PatsFans.com Menu
PatsFans.com - The Hub For New England Patriots Fans
PatsFans.com - The Hub For New England Patriots Fans

Today In Patriots History May 23: Larry Garron

Fun historical team facts.
Status
Not open for further replies.

jmt57

Moderator
Staff member
PatsFans.com Supporter
2024 Weekly Picks Winner
2025 Weekly Picks Winner
Joined
Aug 13, 2005
Messages
23,899
Reaction score
19,794
Today in Patriots History
Larry Garron



In memory of Larry Garron, who would have turned 88 today
Born May 23, 1937 in Marks, Mississippi; hometown Summitt, Illinois
Died September 13, 2019 at the age of 82 in Framingham
Patriot fullback/halfback/kick returner, 1960-1968; uniform #40

Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent from Western Illinois on March 25, 1960
Pats résumé: 9 seasons, 99 games (70 starts); 5,483 yards from scrimmage; 25.8 yard avg on 89 kick returns; 42 TD; 4x All-Star; Pats All-1960s Team




Larry Garron went to Western Illinois, leading the Leathernecks to three consecutive NAIA Conference championships. He intended to go on to medical school, but his college coach - Lou Saban - invited Garron to tryout for his new team in the inaugural American Football League season. After battling tonsillitis and injuries Garron did not initially make the roster, but did proceed to get in on four games in the 1960 season.




March 19, 2008:
“We were the last team in the league to develop,” said Garron. “[The other teams] said we were a rag-a-muffin team, not knowing that in our minds we wanted to be as good as anyone out there.”

Another of the original AFL teams was the Buffalo Bills, and the Patriots-Bills rivalry was born immediately.

“It was always rough,” said Garron, recalling the early AFL matchups between the two teams. “Not only on the field but off the field. I remember the locker room; we always got nervous when we went there, because kids would break into the locker room and take things.”

The fans in the stands weren’t any warmer to the upstart Patriots, who beat the Bills in Buffalo in the first-ever AFL preseason exhibition.

“Sitting on the bench on the field, the spectators were right behind you,” said Garron. “Lou Saban told us to keep our helmets on, but we didn’t know why.”

“All of the sudden we had beer bottles flying out of the stands at us, and we were going ‘Ok. Now we know what he was talking about.’”



Garron added weight to his frame in the offseason and it paid dividends. In 1961 Garron shared rushing duties with Billy Lott and Ron Burton, averaged 5.6 yards per carry, scored five touchdowns and was named to his first All-Star team.

In the Patriots 1961 home meeting with the Bills, Garron raced 85 yards for a touchdown on a draw play. That dash remains the longest rushing play in Patriots history. He totaled 116 yards on 10 carries in that game, forging an 11.6-yard rushing average that was a Patriots single-game record when he retired. And that average didn’t even include his 80-plus-yard kickoff return that day.






For an encore Garron averaged 5.9 yards per carry in 1962, and scored the second touchdown of his career on a kickoff return. His all-purpose yardage increased from 1,168 yards to 1,314, despite missing three games due to injury.

In 1963 Garron's workload increased. He averaged 16.1 yards on 26 receptions with two touchdowns, while also more than doubling his amount of carries. Garron had a career-high 1,168 yards from scrimmage, and led the AFL with 1,884 all-purpose yards. He was a major factor in the AFL East title game, the franchise's first postseason game. On two occasions his receptions (59 yards and 17 yards) set up field goals, as the Patriots won their first playoff game in team history, 26-8 at Buffalo.




In 99 games with the Patriots, Garron scored 42 touchdowns (8th most in team history) and totaled 5,483 yards from scrimmage (10th most in team history). After all these years Garron still ranks ninth all-time in team history with 2,981 yards rushing. When he retired he held the team record for yards per rush in a single game (11.6), which occured on the same day he ran a kickoff back 80 yards. Larry Garron still holds the Patriot record for longest rush (85 yards).


