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Today In Patriots History March 19, 2012: Pats sign Donté Stallworth (again), Robert Gallery, Daniel Fells & Marquice Cole

Fun historical team facts.
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Today in Patriots History
The 2012 Offseason


March 19, 2012:
Patriots sign WR Donté Stallworth, OL Robert Gallery, TE Daniel Fells and CB Marquice Cole


The Patriots were AFC champions in 2011, despite having the 31st ranked defense. The offseason spending focused on key offensive players, and adding more receivers. While the headlines focused on one particular signing (WR Brandon Lloyd), there was also a lot of shopping at the Dollar Store for old veteran names - with expectations exceeding production.

◉ Stallworth was waived as part of final roster cuts. He was re-signed in December when Julian Edelman went on injured reserve; a week later he too was placed on IR.

◉ Gallery tapped out and retired on August 4.

◉ Fells played in 13 games and was on the field for 25% of the offensive snaps, sharing backup duties to Gronk and Hernandez with Michael Hoomanawanui.

◉ Cole was 8th in special team snaps, and on the field for 18% of the Pats plays on defense.


The Patriots continue to stockpile wide receivers.​

On Monday, the team agreed with free-agent receiver Donté Stallworth on a one-year contract, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.​

It will be Stallworth's second stint with the Patriots, as he caught 46 passes for 697 yards and three touchdowns in 2007 with New England. Since then, he's played 30 games for the Browns, Ravens and Redskins. He was also charged with manslaughter for striking and killing a man with his car in Florida in March 2009. Last season, he caught 22 passes for 309 yards and two touchdowns in 11 games for Washington.​

Over the weekend, the Patriots signed free-agent receivers Brandon Lloyd and Anthony Gonzalez.​


The 28-year-old Fells received a three-year deal that could be worth up to $7 million, according to a source. The contract includes $2 million in bonuses and guarantees, with a minimum total value of $5.25 million, the source said. It maxes out at $7 million if all incentives are reached.​

The length of the deal is consistent with how the Patriots have approached free agency this year. They haven't signed a free agent to a deal longer than three years and have focused on the middle class of the roster.​


The mini-column below provides a fun retrospective on what the media/Patriot fans were talking about 13 years ago:
Patriots sign wide receiver Donté Stallworth and offensive lineman Robert Gallery
Do you want to see Tim Tebow on the Patriots? (Poll)​
Peyton Manning to join the Denver Broncos; team will now look to trade Tim Tebow
Patriots reportedly sign tight end Daniel Fells
Chad Ochocinco on talk of him possibly being released by the Patriots: 'Child please'​
Brandon Lloyd is an absolute steal for the Patriots​

The New England Patriots' free-agent frenzy continued Monday as the team agreed to terms with three more players.​

Wide receiver Donté Stallworth, offensive tackle Robert Gallery, tight end Daniel Fells and cornerback Marquice Cole became the latest batch of names to be summoned to Foxborough in what is quickly becoming an extremely hectic offseason for the Patriots.​

The New York Jets signed safety LaRon Landry, who visited with New England over the weekend, to a one-year contract on Monday. Landry’s last two seasons were cut short by Achilles injuries and the Patriots are believed to have been concerned with his medical reports.​


With the benefit of hindsight, the Patriots were fortunate that the first two draft picks were able to contribute right away. Their two best pass rushers from 2011 were free agents, and not re-signed. DE Mark Anderson (10 sacks) got a big payday with Buffalo (which the Bills immediately regretted), and Pro Bowl DE Andre Carter (also 10 sacks) signed with the Raiders. Shaun Ellis was a waste of space and not re-signed. Free agent replacement Jonathan Fanene was penciled in as a starter, but he was a disappointment, and cut in mid-August. Jones and Ninkovich made for a good pair of DEs, but the depth behind them (Trevor Scott, Justin Francis, Jake Bequette) was lacking. Kyle Love was okay at DT, but much of that had to do with playing next to Vince Wilfork; Brandon Deaderick and Ron Brace were adequate at best.

