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Today In Patriots History June 29, 1965: Pats sign Heisman Trophy winner Joe Bellino

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Today in Patriots History
Is Bellino's Pizza still there in Winchester?


June 29, 1965:
The Boston Patriots sign the Winchester Rifle, 1960 Heisman Trophy winner Joe Bellino, after his completion of a four-year commitment to the Navy. Bellino was one of the greatest high school athletes in New England sports history, leading Winchester High School to two state basketball championships, batting over .400 on their baseball team (he was also offered a major league baseball contract), as well as being an outstanding back on their football team.


Joe Bellino was nicknamed the "Winchester Rifle" – a reference to his hometown and high school as well as his explosive running style. He was a fast and agile back who specialized in finding daylight in the smallest of holes.


"My first step was at top speed," explained Bellino. "I could hit the hole as fast as anyone, then quickly get outside."




He starred at Navy from 1958-60 under College Football Hall of Fame head coach Wayne Hardin, rushing for 1,664 yards on 330 carries and scoring 31 touchdowns during his three-year career while also serving as a dangerous return man.


In 1960, Bellino rushed for 834 yards and 17 touchdowns and added 17 receptions for another 280 yards while leading Navy to a 9-2 record. After beating archrival Army 17-12, Navy earned an invitation to the prestigious Orange Bowl – losing 21-14 to Missouri on Jan. 2 in Miami. Bellino also inspired a 14-7 win over Notre Dame and had four touchdowns and a 90-yard run against Virginia that season.




A unanimous All-America selection, he was awarded the Heisman Trophy and Maxwell Award in 1960. Playing both ways, Bellino was also a defensive back, recording an end zone interception to preserve Navy's narrow victory over Army that year.


In 1958, he scored the Middies' only touchdown in a 22-6 loss to Army. He avenged the loss to the Cadets by gaining 115 yards and scoring three touchdowns in a 43-12 victory the following season.


Bellino, who also played baseball for the Midshipmen, capped his senior year by winning Navy's top two athletic awards – the Thompson Trophy and the Naval Academy Athletic Association Sword, marking the first time in 41 years that one midshipman received both honors. His No. 27 jersey was retired following the 1960 season.




Bellino was selected in both the NFL Draft (17th round by the Washington Redskins) and AFL Draft (19th round by the Boston Patriots) in 1961. He chose the Patriots, but would not suit up for the team until 1965 due to his Naval commitment. Bellino spent three seasons with the Pats, primarily as a kick returner. He is the only Heisman Trophy winning running back to play for the Patriots. (The Pats have had five other Heisman winners play, all quarterbacks: John Huarte (1964), Jim Plunkett (1970), Doug Flutie (1984), Vinny Testaverde (1986) and Cam Newton (2010). There is also Tim Tebow (2007), but he was strictly a preseason side show.) Joe was also the lowest drafted Heisman winner in NFL history due to the military commitment, though it should also be noted that three recipients went undrafted. Pete Dawkins (1958) went to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar after graduating from Army, and Charlie Ward (1993) chose the NBA over the NFL.


Joe Bellino served 28 years in the Navy and Naval Reserve, retiring with the rank of captain. He also spent four decades working in the auto leasing and auction industry.


Navy annually presents the Joe Bellino Award to the varsity football player whose inspiring on-field performance made a significant impact on the team and contributed to its overall success during the season.




Bill Belichick can draw up a play from 1959 from memory because of course he can: Belichick sat down with Leslie Visser and Joe Bellino to talk about his father and Navy football - CBS Sports
In a segment for CBS Sports Network produced ahead of this weekend's Army-Navy football game, Belichick sat down with Leslie Visser and former Navy halfback (and Heisman Trophy winner) Joe Bellino, and Belichick drew up the exact diagram for Navy's 27 F Trap, from memory, complete with the route Bellino would usually take -- through the seven hole, then to the outside, then up the field -- when running the play.



