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Today in Patriots History
4th quarter comeback over Jaguars
Colts turn up the heat



Sunday January 21, 2018 at 3:00
2017 AFC Championship Game at Gillette
New England Patriots 24, Jacksonville Jaguars 20
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Doug Marrone
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Blake Bortles
Odds: Patriots favored by 7½

Pats improve to 15-3; advance to Super Bowl 52 vs Philadelphia
Jaguars finish 12-7

The 2017 Jacksonville Jaguars had a great defense, ranked second in scoring, yardage and turnovers. They limited Buffalo to three points in their wild card game, then won a 45-42 shootout at Pittsburgh to advance to the AFC championship game.

What the Jags did not have was Danny Amendola and Tom Brady.


This play from the AFCCG still haunts the Jaguars | boston.com

The Jaguars did just about everything right through three-plus quarters against the defending Super Bowl champions. The defense pressured Tom Brady, sacking him three times. The offense controlled the clock, keeping the three-time league MVP on the sideline. Together, they built a lead and stretched it to 20-10 with a field goal early in the final frame.​
After that came a play that Jacksonville fans and players are still bitter about, and will be for years. Myles Jack forced a fumble and recovered the ball, with a clear path for a touchdown. Problem was that the referee had blown the whistle and the play was dead. While the Jaguars did maintain possession the lead remained at 10 rather than 17.​




The Patriots forced a three-and-out and got the ball back. Then on a third-and-18 from their own 25 with 10:49 left to play, Brady connected with Danny Amendola on a 21 yard pass for a first down. The next play was a 31 yard completion to Phillip Dorsett, then the Pats found the end zone on two more passes to Amendola.


Both teams punted on their next possession, but Jacksonville began the next drive deep in their own territory. The Jaguars had to punt once again, this time from their nine yard line. Amendola returned the kick 20 yards to the Jacksonville 30, with 4:58 left to play. Five plays later Brady connected with 'Dola again to give the Patriots a four point lead.

Check out the highlights [19:06] below:





Sunday January 21, 2007 at 6:45
2006 AFC Championship Game at the RCA Dome
Indianapolis Colts 38, New England Patriots 34
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Tony Dungy
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: Indy favored by 3

Pats finish 14-5
Colts improve to 15-4; play Bears in SB 41

Tony Dungy and Peyton Manning finally beat the Patriots to advance to the Super Bowl. The Patriots jumped out to a 21-3 lead after an Asante Samuel 39 yard pick six, but the Colts battled back to tie the game three times, and then scored the winning touchdown with 60 seconds left to play.

About half of the Patriot defense was sick with the flu, and television announcer Jim Nantz commented that the stadium felt like a sauna. Bill Polian had allegedly ordered stadium workers to turn off the air conditioning and turn on the heat, though that report was never factually confirmed.

In a bit of trivia three linemen scored touchdowns in this game: Logan Mankins and Jeff Saturday on fumble recoveries in the end zone, and former Patriot Dan Klecko on a one yard reception.

Highlights [11:15]


Full Game





Happy 28th birthday to Jordan Richards
Born January 21, 1993 in Sacramento
Patriot safety, 2015-2017, uniform #37; 2019, uniform #39
Pats 2nd round (64th overall) selection of the 2015 draft, from Stanford

Jordan Richards played in 44 regular season games and 5 playoff games with New England, with seven starts. He was used primarily on special teams, never quite living up to his draft status. The Pats traded Jordan on August 31, 2018 to Atlanta for a conditional 2020 seventh round draft pick.

After spending time with the Falcons and Raiders, the Pats re-signed Richards on October 2, 2019. He played in three games, strictly on special teams, and was released. Richards spent the remainder of the season with the Ravens.

2015: 238 defensive snaps (25%), 253 special team snaps (60%) in 14 games
2016: 18 defensive snaps (2.5%), 151 ST snaps (50%) in 11 games
2017: 272 defensive snaps (26%), 309 ST snaps (69%) in 16 games
2019: zero defensive snaps, 57 special team snaps (13%) in three games

Career stats with Patriots: 50 tackles (41 solo), 3 passes defensed, 2 forced fumbles and one fumble recovery. 528 snaps on defense and 770 on special teams. Jordan earned a ring for Super Bowl 51 versus Atlanta, though he did not play in that game.