Larry Garron was a four-time AFL All-Star, the team MVP in 1963, member of the Patriots All-AFL, All-Decade Team of the 1960s, and a member of the American Football League Hall of Fame. His 5.9 yards per carry in '62 is still a franchise record to this day. Garron ranks third among all-time AFL players in career all-purpose yards gained (7,805), third on average kickoff return yardage (25.8), and second for career kickoff return touchdowns.


Larry also had some talented sporting sons and nephews, including nephews Donald Garron (who won the 1981 Massachusetts All State 220 yard championship in 22.37), and Rufus Harris, who had a tryout with the Boston Celtics in 1980. Two of his sons, Arnold and Andre, are in the University of New Hampshire Athletics Hall of Fame. Andre played for the Kansas City Chiefs as a running back and kick returner for two seasons in the late 1980s. Arnold also played in the NFL one year with the Patriots, and one year for Washington as a defensive back.









For more, please check out these articles:

May 19, 2008:
Alumni Spotlight: Larry Garron -- Patriots.com


May 25, 2011:
Garron quickly developed into a fine running back and receiver. In his nine years with the Patriots, he rushed for 2,981 yards, and he had 26 receiving touchdowns, the most by a Patriots running back. Garron was known for his smarts. In 1963, the Patriots made their first playoff appearance. On a slippery field in Buffalo, he put on baseball shoes with rubber cleats and ran circles around the Bills in a 26-8 victory that sent the Patriots to the AFL championship game against the Chargers.

But before the San Diego game, Garron had a real bad vibe during practice. He noticed some young men in the stands taking notes. He saw the same faces on the Chargers sideline on game day. The Chargers beat the Patriots, 51-10, in what might have been the original “Spygate.’’

“They knew every play we ran before we ran it,’’ he said. “Babe Parilli finally drew up a play in the dirt in the huddle. “It was a wedge and we scored on it.’’

In the AFL All-Star Game in 1968, he took a Joe Namath pass and eluded several tacklers for a 26-yard gain that set up the East’s winning score. He and Namath had a history. It was Garron who was sent by the Patriots to recruit Joe Willie at Alabama.

“The first thing he said to me was, ‘Do you have a stadium?’ ’’ recalls Garron. “We were playing at BU at the time. Bear Bryant had a look at me and he said, ‘I think we have a little better offer.’ ’’

After his retirement, Garron taught management, marketing, and economics at Bunker Hill Community College in Charlestown for nearly 20 years.


June 2, 2014:
Former Patriots player tells Clinton students of mid-'60s boycott over racism -- Worcester Telegram & Gazette


Sept 9, 2016:


Sept 14, 2019:
















Pro Football Archives -- Larry Garron Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Larry Garron Transactions

 
The next few entries will be a major letdown after Larry Garron.


Today in Patriots History
Duane Starks



Happy 51st birthday to Duane Starks
Born May 23, 1974 in Miami
Patriot cornerback, 2005; uniform #23
Acquired in a trade with the Arizona Cardinals on March 3, 2005
Pats résumé: one season, seven games (six starts); zero interceptions, five pass deflections; eight games on IR



When Ty Law departed as a free agent after ten years in Foxborough early in the 2005 offseason, the Patriots had a big hole to fill at corner. Bill Belichick attempted to fill that void by trading away a third round pick for Duane Starks, who had been the tenth overall pick of the 1998 draft, out of the University of Miami.

After seven very underwhelming games Starks was placed on injured reserve with a shoulder injury, and unceremoniously released the following February just after the start of the new league year.




The team announced it has released cornerback Duane Starks.

The move is not surprising, considering that Starks was set to count $5.1 million on the team’s salary cap, the sixth highest figure on the club.

Starks played in seven games, with six starts in 2005. He struggled at times, and was benched for the second half of a loss to the Colts on Nov. 7. He was placed on injured reserve with a shoulder injury Nov. 10


The New England Patriots released veteran cornerback Duane Starks after his lone season ended in injury.

Starks was placed on injured reserve Nov. 10 because of a shoulder injury. He was released on Saturday.