June 16, 2004: Bill Belichick with Navy Heisman Trophy winners Joe Bellino and Roger Staubach

Joe Bellino and Jim Plunkett, two former Heisman trophy winners, talk with newly retired Pats receiver and placekicker, Gino Cappelletti




USNA Class of 1963 -- memories
Half a century ago, few players caught the nation's fancy like Bellino, a modest little plugger who, at 5-feet-9, looked like anything but America's best. Yet there he was, the nation's No. 2 scorer (110 points), darting here and feinting there and scuttling for touchdowns with a spontaneity that drove opponents nuts.​

"He runs like a berserk butterfly," Sports Illustrated wrote of its cover boy on the eve of the 1960 Army-Navy game.​

Red Smith, sports columnist for the New York Herald Tribune, wrote that Bellino "wriggles like a brook trout through congested traffic."​

"All I know is that I was quick," Bellino said. "I wasn't big in the shoulders or waist, but my legs were stocky and I was built low to the ground. I could run straight, or sideways, without losing any speed, and I had lateral movement that let me bounce in and out (of jams)."​

Bellino appeared on "The Ed Sullivan Show." Two days later, he won the Heisman Trophy in a landslide vote over college stars like Mike Ditka (Pitt), Tom Matte (Ohio State) and Billy Kilmer (UCLA).​

"I was in engineering class when I got the news," Bellino said. "Someone said the (Naval Academy) Superintendent wanted to speak to me. I thought, 'Geez, I'm in trouble academically.' "​

Afterward, a reporter asked Bellino what else he hoped to accomplish.​

"Well," the All-American said, "another guy from Massachusetts did pretty good this year and I'd like to meet him."​

Within days, Bellino found himself having lunch with that "other guy," - President elect John F Kennedy - in Georgetown. Kennedy, a former Navy Lieutenant who served in World War II, attended the Orange Bowl, where the Midshipmen fell to No. 5 Missouri, 21-14. Playing with a broken collarbone, Bellino made a diving, 28-yard TD catch that he still calls "the best play I ever made."​

He and Kennedy stayed friends.​

"In June of 1961, I was picked to deliver our class yearbook to the President," Bellino said. "He invited me into the Oval Office, where we sat for an hour, just two guys with Boston accents talking football."​








Dec 9, 2016:
Some Bellino memories from our own PatFanKen:
I have one Joe Bellino Story though. When I signed with the Quincy Giants I had to go Joe Bellino's office to do the playerwork. In his office he introduced himself to me and shook my hand, and then pointed out his Heisman Trophy. It then took about 2 minutes to finish up and I was out the door with the next guy coming in. He seemed like a pretty nice guy, and it was many years later before I met him again. But I still remember walking out the office with a copy of my contract (which paid me $250/game) and rememebering him pointing out the Heisman so proudly and thinking to my self, "what a douche"

I can't recall ever seeing him again that season, or for over a decade. Joe lived in Winchester and so did one of my weekly poker buddies. On night Joe showed up for poker night and he was great. Great stories, Great laughs, and he was a bad player. . Since then I've always felt a little bad for my initial reaction that summer night in August of 1969... But it was still a "little" bit douchie, don't you think.


Ten Questions: Joe Bellino -- HistoryNet
What can you tell us about playing pro football with the Boston Patriots?

BELLINO: That was the summer of ’65, and I accepted a contract at Patriot camp, resigned my active commission from the Navy, but stayed in the Reserves.​

I played with the Patriots for three years; but unfortunately, the first two years I had a broken ankle. My last year, I was healthy and did very well on punt returns and was also a wide receiver and running back. In my third year, I was picked up by the Cincinnati Bengals in the expansion draft, but at age 30 I was not keen on moving my young family to Cincinnati.​








Joe Bellino, the “Winchester Rifle” is the first Naval Academy football player to win the Heisman Trophy.​

Born and raised in Winchester, Mass., Bellino was a three-sport star for Winchester High. He was good enough in baseball to be offered a contract out of high school by the Pittsburgh Pirates, but he chose to play football for Navy despite offers from Notre Dame and several Big Ten schools.​

After a year in prep school, Bellino became an instant star for the Midshipmen. In his three years at Navy, he scored 31 touchdowns, rushed for 1,664 yards on 330 carries, returned 37 kicks for 833 more yards and altogether set 15 Naval Academy football records.​

In 1960, Bellino rushed for 834 yards and 15 touchdowns and scored another three TDs via pass receptions. He was a unanimous All-America selection and also the winner of the Maxwell Award. He won the Heisman handily over Richie Lucas of Penn State, totaling 1,929 points to Lucas’ 613.​