Happy 31st birthday to Kanorris Davis
Born January 21, 1990 in Perry, Georgia
Patriot ST/SS/LB 2013-14; uniform #36
Signed as an undrafted free agent on May 3, 2013 from Troy

Kanorris Davis played in three regular season and two playoff games for the Patriots in 2013, bouncing between the active roster and practice squad three times. During that time he was on the field for 53 special team snaps (64%), and zero on defense.

Davis was initially signed to the practice squad again after being cut at the end of 2014 training camp. Less than a week later Davis was released again, as the Pats signed WR Marcus Thigpen, OL Chris Barker and TE Allen Reisner to the practice squad. Davis went on to play for the Toronto Argonauts in the CFL, but his pro football career ended in 2016 due to a knee injury.






Happy 36th birthday to Dan Gronkowski
Born January 21, 1985 in Amherst NY
Patriot TE in 2011; uniform #82
Signed as a free agent on September 6, 2011

The elder Gronk played in five games with one start while with the Patriots. He was originally a seventh round draft pick by Detroit in 2009, from Maryland. Dan also played for Denver prior to coming to Foxborough, and for Cleveland after the Pats waived him on November 8, 2011. Between those four teams he played in 21 NFL games, with five starts and nine receptions.




Happy 40th birthday to Johnathan Sullivan
Born January 21, 1981 in Griffin, Georgia
Patriot DT, 2006 offseason
Acquired from New Orleans on June 5, 2006 in trade for Bethel Johnson

Johnathan Sullivan was originally the sixth overall pick of the 2003 draft. The Saints had traded up to snag Sullivan in a lopsided trade with Arizona that netted the Cardinals DE/LB Calvin Pace, WR Bryant Johnson and WR Anquan Boldin. Sullivan played in 36 games with 16 starts in three seasons with the Saints - with only four of those starts coming in year two and three.

Sullivan was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana near Atlanta three weeks after being traded to New England, with those charges later being dropped. He began training camp on the physically unable to perform list due to being unable to pass his conditioning test, then was activated off PUP on August 7. The Patriots released Sullivan on October 9, 2006; he never did get on the field of play in a regular season game while with the Pats - and never played in the NFL again either, going down in league history as one of the biggest draft busts ever.




January 21, 1991
The Patriots announce the initial coaching staff for new head coach **** MacPherson.

Joe Collier is the defensive coordinator and **** Coury is the OC. Bobby Grier (RB) and Rod Humenick (OL) are re-signed as assistant coaches. Dante Scarnecchia returns to New England after two seasons with the Colts to coach special teams and tight ends. Other new position coaches are Ivan Fears (WR), Stan Jones (DL), Norm Gerber (ILB), Myrel Moore (OLB), Dave Uyrus (assistant ST/DL) and Joe Collier Jr. (assistant RB/WR).
 
Today in Patriots History
Sterling Moore's deflection and Billy Cundiff's
wide left give the Pats a 23-20 AFCCG victory


Sunday January 22, 2012 at 3:00
2011 AFC Championship Game at Gillette
New England Patriots 23, Baltimore Ravens 20
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, John Harbaugh
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Joe Flacco
Odds: Patriots favored by 7

Pats improve to 15-3; advance to Super Bowl 46
Ravens finish 13-5


AFC Championship: Patriots 23, Ravens 20 | Fifth Down

In a back-and-forth battle that ended in heartbreak for the Baltimore Ravens and kicker Billy Cundiff, the New England Patriots advanced to Super Bowl XLVI with a 23-20 victory on Sunday.​
Cundiff missed a 32-yard field goal in the final seconds that would have sent the game into overtime, hooking it wide left. Two plays prior, Ravens receiver Lee Evans failed to hold onto the ball in the end zone. A catch would have given Baltimore the lead and a likely victory. . . .​
The victory gives Brady his 16th career postseason victory, tying him with Joe Montana for the most in NFL history.​



There is also a good full-game recap from the AP here:
Patriots beat Ravens 23-20, head to Super Bowl | WBUR News

