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Today In Patriots History September 19, 1971: Plunkett makes debut in 1st regular season game in Foxborough

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Today in Patriots History
1971: Jim Plunkett, Julius Adams make their NFL debut
First regular season game at Schaefer Stadium
14½-point underdog Pats shock Raiders, NFL in 20-6 upset



Sunday Sept 19, 1971 at 1:00
Week 1, Game 1 at Schaefer Stadium
New England Patriots 20, Oakland Raiders 6
Head Coaches: John Mazur, John Madden
QBs: Jim Plunkett; Daryle Lamonica/George Blanda/Ken Stabler
Odds: Raiders favored by 14½



By the time the season opener arrived on Sept. 19, Plunkett was ready. The rookie's much anticipated debut was a surprising success, as New England upset the heavily favored Oakland Raiders, 20-6.​

Oakland fumbled six times and Plunkett tossed two scoring passes in the amazing victory. The win began a roller-coaster season for the Patriots. After losing its next two games in one-sided affairs, New England rose up to shut out the New York Jets, 20-0.​





The New England Patriots were a franchise reborn as they hosted the Oakland Raiders in their home opener on September 19, 1971. Stadium issues had been a chronic problem for the club since entering the American Football League as the Boston Patriots in 1960, but now they had a new 60,000-seat stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts, and a new name as a result. They also had a new quarterback in Jim Plunkett (pictured below), the overall top draft choice who had won the Heisman Trophy at Stanford. The team was in need of refurbishment on the field, having gone 2-12 in 1970, the fourth straight losing record. John Mazur had taken over as head coach halfway through the previous season and was starting his first full year at the helm.​


The Raiders were a far more successful team, having reached the postseason for the fourth straight year in ’70 with an 8-4-2 record. Youthful John Madden was commencing his third season as head coach and still had plenty of talent on both sides of the ball, even if there were some concerns. Star QB Daryle Lamonica had a lesser passing year and was lifted in favor of 43-year-old QB George Blanda several times the previous season, and now the promising Ken Stabler was being added to the mix. Off-field problems had removed the top deep threat, WR Warren Wells. On defense, there was a need for some retooling and they would be starting a rookie, Jack Tatum, at free safety in place of the departed Dave Grayson.​


There were 55,405 fans in attendance at Schaefer Stadium on a cool, sunny day. The Raiders drove into New England territory on their first possession, but a holding penalty moved them out of scoring range and they had to punt. A short series by the Patriots also ended in a punt and the home team got a break when a scrambling Daryle Lamonica fumbled and LB Ed Philpott recovered at the Oakland 41.​


Daryle Lamonica​

The Patriots also had a promising drive that was stymied by a holding penalty, and they were forced to punt in turn. Neither team was able to move effectively in the next few possessions until, with 4:50 left in the half, the Raiders put together a 60-yard drive in 10 plays. HB Don Highsmith ran the ball four consecutive times for 26 yards and Lamonica completed two passes. HB Pete Banaszak finished the possession off with a sweep around left end for a four-yard touchdown. However, a bad snap on the extra point attempt forced Oakland to abort and the score remained 6-0.


Bob Gladieux​

The Raiders had a chance to pad their lead when HB Bob Gladieux fumbled the kickoff return and Jack Tatum recovered. With 49 seconds on the clock and the ball at the New England 44, Lamonica (above) completed a pass to WR Fred Biletnikoff for 20 yards, but two passes into the end zone were overthrown and, while a penalty and six-yard run by FB Marv Hubbard advanced the ball to the 13, George Blanda missed wide to the right on a 21-yard field goal attempt. The score remained unchanged at halftime.


George Blanda​

The Patriots had the first possession in the third quarter and again had to punt. Oakland reached the New England 43 before having to punt as well, but again there was a miscue on special teams. A bad snap forced Mike Eischeid to try to run and he was downed at the 50. The Patriots struck quickly as Plunkett, who completed just one pass in the first half, threw to WR Ron Sellers for eight yards, Gladieux ran for another nine, and then Plunkett connected with Sellers again for a 33-yard TD. Charlie Gogolak added the extra point and the home team was in front by 7-6.