In addition to his football exploits, Bellino was an outstanding catcher and outfielder on Navy baseball teams. He hit .428 in 22 games in 1959 and led the Eastern Intercollegiate League in stolen bases. He had a .320 average in 1960 and was the baseball team captain in 1961.​





Boston Patriots players Joe Bellino (Winchester); Ed Toner (Lynn); Bobby Nichols (South Boston); Ray Ilg (Wellesley) pose for a portrait together on July 25, 1967


July 2, 1965: Joe Bellino and Boston Patriots president Bill Sullivan pose for a photo after Bellino signed with the team.


Oct 8, 1960, Norfolk, VA; Navy vs SMU in the Oyster Bowl: Navy HB Joe Bellino, #27, vaults the SMU line in the third quarter for a 6 yard gain.




1965 Wire Photo: Joe Bellino reported to Boston Patriot's coach Mike Holovak



 
Today in Patriots History
Patriots extend Ja'Whaun Bentley



June 29, 2023:
The Patriots extend Ja'Whaun Bentley with a two-year contract worth up to $18.75 million, with $9 million guaranteed

21 months later the Pats released Bentley. As of this moment he is still a free agent.


Patriots, LB Ja'Whaun Bentley agree to two-year, $18.75M extension -- NFL.com
A career year has earned Ja'Whaun Bentley a new deal.​

The Patriots and Bentley have agreed to terms on a new, two-year contract extension worth a maximum of $18.75 million, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported, per source. Bentley's new contract includes $9 million in fully guaranteed money, per Rapoport.​

Bentley began his NFL career as a fifth-round pick of New England and played sparingly as a rookie, but by his third season he took over in a starting role. In each of the last two seasons, he's grown into a legitimate defender, setting career-high marks in tackles (125), sacks (three) and tying his best totals in tackles for loss (five), pass breakups (two) and interceptions (one). Pro Football Focus ranked Bentley as the eighth-best linebacker in the NFL in 2022 and, with the five-year veteran entering a contract year, New England opted to secure his services for the future with a deserved extension.​

This isn't simply about rewarding Bentley, though. One day after extending DeVante Parker, the Patriots have cleared additional cap space by agreeing to an extension with Bentley. The combination of newly freed salary for 2023 could improve their chances of signing receiver DeAndre Hopkins, who visited the Patriots in June, and isn't expected to join a team until just before the start of training camp in late July.

If anything, the Patriots have decided to lock up two playmakers in their prime as they attempt to return to prominence in 2023. And it could mean a whole lot more if Hopkins ends up moving to New England.​


Bentley was under contract for 2023 and was set to earn up to $4.25 million between base salary, bonuses and incentives. Factoring in the two-year extension, Bentley can now earn a maximum value of $18.75 million over the next three seasons, according to a source. Of that total, $9 million is guaranteed.​

Entering his sixth NFL season, Bentley has emerged as a defensive stalwart, with linebackers coach Jerod Mayo saying last December: "I'm not sure why he doesn't get much publicity, but he's one of the best 'backers in the league."​

Bentley started all 17 regular-season games last season and was cited by Mayo as a key player this spring in helping the defense fill the void of communication and leadership created by safety Devin McCourty's retirement.​

The 6-foot-2, 244-pound Bentley entered the NFL as a fifth-round draft choice out of Purdue in 2018. He has spent his NFL career in New England and broke through in 2020 when he was elected as a co-captain for the first time by his teammates and was a full-time starter.​

He's been a captain each of the past three seasons. At Purdue, he was the first three-time captain in school history.​


Bentley, who has $500,000 in playing-time incentives this upcoming campaign, will see his annual per-game active bonuses go from $510,000 to $1.02 million for both of the following campaigns. And although the new deal opened less than $270,000 in current cap room for New England, per Miguel Benzan of PatsCap’s accounting, it brought a $4.4 million cash increase for Bentley.​

The Purdue product’s cap numbers move forward at $4.783 million for 2023 and $5.33 million for 2024 before a climb to $7.333 million for 2025. According to OverTheCap.com, those hits over the duration of the deal respectively rank 23rd, 25th and 12th among NFL off-the-ball linebackers.​

