike the new place. I was at the Snow Game. Many fond memories. We bought our seats too. I turned it into a bench for the patio.


FCB02062:
I was there, along with probably many others on this board, and it was an incredible day/night/game. We got to the stadium around 3:30 and it started snowing shortly after, perhaps even as we were unloading my brother's truck to start our tailgate. We had 4 in our usual crew and we each had assigned "duties" to unload/setup - one guy assigned to each - the grill, the speakers (set up and connect to car radio), our flag poles (American Flag, Pats Flag, Italian Flag), table/chairs, cooler, etc. This was our 8th or 9th season as season ticket holders, so we had it down to a science by then.

Anyway, as we're unloading the snow starts (iirc), but this I'm sure of - these were some HUGE snowflakes, like so big that you could almost make out their geometric shape. It was not THAT cold out - there've been many other much colder games, and there wasn't much wind. All I remember is those massive snowflakes falling from the darkening Foxboro sky. By mid tailgate we've got accumulating snow in the parking lot (we always tailgated in Lot A, which was south of the stadium).

We go through our tailgating routines - we drank lots of beer, ate our usual menu of grilled chicken, steak tips, burgers, dogs - basic tailgate fare. And then we'd get our area going as one of us would "preach". I don't know how or why we started doing this, but one of our group would stand up on a cooler and basically get everyone's attention and pump up the area. Sometimes we'd burn a shirt or paraphenelia from the other team, but mostly it was just "The Pats are gonna beat the schitt out of such and such and blah blah blah" (we were in our early-mid 20s, it was fun, don't judge ). And after our preaching we'd play a song that keeps the area pumped up - usually Song 2 by blur or Machinehead by Bush (very popular high energy tunes at the time) as both made appearances on the in Foxboro stadium game day soundtrack.

By now it's time to break everything down and load up the truck. We always grabbed a "roadie" for the walk into the stadium. At the old stadium you had to walk up a hill (steepness depended on how hammered you were) from Lot A and other lots on the south side of the stadium, and I remember it being quite slippery from the now accumulated snow.

Now we're talking 18 years ago, so some of this may be foggy.

My seats were in 223, about the 5 or 10 yard line on the Pats sideline closest to the south end zone. IIRC, the game tying drive was going right to left in front of us. When the "tuck rule" play happened, and Oakland recovered the ball, many folks in our section got up and left. I sat there in several seconds of disbelief at what just transpired in front of my eyes. I was pissed. I turned to my left and said to my brother as I raised from the bench (bench seats back then) "let's get the **** outta here." And literally just that moment Walt Coleman announced "the previous play is under review". I still wanted to leave because there was no way that wasn't a fumble. My brother wanted to stay and hear the call. I agreed to stay. We couldn't believe the call reversal. It was an amazing turn of events. So then they go on and Vinatieri makes the most incredible kick in football history.

Pats get the kickoff and now they're moving to the end zone farther away from us. I remember there was a run by Antowain Smith around the right side in which it looked like he might be able to run it in for a td as the play was transpiring. But he got tackled for a 9 or 10 yard gain down inside the Oakland 10. At this point I'm thinking just don't fumble. When Vinatieri made the game winner it was absolute pandemonium - hugging guys you don't know in your section. It was insane.

After the game we did some more tailgating, sparked up the grill, drank some more, and my brother and I called our father from the parking lot as we always did. My brother dropped me off at my house maybe around 1 or 1:30 and I remember I watched SportsCenter highlights and commentary until 3 am. I still have the ticket stub from this game.


Patriot Missile:
Good riddance, have some good memories from that place but there is no denying that place was a dump.


Hyped:
I won't miss the cold metal benches and the insane lines for the bathroom....hell I even had to pee downhill towards the old race track outside the bathroom through a chainlink fence because my next option was to pee in my pants....


FCB02062:
Another memory/oddity of the old stadium...

As we would leave our seats/bench after the game, we'd exit the stadium proper at the first stairway to the runway/walkway abutting the stadium. There was a fence, maybe 6 feet high running along the length of this walkway. On the other side of the fence was a fairly steep hill leading down to the parking lot. Sometimes people would give up waiting to get to the front exit as the throngs left after the game, and they'd hop the fence. Every game someone would be schitfaced and fall off the fence and roll down the hill...

