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Friday Patriots Notebook 4/5: News and Notes
Ian Logue
While many have wondered if the New New England Patriots might entertain a trade for what Jerod Mayo called 'a bag' to get them to move out of that spot, it sounds like it's going to take a lot for that to happen.

The post Friday Patriots Notebook 4/5: News and Notes appeared first on PatsFans.com.

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Christian Gonzalez appears like he’ll be wearing a different jersey number in 2024, with the second-year cornerback apparently switching to No. 0 ahead of this season. Gonzalez wore that number in college, but donned the #6 during his rookie campaign, which was obviously cut short due to a season-ending shoulder injury.
My mind is playing tricks on me. This was right in the middle of a paragraph about players being traded. :oops:
 
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I saw one of my old "Today in Pats History" threads at the bottom of the page. Since this is such a slow period of time prior to the draft, I'll copy and paste the pages here.


Today in Patriots History
Jon Morris

Happy 82nd birthday to Jon Morris
Born April 5, 1942 in Washington DC
Patriot center, 1964-1974; uniform #56
Pats 4th round (29th overall) selection of the 1964 draft, from Holy Cross


Jon Morris | Patriots Hall of Fame

Jon Morris played 11 seasons for the Patriots, appearing in 130 games from 1964-74. He earned seven consecutive All-Star appearances with six AFL-All Star games (1964 through 1969) and was an AFC Pro Bowl center in 1970. His seven league All-Star selections rank second in Patriots history behind Pro Football Hall of Famer John Hannah (9). Morris was the first Patriots’ player to be selected to the NFL Pro Bowl. Morris anchored an offensive line that opened holes for Jim Nance to amass a team-record 45 rushing touchdowns from 1965-71.​


New England Patriots of the Past: Jon Morris | Last Word on Football

Morris played in all 14 games of his rookie season, and immediately became known as one of the most dominating centers in football. Morris took home the team’s Rookie of the Year award in 1964, while also winning All-AFL honors and a spot on the AFL All-Star team.​
The Holy Cross product would go on to show that he was no one-year wonder, either. Morris was selected to every AFL All-Star team from 1965-1969, being named All-AFL each year. The center was an absolute iron-man, as he never missed a game during his AFL tenure.​
The AFL merged with the NFL prior to the 1970 season, and Morris went down as one of the best players in the AFL’s history. His great play and long list of accomplishments earned him the honor of being named Second-Team, All-Time All-AFL. The First-Team selection, Oakland Raiders center Jim Otto, played four more AFL seasons than Morris.​
Much like fellow Boston Patriot Gino Cappelletti, Morris remained connected to the Patriot football scene after his retirement. Starting in 1979, Morris served as the primary color commentator for the Patriot radio games. Morris would eventually relinquish the post in 1987 after receiving a better offer with NBC Sports.​
Morris had an incredible impact with the Patriot organization, both on and off the field.​







Jon Morris Elected to Patriots Hall of Fame | CBS Boston

“It was overwhelming,” said Morris of his reaction to the call from Patriots owner Robert Kraft. “I thought my days were numbered. This announcement came as a complete surprise. I consider this the crowning achievement of my football life and I am so thankful to the Kraft family and the selection committee for allowing me to experience this feeling.”​
“I give the Krafts all the credit for making the alumni feel so special and I look forward to being a part of this year’s hall of fame ceremony,” Morris added.​




Welcome to Pats Hall, Jon Morris | Mike Reiss, espn - New England Patriots Blog

Morris' selection was made by the newly formed Senior Committee. Morris will be joined this year as an inductee by one of three yet-to-be-announced finalists.​
A member of the Patriots' 50th anniversary team, 35th anniversary team, and 1960s all-decade team, Morris was a six-time AFL all-star. He had been a finalist for induction in 2008, 2009 and 2010.​
The Senior Committee, a 10-person group consisting of some of the most tenured Patriots beat writers and staff, felt it was time that Morris' wait officially ended. The establishment of the committee was to ensure that early-era players who are deserving of induction are given that consideration.​


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Jon Morris on his Induction into the Patriots Hall of Fame | Tales from the AFL

Believe it or not, Jim Otto was not the only man to play center in the American Football League! As incredible and enduring as we was (and he was both), Jim Otto garners nearly 100% of the attention when the center position is brought up in regards to the AFL. But there were other very fine centers through the league, Sam Gruneisen, Jon Gilliam and Al Bemiller, to name a few.