Bentley isn’t out of place in that range. Nine Patriots teammates near training camp with higher hits.​

Last offseason, New England retained Bentley on a two-year, $6 million pact worth up to $9 million. As part of those terms, the then-free agent had $1.26 million of his $2.14 million base salary for 2023 guaranteed.​

Yet what was scheduled to be another contract campaign no longer is for a member of the Super Bowl LIII team.​

In 2022, Bentley started all 17 games for New England’s defense and trailed only retired centerfield captain Devin McCourty in snaps played. Staying in for 80.2% of the workload, he set career bests with 125 tackles, three sacks and one fumble recovery while earning $1.5 million in playing-time incentives.​








Two coaches and a pair of 4-13 seasons later, Bentley was let go on March 28, 2025 by the new regime.

The Patriots signed inside linebackers Robert Spillane and Jack Gibbens during the offseason. They re-signed Christian Ellis. Jahlani Tavai is still under contract. With outside linebacker Harold Landry in the mix, ESPN’s latest New England depth chart has the Patriots using new starters at three of the four linebacker spots.​


The 6-foot-2, 250-pound Bentley totaled more than 100 tackles in each of the 2021, 2022 and 2023 seasons, setting a career high with 122 in 2022. He tore his left pectoral muscle in Week 2 of last season, missing the rest of the year, and said last weekend at a season-ticket member event that he had recently been fully cleared.

Earlier in March, when the Patriots signed former Las Vegas Raiders linebacker Robert Spillane to a three-year, $33 million contract that could be worth up to $37.5 million, it sparked a question of whether Bentley's spot on the team was in jeopardy.

Bentley, 28, was scheduled to earn $4.35 million in base salary this season. He also was set to earn per-game roster bonuses of $60,000 and had a $130,000 workout bonus; the team's voluntary offseason program begins April 7.

Under first-year coach Mike Vrabel, the Patriots plan to adopt a more aggressive defensive scheme, and that also could have contributed to the anticipated release of Bentley, who was considered an ideal fit in the old Bill Belichick/Jerod Mayo scheme that placed a high value on run-stuffing linebackers who play downhill.​


 
Today in Patriots History
The Replacements



Happy 61st birthday to David Hendley
Born June 29, 1964 in Spartanburg, South Carolina
Patriot safety, 1987; uniform #28
Signed as a replacement player on Sept 23, 1987
Pats résumé: one season, two games





David Hendley appeared in the first two of the three replacement games with the Pats in the 1987 strike season. After being released on October 21, he spent the next two years he was in the Arena Football League. He played as a defensive back and wide receiver in 1988 with the New England Steamrollers, and in '89 for the Denver Dynamite. Hendley then returned to his alma mater as a defensive backs coach at Southern Connecticut State.


David has had a nice business career, progressing to several VP positions with Honda. He was vice-president of auto operations and logistics at the carmaker, among other titles/ Hendley, who resides in North Stonington CT, had been with American Honda for 16 years working across a range of roles involving sales, field operations and export management up until 2021. Since then he has been the Executive Vice President of Future Energy, a tech company that works with companies on energy control, equipment automation, lighting and electrical efficiency, etc.




David Hendley -- ArenaFan.com

David Hendley -- LinkedIn

David Hendley - American Honda Motor Company, Inc.


Pro Football Archives -- David Hendley Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- David Hendley Transactions




 
Today in Patriots History
Replacement Players


Replacement player David Hendley was the only June 29 Patriot birthday, to the best of my knowledge.





The third week of the 1987 season was cancelled due to the players going on strike, but the owners had a plan in place for week four.


New England Patriots fans wait on line outside old Sullivan Stadium to return their tickets for refunds.



The Pats lost their first replacement game to Cleveland by the score of 20-10.


Patriots fans wore bags over their heads as New England and Cleveland replacement teams played Oct. 4, 1987, at Sullivan Stadium.



Game two went much better:
The Patriots, who last season became the first team in 20 years to average less than 3 yards a carry, accumulated 213 yards rushing Sunday as New England beat the Buffalo Bills 14-7.

LeBlanc, recently released by Winnipeg of the CFL and signed by the Patriots as a replacement, gained 146 yards on 35 carries.