Also, the back doors to the many of the concessions opened up to this exit walkway...there was this one dude pretty close to the "end" of the stadium towards the route 1 side that'd give out papa gino pizzas to passers by. These are the litte "Junior Gino" pizzas (IIRC) that they used to sell at the stadium. I was the recipient of several of these through the years...


Tunescribe:
My seats were in sec. 204. The snow was like feathers and piled up vertically on people's heads and shoulders. I remember short catches by Wiggins, Patten and Troy Brown comprising much of the Pats offense while field conditions hindered the explosiveness of Oakland's Jerry Rice and Tim Brown. The trajectory of Vinatieri's game-tying kick was so low and it was snowing so hard we couldn't tell he made it 'til the refs' arms went up. Of course, those were the days before metal detectors at the entry gates: one guy a few rows down from us had two aerosol air horns he held up and blasted whenever Oakland had the ball. I still have a souvenir hat I bought at that game embroidered with the date and team logos.


Free Ted Williams:
I hear they moved those aluminum benches to Gitmo as a tourture device!

I'm pretty sure half of my butt cheek is still attached to one of them.


sean10mm:
The final game there was legendary, but the place itself was an embarrassing dump. It wasn't even a charming mess, it was just an open septic tank with bleachers that gave children tetanus.


italian pat patriot:
I know that it was not a fantastic venue but i have to admit i would have loved to see a game or more at the old Foxboro Stadium
 
Today in Patriots History
Cedric Jones



Happy 65th birthday to Cedric Jones
Born June 1, 1960 in Norfolk, Virginia; hometown Weldon, North Carolina
Patriot wide receiver, 1982-1990; uniform #83
Pats 3rd round (56th overall) selection in the 1982 draft, from Duke
Pats résumé: nine seasons, 120 games; 191 receptions for 2,703 yards (14.2 ypc), with 16 touchdowns



Cedric Jones played in 120 games over nine seasons with the Patriots, scoring 16 touchdowns on 191 receptions for 2,703 yards. At that time he ranked 9th in career franchise receiving yardage (it is 20th now), 9th in receptions (20th) and 10th in TD receptions (22nd). Jones averaged 14.2 yards per reception but did not get a whole lot of passes thrown his way, as he was typically the fourth option after Stanley Morgan, Irving Fryar and RB Tony Collins. Most of Cedric Jones' 38 starts came in two seasons: 12 in his second season (1983), and 12 again in his next to last season (1989), when he had career bests in receptions (48), yards (670) and touchdowns (six).


Cedric Jones was a member of the 1985 Patriots team that snapped an 18-game losing streak in Miami,
with a win in the AFC Championship game - aka the Squish the Fish game.


Even though he did not start often, Jones did develop a niche as a trusted possession receiver - despite the constant turnover at quarterback. Part of his post-NFL career includes being the athletic director at the New York Athletic Club, catering in part to athletes focusing on the Olympics.





Jan 8, 2006:
Where are they now? Cedric Jones -- Patriots.com
Jones was the epitome of a team player, always putting collective goals ahead of individual ones. He often found himself backing up Stanley Morgan and Irving Fryar, but when either one was out of the lineup he was always called upon and he produced.​

"Each person who comes into the National Football League has to find their niche," said Jones. "Mine was always being dependable and I was able to play all four wide receiver positions so when someone got injured I was the swing guy. I wanted to do whatever I could to help the team."​

These days Jones, 45, is still involved with the NFL, working at the league office in New York City. He is the NFL Senior Director of Youth Football, where he oversees operations both internationally and domestically.​

"I've worked at the National Football League office for 12 and half years now," said Jones. "We have a youth football fund that was established in 1998, which is a $150 million fund. Also we have programs we run from "Punt, Pass and Kick" to NFL Flag Football to NFL junior player development to NFL high school player development. I've really enjoyed it." Currently, Jones resides in Greenwich, Connecticut with his wife, Suzy.​



July 21, 2014:
Where are they now? - Cedric Jones -- Patriots.com
A wide receiver who spent nine seasons [1982-90] with New England, you lined up alongside two other talented receivers in Stanley Morgan and Irving Fryar. Since the game's played with only one ball, how'd you make your mark?