The Patriots acquired the 31-year-old Starks in an offseason trade with Arizona. He intercepted 25 passes in his first seven seasons with the Baltimore Ravens and Cardinals, but had no interceptions in seven games with the Patriots.

New England had envisioned Starks as a replacement for Ty Law, who left the Patriots after the 2004 season. Baltimore drafted Starks in the first round, 10th overall, of the 1998 draft.







Pro Football Archives -- Duane Starks Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Duane Starks Transactions

 
Today in Patriots History
He shares a record with Tom Brady,
and is responsible for Pats drafting Drew Bledsoe



Happy 59th birthday to Jeff Carlson
Born May 23, 1966 in Long Beach, California
Patriot quarterback, 1992; uniform #17
Signed as a veteran free agent on November 10, 1992
Pats résumé: one season, three games (0-2); 18-49 (37%), 232 yards (4.7 ypa); 1 TD, 3 Int; 33.7 passer rating



Jeff Carlson was one of four (Hugh Millen, Tommy Hodson, Scott Zolak) players to start at quarterback during **** MacPherson's second and final year as head coach in Foxboro. The former Weber State Wildcat started the final two games (both losses), completing 37% of his passes with one touchdown and three picks. His most memorable play came in the final game of that dreadful 1992 season.


In the last game of the year against Miami at Foxboro Stadium, the Pats were on the verge of pulling a Jerod Mayo-style upset win. Unlike Buffalo though, the Dolphins had something to play for. A win would give them the AFC East title over Buffalo and a bye in the wild card round. Even though the temperature was 29 with a wind chill of 9, 10-5 Miami was favored by 11 points over the 2-13 Patriots.


The Patriots held a 13-3 lead at halftime, and looked like they might take a 20-6 lead early in the 4th quarter - but on a 1st-and-ten at the Miami 34 Scott Lockwood fumbled, and Bryan Cox recovered for Miami. After an exchange of punts the Dolphins finally came to life, scoring on a 75-yard drive with 2:43 left to play to tie the score at 13-13.


A couple of runs up the middle gave the Pats a first down at their own 46 at the two-minute warning. After two more runs, Carlson hit Michael Timpson for an 11-yard gain and a first down at the 40 with 40 seconds remaining. A 12-yard completion to Irving Fryar gave the Pats another first down, and the Pats were on the Miami 28-yard line with 22 seconds left to play. A spike and incomplete pass to Greg McMurty set up a third down, still on the 28.


At this point the Patriots were looking at a 45-yard field goal attempt to win the game. Your responsibilities are simple: try to get some yardage - but just make sure you don't turn the ball over, and don't take a sack. For Jeff Carlson it was the latter: an 11-yard sack back to the 39-yard line. After a timeout, the decision was to go for a hail mary, as a 56-yard attempt in bad weather was not feasible for Charlie Bauman.


Carlson's attempt to Fryar fell incomplete, and the Pats went three-and-out in the first possession of overtime. Miami took over on their 35, Dan Marino completed three passes for first downs, and the Dolphins won on a 35-yard Pete Stoyanovich field goal. With that, the 1992 season was mercifully over. It was for the best though.


That loss gave the Pats the tiebreaker over Seattle for the first pick in the 1993 draft, and New England ended up with Drew Bledsoe rather than Rick Mirer. On a side note, both wins that season came when MacPherson was hospitalized, and Dante Scarnecchia took over head coaching duties.



Jeff Carlson has four New England Patriots claims to fame:
1.) He is responsible for the Patriots drafting Drew Bledsoe, not Rick Mirer.
2.) Carlson is the last Pats starting quarterback to sport Pat Patriot on his helmet as part of a season-long uniform, excluding the couple of annual throwback unis.
3.) Jeff is the only left-handed starting quarterback in the history of the franchise.
4.) Carlson's most recent claim to fame is being the original member of an extremely exclusive club: one of only two quarterbacks to ever start for both the New England Patriots and the Tampa Bay Bucaneers. (Vinny Testaverde becomes a third member if you exclude the 'starter' requirement for that group.)