The Patriots won their tenth game in a row to win their seventh AFC title. The New England defense had been highly criticized by sports media throughout the year, with the phrase '31st ranked defense' becoming the season's most overused statistic. Patriot defenders pointed out that games were won and lost based on points rather than yardage, and in that category the Pats ranked 15th.​
Ray Rice had set the tone on the very first play from scrimmage when these two teams met in the 2009 wild card game, running for an 83 yard touchdown. Much of the pre-game talk leading up to this rematch centered on how the much maligned Patriot defense would fare against Rice, who led the NFL in 2011 with 2,068 yards from scrimmage.​
Baltimore tried running the ball on first down on each of their first three series. The result was zero yards, loss of one and loss of five, with each of those possessions turning into a three and out. Rice averaged just 3.2 yards per carry on the day, rushing for 67 yards.​
After the first drive of the second half the Patriots led 16-10. The Pats seemed to be controlling the game, but the inability to finish was bothersome: the offense scored only one touchdown on four trips to the red zone, settling for three field goals.​
Baltimore scored on a 29 yard pass from Joe Flacco to Torrey Smith on the next drive, and then Danny Woodhead fumbled the ensuing kickoff return. James Ihedigbo sacked Flacco for a loss of 12 on third down at the nine to force a field goal, but the Ravens were up 20-16 with less than a minute to go in the third quarter.​
The Patriots regained the lead on an 11 play, 63 yard drive on their next possession, aided by a penalty on Terrell Suggs that negated an interception. Tom Brady dove in from one yard on fourth down. This came after replay overturned a prior run that had originally been called a touchdown.​
On the final drive Flacco completed four passes to Anquan Boldin to move the ball to the 14. On the final catch defensive back Julian Edelman forced a fumble but the ball rolled out of bounds, so Baltimore retained possession.​
On the next play Lee Evans appeared momentarily to catch a go-ahead touchdown, but Sterling Moore knocked the ball out of his hands at the last possible moment. Moore then knocked away another pass on the next play, this one intended for TE Dennis Pitta. Billy Cundiff then infamously shanked the 32 yard field goal attempt, and rather than overtime the game was over.​
The Patriots had won - with a patchwork secondary that included Edelman, Sterling Moore, Antwaun Molden, Nate Jones and James Ihedigbo.​
After the game Harbaugh first whined that the pass play to Evans should have been reviewed. Then there was more conspiracy theories floated when he implied that the Cundiff miss was due to his not knowing it was fourth down, implying that the Patriots had done that to throw the kicker and coaches off. (Note: NFL personnel run the scoreboard, not the home team). Here is the question though: since there was that much confusion Mr. Harbaugh, why not call a timeout - rather than send your kicker out late in a frantic, hurried and unprepared manner?​

Is 'scoreboard' excuse legit? | Baltimore Sun

Harbaugh boots response to joke | Capital Gazette



Sound FX - 2nd Half:



Final Play:
 
Today in Patriots History
Sterling Moore's deflection and Billy Cundiff's
wide left give the Pats a 23-20 AFCCG victory


Sunday January 22, 2012 at 3:00
2011 AFC Championship Game at Gillette
New England Patriots 23, Baltimore Ravens 20
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, John Harbaugh
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Joe Flacco
Odds: Patriots favored by 7

Pats improve to 15-3; advance to Super Bowl 46
Ravens finish 13-5


AFC Championship: Patriots 23, Ravens 20 | Fifth Down

In a back-and-forth battle that ended in heartbreak for the Baltimore Ravens and kicker Billy Cundiff, the New England Patriots advanced to Super Bowl XLVI with a 23-20 victory on Sunday.​
Cundiff missed a 32-yard field goal in the final seconds that would have sent the game into overtime, hooking it wide left. Two plays prior, Ravens receiver Lee Evans failed to hold onto the ball in the end zone. A catch would have given Baltimore the lead and a likely victory. . . .​
The victory gives Brady his 16th career postseason victory, tying him with Joe Montana for the most in NFL history.​



There is also a good full-game recap from the AP here:
Patriots beat Ravens 23-20, head to Super Bowl | WBUR News