"Coming out of college [Duke] I was a speed receiver. I ran a 4.42 [40]. But Stanley and Irving were much faster, more elusive, so I became a 4.4 possession receiver. [Laughs] I made my craft in not putting the ball on the carpet and I could play all four wide receiver positions. I learned the entire offense so I found a place to play."​

It couldn't have hurt to have Hall of Fame receiver Raymond Berry as your head coach [1984-89].

"It did not. And not only did I have Stanley Morgan, who was a perennial Pro Bowl candidate, Harold Jackson, who played with the Rams and was a great wide receiver in the league for numerous years, was my position coach. And then with Raymond Berry, I had a wealth of knowledge at wide receiver to learn from and to emulate.​



Nov 16, 2008:


Feb 5, 2011:


April 28, 2021:






Pro Football Archives -- Cedric Jones Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Cedric Jones Transactions

 
Today in Patriots History
Larry Centers



Happy 57th birthday to Larry Centers
Born June 1, 1968 in Tatum, Texas
Patriot fullback, 2003; uniform #31
Signed as a veteran free agent on July 30, 2003
Pats résumé: one season, nine games (three starts); 19 receptions for 106 yards, 21 rushes for 82 yards, one touchdown; one ring



Larry Centers was one of the best pass receiving backs in the history of pro football. Unfortunately he was 35 years old and had lost a step when he signed with New England, with his primary contribution coming from his still prolific blocking skills. The Pats signed Centers at the start of training camp, and he beat out Patrick Pass and Fred McCrary as the number one fullback to begin the 2003 season.


Centers had 54 yards from scrimmage on five carries and four receptions in the week one 'they hate their coach' loss to Buffalo; that would turn out to be his most statistically productive game of the year. The Patriots cut Centers in order to activate Tully Banta-Cain from PUP after a week six 17-6 victory over the Giants, where he had one carry for a loss of two yards and no receptions on two targets.


The Pats waived WR J.J. Stokes and re-signed Centers in mid-December for the final three games of the regular season. After the Colts had scored to cut the lead to 15-7 in the AFC Championship Game, Centers had a critical 28-yard catch-and-run that helped set up an Adam Vinatieri field goal and give the Pats an 11-point lead.

Centers retired after earning his first super bowl ring in the championship victory over Carolina. His 827 career receptions is most for any running back in NFL history, and at the time he retired it ranked 7th most in league history. To put that in perspective, Larry Centers has 60 more catches than Marshall Faulk, 203 more than LaDainian Tomlinson, and 240 more than Marcus Allen - all running backs that are members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame known for their pass receiving abilities.


From October 24, 1993 to October 20, 2002 Centers caught a pass in an incredible 143 consecutive games. He held the NFL record for most receptions in a season by a running back (101 in 1995) for 19 years (surpassed by Matte Forte with 102 in 2014 and Christian McCaffrey with 107 in 2018), and was the first NFL running back to have 100 receptions in one season. The three-time Pro Bowler from Stephen F Austin State University was at his peak from 1994-96 when he scored 20 touchdowns and racked up 3,390 yards from scrimmage in that three year span.


Over the course of his 14 year NFL career Centers had 827 receptions for 6,797 yards, averaging 8.2 yards per reception with 28 touchdowns. He also ran for 14 TDs, giving him a total of 8,985 yards from scrimmage and 42 touchdowns while averaging 6.2 yards per touch (70th best in NFL history).












Pro Football Archives -- Larry Centers Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Larry Centers Transactions

 
Today in Patriots History
Jon Williams



Happy 64th birthday to Jon Williams
Born June 1, 1961 in Somerville, New Jersey
Patriot kick returner/running back, 1984-1985; uniform #44
Pats 3rd round (70th overall) selection in the 1984 draft, from Penn State
Pats résumé: two seasons, both ending on IR; nine games, 20.0 yard average on 23 kick returns



Jon Williams had the unfortunate circumstances of first growing up in a toxic environment, secondly playing on the same college football team as both Curt Warner and DJ Rozier, and then thirdly having knee injuries place him on injured reserve in both of his first two seasons in the National Football League.