A three-and-out series by the Raiders resulted in another punt and the resurgent Patriots put together a 70-yard drive in five plays. On second down, Plunkett tossed a pass to WR Randy Vataha that gained 39 yards to the Oakland 27. Two plays later, and following an illegal procedure call on the Patriots, Plunkett rolled out and threw to Sellers for 12 yards and then found TE Roland Moss all alone for a 20-yard touchdown. Gogolak converted and New England was now up by 14-6.


Randy Vataha​

It got worse for the Raiders as Banaszak fumbled on the next series and the Patriots regained possession at the Oakland 42 in the waning seconds of the period. The result was a 46-yard Gogolak field goal early in the fourth quarter and an extended lead of 17-6.​


Ken Stabler​

The Raiders again had to punt but got the ball back two plays later when Plunkett’s pass was intercepted by CB Nemiah Wilson at his own 40. Ken Stabler was now in at quarterback but the result was another short series and a punt. Almost exclusively keeping the ball on the ground, the Patriots put together another scoring drive. Gladieux and HB Carl Garrett handled the running load effectively and, when Plunkett did try a pass, Oakland was called for roughing the passer. The result was another field goal by Gogolak, this time from 22 yards.​


Carl Garrett​

Now it was the aged veteran George Blanda behind center for the Raiders, and a carry by HB Clarence Davis gained 39 yards to the New England 25. But Blanda, attempting to pass, fumbled and while the Raiders recovered, it was all the way back at the 42. Two plays later a Blanda throw was intercepted by CB Larry Carwell to effectively seal the 20-6 win for the Patriots with 1:55 to play. As the clock ran down, the enthusiastic home crowd gave the Patriots a long standing ovation.​


The Raiders led in total yards (304 to 261) and first downs (20 to 12). They also turned the ball over four times, to three suffered by New England, and were called for seven penalties at a cost of 80 yards, as opposed to four penalties for 37 yards on the Patriots.​


Jim Plunkett completed just six of 15 passes for 127 yards and two touchdowns with one interception, but was five of eight for 113 yards during the third quarter rally. Carl Garrett rushed for 78 yards on 16 carries and Bob Gladieux contributed 48 yards on 11 attempts. Ron Sellers (pictured above) led the receivers with three catches for 54 yards and a TD.​

For the Raiders, Daryle Lamonica was successful on 9 of 23 throws for 105 yards with no TDs or interceptions. Ken Stabler and George Blanda combined to go two of eight for 17 yards with one pass picked off. Pete Banaszak ran for 71 yards on 15 attempts that included a touchdown and also topped the team in pass receiving with three catches for 38 yards. Fred Biletnikoff was right behind with three receptions for 34 yards. Marv Hubbard gained 50 yards on 10 carries.​

The stunning early win did not signal an immediate turnaround for the Patriots, who won only one of their next six games, but they did come out on top of four contests during the second half of the season and finished up at 6-8, good enough to place third in the AFC East and the team’s best record since 1966. Jim Plunkett passed for 2158 yards and 19 touchdowns and received NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year honors from the Pro Football Writers and consensus AFC Rookie of the Year recognition.​

Oakland didn’t lose again until Week 11, going 7-0-2 during that stretch, but then lost three straight games to end up second in the AFC West with another 8-4-2 record and out of the playoffs.​


Unable to find a place to play in Boston, Owner Billy Sullivan made plans to finance the building of one on land donated by the Bay State Raceway in Foxboro. The stadium at cost of $7.1 million took just one year to build, with a cost overrun of $200,000. To help offset the expense of building a new stadium, Sullivan sold the naming rights to Schaefer Beer. It was one of the earliest examples of a stadium having a cooperate sponsorship. With the move to Foxboro, also came a name change for the team. With Foxboro located halfway between Boston and Providence, the Patriots originally were going to be called the Bay State Patriots, but the name seemed clunky. Instead, they became the New England Patriots marketing themselves to the entire region.​