The Patriots won their tenth game in a row to win their seventh AFC title. The New England defense had been highly criticized by sports media throughout the year, with the phrase '31st ranked defense' becoming the season's most overused statistic. Patriot defenders pointed out that games were won and lost based on points rather than yardage, and in that category the Pats ranked 15th.​
Ray Rice had set the tone on the very first play from scrimmage when these two teams met in the 2009 wild card game, running for an 83 yard touchdown. Much of the pre-game talk leading up to this rematch centered on how the much maligned Patriot defense would fare against Rice, who led the NFL in 2011 with 2,068 yards from scrimmage.​
Baltimore tried running the ball on first down on each of their first three series. The result was zero yards, loss of one and loss of five, with each of those possessions turning into a three and out. Rice averaged just 3.2 yards per carry on the day, rushing for 67 yards.​
After the first drive of the second half the Patriots led 16-10. The Pats seemed to be controlling the game, but the inability to finish was bothersome: the offense scored only one touchdown on four trips to the red zone, settling for three field goals.​
Baltimore scored on a 29 yard pass from Joe Flacco to Torrey Smith on the next drive, and then Danny Woodhead fumbled the ensuing kickoff return. James Ihedigbo sacked Flacco for a loss of 12 on third down at the nine to force a field goal, but the Ravens were up 20-16 with less than a minute to go in the third quarter.​
The Patriots regained the lead on an 11 play, 63 yard drive on their next possession, aided by a penalty on Terrell Suggs that negated an interception. Tom Brady dove in from one yard on fourth down. This came after replay overturned a prior run that had originally been called a touchdown.​
On the final drive Flacco completed four passes to Anquan Boldin to move the ball to the 14. On the final catch defensive back Julian Edelman forced a fumble but the ball rolled out of bounds, so Baltimore retained possession.​
On the next play Lee Evans appeared momentarily to catch a go-ahead touchdown, but Sterling Moore knocked the ball out of his hands at the last possible moment. Moore then knocked away another pass on the next play, this one intended for TE Dennis Pitta. Billy Cundiff then infamously shanked the 32 yard field goal attempt, and rather than overtime the game was over.​
The Patriots had won - with a patchwork secondary that included Edelman, Sterling Moore, Antwaun Molden, Nate Jones and James Ihedigbo.​
After the game Harbaugh first whined that the pass play to Evans should have been reviewed. Then there was more conspiracy theories floated when he implied that the Cundiff miss was due to his not knowing it was fourth down, implying that the Patriots had done that to throw the kicker and coaches off. (Note: NFL personnel run the scoreboard, not the home team). Here is the question though: since there was that much confusion Mr. Harbaugh, why not call a timeout - rather than send your kicker out late in a frantic, hurried and unprepared manner?​

Is 'scoreboard' excuse legit? | Baltimore Sun

Harbaugh boots response to joke | Capital Gazette



Sound FX - 2nd Half:



Final Play:

Game never, Ever should've come down to an almost game-winning TD by the Murderers ... Brady missed an open Gronk down the seam during the 1st quarter and had to settle for a FG ... Settled for another FG during the 3rd quarter because of shyte blocking on 3rd/2 at the Murderers 7 ... Incompetent zebras ruled Gronk OOB on a 3rd-down catch which would've given Pats 1st/GTG inside Murderers 10; Pats settled for - you guessed it - another FG ... BLATANT face-masking by WR Torrey Smith during his TD that was not called, nor was he called for stepping THE **** out of bounds besides ... Woody's careless fumble during the KOR after the ILLEGITIMATE Torrey Smith TD ... And the topper: Brady's Special Olympics-sized INT to a double-covered Matty feckin Slater ... Should've been AT LEAST a 10-point win, if not an 18-POINT win.
 
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Today in Patriots History
Chris Hogan's 180 yard AFC Championship Game


First this:
January 22, 2014:
Dante Scarnecchia retires as assistant head coach and offensive line coach after 30 years with the Patriots. New England native Dave DeGuglielmo is hired as the offensive line coach; he lasted two seasons before Scar was lured out of retirement.




Sunday January 22, 2017 at 6:40
2016 AFC Championship Game at Gillette
New England Patriots 36, Pittsburgh Steelers 17
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Mike Tomlin
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Ben Roethlisberger
Odds: Patriots favored by 5½

Pats improve to 16-2; advance to Super Bowl 51 vs Atlanta
Steelers finish 13-6

The Patriots entered this game without Rob Gronkowski and with a defense that had been derided in the media for playing against what was considered by some to be soft competition and inferior quarterbacks. Chris Hogan had nine catches for 180 yards and two touchdowns to lead the offense, with the Pats scoring on all three of their third quarter possessions. The second half drives for Pittsburgh consisted of a punt, another punt, fumble on the first play, turnover on downs, and an interception on the first play. The Steelers finally found the end zone late to make the final score more respectable, but only after they were down by 27 points.