Jon Williams on the field for the Patriots during the 1984 season. He was injured for the next two seasons, but recalls the shift in player thinking
following the team’s first playoff win against the New York Jets in 1985. “Ever since then the camaraderie among Patriots players has gotten better and better,” he said.


Jonathan 'Jon' Williams had a rough childhood: his father was in prison on a murder charge when he was nine, and three of his six siblings wound up becoming drug addicts. Somehow he persevered and was part of a national championship team at Penn State. Unfortunately he blew out his knee his rookie season, and his pro football career lasted only nine games. Since then he has used his life experience to council at risk boys on making the right choices, and forged a career in sales for Federal Express.







1982: Penn State QB Todd Blackledge (14), RB Curtis Warner (25) and RB Jon Williams (44)


1985 Patriots Media Guide





Pro Football Archives -- Jon Williams Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Jon Williams Transactions
 
Today in Patriots History
Joe Biscaha



Happy 88th birthday to Joe Biscaha
Born June 1, 1937 in Clifton, New Jersey
Patriot end, 1960; uniform #34
Signed as a free agent on November 4, 1960
Pats résumé: one season, one game, no stats



Joe Biscaha was a late (27th round, 323rd overall) selection by the Giants in the 1959 draft, out of Richmond. New York placed him on injured reserve in '59, and released him at the end of training camp in 1960. The Patriots signed him late in their inaugural season, getting on the field for one game.

After retiring from football in 1961, Biscaha spent 35 years as a teacher, coach and school administrator in Passaic County, New Jersey. During that time his teams won three New Jersey state championshipships, in 1975, 1979 and 1980. He then worked for eight years in financial services, then worked for ten more years as a school administrator.



Two days after Christmas, in the midst of a tight defensive battle, Giants wide receiver Kyle Rote suffered an apparent concussion. His replacement was Joe Biscaha, a 27th round draft out of the University of Richmond.​

Almost A Touchdown
“Near the end of the first half, (Giants quarterback Charlie) Conerly tried to connect with me on a corner route, but slightly overthrew the pass and I couldn’t quite make the catch, even with a diving attempt,” Biscaha, right, recalls more than 50 years year. “If completed. it would have resulted in a touchdown, but it unfortunately fell incomplete in the Colts end zone.​




Playing in The Original AFL
Biscaha failed to make the Giants roster in 1960. He was substitute teaching and making about $100 a week when the Boston (now New England) Patriots of the AFL offered him $4,500 for the last month and a half of the season. So Joe played for that first Patriots team in the AFL’s inaugural season, calling the Kenmore Station Hotel on Commonwealth Avenue home.​


“The head coach was Lou Saban, a former Cleveland Brown, who seemed to have been influenced in the ‘General George Patton mentality,'” Biscaha recalled, “while my position coach was Mike Holovak, a likable gentleman from the Boston College coaching background. It seemed like most of the players were from a Boston College or Syracuse (1959 championship team) playing pedigree.


“I was being tried out as a wide receiver and needed to learn the skills to compete against the bump and run techniques utilized by the AFL defensive backs. Having played with the Giants as primarily a tight end, those were skills that I never had to acquire.”​


In September of 1961 Biscaha, realizing his playing days were over after a tryout with the New York Titans (now Jets), “signed a teaching contract with the Paterson (NJ) School District for $4,500 for the year and got $400 more to assist in coaching football.”​


His teaching career continued for more than 25 years and was highlighted by three New Jersey State Championship seasons, 1975,1979 and 1980, at Passaic Valley High School, as well as numerous coaching honors. After an eight-year retirement from education, while working in financial services, he returned to serve ten years as a school administrator at Passaic County Technical Institute until his retirement in 2005.​