From 1964-1974, Jon Morris played center for the Boston Patriots. Drafted out of Holy Cross in the second round of the 1964 AFL Draft, Morris won the Patriots’ Rookie of the Year honors in ’64, and settled in for his 11-season stay as leader of the Patriots offensive line.

In 2011, after many near misses, Jon Morris was inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame.



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Boston Patriots | Remember the AFL

Jon Morris was a sensational three sport athlete in high school and played center and linebacker for three seasons at Holy Cross College, where he was the New York Daily News' "Athlete of the Year" in 1960 and Varsity Club Athlete of the Year and Lineman of the Year in 1963.​
Morris was selected All-East and All-America in his senior year, played in the College All-Star Game and captained the Senior Bowl. He was inducted into the Holy Cross Hall of Fame in 1973.​
The Packers were unable to lure him as a No. 2 draft choice and the Patriots signed him as their third pick. Morris was the Patriots' team Rookie of the Year in 1964, and their Unsung Hero in 1965.​
He was an American Football League All-Star six times, 1964 through 1969, and played 128 games for the Patriots (eighth best individual record in club history). Morris was named to the second team, American Football League All-Time Team.​

* Note: At the time Morris actually ranked 7th in the history of the Patriots in number of games played with 130. He now ranks 36th, tied with Logan Mankins in that category.




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Picture Day allegedly from July 15, 1971(or maybe 1969-70?) offensive line.
RT Tom Neville, RG Len St. Jean, C Jon Morris, LT Tom Funchess and LG Mike Montler.​


Why '10 voting for Patriots HOF is so big | Boston.com

Do you feel, Jon Morris, it’s tougher for American Football League players to get recognition? Seems I set him off a little:​
“I had this conversation with someone the other day — I think it’s a disgrace that the all-time leading scorer in the American Football League is not in the NFL Hall of Fame,” Morris said, referencing Gino Cappelletti. “And I just wonder if that has something to do with it.”​
And that led us down another road.​
“I don’t know if any politics are involved in terms of the old AFL-NFL rivalry. I think that’s long gone, don’t you?” Morris continued. “I just think the longer you’re away from football, the easier it is to forget.​



Boston Patriots Near Forgotten Heroes Live with CTE - Neurologic Rehabilitation Institute