Matt Light retired, but the Patriots had already planned ahead by drafting Nate Solder the previous year. Brian Waters refused to report because he wanted to live near his family in Texas; fortunately the Pats had Scar, and Dan Connolly slid over from C to RG, and Ryan Wendell became the new C. The Pats got Ochocinco to agree to a pay cut - and then released him anyways.


Overall it looks like a whole lot of throwing a bowl of spaghetti against the wall and hoping some sticks - and not much of it did. Obviously many are just camp bodies, but there were plenty of 'name' veteran signings that didn't make it (Stallworth, Gallery, Anthony Gonzalez, Will Allen, Joseph Addai, Bo Scaife), or contributed very little (Bobby Carpenter, Visanthe Shiancoe, Greg Salas, Deion Branch). The major moves were signing Lloyd, tagging Welker, and extending Gronk and Hernandez.



Here is a look at how March and April of the 2012 offseason worked out for the Patriots:

Designated WR Wes Welker as the franchise player.

Re-signed WR Mathew Slater (core ST)

Signed DT Marcus Harrison (cut Aug 31)

Re-signed LB Tracy White (backup, ST)

Signed S Steve Gregory (became starter)

Signed DE Jonathan Fanene (cut Aug 21)

Signed WR Anthony Gonzalez (cut May 29)

Signed DE Trevor Scott (14 games, backup depth)

Signed WR Brandon Lloyd (74 catches, 911 yards, 4 TD)

Signed CB Will Allen (IR, Aug 27)

Signed CB Marquice Cole (played 20% of defensive snaps, 47% of ST snaps)

Signed TE Daniel Fells (30% of offensive snaps, 25% of ST snaps)

Signed WR Donte' Stallworth (cut Aug 27)

Signed OL Robert Gallery (quit on Aug 4)

Signed QB Brian Hoyer (cut Aug 31)

Re-signed WR Deion Branch (cut Aug 31; re-signed 9/19 and 12/12)

Signed FB Tony Fiammetta (quit on Aug 4)

Signed FB Spencer Larsen (IR on Aug 27)

Signed LB Bobby Carpenter (cut Sept 1; re-signed Oct 3)


2012 Draft, April 26-28:
• Chandler Jones
• Dont'a Hightower
• Tavon Wilson
• Jake Bequette
• Nate Ebner
• Alfonzo Dennard
• Jeremy Ebert



And the May-June signings:

Re-signed DL Gerard Warren (cut Aug 27)

Re-signed WR Jabar Gaffney (cut Aug 27)

Signed RB Joseph Addai (cut July 25)

Signed UDFA RB Brandon Bolden (core ST)

Signed UDFA DL Marcus Forston (1 game, then PS)

Signed UDFA DL Justin Francis (waived-injured, Aug 31)

Signed UDFA TE Brad Herman (IR, June 12)

Signed UDFA WR Matt Roark (cut July 20)

Signed UDFA OL Jeremiah Warren (cut Aug 31; PS)

Signed UDFA OL Markus Zusevics (NFI, Aug 27)

Signed UDFA OL Jon Opperud (cut June 7)

Signed UDFA TE Nick Melillo (cut June 7)

* WR Wes Welker signs franchise tender contract

Signed OL Jamey Richard (IR Aug 2)



Later additions prior to the start of the season:

Signed TE Bo Scaife (cut June 19)

* Gronk signed to six-year extension

Claimed TE Jake Ballard off waivers from Giants (spent season on IR)

Re-signed S James Ihedigbo (cut Aug 31)

Signed DL Tim Bulman (cut Aug 27)

Signed TE Visanthe Shiancoe (IR Sept 5; cut Dec 12)

Signed OL Darrion Weems (cut Aug 31)

Signed OL Derek Dennis (cut Aug 31)

Claimed OT Dustin Waldron off waivers from Miami (cut Aug 31)

Signed DB Derrick Martin (cut Aug 31; re-signed Oct 31)

Signed FB Kareem Huggins (cut a day later, Aug 5)

Signed OL Kyle Hill (cut 13 days later, Aug 21)

Signed RB Jeff Demps (IR, Aug 31)

* Signed TE Aaron Hernandez to a five-year contract through 2018

Acquired WR Greg Salas from St. Louis for an undisclosed draft pick (cut Sept 18; PS)

Claimed OL Matt Tennant off waivers from New Orleans (cut 3 days later)

Signed RB James Develin to the practice squad (good move)

Signed RB Lex Hilliard (cut 2 weeks later)

Signed TE Michael Hoomanawanui (good depth, ST)




Here are some PatsFans articles and threads from this time period.