After finishing 2-12 the previous season, the Patriots with the number one overall pick chose Heiman Winner Jim Plunkett out of Stanford. The Patriots coached by John Mazur were hoping Plunkett was the franchise quarterback who could turn around the struggling franchise. The Patriots first game at Schaffer Stadium came against the Oakland Raiders, one of the premier teams in the AFC, who had lost in the Conference Championship three straight seasons after playing in Super Bowl II. The game turned into a defensive battle, as the Raiders scored the only points in the first half on a touchdown run by Pete Banaszak, missing the extra point. The Patriots got on the board in the third quarter on a 33-yard pass to Ron Sellers, add a second touchdown later with a 20-yard pass to Roland Moss. The John Madden led Raiders appeared to not be ready to start the season, as they fumbled six times. The Patriots would add a pair of field goals by Charlie Gogolak in the fourth quarter and won the game 20-6. In his debut, Jim Plunkett completed 6-of-15 passes for 127 yards with two touchdowns and an interception.​





3:09 Highlight Video
1971 Raiders at Patriots week 1



23:07 Game of the Week
1971 Raiders at Pats - Rams at Saints GOTW week 1




Original NFL Media Game Summary

Box Score, Team & Individual Stats:
 
Today in Patriots History
September 19 Birthdays



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- 1964 AFL Coach of the Year
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1961 Boston Patriots highlight film



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1962 Boston Patriots highlight film "Professional Football with the Boston Patriots"



27:47 Highlight Video
1964 Boston Patriots highlight film "The Spirit of the New Boston" Gino Cappelletti Babe Parilli



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Boston Patriots 1966 Highlights- 34 min





Stephon Gilmore, 34 (1990)
Patriots CB, 2017-2020
- 56 Games, plus 7 Postseason Games with Pats
- 11 Interceptions, 2 Pick-Sixes, plus two postseason interceptions
- Super Bowl 53 Champion
- NFL Defensive Player of the Year, 2019
- Two-time First Team All Pro (2018, 2019)
- Three-time Pro Bowler (2018, 2019, 2020)
- NFL Interception Leader (2019)
- Patriots All-2010s Team
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8:33 Highlight Video
Stephon Gilmore - Patriots Career Highlights





Kenny Britt, 36 (1988)
Patriots WR, 2017
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Today in Patriots History
2021: Mac Jones gets his first NFL win
Jets grounded; Patriots 25, Jete 6



Sunday Sept 19, 2021 at 1:00
Week 2, Game 2 at MetLife Stadium
New England Patriots 25, New York Jets 6
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Robert Saleh
QBs: Mac Jones, Zach Wilson
Odds: Patriots favored by 6



Nick Folk kicked four field goals, and the Pats scored on touchdown runs by James White (7 yards) and Damien Harris (26 yards) to defeat the Jets. The Pats defense forced four turnovers, with two interceptions by JC Jackson, and one each by Devin McCourty abd Adrian Phillips off Zach Wilson.




13:29 NFL Highlight Video
Patriots vs. Jets Week 2 Highlights | NFL 2021




Box Score, Team & Individual Stats, and Full Play-by-Play:
 
Today in Patriots History
2004: Daniel Graham scores on two TB12 passes
New England 23, Arizona 12



Sunday Sept 19, 2004 at 4:15
Week 2, Game 2 at Sun Devil Stadium
New England Patriots 23, Arizona Cardinals 12
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Dennis Green
QBs: Tom Brady, Josh McCown
Odds: Patriots favored by 8



The Patriots jumped out to a 14-0 lead on two touchdown receptions by Daniel Graham, and cruised to a 23-12 win in the desert. David Givens had six receptions for 120 yards, and Corey Dillon was at his clock-killing best, rushing for 158 yards on 32 carries. Adam Vinatieri added three second-half field goals to seal the victory.