While LeBlanc was running circles around the Bills before the smallest Sullivan Stadium crowd ever -- 11,878 rain-soaked fans - striking Patriots quietly walked the picket line.

No incidents were reported on the New England picket line outside the stadium during the second week of demonstrations by striking NFL players at games played by replacement players.

LeBlanc keyed a running attack that accumulated the most New England rushing yards since the final game of the 1985 season, the year in which the Patriots used a ground attack to reach the Super Bowl.



By the third replacement game many of the regular players had crossed the picket line.
After canceling one week of play, the league opted to continue with teams stocked with replacement players. Several Patriots, including Collins, Clayborn and Tippett, crossed the picket line and joined the motley crew assembled by general manager Patrick Sullivan. New England managed to win two of the three games played during the strike, including a memorable win against the Houston Oilers in the Astrodome.

The Patriots had succeeded in acquiring former Boston College star quarterback Doug Flutie from the Chicago Bears during the strike for only an eighth-round draft choice. Flutie sparked New England to a 23-13 victory over Houston, completing 15-of-25 passes for 199 yards and a touchdown. Though Flutie’s acquisition had merely been intended as a stop-gap measure, his presence on the roster would spark a quarterback controversy that would last the better part of three years in Foxborough.




Some of these articles are very lengthy, but they do give detailed facts (and interesting opinions) on the 1987 NFL strike.

"Those players kind of considered themselves a cult, almost," said Brandt, a former Cowboys exec who's now an analyst for NFL.com. "Four or five of them got together and bought a used car for 500 bucks so they had transportation. They were a self-reliant group is what they were. I think the hardest thing they had to do was find a coat and tie to wear on an away game when we went to play the Jets.

"It was refreshing. There were so many interesting, refreshing things that happened that year."

So many stories. Like the time receiver Cornell Burbage reached into the stands during a road game at New York, grabbed a package and placed it under the bench. It was a box of laundry Burbage's sister had washed for him. He couldn't afford to have his clothes cleaned at the hotel.



The replacement rosters were full of players who were cut in training camp and played in the USFL and CFL. Though cracks began forming in the union right away, as 15% of the NFL crossed the picket line to play with the scabs. Among the players who crossed the picket line were Howie Long of the Los Angeles Raiders, Tony Dorsett, and Randy White each from the Dallas Cowboys, Mark Gastineau of the New York Jets, Doug Flutie of the New England Patriots, Steve Largent of the Seattle Seahawks and Joe Montana of the San Francisco 49ers. Despite their presence, the fan reaction to the scab games was overwhelmingly negative as most games had less than 10,000 fans per game. Nowhere was the reaction worse than in Philadelphia where the Teamsters and fans joined the NFLPA on the picket line and drove around Veteran’s Stadium honking their horns, as less than 5,000 fans attended the Eagles game against the Chicago Bears.

With some teams having players cross the picket lines and other teams being made up completely of replacement players some of the games were incredibly lopsided.



As the CBA talks broke down that year, a quote that to this day is widely attributed to Dallas Cowboys president Tex Schramm started making the rounds. “You guys are cattle and we’re the ranchers,” Schramm supposedly told NFLPA executive director Gene Upshaw during a late-stage bargaining session in September 1987. “And ranchers can always get more cattle.”

And that sentiment—that the players were fungible, disposable, and not entitled even to the modicum of agency they had—was impossible to miss. The explanation of the owners’ tactics was left to Hugh Culverhouse of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, a notorious skinflint and historically negligent owner. On Culverhouse’s watch, the Bucs once lost at least 10 games in 12 consecutive seasons. He ran the Bucs on such a shoestring that players were reduced to grabbing lunch at a local fast-food drive-thru after taping up for practice. Yet when it came to replacing striking players with scabs, Culverhouse uttered a line that to this day remains the league’s failsafe when it wants assert its power over the players: “It’s in the best interests of protecting the integrity of the game.”

So much of what’s happened since—from players’ inability to secure more guaranteed contracts to the league’s manipulation and denial of the science of brain trauma to the heavy-handedness of the league’s discipline—can be traced to the ’87 strike. It’s hard, drawing the line between then and now, not to view that time as the birth of the modern NFL.