Several other former Patriot players have been diagnosed with CTE. Aaron Hernandez most recently, Junior Seau, Mosi Tatupu and Kevin Turner also played for the Patriots. These men or their relatives are part of the group of 5,000 retired football players involved in a class action lawsuit against the NFL.​
Other retired players from the 1970’s like Jon Morris, a former team captain and a member of the Patriots Hall of Fame, awaits the findings of baseline examinations. Morris played 11 seasons with the Patriots and snapped the ball to at least two quarterbacks, Jim Plunkett and Joe Kapp, who suffer from neurological disorders.​
Marty Schottenheimer, now 74 and a coach with an outstanding history, reports that he is struggling with Alzheimer’s. Bill Johnson, who played defensive back with Schottenheimer, lives with Alzheimer’s and has pledged his brain for research.​
The heroes of 1960’s and 70’s played football in a time when salaries were low and players relied on off-season work to make ends meet. Little was known about concussion and players were coached to lead with their heads. Concussion awareness in that era was low allowing players to be returned to the game often after a violent collision.​
Billy Johnson suffered a subdural hematoma attempting to take down Larry Csonka, a Dolphin’s running back in 1970. Johnson has no memory of the game but he participated in the next practice and played in the next game. He contemplates committing suicide as he lives with cognitive deficits and memory loss.​
John “Bull” Bramlett was known as “The Meanest Man in Football” joined the Patriots in 1969, He helped the team develop a reputation and earned much recognition for his ferocity of the field. He died at 73 from the complications of Alzheimer’s.​
Bill Lenkaitis studied dentistry in the off-seasons; joining the Patriots in 1971 he earned a spot on the Patriots All-Decade team. By his late 60’s he lost interest in his dental practice and according to his wife he was showing the signs associated with CTE. Lenkaitis died in 2016 from Glioblastoma, an aggressive brain cancer, but the toll of concussions was showing long before that.​
Dennis Wirgowski played football in high school and college and excelled in other sports, he joined the Patriots in 1970 and was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles in 1973. As he aged he lost the athleticism that had marked his life and following an orthopedic injury was confined to a wheelchair. He spoke with his football friends about his increasing depression and began to collect articles about former football players who committed suicide. On January 25, 2014 he killed himself with a borrowed shotgun.​
Many of these heroes of football are now out of sight as they live with disability or have died. It is important that we understand how multiple concussions changed their lives as we look for ways to increase concussion awareness and build greater safety into the game.​



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Interesting interview with Jon Morris and his wife Gail in the link above. He mentions how when he played football players had to take part time jobs in the offseason. Morris worked with a Boston food broker, which gave him enough experience to open up his own food brokerage when his football career ended. He and his wife are now retired to an impressive sounding home on a golf resort in South Carolina.



 
Happy 77th birthday to Eddie Ray
Born April 5, 1947 in Vicksburg, Mississippi
Patriot RB/TE, 1970; uniform #36
Pats 4th round (83rd overall) selection of the 1970 draft, from LSU

Eddie Ray was used sparingly (five games, one start, five carries) by John Mazur in 1970. He was on the verge of being cut at the end of training camp in 1971 when the Pats were able to trade him to San Diego in exchange for a 1972 7th round draft pick, which was used to select John Tarver. Eddie played in the NFL through 1976; his best season was in '73 for Atlanta when he scored 11 touchdowns.






Happy 53rd birthday to Bob 'Scooby' Kuberski
Born April 5, 1971 in Chester, Pennsylvania
Patriot DT, 1999; uniform #93
Signed as a veteran free agent on Sept 5, 1999

Kuberski served in the Navy for two years before playing in Green Bay for four years. He earned a Super Bowl ring there when the Packers defeated the Patriots in the 96-97 season. Scooby played in five games in a reserve role with the Pats in '99, then signed with Denver as a free agent the following spring.

Kuberski has enjoyed a very successful post-football career. Following his rookie season in Green Bay he worked as an intern at Associated Investment Services. He then worked as a financial advisor at Morgan Stanley, ten years as Regional VP for Invesco, and head of retail sales for Ridgeworth Capital Management. Kuberski is now the Director of Global Relationship Management at Eaton Vance Investment Managers.

12/5/1992: Navy Defensive Lineman Contemplates NFL | LA Times

10/1/2018: One Year In, a Top Sales Vet Rises at Eaton Vance

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Happy 30th birthday to Obi Melifonwu
Born April 5, 1994 in London
Patriot S, 2018-19; uniform #22
Signed as a free agent on November 6, 2018

Born in England, Melifonwu moved to the US at age three. He is a local guy, who went to Grafton High School and UConn. Obi was a second round draft pick by the Raiders in 2017. He only appeared in five games for Oakland, spending most of his two seasons there on injured reserve. Obi appeared in two games late in the 2018 season after signing with the Pats, getting 20 snaps on defense and 25 on special teams; he also appeared on special teams for the AFCCG versus Kansas City that postseason.

The Patriots signed Obi to the practice squad prior to week one in 2019, and he remained there until going on IR on November 16. He was re-signed to a future contract on January 6, and waived three days after the 2020 draft, on April 27. He last played in the NFL in 2021, and has since then played in the USFL and XFL.