Daniel Graham caught a pair of touchdown passes from Tom Brady as the New England Patriots defeated the Arizona Cardinals, 23-12.​
Brady was 15-of-26 for 217 yards, but was intercepted twice and lost a fumble.​
Corey Dillon rushed 32 times for 158 yards for the Patriots (2-0), who won their 17th straight game, including last year's playoffs.​
The defending Super Bowl champs owned possession for nearly 10 minutes longer than the Cardinals, while gaining 377 yards of total offense compared with 167 for Arizona.​
Arizona quarterback Josh McCown completed just 13-of-29 passes for 160 yards and was intercepted twice.​


1:31 Highlight Video
2004 Patriots at Cardinals Week 2



2:22:51 Full Game
2004 Patriots @ Cardinals





Box Score, Team & Individual Stats, and Full Play-by-Play:
 
Today in Patriots History
1999: Pats finish with 24 unanswered points
Peyton chokes, Pats win 31-28



Sunday Sept 19, 1999 at 1:00
Week 2, Game 2 at Sun Devil Stadium
New England Patriots 23, Arizona Cardinals 12
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Dennis Green
QBs: Tom Brady, Josh McCown
Odds: Patriots favored by 8



The Patriots overcome a 28-7 halftime deficit to defeat the Colts in Peyton Manning's second career visit to Foxborough.

The Colts second half possessions consisted of:
- punt
- punt
- punt
- fumble
- punt
- fumble
- interception


The Patriots committed 15 penalties eating up 135 yards and trailed 28–7 at halftime. Drew Bledsoe got off the mat and answered with a touchdown pass to Terry Allen and two TDs to Ben Coates to tie the game late in the fourth quarter. The two scores by Coates came off a Marcus Pollard fumble and a Manning three-and-out forced by Ty Law. Edgerrin James was then stripped by Tebucky Jones, setting up a 26-yard game-winning Adam Vinatieri field goal FTW.

It seemed inconceivable at the time, but Ben Coates' two fourth-quarter scores turned out to be the last touchdowns of his illustrious, should-be-in-the-hall-of-fame career.


Drew Bledsoe, down by 28-7 at halftime, kept his cool and threw three of his four touchdown passes in the second half as New England stunned Indianapolis.​
The defense, victimized in the first half by three touchdown passes from Peyton Manning to Marvin Harrison and a 1-yard scoring run by Edgerrin James, also kept cool.​
The Patriots allowed just 79 yards in the second half after giving up 265 in the first.​
Bledsoe threw an 8-yard touchdown pass to Terry Allen in the third quarter and 3- and 10-yarders to Ben Coates in the fourth before Adam Vinatieri won the game with a 26-yard field goal with 35 seconds left.​
The costliest Colts turnover was made by James (32 carries for 118 yards), the No. 4 overall pick in the draft who had run for 112 yards in his N.F.L. debut a week earlier. He fumbled with 2 minutes 32 seconds to go and the score tied at 28-28. Brandon Mitchell recovered at the Indianapolis 37, starting the drive toward Vinatieri's field goal.​



Chris Carter looks for running room during the Pats victory over the Colts on 9/19/99


1:55 Highlight Video
1999 Colts at Patriots Week 2



2:29:31 Full Game
1999 Week 2 - Indianapolis Colts at New England Patriots




Box Score, Team & Individual Stats, and Full Play-by-Play:
 
Today in Patriots History
1976: Fairbanks' Pats make a statement
Grogan throws three touchdowns, shuts Shula's Dolphins down
Ten-point home underdog Patriots smother Miami, 30-14



Sunday Sept 19, 1976 at 1:00
Week 2, Game 2 at Schaefer Stadium
New England Patriots 30, Miami Dolphins 14
Head Coaches: Chuck Fairbanks, Don Shula
QBs: Steve Grogan, Bob Griese
Odds: Dolphins favored by 10



The Patriots bullied the arrogant Miami Dolphins in a 30-14 victory in Foxborough. New England rushed for a commanding 278 yards, and held a 430-254 yard advantage in total yards of offense. Sam Cunningham rushed for 106 yards, and Andy Johnson totaled 128 yards from scrimmage to put the arrogant and heavily favored Dolphins in their place. The Pats defense forced four turnovers, including interceptions by Mike Haynes, Prentice McCray and Steve Nelson.