After leaving pro football Jeff Carlson returned to Tampa, where he has worked as an account manager in pharmaceutical sales since 1996. He also had a long time side job as a sports analyst for the local Tampa area cable news company.

Linked-In -- Jeff Carlson













Jeff Carlson was a four-year standout quarterback for the Weber State football team from 1984-88 and helped lead the Wildcats to one of their best seasons in school history.

Carlson came to Weber State out of Cypress, Calif. He only played in four varsity games for the Wildcats as a freshman and sophomore but exploded in his final two seasons as the Weber State starter.

During his junior season of 1987, he led the Wildcats to a 10-3 overall record, still the best winning percentage in school history. Under head coach Mike Price, Weber State was 7-1 in Big Sky play that season, finishing in a tie for first in the league standings. The Wildcats also advanced to the NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs for the first time in school history where they defeated Idaho in the first round before falling at Marshall.

During the year Carlson threw for 3,044 yards, at the time the second most in a season in school history. He also threw 19 touchdowns and finished the year seventh in the nation in total offense and eighth in the country in pass efficiency.

As a senior in 1988, he threw for 2,998 yards and 26 touchdowns, at the time a school record. In a win over Southern Utah, he threw for 434 yards, at the time the second most yards in a game in school history. He threw six touchdowns in a game twice that season to set a Big Sky record.

Carlson ended his career as Weber State's career leader in passing yards with 6,147 yards, which now ranks third in school history. He threw for 47 touchdowns in his career with the Wildcats, still third most in school history.

Following his Wildcat career, Carlson was drafted in the fourth round of the NFL draft by the Los Angeles Rams, which was the highest a Big Sky quarterback had ever been drafted. He played four seasons in the NFL with Tampa Bay, New England and Denver. He currently resides in the Tampa area.





Pro Football Archives -- Jeff Carlson Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Jeff Carlson Transactions

 
Today in Patriots History
Tom Toth



Happy 63rd birthday to Tom Toth
Born May 23, 1962; from Orland Park, Illinois
Patriot offensive tackle, 1985; uniform #74
Pats 4th round (102nd overall) selection of the 1985 draft, from Western Michigan
Pats résumé: two offseasons and training camps, one season on injured reserve



Thomas Jeffrey Toth injured his ankle during a training camp scrimmage, and spent his entire rookie season on injured reserve. He was waived as part of the final roster cuts prior to the start of the 1985 season. Though he never made it with the Pats, he did play for five seasons with the Dolphins and Chargers, appearing in 51 games. In his post-NFL days Tom has worked as the owner/personal trainer of a fitness and weightlifting facility in the suburban Chicago area.



1986 Patriots Media Guide
TOM TOTH 74​
OT 6-5 275​
WESTERN MICHIGAN 1st year​
DOB: 5-23-62 at Blue Island, IL​
HOW ACQUIRED: D-4a, 1985 (102nd)​

PRO: Spent the 1985 season on Injured Reserve, going on IR 8-15 with right ankle injury...suffered injury in rookie scrimmage vs. Redskins in Foxboro on 7-26...was placed in a removable cast on 8-5...practiced with team the last half of Season...coaches are high on his future.​

COLLEGE: Was drafted by the Oakland Invader of USFL in 1-85, but waited for NFL draft...Was 6th player taken in draft by Patriots, ...an avid weight-lifter, ...sat out his first year of 1981 as red-shirt...broke his arm the week before his first collegiate game in 1981, and had to sit out seven weeks...he came back for the team’s Homecoming Game (wearing a cast) and broke his arm in the same place six plays into that game...team went 6-5 his frosh year of 1981, went 7-2-2 in 1982 (2nd in league), 6-5 in 1983 (2nd in league)...dominated play in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) as senior, after missing 1st and 4th and 5th games due to minor knee injury...was HM AP All-America as senior; was WMU co-Captain...was voted his team’s Offensive-Player-of-the- Year by his teammates after his senior year...HM AI-MAC as junior...percent...was guard in 1982 and started 9 games that season (graded out 83 percent)...figured to see plenty of action with 2nd team unit in 1981, but suffered injury early that season, causing him to miss most of season.. played sei Patriots teammate, Jim Bowman (from Central Michigan Univ.) throughout College.​