In some ways, it is impossible to explain to folks too young to have cared in 1987 just how devastating the ’87 football strike was. There have been other work stoppages that crushed the masses’ sporting soul. The ’94 baseball strike was long and ugly. The NHL once lost an entire season to a lockout. The NBA has had shortened seasons to accommodate protracted lockouts. All of them bring their own share of collateral damage.

None of them match what happened 30 years ago this month, though. For one thing, the solidarity that had marked prior strikes proved a sad joke in this one: fully 15 percent of the union membership would cross picket lines, including a number of high-profile players, including Lawrence Taylor, including Joe Montana.

That would have been dispiriting enough.

But the NFL’s owners, prepped for war, instituted something they called “replacement players,” something the rest of the world called “scab players,” and the images were awful: buses being attacked, players being egged and then, worst of all, the reality of scab football.



Review of Three-Week Professionals: Inside the 1987 NFL Players Strike -- Sport in American History
Chapter three provides insight from former NFL coach Les Steckel, who was an “offensive assistant” for the New England Patriots in 1987 (p. 40). Chapter four captures the experience of wide receiver Larry Linne, who signed on as a replacement player for the New England Patriots and was kept on for the entire season. Chapter five looks at the replacement play of the Los Angeles Rams, a team that welcomed now infamous West Coast rapper Marion “Suge” Knight to suit up.

Through these perspectives and Kluck’s lively breakdown of the replacement games, the work shows how much the league has changed since 1987, impacted by 1980s conversations on labor and ownership, economics and play, branding and image, and health and safety. He reveals how by striking the players both lost and won.



Replacements as a Labor Weapon | Berkeley Law School
In Foxboro, New England Patriots fans were divided amongst strike supporters and ticket holders. Picketers shouted “Shame, shame, shame” while the game attendees shouted “Game, game, game.” Violence, however, was notably absent in Massachusetts.

Owners knew that the fact that the games counted toward the playoff race meant having their superstars cross would give them a huge leg up on the competition (not to mention further break the back of the union). Some owners attempted to do more than simply ask nicely. For William Sullivan, Jr., the owner of the Patriots in 1987, the answer to his problems was to air his grievances directly by appealing to Lin Dawson with a heartfelt letter. The relevant portion of the long rambling letter was its conclusion. Sullivan stated, “I might say that I am not as proud of the Patriots as I once was. Indeed, I am ashamed of them and cannot wait the conclusion of this event to see if I can get someone else to buy the contracts of people who have acted in such an unfair manner.” Dawson, in responding to this perceived threat of future action, got upset and filed a complaint with the NLRB.

Despite a near total loss on almost all counts of the action, the NLRB’s weak enforcement remedies arguably resulted in a win for the league.




Hat Tip to Pape for this gem:
A montage of Replacement Players...
1 Eric Schubert, 6 Al Herline, 10 Bob Bleier
48 Darrayl Wilson, 59 Randy Sealby, 61 Greg Robinson, 78 Eric Stokes
72 Todd Sandham, 70 unknown*, 80 Larry Linne, 82 Dennis Gadbois, 97 John Guzik, 99 Steve Wilburn



* Art Plunkett wore #70... The Cleveland game, where the screencap was taken from, is not listed in Art Plunkett's game log... but there is no other 70 on the roster... so not exactly sure who it is...

and here is the 1987 Patriots @ Cleveland game...














 
Today in Patriots History
Other June 29 Trivia


June 29, 1972:
Patriots acquire Jim Flanigan

The Pats sent a sixth round draft pick - that they had just acquired the previous day from Pittsburgh, for PR/DB/WR Ron Gardin - to New Orleans for Flanigan. The middle linebacker from Pitt was a 2nd round pick by Green Bay in 1967, but could not crack the starting lineup in four seasons with the Packers. The Saints claimed him off waivers and he was their starting middle linebacker in 1971. His son Jim Flanigan Jr was a defensive tackle for the Bears, playing in the NFL from 1994 to 2003, and his grandson James Flanigan is a tight end at Notre Dame.

The Pats waived the original Jim Flanigan on September 5, 1972, marking the last stop of his NFL career.