Steve Grogan, New England's second year quarterback out of Kansas State, who replaced the traded Jim Plunkett enjoyed his finest pro game yesterday. He directed a 30?14 upset victory over the Miami Dolphins at the Patriots’ Foxboro Stadium.​
Grogan passed for three touchdowns and scored on a 15?yard run for the Patriots go?ahead touchdown, late in the first half. The Dolphins had won seven of their previous eight games against the Pats, were undefeated in preseason play this year and took their season opener against Buffalo last Monday night. But yesterday they were completely outclassed by the Patriots.​
Besides connecting on touchdown passes of 15 and 29 yards to his running back, Andy Johnson, and a 4?yard scoring toss to Russ Francis, a tight end, Grogan exhibited some of his collegiate running form. He rushed for 76 yards including the 15?yard touchdown run.​
New England's often?criticized defense turned in a superb performance, intercepting three Bob Griese passes and holding the Dolphins to 27 yards on the ground in the first half, while building a 13?7 lead. The Patriots held Miami to just 108 yards rushing for the game.​


John Smith added a 22?yard field goal for the Patriots, who evened their won?lost record and Miami's at 1?1. The Dolphins took the lead only once (7?6), at 13:12 of the second period, when Griese capped a six?play, 76?yard drive with a 5?yard scoring pass to Andre Tillman. Barry Hill, the Dolphins’ safety, had blocked Smith's conversion attempt after New England's first touchdown.​
Al Chandler, a reserve tight end, recovered a fumble by Nat Moore, a Miami punt returner and set up Grogan's touchdown run. That put the Pats ahead to stay at 14:49 of the second period. Grogan completed 16 of 27 passes for 167 yards, and Johnson caught six for 93 yards.​



1:00 Highlight Video
9/19/1976 Miami Dolphins at New England Patriots highlights, National Football League Week 2





Official NFL Media Game Summary


Box Score, Team & Individual Stats:
 
Today in Patriots History
Other September 19 Games



Thursday Sept 19, 2024 at 8:15
Week 3, Game 3 at MetLife Stadium
New York Jets 24, New England Patriots 3
Head Coaches: Jerod Mayo, Robert Saleh
QBs: Jacoby Brissett, Aaron Rodgers
Odds: Jets favored by 6
Pats drop to 1-2; Jets advance to 2-1





Sunday Sept 19, 2010 at 4:15
Week 2, Game 2 at "New Meadowlands Stadium"
New York Jets 28, New England Patriots 14
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Rex Ryan
QBs: Tom Brady, Mark Sanchez
Odds: Patriots favored by 3
Pats drop to 1-1; Jets advance to 1-1





Sunday Sept 19, 1993 at 1:00
Week 3, Game 3 at Foxboro Stadium
Seattle Seahawks 17, New England Patriots 14
Head Coaches: Bill Parcells, Tom Flores
QBs: Drew Bledsoe, Rick Mirer
Odds: Patriots favored by 2½
Pats drop to 0-3; Seahawks advance to 1-2





Sunday Sept 19, 1982 at 1:00
Week 2, Game 2 at Schaefer Stadium
New York Jets 31, New England Patriots 7
Head Coaches: Ron Meyer, Walt Michaels
QBs: Matt Cavanaugh, Richard Todd
Odds: Jets favored by 1
Pats drop to 1-1; Jets advance to 1-1





Sunday Sept 19, 1965 at 2:30
Week 2, Game 2 at Rice Stadium
Houston Oilers 31, Boston Patriots 10
Head Coaches: Mike Holovak, Hugh Taylor
QBs: Babe Parilli, Eddie Wilson; George Blanda, Don Trull
Odds: Oilers favored by 4
Pats drop to 0-2; Oilers improve to 2-0



4:54 Highlight Film
9/19/1965 Boston Patriots at Houston Oilers highlights, American Football League Week 2
 
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