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April 5, 1976: Patriots trade Jim Plunkett to 49ers
The Pats received a bevy of draft picks in return, plus backup QB Tom Owen. Two 1976 first round picks (Pete Brock, Tim Fox), a 1977 first (Raymond Clayborn), and a '77 second (Horace Ivory). It turned out to be one of the greatest trades in franchise history, if not NFL history.

For more on this transaction see the April 8th thread on the 1976 draft.




April 5, 1979: Ron Erhardt promoted to head coach.
Erhardt had been the OC for Chuck Fairbanks the previous two seasons. The Pats went 9-7 and 10-6 in his first two seasons, with the offense ranking second in points scored both times. However in 1981 the Pats ranked near the bottom in both takeaways and giveaways, going 2-14. That was the finish to Erhardt's head coaching career, though he did effectively work for 14 more seasons as the OC for the Giants and Steelers.




April 5, 2005: Free agent WR David Terrell signs with Pats.
Originally a #8 pick of the 2001 draft, Terrell was released at the end of training camp. He is more well known in Patriots folklore for being one of several players that Ron Borges lamented that the Pats should have drafted, rather than Richard Seymour and Matt Light.




April 5, 2012: Free agent LB Bobby Carpenter signs with Pats.
Carpenter was a first round pick by Dallas in 2006, who never quite lived up to his draft billing. Viewed as another reclamation project like Corey Dillon and Randy Moss, Carpenter was okay but not great - and was released four games into the 2012 season.
 
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Since there are no "News and Notes" columns on the weekend, I'll copy and paste old "April 6 in Pats History" pages here.


Today in Patriots History
Frank Robotti


Happy birthday to Frank Robotti
Born April 6, 1939 in Stamford, CT
Died August 14, 1971 at the age of 32
Patriot LB, 1961; uniform #51

Robotti was a linebacker and fullback from Stamford CT and Fairfield Prep; he moved northeast to play for Mike Holovak at Boston College, where he was also a standout baseball player. As a rookie he played in 12 games with seven starts and two interceptions for the Pats before chipping a bone in his right ankle on December 5, 1961. The Patriots drafted Nick Buoniconti the following off season and signed him to a no-cut contract, and with a roster limit of 33 players at that time, Robotti's playing days with the Pats were quickly over.


Below is a great article on Robotti, well worth taking the time to read:

Frank Robotti: The man behind the trophy | Stamford Advocate

Robotti moved to Florida, got married, did some coaching and worked for Coca-Cola.
The gang from Stamford stayed in touch until August 14, 1971 when Robotti was age 32.
"Frank was still close to all of us. But there was a car accident," said Gene Bonina. "Frank died. We were all shocked."
"There were two little girls in the car with Frank. There were no seat belts then," said Dom Lacerenza. "It was a two lane highway. A young kid, drunk driver swerved across the yellow line. He hit Frank's car head on but walked away without a scratch. Frank threw his body over the two girls and took the entire crash force. He saved their lives."
 
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Today in Patriots History
Bucko Kilroy
April 6, 1979
Francis "Bucko" Kilroy is named General Manager
Former Patriot offensive coordinator Ron Erhardt is named Head Coach

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Bucko Kilroy

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Ron Erhardt​




7/11/07: Legendary NFL player and executive Bucko Kilroy dies at 86 | Patriots.com

Kilroy was a member of the New England Patriots organization for the past 36 years, serving as personnel director (1971-78), general manager (1979-82), vice president (1983-93) and scouting consultant (1994-2007). He was a contributor to 14 of the club’s (first) 15 playoff seasons, including all five of the franchise’s trips to the Super Bowl (at that time).​
As personnel director of the Patriots, Kilroy was responsible for selecting the team’s two Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees, John Hannah (1973) and Mike Haynes (1976). He is credited with building some of the best teams in Patriots’ history, drafting Julius Adams, Hannah, Sam Cunningham, Steve Nelson, Russ Francis and Steve Grogan during his first five years as personnel director (1971-75). Over the next three years (1976-78), the Patriots compiled a 31-13 record (.705), including two playoff appearances.​