PERSONAL: Married the former Gail Nelson on June 13th...expects to spend offseason months working towards his degree (because of team’s post-season activities last year, did not have time to register)...spends great deal of time working out...hobbies: all sports, also likes to fish, camp...dad, Robert, played guard at Xavier University from 1952-55...his high school football team was 28-8 while he was there...started playing tackle football in fifth grade ...attended Carl Sandburg HS in Orland Park, IL, team went 28-8 in his four years as starter (9-0 his frosh season, 7-2 aS a sophomore, followed by 6-3 records the final two years)...was a starter at wing back (also played some safety) as a 145 pound freshman, then started at both offensive and defensive tackles as sophomore and senior and at offensive tackle as junior...weighed 210 pounds as senior, and then weighed 245 during first year of college...as senior, selected all-state HM...hobbies: lifting weights, softball , fishing...given name: Thomas Jeffrey Toth...parents: Robert and Joan...has two brothers and two sisters.​

1985—On Injured Reserve List (ankle) entire season. Placed on Injured Reserve 8-15-85.​






Two former Patriots battle it out at Soldier Field on Sept 4, 1988: Miami's Tom Toth, and Chicago's Steve McMichael






Owner Tom Toth ex-NFL player for the Dolphins and the Patriots. . .


LinkedIn -- Tom Toth
Personal Trainer at The Fitness Edge


Pro Football Archives -- Tom Toth Player Profile

Pro Football Archives -- Tom Toth Transactions

 
Today in Patriots History
Quick Cup of Coffee



Happy 32nd birthday to Josh Ferguson
Born May 23, 1993 in Naperville, Illinois
Patriot running back, 2018 practice squad
Signed to the practice squad on Nov 7, 2018
Pats résumé: 48 hours on the practice squad


Nov 7, 2018:
The Patriots worked out Ferguson on Tuesday. He went undrafted out of Illinois in 2016 and spent two seasons with the Indianapolis Colts. He most recently was on the Houston Texans’ practice squad. Ferguson has 16 career carries for 25 yards. He’s also caught 23 passes for 152 yards in 26 career games.​
The Patriots released running back Kenneth Farrow from their practice squad Tuesday.​
Here’s an updated look at the Patriots’ practice squad:​
QB Danny Etling​
RB Josh Ferguson​
TE Stephen Anderson​
OL Eric Smith​
DE Ufomba Kamalu​
DE Trent Harris​
DT Frank Herron​
LB Calvin Munson​
CB Jomal Wiltz​
S David Jones​


Nov 9, 2018:
The Patriots continued a long week of tweaking their practice squad Friday, signing wide receiver Damoun Patterson and releasing running back Josh Ferguson.​


Pro Football Archives -- Josh Ferguson Transactions







Other pro football players born on May 23 with a New England connection:

Ken Avery, 81 (May 23, 1944)
Boston Patriots 2nd round (11th overall) 1966 AFL 'Redshirt' Draft Pick, from Southern Miss
The linebacker instead signed with the New York Giants. Avery played in 123 games over nine seasons from 1967 to 1975, primarily for the Cincinnati Bengals.
Pro Football Archives -- Ken Avery


Bruce Laird, 75 (May 23, 1950)
Born in Lowell; raised in Scituate; Scituate High School; American International College (Springfield)
Laird was named to the Pro Bowl his rookie season when he led the NFL with 303 punt return yards. He played in 164 games with 127 starts at strong safety over twelve seasons, mostly with the Baltimore Colts, accumulating 19 interceptions and 18 fumble recoveries. he is the only player from Scituate High to make it to the NFL.
Pro Football Archives -- Bruce Laird