23AFC-jumbo.jpg

No Gronk? No problem: Chris "7-11" Hogan was open all night against the Steelers


A good recap of the game an be found below:
Tom Brady and Patriots overwhelm Steelers and advance to Super Bowl | New York Times

The blemish on a defensive résumé that included the N.F.L.’s fewest points allowed was that New England had conquered quarterbacks of meager stock — Bryce Petty, Brock Osweiler, Jared Goff. Here late in the second quarter, though, was Roethlisberger, who assumed that he had drawn Pittsburgh tighter — New England led by 17-6 at the time — with a touchdown to Jesse James that would be overruled by video review.​
Still, first-and-goal at the New England 1.​
“That yard is so small,” Harmon said. “You would think the Pittsburgh Steelers would be able to get that yard.”​
Stuffed for a loss on first down, DeAngelo Williams — playing in place of the star running back Le’Veon Bell, who sustained an early groin injury — took the handoff again on second. Before he could even take a step, a 320-pound rookie defensive lineman named Vincent Valentine yanked Williams to the ground for a 3-yard loss.​
The stop, which preceded a Roethlisberger incompletion, asserted the Patriots’ primacy. It pushed Pittsburgh into a passing situation. It forced a field goal — the Steelers’ final points until scoring a touchdown with 3 minutes 36 seconds left. They trailed by 36-17.​
“At some point,” cornerback Logan Ryan said, “we just want to try to earn the respect when it’s not given.”​


23jpAFC2-jumbo.jpg

To this day Steeler fans will insist they were robbed of a touchdown on this play, but let's get real: would it have really made a difference?


The game is also notable for this amazing run by LeGarrette Blount:



36 thoughts on Patriots' AFC Championship Game victory over the Steelers | boston.com

36. Vengeance is near, Patriots fans. Vengeance is near. I cannot wait to see how Roger Goodell justifies going to Atlanta again in two weeks.​


Steelers vs Patriots AFCCG Highlights [9:17]





Happy birthday to Bob Reynolds, who would have been 81 today (1939-1996)
Born January 22, 1939 in Nashville
Patriot OT, 1972-1973; uniform #74
Pats 4th round (30th overall) selection of the 1963 draft, from Bowling Green

The Patriots drafted Bob Reynolds on December 1, 1962, and two days later he was also selected in the NFL draft, by St. Louis. Two weeks later he signed with the Cardinals; he went on to play for nine seasons with them, being named to three Pro Bowls.

The Cardinals waived Reynolds just before the start of the 1972 season, and the 33 year old tackle was claimed by the Patriots on September 18. He played in 12 games with 11 starts in the final season with John Mazur as head coach, and then in seven games with four starts for Chuck Fairbanks in '73. Reynolds was placed on injured reserve in late October, by that time replaced in the starting lineup by Sam Adams; Reynolds was waived on November 29. He played in 141 games with 120 starts between the Cardinals and Patriots from 1963 to 1973.




Three other pro football player birthdays on this date with a New England connection:

James Dearth, 45 (1976)
On April 17, 1999 the Patriots traded up three spots in the draft to select Damien Woody with the 17th overall pick. In exchange Seattle received the 20th overall pick (traded to Dallas, DE Ebenezer Ekuban), a third round pick and a sixth (Dearth). Ekuban was a decent player, but the Patriots got the better side of that trade.


Joe Dudek, 57 (1964)
Born in Boston, grew up in Quincy; North Quincy High School; Plymouth State College



The longest of Heisman longshots | Sports Illustrated

What the heck, why not Dudek? | Sports Illustrated

Dudek has broken every touchdown record known to man in his four years at Plymouth State in Plymouth, N.H. His 79 career touchdowns broke the NCAA record of 66 that Payton set at Jackson State, and the NAIA mark of 77 that Wilbert Montgomery established at Abilene Christian from 1973 to '76. Dudek has rushed for a Division III (yes, III) record 5,570 yards at Plymouth, which has gone 37-6 since he arrived. Many NFL teams have sent scouts to see him play. Somebody must think he's good.​
What the heck? Take a breath of fresh air. Plymouth has no training table, no athletic dorm, no redshirts and no slush funds. There, players shake a man's hand without expecting to find a $20 bill for their trouble. Dudek has taken out a $2,500 student loan all four years and admits he's "loaned out." To make ends meet, he often takes odd jobs, including cleaning up the stadium on Sundays after cleaning up on the field on Saturdays. "It doesn't pay much," says Dudek. "Minimum wage."​



Bennie LaPresta (1909-1975)
In the thirties Bennie was a back for the St. Louis Gunners and Boston Redskins.
 
Today in Patriots History
Pats crush 15-1 Steelers at Heinz Field


No, this is not a duplicate post from yesterday. Four times the Pittsburgh Steelers have ended their season with a loss to the Patriots in the playoffs - and three of those instances have come in the conference championship, one game away from the Super Bowl. It is no wonder that their fans hate the Patriots and Pats fans.