 
Today in Patriots History
Joe Kapp



In memory of Joe Kapp, who would have been 87 today
Born March 19, 1938 in Santa Fe, New Mexico
Died May 8, 2023 at the age of 85 in San Jose, California
Patriot QB, 1970; uniform #11

Signed as a free agent on October 2, 1970
Pats résumé: ten games (1-9 record), 3 TD, 17 INT; 44.7% completion rate, 32.6 passer rating



When Joe Kapp signed a four-year contract with the Boston Patriots, he became the the highest paid player in the league. Utterly incapable of throwing a spiral, he finished with what must be the worst touchdown to interception ratio in the modern era of the NFL - though to be fair, his surrounding cast was horrible.

In the following offseason Pete Rozelle told Kapp that he had to sign a 'standard' NFL contract. (Which begs the question: what did Billy Sullivan have Kapp sign? Was this the case for all of the old AFL players? I don't recall this being an issue with any other players.)

After conferring with his lawyer and the NFLPA, Kapp refused to comply. He and his lawyers sued, claiming that a standard NFL contract was unconstitutional and a restraint of trade. It took four years, but Kapp won - and his case got the ball rolling for what is now genuine free agency in the NFL. Meanwhile, Kapp never played another down in the NFL. Thanks to the Patriots finishing with the worst record in the league, they had the first pick in the draft, and selected Jim Plunkett. Things improved with Plunkett, but the surrounding cast was still bad. When Chuck Fairbanks traded Plunkett to the 49ers in 1976, the Patriots received three early draft picks - which immediately turned the Patriots around to one of the best teams in the league.



Kapp transitioned into acting, appearing in movies such as The Longest Yard, Breakheart Pass and Semi-Tough, as well as many single episode guest star roles on primetime television shows.

In 1982 Kapp was hired to be the head coach at his alma mater, Cal. In his first year he turned the program around, going from 2-9 to 7-4, and being named Pac-10 coach of the year. That was the same season that Cal upset John Elway and Stanford on "The Play", when Cal returned a kickoff as time expired, lateraling multiple times, as Stanford's band and cheerleaders rushed onto the field in a premature victory celebration - as Cal returned the kickoff, weaving between and knocking down band members for the game-winning touchdown.






















































 
Wow, that fight was awesome!
 
Today in Patriots History
Ray Costict



In memory of Ray Costict, who would have been 70 today
Born March 19, 1955 in Moss Point, Mississippi
Died January 3, 2012, in Orlando, Florida
Patriot LB, 1977-1979; uniform #55

New England's 11th round (303rd overall) selection in the 1977 draft, from Mississippi State
Pats résumé: three seasons, 47 games (6 starts); three sacks, two fumble recoveries, one interception



Hat tip to Actual Pats Fan for his eulogy, from 2017:
Pats' special teams standout was a native of Moss Point, Mississippi, Costict stayed local and attended Mississippi State (1973-1976) where he excelled on the football field as a fullback and linebacker. After playing his freshman year as a fullback, the Bulldogs' coaching staff elected to switch Costict to the defensive side of the ball, despite averaging 4.8 yards per carry.

Costict thrived in the new position and amassed 467 tackles over three years, a number that ranks first all-time in Mississippi State history. As a senior ('76), Costict received numerous accolades including being selected as Southeastern Conference (SEC) Defensive Player of the Year, 1st Team All-SEC, and AP 2nd Team All-American. He was also named 1st Team All-Sec as a junior ('75).