More than 50 years later, he wonders if his career might have taken a different path if Conerly, the NFL MVP in 1959, had not overthrown him in the end zone. “Had I caught that pass would my life have turned out differently?”​





Pro Football Archives -- Joe Biscaha Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Joe Biscaha Transactions

 
Today in Patriots History
Bob Bleier



Happy 61st birthday to Bob Bleier
Born June 1, 1964 in Rochester, New York
Patriot quarterback, 1987; uniform #10
Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 11, 1987; re-signed Sept 26, 1987
Pats résumé: one season, three strike-replacement games; 1-1, 14-39, one touchdown, one interception








The cousin of Rocky Bleier was New England's starting quarterback when the NFL players went on strike in '87 and replacement players were used for three games. Bleier still ranks first in University of Richmond school history in most passing categories. However, his talents were rarely showcased because installing a productive pass offense in such a short time with no veterans was impossible for the coaches of the replacements in '87. Bob is now a financial adviser and active in youth charitable organizations in western New York.






Bob Bleier was one of the most prolific passer in Richmond football history. He is first on Richmond's career lists with 1,169 career attempts, 672 completions, 8,057 passing yards and 54 passing touchdowns from 1983-86. Bleier owns three of the top five passing seasons in school history. He was Second Team All-Yankee Conference in 1986 and played in the Blue-Gray Game following that season. Bleier played for the New England Patriots of the National Football League in 1987.









Prior to his 28 years in the financial services industry, Bob played professional football with the NFL New England Patriots. In 1991, he was named “The All Time Greatest Quarterback” at the University of Richmond. He has been inducted into three athletic Halls of Fame: Aquinas Institute, NYS Section V, and the University of Richmond. He is a frequent keynote speaker with a number of speaking engagements stressing his lifelong message, “If the opportunity comes, take it; if it doesn’t come, make it”.






Pro Football Archives -- Bob Bleier Player profile

Pro Football Archives -- Bob Bleier Transactions
 
Today in Patriots History
Tony Washington



Happy 33rd birthday to Tony Washington
Born June 1, 1992 in High Point, North Carolina
Patriot wide receiver, 2017 offseason; uniform #17
Signed as free agent on July 27, 2017
Pats résumé: one offseason



I have a feeling this birth date may be incorrect, a possible conflation between three NFL Tony Washingtons.



Tony Washington during a preseason game between the Patriots and Giants on August 31, 2017 at Gillette Stadium.
The Appalachian State alum never had a chance, having been designated the cursed number 17 jersey.


Washington, 26, signed with New England as a free agent on July 27, 2017. The 5-foot-11, 195-pounder was originally signed by the Indianapolis Colts as a rookie free agent out of Appalachian State on May 11, 2014. He spent his rookie season on the Jacksonville Jaguars practice squad in 2014 and began the 2015 season on the Jacksonville practice squad before being added to the 53-man roster on Sept. 26, 2015. In his two seasons with the Jaguars and multiple stints on the practice squad and 53-man roster, Washington appeared in six regular season games as a reserve and caught one pass for 9 yards. He also had one rushing attempt for 8 yards. Washington was released by Jacksonville on May 1, 2017.​


Washington was a multi-selection to All-Southern Conference squads while at ASU and was chosen to play in the NFLPA Collegiate Senior Bowl. He earned a number of accolades for his performance in the classroom, including SoCon All-Academic, Capital One All-District Academic and ADA FCS All-Star Academic honors, along with being the 2013 recipient of the NFF National Scholar-Athlete Award & Scholarship. Washington was a Dean's List student at ASU who also captured the school's Science Building Most Outstanding Student Award.​

Washington, who prepped at T. Wingate Andrews High School in High Point, N.C., earned dual bachelor's degrees in architecture & design technology and construction management from Appalachian State in 2013. He graduated with a 3.83 grade point average.​




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

Joe Costello, 65 (June 1, 1960)
Costello grew up in Stratford CT and went to Central Connecticut State.
The linebacker played 31 games for the Falcons and Raiders from 1986-89, and also spent some time in the CFL and USFL.