Speak My Language

The backbone of the Erhardt-Perkins system is that plays — pass plays in particular — are not organized by a route tree or by calling a single receiver’s route, but by what coaches refer to as “concepts.” Each play has a name, and that name conjures up an image for both the quarterback and the other players on offense. And, most importantly, the concept can be called from almost any formation or set. Who does what changes, but the theory and tactics driving the play do not. “In essence, you’re running the same play,” said Perkins. “You’re just giving them some window-dressing to make it look different.”​
The biggest advantage of the concept-based system is that it operates from the perspective of the most critical player on offense: the quarterback. In other systems, even if the underlying principles are the exact same, the play and its name might be very different. Rather than juggling all this information in real time, an Erhardt-Perkins quarterback only has to read a given arrangement of receivers. “You can cut down on the plays and get different looks from your formations and who’s in them. It’s easier for the players to learn. It’s easier for the quarterback to learn,” former Patriots offensive coordinator. “You get different looks without changing his reads. You don’t need an open-ended number of plays.”​
 
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Today in Patriots History
Charlie Long


In memory of Charlie Long
Born April 6, 1938 in DeKalb, Alabama
Died 12/16/89 at the age of 51 in Framingham
Patriot LG/LT, 1961-1969; uniform #76
Pats 8th round (59th overall) selection of the 1961 draft, from Tennessee-Chattanooga

Long became a starter at left tackle his rookie season and was an immediate upgrade at the position, replacing George McGee. He was named to the AFL All-Star team at LT in '62. The following year the Pats had a hole at left guard, and he moved inside to man that position. The transition went smoothly as the Pats made it to the AFL championship game, and Long was again named to the All-Star team.


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Charlie Long was a steady and reliable performer for the Patriots, missing just two games over his nine seasons with the Patriots. Along with his two All-Star selections, he was also awarded inclusion to the Patriots All-Decade Team of the 1960s.


Boston Patriots | Sports Illustrated - September 12, 1966

Charley Long | Pro Football Reference
 
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Today in Patriots History
Chad Eaton

Happy 52nd birthday to Chad Eaton
Born April 6, 1972 in Exeter, New Hampshire
Grew up in Puyallup, Washington
Patriot DL, 1996-2000; uniform #90
Signed to the Practice Squad on August 27, 1996

Eaton worked his way up from being a practice squad player cut by three other teams, to a starter on the Patriot defensive line. He performed well enough that it paid off with a $10 million free agent contract in 2001 with Seattle - though that also meant that Eaton missed out on the glory of Super Bowl 36.


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Eaton is one of the few players to be named both AFC Defensive Player of the Week (12/6/98) and Special Teams Player of the Week (12/17/00). For more on him, I highly recommend this article:

Ex-NFL player Eaton bringing attitude to CSU | Dayton Daily News

The following season he was picked up by New England, which is where he teamed with Ben Coates, the Pats’ standout tight end who is now the CSU offensive coordinator.​
He became popular with Patriots fans because of his blue-collar play and colorful ways.​
“I had gotten all the tattoos and did the wild stuff on the field because I thought it made people think I was a tough guy and crazy, so don’t mess with me,” Eaton said. “Then I realized I was tough enough and didn’t need all that.”​
He had some highlight games with the Pats — he sacked Kordell Stewart three times in one game, blocked two Buffalo field goals in another, returned a fumble 23 yards for a score against Baltimore — then became an unrestricted free agent in 2001 and went back home to Seattle, where he signed a four-year deal worth $10.7 million.​


At the time the Eaton article above was published in 2011, it created a buzz and 'tsk tsk Patriots' finger-pointing from Pats haters for this snippet:

“That first season I was cut by three teams (the Jets and Ravens, too) and finally ended up on Cleveland’s practice squad.”​
His grit and energy caught the interest of head coach Bill Belichick and they forged a pact.​
“If practice was going slow, he’d look at me and just say, ‘It’s time,’ ” Eaton said. “He wanted me to get on somebody’s (case) and start a little fight. I was known for that and it paid off on Fridays. There’d always be some extra money in my locker. Practice players don’t make much, so I really appreciated it.”
 