Donnie Fletcher, 35 (May 23, 1990)
Boston College
Cornerback played for the Jets in 2012, then spent two years in the Arena Football League.
Pro Football Archives -- Donnie Fletcher


Reggie Rust (May 23, 1909 - Jan 11, 1984)
Defunct pro football franchise from New England
Tailback for the 1932 Boston Braves.
Pro Football Archives -- Reggie Rust
 
Today in Patriots History
May 23 Trivialities


May 23, 1973:
The Patriots signed two free agents: kicker John Smith, who would be traded to Pittsburgh, but return in 1974; and 6'3, 205 lb Danny Hardaway, a WR/RB who was Texas Tech's first African-American football player, but never made it in the NFL.

Fourth round draft pick Allen Gallagher, an OT from USC; 14th round pick Ray Hamilton, NT from Oklahoma; and 17th round pick Eddie McAshan, a QB from Georgia Tech, also signed their rookie contracts.


The Pats also sign first round draft pick, multiple-athlete Russ Francis to a multi-year contract.





May 23, 1980
New England signs free agent WR John Kimbrough, a 1977 third round pick by Buffalo from St Cloud State.
John Kimbrough graduated from SCSU in 1976, after earning four letters in football and track. He was named All-Conference in 1974-76 and played in the prestigious post-season football all-star games like the Blue and Gray Classic and the Senior Bowl. Kimbrough went on to play in the National Football League for the Buffalo Bills, Oakland Raiders, and New England Patriots. His off-the-field contributions earned him the Buffalo (N.Y.) Community Service Award in 1978 and the NFL Goals for Youth Award in 1978, 1979, and 1980. Kimbrough has worked as a family counselor and youth leadership director in San Bernandino, California.




May 23, 1983:
Billy Sullivan was one of the first owners to create revenue by selling the naming rights to a stadium (Schaefer Stadium). So at first glance it seemed odd that he would reverse the trend by re-naming the stadium after himself. Of course there was more to the story; he would never turn down an opportunity for an extra dollar.
The New England Patriots Monday officially renamed Schaefer Stadium as Sullivan Stadium in honor of the NFL team's founder and owner, William H. Sullivan.

The change, effective immediately, ties in with a marketing arrangement with Anheuser Busch. The brewery is paying the Patriots more than $1 million for seven permanent signs at the stadium and time on the Diamond Vision scoreboard.

In addition, the Budweiser red bow tie logo will appear under the name 'Sullivan Stadium' at the entrance and on the elevator tower.

Chuck Sullivan said the agreement with Schaefer still had two years to run and there would be concourse advertising for Stroh's, which has since taken over Schaefer.




May 23, 1988:
Patriots waive kicker Carlos Reveiz again. An 11th round 1987 draft pick in 1987, the previous year Reveiz had been signed and waived by both New England and Tampa Bay. Carlos never did play in any regular season NFL games.




May 23, 1991:
Patriots sign punter Bryan Wagner, and re-sign corner Ronnie Lippett
If you’re a punter, dark thoughts regularly invade your head, creeping through your mind like ****roaches in the night, bringing sinister imaginings of all the things that can go wrong each time the football sails between the center’s legs in your direction.

Among them:

-- The ball goes over your head, forcing you to stumble back after it and capture it while a charging group of 250-pound men are trying to hit you hard enough to make you think you’re Ethel Merman for the next several days.

-- The aforementioned group will arrive just as you follow through with the kick, charging into you with granite-hard football helmets just at that oh-so-slightly vulnerable moment when you have one leg up above your head.

-- You miss the ball completely and kick somewhat maniacal 233-pound teammate Eugene Lockhart really hard in the seat of his pants. The other team recovers the ball for a touchdown. Eugene is angry. The team fires you 10 minutes after the game.

It was just Bryan Wagner’s luck that with all of the things that can go wrong on a punt, the worst one, that Eugene-kicking nightmare, came true.