Other notable football players born June 1:

- Alan Ameche, 4-time Pro Bowl RB and Heisman Trophy winner.

- Ki Aldrich, 1st overall pick in '39 and C/LB/G for Cardinals and Washington.

- Santana Moss, WR with 10,283 career receiving yards - and cousin of Patriot RB James White.
 
Today in Patriots History
Older June 1 News


June 1, 1961:
The Boston Patriots traded Tom Green to the San Diego Chargers for Duane Leopard

Greene was a quarterback from Holy Cross who backed up Butch Songin in 1960, going 1-1 as a starter while throwing six picks and one touchdown. Leopard was a lineman at LSU, blocking for Heisman Trophy winner RB Billy Cannon in the late fifties. His pro career was less glamarous; Leopard never played in an AFL or NFL game.







June 1, 1975:
New England re-signs punter Chuck Ramsey, a sixth round pick of the 1974 draft from Wake Forest.

After being cut as a rookie he played for the Chicago Fire of the WFL in '74. However, the Pats went with Mike Patrick over Ramsey to handle punting duties in the 1975 season. The Jets eventually signed Ramsey, and he stuck with Gang Green for an eight year NFL career.




June 1, 1979:
Pats sign undrafted rookie free agent Ken Talton, a running back from Cornell.

Talton kept getting bit by the injury bug and didn't survive roster cuts, but did play briefly for Detroit the following year. He later spent two seasons with the Birmingham Stallions in the USFL.




June 1, 1991:
Patriots re-sign WR Mike Murphy, who had also been with the team during the 1990 training camp.

Alas, the 5'9, 163 pound product from Texas State-San Marcos did not make the 1991 roster either.


Mike Murphy seated next to Tommy Hodson for a Pats team photo


June 1, 1991:
Patriots sign punter/quarterback Shawn McCarthy

McCarthy spent the 1990 offseason with the Falcons and Eagles, but did not stick with either team. A 12th round (305th overall) pick by Atlanta out of Purdue, he would spend two seasons with the Patriots.

On November 3, 1991, McCarthy booted a 93-yard punt versus the Buffalo Bills that was downed inside Buffalo's 1-yard line. The punt, which set a Patriots franchise record, was the third longest in NFL history and the longest since the AFL-NFL merger. McCarthy also owns the franchise record for most punts in a single season with 103, which is a testament to how impotent the 2-14 1992 **** MacPherson offense was.


1991 Patriots Media Guide


1993 Patriots Media Guide





June 1, 1994:
Patriots sign seventh round draft pick Marty Moore

The MLB from Kentucky was the final pick of the 1994 draft; he was a special teams standout who played in 96 games over two stints with the Pats from '94-2001.

 
Today in Patriots History
More Recent June 1 News


June 1, 2005:
The New England Patriots waived quarterback Chris Redman on Wednesday.​
Redman was signed by the Patriots in January 2005 after missing the entire 2004 season while recovering from back surgery.​
Redman's chances of making the team took a major hit when the Patriots signed veteran quarterback Doug Flutie in April to back up Tom Brady.​
The other quarterback spot will likely go to Rohan Davey, a backup for the last three years.​
Rookie quarterback Matt Cassel, a seventh-round pick out of Southern California, may spend the year on the practice squad.​
Redman, 27, played for the Baltimore Ravens from 2000-03. He started six of 10 games and completed 106-of-198 passes for 1,111 yards and seven touchdowns with five interceptions.​

3 - Chris Redman, picked at #75, Baltimore Ravens​
4-8 career record, 3,179 passing yards, 21 touchdowns, 14 interceptions, 1 Super Bowl title (as backup)​
Technically the most accomplished of the group by virtue of picking up a Super Bowl victory as a member of the 2000 Ravens team, but someone who spent the vast majority of his time as a backup in the league with the Ravens.​
He did bounce around the practice squads of a few other teams around the league before moving to the Atlanta Falcons where he remained a backup but playing a few games before retiring in 2012.​