Today in Patriots History
Jalen Mills
Happy 30th birthday to Jalen Mills
Born April 6, 1994 in DeSoto, Texas
Patriot CB/FS, 2021-2023
Acquired as a veteran free agent on March 19, 2021

The 'Green Goblin' was a 7th round draft pick out of LSU in 2016 by Philadelphia. He played in 63 games over five seasons for the Eagles, registering 283 tackles and five interceptions. In 2020 Mills showcased the versatility Bill Belichick coveted while on the field for 92% of Philly's defensive snaps, lining up as a strong safety, free safety, perimeter corner and slot corner; he was also on the field for 82 special team snaps.

The Patriots originally signed Mills to a four-year deal worth $24 million in 2021, then renegioted that to a one-year, $2.5 million contract in 2023. After appearing on 90% of the defensive snaps for the Patriots in 2021, his playing time decreased; in 2023 Mills was on the field for only 40% of the defense's snaps. In three seasons with the Pats he appeared in 43 games with 34 starts, registering two interceptions, on forced fumble, one fumble recovery, 13 pass deflections, 123 tackles, two quarterback hits and three tackles for a loss.

The New York Giants signed Mills as an unrestricted veteran free agent to a one-year contract worth $1,377,500 on March 12, 2024.


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The Green Goblin​
 
Today in Patriots History


Happy 35th birthday to Jeremy Ebert
Born April 6, 1989 in Hilliard, Ohio
Patriot WR, 2012-2013; uniform #80
Pats 7th round (235th overall) selection of the 2012 draft, from Northwestern

Ebert caught 137 passes for 2,013 yards and 19 touchdowns in his final two seasons at Northwestern. The Pats cut him at the end of the 2012 training camp, and the Eagles signed him to their practice squad. He rejoined the Pats in November, signed to the practice squad after James Develin was promoted to the 53-man roster. The Patriots released Ebert following the 2013 draft, after selecting Aaron Dobson and Josh Boyce, and then signing undrafted rookie free agents TJ Moe and Kenbrell Thompkins for the wide receiver position.

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In 2013 Ebert bounced back and forth between Jacksonville's 53-man roster and their practice squad, Ross Ventrone-like on an almost weekly basis.

Ebert finished his NFL career with three receptions for 18 yards.







Happy 35th birthday to Cyhl Quarles
Born April 6, 1989 in Tucker, Georgia
Patriot safety, 2012; uniform #49
Signed to the practice squad Sept 12, 2012

The former Raven was released two weeks later to make room for DL Marcus Forston. The Pats then re-signed Quarles to their practice squad in December. After the 2012 season ended and practice squad players become free agents, he signed with Chicago. Quarles was cut before the end of the 2013 training camp, ending his NFL career. He now works as an account executive for Ricoh in Baltimore.




Happy 60th birthday to Adrian White
Born April 6, 1964 in April Park, Florida
Patriot safety, 1993; uniform #38

White was a career backup and special teams player. He re-joined with Bill Parcells in '93 after five NFL seasons, the first four having been with the Giants. He played in each of the first five games of the '93 season for the Patriots, with four starts.

From 1999 to 2000 White coached football at various levels, primarily as a defensive backs position coach. He was in the WLAF/NFL Europe for 11 years, Southern Illinois University for two seasons and Indiana State for one. White was also with the Buffalo Bills from 2008-2012, and spent one year in Arena football.

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Happy 60th birthday to Jon Sawyer
Born April 6, 1964 in Hialeah, Florida
Patriot safety, 1987; uniform #31

The former University of Cincinnati Bearcat was a replacement player during the '87 strike season under Raymond Berry.