It was Sept. 15, 1991, in Pittsburgh’s Three Rivers Stadium. The Steelers had pinned New England against its own goal line (who hasn’t? ), and on fourth down the Patriots sent Wagner in to punt. Because he was limited to only a 10-yard drop instead of the regular 15 that punters use, Wagner admits he was a bit nervous.

And then the nightmare unfolded.

Inexplicably, Lockhart, one of the Patriots’ blockers, took several steps backward at the snap of the ball. Suddenly, from Wagner’s viewpoint, the charging linemen, most of the stadium and the sun were blocked out by Eugene’s rather hefty caboose. Flustered, Wagner dropped the ball during the initial phase of his leg swing and then tried to stop his leg.

It was too late.

Momentum too great.

Space too confined.

Wagner’s foot thudded loudly into Lockhart’s rear end. The Steelers’ Ernie Mills fell on the ball in the end zone for a touchdown. The crowd of 53,703 roared with laughter, having witnessed one of the funniest moments of slapstick since Moe lodged the pronged end of a crowbar up Shemp’s nose and dragged the shrieking Stooge across the room by the nostrils.

Wagner didn’t have a crowbar.

But after the game he did get the ax.

He was banished by the pathetic Patriots for not being good enough, which is sort of like being fired by Roseanne Arnold for over-snacking. Wagner spent a year looking for work, trying out with several NFL teams, pushing hard for another chance.

And not getting one.

“I know it was the stigma of what happened that day in Pittsburgh,” Wagner said. “I think that’s why no one picked me up. I got some bad publicity. Any place I went for a tryout, no matter how well I did, I had the feeling they were looking at me and thinking, ‘This is the guy who kicked a teammate in the butt.’ It was really a bad deal.”

A bad deal, Wagner said, because he didn’t cause the botched punt.

“To start with, I had no room to work with. The ball was on the one-foot line,” he said. “And then Eugene starts backing up and gets way too close to me. At that point I ran out of space. I dropped the ball and tried to slow my foot down, but I got him anyway. I really got my foot into his behind.

“I got blamed for the whole mess, and it wasn’t my fault. After the game they released me. No chance for me to explain what happened, no chance for them to look at the film so they could see what happened. I was gone. That’s how the game works for a punter.”




May 23, 2005:
The New England Patriots Monday re-signed wide receiver Troy Brown, who was released in March when the team declined to pay his $2.5 million roster bonus.

Details of the new one-year deal were not disclosed, but it was believed to involve far less money than it would have been with the bonus.

The 12-year veteran, who was an eighth-round draft pick out of Marshall in 1993, also served as a punt returner and defensive back last season and has helped the Patriots win three Super Bowl titles during the past four years.

He caught only 17 passes for 184 yards with one touchdown during 2004, but had three interceptions as a nickel back.

Brown holds the franchise single-season record with 101 receptions set in 2001, the club's first Super Bowl winning campaign.




May 23, 2012:




Today in Patriots History
Bemidji State of Mind



May 23, 2019:
Patriots sign an undrafted rookie free agent from some fictitional sounding place, or possibly an alt-rock band name, called Bemidji State.













May 23, 2024:
Here is what the forum was discussing 365 days ago:


 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Patriots Insider on Kayshon Boutte Trade: “I don’t know if it should happen”
Patriots News 05-17,  And Patriots’ Schedule Analysis
MORSE: 2026 Patriots Schedule, Win Projection and UDFA Bonuses
2026 Patriots Schedule Sets Up Tough Start In Vrabel’s Second Season
MORSE: Patriots Rookie Mini Camp and Signings
Patriots News 05-10, Patriots Rookie Minicamp Starts
MORSE: Way Too Early 53-man Roster Projection
Several Remaining Patriots Free Agents Still Seeking Homes
ESPN Insider on Patriots A.J. Brown Trade: ‘I Think He Knows Where His Future is Headed’
Former Patriots Staffer Reveals Surprising Person Behind Two Key Player Cornerstone Additions in 2021
Back
Top