Patriots.com | Patriots waive OT Lance Nimmo and QB Chris Redman
Nimmo, 25, was signed to the Patriots practice squad on Nov. 10, 2004 and was subsequently signed to the active roster on Feb. 16, 2005. He was drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the fourth round (130th overall) of the 2003 NFL Draft. The 6-foot-5-inch, 303-pounder spent the spring of 2004 in NFL Europe, where he started all 10 games for the Cologne Centurions. The West Virginia University product was a member of the New York Jets in 2003 and was listed among the day-of-game inactives for all 16 games. The Jets released the New Castle, Pa. native on Sept. 4, 2004. He was signed to the Cleveland Browns' practice squad on Sept. 7, 2004 and remained with Cleveland until being released from the practice squad on Oct. 6, 2004.​






June 1, 2007:
In an expected move, the Patriots announced the re-signing of exclusive rights free agent Antwain Spann today.​
The 24-year-old Spann, a cornerback, has played in eight career regular-season games and three playoff games, all with the Patriots in 2006.​
Spann has primarily been a special teams player and bounced back and forth between the team’s practice squad and active roster last season. He was present at the team’s passing camp on Thursday, stretching with the team before leaving the field, likely to rehabilitate a physical ailment.​


Brandon Meriweather, Miss Nevada and Antwain Spann for media day prior to Super Bowl 42​




June 1, 2009:
The Patriots announced that they have re-signed punter Tom Malone today.​
Malone joins veteran Chris Hanson on the roster at the punter spot. The team previously had UCLA rookie Aaron Perez on the roster as competition for Hanson, but released him last week.​
Malone, 24, had two stints on the Patriots practice squad in 2008 – from Sept. 10 to Sept. 15 and from Nov. 26 through the end of the season. He was also on the Patriots practice squad late in the 2006 season and was with the team for its 2007 training camp.​
Most recently, Malone had been released by the Patriots on May 5, 2009.​





June 1, 2021:
 
Today in Patriots History
Nick Caserio



June 1, 2001:
Bill Belichick hires Nick Caserio as a Personnel Assistant.
Earlier that year he was a grad assistant at Central Michigan, and held the same position the previous two seasons for Saginaw Valley State.





Patriots Today - Inside the Draft Room
1:43 video of the Pats 1st round pick, April 22, 2010



Nick Caserio's résumé with the Patriots:
2001: Personnel Assistant
2002: Offensive Coaching Assistant
2003: Scout
2004-2006: Director of Pro Personnel
2007: Wide Receivers Coach
2008-2020: Director of Player Personnel
Six-Time Super Bowl Champion


Feb 4, 2013:
Meet Nick Caserio, undercover architect of New England Patriots -- Patriots.com
"He's kind of a weird guy, quirky, not much personality, just a hyper-intense guy," one rival personnel executive said. "He's done a lot of different things. He's done coaching, he's done college, he's done pro. He seems real stiff, a little weird and I don't know if those qualities lend themselves to being a general manager, but he's really smart when it comes to football."​

If that sounds like it could be a description of a scouting-side version of Bill Belichick, well, that's probably not by mistake either.​

The former John Carroll University quarterback (one of his receivers there was New England offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels) rose to the top of the team's personnel department in 2009, after Scott Pioli, then vice president of the player personnel, left to become the Kansas City Chiefs' general manager. He'd previously moved back and forth between scouting and coaching. In his new role, Caserio was charged with leading a youth movement as many of the championship foundation pieces of the 2000s retired.​

The promotion -- part of a transition that passed coveted draft-room seats from Pioli and Thomas Dimitroff (who left to become the Atlanta Falcons' GM) to Caserio and new college director Jon Robinson -- had to be earned, of course, and it was.​




April 30, 2014:


April 22, 2015:


April 19, 2016:



How the Patriots Scout Top NFL Prospects | Do Your Job
Jan 12, 2019 Video by the New England Patriots; 14:53



April 23, 2020:


Nick Caserio Recaps Day 1 of the Draft | Press Conference
April 24, 2020 video by the New England Patriots; 17:45

















Little Nicky Cesar was part of the Problem here. If the ****ing Panthers weren't so ****ing stupid, he'd be the ****ing Former Houston GM already. Fact.
 
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