30 years ago this month, replacement football came to Foxborough | Boston Sports Journal - Christopher Price





April 6, 2006: Pats sign free agents Martin Gramática and Tebucky Jones
Gramática was a very successful kicker for the Bucs, most known for his over the top celebrations after every successful field goal. The Patriots signed him as insurance, in case then-rookie Stephen Gostkowski struggled; Grámatica was released well before the end of training camp when it was obvious that was not going to be the case.

2006 was Tebucky Jones' second stint with the Patriots, after two seasons with the Saints and one in Miami. He was placed on season ending injured reserve with a pulled hamstring just prior to week one, and released at the end of the season.




April 6, 2018: Pats sign UFA WR Jordan Mathews
Matthews was penciled in to be the starting wideout, opposite Chris Hogan, with Malcolm Mitchell, Philip Dorsett and Cordarelle Patterson adding depth. Hamstring injuries placed him on the shelf in training camp, and rather than wait for that to heal the Pats released him on August 7th. That decision would be second guessed as Mitchell and Kenny Britt were also released, Dorsett failed to progress, Patterson was limited to return duties and jet sweeps, and the Pats eventually had to trade for Josh Gordon.
 
Today in Patriots History
Obscure Tight Ends, and other April 7 Birthdays



April 7, 2008
Patriots sign veteran free agent linebacker Victor Hobson, after five years with the Jets. There were high expectations for Hobson, but strong training camp performances by rookies Jerod Mayo and Gary Guyton resulted in Hobson's release at the end of camp.




Happy 52nd birthday to Lovett Purnell
Born April 7, 1972 in Seaford, Delaware
Patriot TE, 1996-1998; uniform #48, #85
Pats 7th round (216th overall) selection of the 1996 draft, from West Virginia

Lovett Purnell had four receptions for 90 yards and two touchdowns in the 1995 Blue-Gray Game. He played in 34 games with seven starts over three seasons with the Pats. With limited playing time as a backup to All Pro Ben Coates, he had five touchdowns on 19 catches for 159 yards, averaging 8.4 yards per catch. Purnell also had two receptions in three playoff games with the Patriots. He became expendable after Pete Carroll drafted Rod Rutledge in the second round of the 1998 draft. On April 1, 1999 the Pats traded Purnell to Baltimore for a sixth round draft pick.

Purnell only appeared in a couple of games with the Ravens in '99, and finished his pro football career with Chicago in the XFL in 2001. In his post-football life he enjoyed success in the telecom industry, residing in Tampa.

In 2007 Purnell was inducted to the Delaware Sports Museum and Hall of Fame.

Lovett was a four-year starter at Seaford in football, basketball and baseball. He was named first team All-State a total of five times in three major sports, and starred in the Delaware All-Star game in each sport. In football, Purnell led the state in scoring and was named the News Journal Player of the Year. In the Blue-Gold All-Star Football Game, he became the first player in history to win both major awards – The Jim Williams Sportsmanship Award and MVP. In basketball, he finished his career with 1,563 points, second only at Seaford to Delino DeShields. After a brilliant high school baseball career, he was drafted by the Chicago White Sox. Lovett chose to attend Valley Forge, where he was captain and MVP in all three sports and was inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame. At WVU, he was a football captain, and All Big East selection. Lovett led the team in receptions, setting a WVU single-season record for tight ends. Named the team MVP, he was also named to the WVU All-Century team. While playing in the Carquest Bowl, Lovett caught two touchdown passes.


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Happy 34th birthday to Tim Wright
Born April 7, 1990 in Wall Township, New Jersey
Patriot TE, 2014; uniform #81

Wright is most well known for being the player that the Patriots received when Logan Mankins was traded to Tampa. Overlooked at the time was the fact that New England also received a 4th round draft pick, which turned out to pay better dividends for the Pats: that pick was used to select Trey Flowers. He had previously played for Greg Schiano at both Rutgers and Tampa Bay.