June 29, 1987:
Patriots re-sign CB Ronnie Lippett

Lippett was entering the fifth season of his eight year career with the Patriots and was coming off a 1986 season in which he had eight picks. The former Miami Hurricane would add three more interceptions in 1987 - two of which were the pick-six variety. In week one Lippett picked off Dan Marino in the second half of a tie game for the winning points in a 28-21 victory. Then in week 10 his 45-yard return off Gary Hogeboom sealed a 24-0 victory over former head coach Ron Meyer's Indianapolis Colts.

Over the course of his career Ronnie Lippett had 24 interceptions for the Patriots.
He is a member of the New England Patriots All-1980s Team.





June 29, 2000:
Former New York Jets linebacker Chad Cascadden has signed with the New England Patriots, who also came to terms with seventh-round draft choice Patrick Pass. Cascadden, 28, was signed by the Jets as an undrafted free agent out of Wisconsin in 1995. In 1998, he had a career-best five sacks in the regular season and two more in the American Football Conference championship game against the Denver Broncos. He suffered a season-ending knee injury in Denver on Oct. 3, 1999, and was released by the Jets on March 2.​


Cascadden was trying to return from a torn ACL injury suffered the previous season. That was a recurring theme for Cascadden. In high school he tore an ACL in the opening game of his senior year, yet was able to be a walk-on linebacker at the University of Wisconsin the following fall. However, this time the knee was not healthy, and he struggled with the discomfort throughout training camp. On August 17 the linebacker and special teams ace decided the knee issue was too much and told Bill Belichick he was retiring.

Pass played in 78 games for the Patriots from 2000 to 2006. The fullback holds the rare distinction of being on four super bowl winning teams: three with the Pats, and one against them (in 2007).

"Parcells came in with a little bit more of a disciplinary and a more structured way of running the organization. Which I was accustomed to playing under Barry Alvarez at Wisconsin. Certainly, the level of expectation was raised.​

"I thought he did a nice job of bringing in talent and motivating that talent to perform at its highest level. And ultimately, we were able to sort of develop as a team. We were tough and we were talented."​

In 1998 the Jets posted a 12-4 record and made it to the AFC Championship Game. Cascadden literally scored a first that season during a 21-16 victory over Miami, when he sacked Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino late in the fourth quarter, was credited with a forced fumble, recovered it, and raced 23 yards for a touchdown.​

"I came around on a pass rush and it looked on film that I was able to dislodge the ball, but it was actually (defensive tackle) Ernie Logan that did it," Cascadden said. "I knew that the ball had come out, but I couldn't believe it was just sitting there for what felt like 10 seconds. I went over and picked it up and started running. And then when I finally got to the end zone and turned back to celebrate with the guys, Mo Lewis and James Farrior were basically already tackling me to the ground. That was a pretty cool experience for me having never scored a touchdown before."​

He is the managing director of ParkWest Advisors in New York, a small financial firm that deals with lower- and middle-market companies.​

"
We provide transactional advisory and board capital raising and principal investing. We don't deal with the public market, mostly private market, mostly companies that are looking to grow and need a little capital or need someone to invest in them. We provide that platform," Cascadden said. "I've been doing this for about a year and a half. Before that I was in the corporate insurance world. I just felt this was more suited to my skillset and I enjoy it more."​






This is what we were discussing 365 days ago:





June 29, 2025:
 
my favorite play of sb XX was when mcmahon took off running and lippett went low and flipped mcmahon on his helmet....best play of the game.....for us.

 
@jmt57 , Bellino was a huge "get" for the nascent AFL Patriots. A nationally recognized star player with huge local interest. One wonders if the Pats would have caught on in those early days without him.
 
@jmt57 , Bellino was a huge "get" for the nascent AFL Patriots. A nationally recognized star player with huge local interest. One wonders if the Pats would have caught on in those early days without him.
Billy Sullivan went and traded for John Huarte as well, so he could market the Boston Patriots having two Heisman Trophy winners on their roster.
 
Moved into Winchester from Arlington my sophomore year in HS. One day walking thru the halls Joe was coming towards me in Navy whites. He was very wide but no way was he 5' 9" as at 5'9"and a half I had inches on him. I thought "No way could I ever tackle this guy" His younger brother Mike was in my class. A decent running back but not even a shadow of Joe. Later on with relatives living in Winchester I got to meet him and his family. Good people.
Drove by Bellino's Pizza old location week ago and it is not there now.
 
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