The 6'0", 217 pound prospect was drafted by the Patriots with the 24th pick in the 11th round (303rd overall) of the 1977 NFL Draft. Despite being drafted late, Costict was able to find a niche on the Patriots special teams unit as a 22-year-old rookie during the 1977 season. The following season, Costict earned four starts and recorded 50½ tackles. In 1979, his final season of his NFL career, Costict tallied 50 tackles - the most on the team for any non-starter - in a reserve role behind Rod Shoate, and also recorded an interception against the Jets (Sept. 9). His play alongside linebacker Sam “Big Backer" Hunt and stature earned him the nickname “Little Backer."



1979 Patriots Media Guide - Page 14





 
Today in Patriots History
Mr. Irrelevant, Marty Moore



Happy 54th birthday to Marty Moore
Born March 19, 1971 in Phoenix
Patriot LB, 1994-1999; uniform #58; 2001, uniform #90
Patriots 7th round (222nd overall) selection of the 1994 NFL Draft, from Kentucky
Pats résumé: 7 seasons, 96 games (10 starts); 83 tackles, 2 interceptions; 7 playoff games (2 starts); SB36 ring



The linebacker from Kentucky was "Mr. Irelevant", selected with the last pick of the 1994 draft. Played 96 games over seven years with the Patriots, primarily on special teams.



Former UK stars' Super Bowl memoirs -- Lexington Herald Leader, Feb 6, 2012
Before the Patriots faced the Rams of Kurt Warner and The Greatest Show on Turf in Super Bowl XXXVI, the New England team famously took the field en masse for the pre-game introduction rather than having players introduced individually.​

At the time, it was a widely-praised act of unity. Moore said there was actually more to it than what the public saw.​

Usually before NFL games, including the Super Bowl, the pre-game introductions include the defense for one team and the offense for the other. That means the players who start on one team's offense and one team's D don't get introduced.​

"Before our first Super Bowl in '96, that created a big, huge ordeal in our locker room," Moore said. "We had a coin flip on who would get introduced. The defense won. Our offense had guys like (offensive tackle) Bruce Armstrong who had played forever and weren't going to be introduced at the Super Bowl. It was splitting our locker room. So when we went back the second time, we were more seasoned. We weren't letting that happen again. That was the biggest reason we went out as a whole team."

Moore played primarily on special teams in the game that saw Adam Vinatieri's last-second field goal stun the Rams 20-17.​

"It wasn't just that we'd won the Super Bowl," Moore said of the thrill. "No one gave us a chance to win that game. It was sweet."








The Most Relevant "Mr. Irrelevant", Marty Moore
2:26 Interview





 
Today in Patriots History
X-Ray McQuay



In memory of Leon 'X-Ray' McQuay, who would have been 75 today
Born March 19, 1950 in Tampa
Died November 29, 1995 at the age of 45 in Tampa
Patriot RB, 1975; uniform #31

Acquired in a trade with the Giants on August 21, 1975, for a 1976 sixth round pick
Pats résumé: one season, 13 games; 33 carries, four receptions and 15 kickoff returns; three fumbles



The Giants selected McQuay out of the University of Tampa – two seasons before the Spartans ended their football program – with the 119th overall pick in the fifth round of the 1973 draft. McQuay was the first African-American athlete to receive a football scholarship at the University of Tampa, which was still segregated at that time. ‘X-Ray’ McQay rushed for 3,039 yards and scored 37 touchdowns, and was a two time small college All-American in three seasons at UT. As a junior he rushed for 1,362 yards and scored 22 touchdowns. McQuay, Freddie Solomon and John Matuszak led the Spartans to a 10-2 record and a victory over Jack Lambert and Nick Saban in the Tangerine Bowl. Enticed by cash and thinking he had nothing left to prove as a college player, McQuay then skipped his senior year to play in the Canadian Football League, where he averaged 7.1 yard per carry and went to the Grey Cup with the Toronto Argonauts.