Tim Wright had six touchdown receptions with the Pats in 2014, appearing in all 16 games with 8 starts. He had 26 receptions for 259 yards (10.0 ypc), but was waived prior to the start of training camp the following year.

The Bucs re-signed Wright, then traded him to Detroit prior to week one in 2015. He didn't do much with the Lions (9 receptions for 77 yards and 2 TD) in '15, and spent 2016 on IR. KC signed him in 2018, but he did not make the 53-man roster. His career NFL stat line is 907 yards on 89 receptions, with 16 touchdowns in 41 games. He also has a ring from the Pats from the Super Bowl victory over Seattle.

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In memory of Bob Suci, who would have been 85 today
Born April 7, 1939 in Flint, Michigan
Died 12/21/15 in Grand Blanc, MI
Patriot CB/PR, 1963; uniform #21

Bob Suci spent four seasons in the AFL with the Oilers and Patriots, but unfortunately a knee injury cut his career short. In 1963 he appeared in all 14 games for the Patriots, averaging 9.3 yards on 25 punt returns and 21.2 yards on 17 kickoff returns. That same year Suci led the AFL in pick-sixes (2) and interception return yardage (277). His 98-yard TD interception off George Blanda was the highlight of a 45-3 rout over the Houston at Fenway Park on November 1, 1963. The crucial victory put the Patriots and Oilers in a first place tie.

Suci was in on nine turnovers for that '63 Patriot defense, with seven interceptions and two fumble recoveries. The Pats ranked first in yards allowed and second in points allowed that year, claiming the franchise's first title (AFL East) and first ever playoff victory in a 26-8 victory at Buffalo.

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Legend of former Michigan State, AFL player Bob Suci still lives on after death

Greater Flint Area Sports Hall of Fame




Happy 74th birthday to Kenny Price
Born April 7, 1950 in Houston
Patriot LB, 1971; uniform #54

Kenny Price was signed as an undrafted free agent out of Iowa by Dallas in 1971. He spent time on the taxi squad, and appeared in just one game with the Patriots. That was on December 19, 1971 when John Mazur's squad upset Johnny Unitas and the Baltimore Colts 21-17. The winning points came on an 88-yard 4th quarter touchdown pass from Jim Plunkett to Randy Vataha; that was the second Plunkett-to-Vataha TD connection of the day.

That was the final regular season game in '71, with the Pats finishing 6-8: a four-win improvement over the previous season. It was also Kenny Price's one and only NFL game.

On the Wikipedia page for the 1971 draft Price is listed as one of eleven notable undrafted players. Apparently their definition of notable and mine differs.




Happy 34th birthday to Jemea Thomas
Born April 7, 1990 in Fitzgerald, Georgia
Patriot CB, 2014; uniform #21
Pats 6th round (206th overall) selection of the 2014 draft, from Georgia Tech

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Patriots Found Upside in Georgia Tech Do-It-All Jemea Thomas | NEPatriotsDraft.com

8/26/14: Patriots Cut Six, Including Sixth-Round Pick Jemea Thomas | NESN

The New England Patriots already cut ties with a 2014 sixth-round draft pick, cornerback Jemea Thomas.​
The Patriots whittled down their roster to 75 players Tuesday by waiving Thomas, defensive lineman Ben Bass, defensive back Travis Hawkins, wide receivers Derrick Johnson and Wilson Van Hooser and linebacker Deontae Skinner. The Patriots also placed running back Tyler Gaffney and linebacker Cameron Gordon on injured reserve.​

Thomas was picked up by the Cowboys, and then the Rams and Titans. His NFL career consisted of 28 special team snaps over two games in 2014, one each with St. Louis and Tennessee. Thomas' last pro football stop was with the Titans for their training camp in 2015.



Other notable pro football players born today include Tony Dorsett, Ronde and Tiki Barber, Steve Wiesniewski and Ricky Watters.
 


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