McQuay spent three years in the CFL before joining the Giants. Thought to be too small at 5’9? to be an every down player, he was their kick returner, averaging 27.6 yards on 25 returns, and added another 299 yards from scrimmage as their third down back. On August 21, 1975, the Patriots traded their sixth round 1976 draft pick to the Giants for McQuay. He played in 13 games for the Pats, returning 15 kicks, with limited time at running back (74 yards from scrimmage). With three fumbles he landed in Chuck Fairbanks’ doghouse though, and the following spring McQuay was traded to Oakland for the Raiders’ 10th round draft choice in 1977.

McQuay played four games for the Saints in ’76, then returned to Toronto and the CFL the next year. He tried making a comeback with his hometown Tampa Bay Bandits of the USFL in 1982, but was cut during training camp. In 1983 McQuay was inducted into the University of Tampa Athletic Hall of Fame. He then became a licensed auto mechanic and an ordained minister, but died of a heart attack in 1995 at the age of 45. His grandson, Leon McQuay III, was a safety who played for the Chiefs in 2017-2018 after being selected in the sixth round of the 2017 draft, from Southern Cal.










 
Today in Patriots History
Tavon Wilson



Happy 35th birthday to Tavon Wilson
Born March 19, 1990 in Washington DC
Patriot S, 2012-2015; uniform #27
Patriots 2nd round (48th overall) selection of the 2012 NFL Draft, from Illinois
Pats résumé: 4 seasons, 54 games (4 starts); 5 interceptions, 10 passes defensed, one touchdown; ring from SB49 vs Seattle



Accurately derided as a reach by Bill Belichick to be drafted that early. Played 54 regular season games and seven playoff games in four years with the Patriots (2012-2015) with four starts (all in his rookie season). Had two fumble recoveries and five interceptions with the Pats. Claim to fame was a 74-yard pick six in 2013 off Tyrod Taylor in garbage time of a 41-7 victory against the Ravens. Played for six more years, including two as a starting safety for the Lions.

If he had been a sixth or seventh round pick, we would have lauded his contributions. Being drafted that early doomed what fans and the media would ever think of him. Seattle took Bobby Wagner one pick earlier, and Tampa Bay grabbed LaVonte David a few picks later. If it had to be a safety, Pro Bowler Casey Hayward was still available.

Ouch.












 
Today in Patriots History
Tavon Wilson



Happy 43rd birthday to Jonathan Fanene
Born March 19, 1982 in Pago Pago, American SamoaDC
Patriot DE, 2012 offseason; uniform #98
Signed as a 30-year old veteran free agent on March 20, 2012
Pats résumé: one offseason



After the Patriots elected to let Mark Anderson and Andre Carter walk in free agency, Fanene was supposed to fill one of those spots in the starting lineup.

Didn't happen; he was released in mid-August, well before final cuts - and he never caught on with another NFL team after that.

Fanene claimed there was more to the story though.




The Patriots and defensive lineman Jonathan Fanene (represented by the NFL Players Association) settled their grievance within the past week, according to sources, and part of the settlement is that the Patriots won’t have to pay Fanene the final $1.35 million of his $3.85 million signing bonus.​

When the Patriots had signed Fanene in March of 2012, the contract called for the $3.85 million signing bonus to be paid in multiple installments, with the final $1.35 million on March 31, 2013. We all know what happened -- Fanene never played for the Patriots and the team released him five months after signing him with the new “failure to disclose physical condition” designation. A grievance followed. We can now officially close the book on the Patriots’ failed Fanene signing, with Fanene able to keep $2.5 million of the original signing bonus and the Patriots receiving a credit on their 2013 salary cap.​


According to Mike Reiss of ESPNBoston.com, the Pats and Fanene resolved a grievance over Fanene’s 2012 signing bonus by letting him keep the $2.5 million he already has been paid -- and by cutting off the final installment of $1.85 million.​

The Patriots claimed that Fanene concealed a knee injury when Fanene signed a contract last year that included a $3.85 million signing bonus. The team wanted to keep the $1.85 million and recover the full $2.5 million.​

The decision to work things out comes at a time when the hay was in the barn on the formal arbitration process, which included testimony from coach Bill Belichick and others. Instead of waiting for the arbitrator to impose a ruling that one side would hate and the other would love, the two sides played it safe.​






 
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