Sunday January 23, 2005 at 6:30
2004 AFC Championship Game, at Heinz Field
New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Bill Cowher
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Ben Roethlisberger
Odds: New England favored by 3

Pats improve to 16-2; advance to Super Bowl 39
Steelers finish 16-2

This perspective from a Pittsburgh Steeler fan sums up the first half, when the Patriots jumped out to a 24-3 lead:
The 12 Most Heartbreaking Playoff Losses In Pittsburgh Steelers History: #3

This AFC Championship Game, played at home, was especially painful since there is no question in my mind that the Steelers could have whooped Philadelphia in the Super Bowl. In fact, we had already beaten New England and Philly in back-to-back weeks during the regular season making this loss hard to swallow. It was also painful physically. The temperature of 11 degrees was the coldest playoff game in Pittsburgh history and one of the coldest Steelers' games ever, period. With the wind-chill, it was somewhere in the minus category.
For the first time all season, our rookie quarterback looked like a rookie quarterback. The clock struck midnight for Ben Roethlisberger, who previously had been brilliant, albeit in a limited system. Roethlisberger's first pass of the game was picked off by Eugene Wilson, putting the Steelers in the hole, 3-0. The Steelers drove to the New England 39-yard line on their next possession, but Jerome Bettis' fumble was recovered by ex-Steeler Mike Vrabel. On the very next play, Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady hit Deion Branch with a 60-yard touchdown strike. After a Jeff Reed field goal, the Patriots scored again on Tom Brady's second touchdown pass, this time to David Givens. Trailing 17-3, Pittsburgh drove down the field and looked ready to score when Roethlisberger was intercepted by Rodney Harrison, who bolted 87 yards for a touchdown. At half the score was 24-3. Three horrific first-half turnovers took all the air, cold as it was, completely out of the stadium.



Even though the Patriots scored 41 points, the stars for this game were on defense. Rodney Harrison had the 87-yard pick six, a game-high 12 tackles (nine solo), one tackle for a loss and a pass deflection. Eugene Wilson had two interceptions, and Tedy Bruschi had nine tackles (eight solo). Jarvis Green had a strip sack and five tackles subbing for Richard Seymour (out with a knee injury), and Mike Vrabel had six tackles (five solo) and a fumble recovery created by Rosevelt Colvin.

Tom Brady completed 67% of his passes for 207 yards and two touchdowns, with no interceptions. His 60 yard touchdown pass to Deion Branch on the first play after a Jerome Bettis fumble on 4th-and-one set the tone for the night, putting the Patriots up 10-0. Branch had four receptions for 116 yards to go with that TD, plus two rushes for 37 yards. David Givens had five catches for 59 yards and a touchdown, and Corey Dillon scored on a 25-yard carry to restore the lead to 21 points in the third quarter, squashing any thoughts of a Steeler comeback.


Rodney Harrison's pick-six gave the Patriots an insurmountable 21-point lead:


Patriots vs. Steelers 2004 AFC Championship Game: Grudge Match | NFL Films (7:24)



AFC Championship 2004 Patriots at Steelers | Full Game Video:


.



 
Game never, Ever should've come down to an almost game-winning TD by the Murderers ... Brady missed an open Gronk down the seam during the 1st quarter and had to settle for a FG ... Settled for another FG during the 3rd quarter because of shyte blocking on 3rd/2 at the Murderers 7 ... Incompetent zebras ruled Gronk OOB on a 3rd-down catch which would've given Pats 1st/GTG inside Murderers 10; Pats settled for - you guessed it - another FG ... BLATANT face-masking by WR Torrey Smith during his TD that was not called, nor was he called for stepping THE **** out of bounds besides ... Woody's careless fumble during the KOR after the ILLEGITIMATE Torrey Smith TD ... And the topper: Brady's Special Olympics-sized INT to a double-covered Matty feckin Slater ... Should've been AT LEAST a 10-point win, if not an 18-POINT win.

You're not wrong, captain. And, yes. If I could see that the ball was going to be thrown to Slater no matter what, I'm guessing that everybody who does this stuff for a living knew it too.
 
Today in Patriots History
Shelby Jordan


Happy 69th birthday to Shelby Jordan
Born January 23, 1952 in Saint Louis
Patriot RT, 1975-1982; uniform #74
Signed as a 2nd year free agent on April 2, 1974

I remember the first time I saw Shelby Jordan up close. It was at a preseason game, against the Browns if I recall. A group of Patriots were warming up near our end zone seats. There was this one guy that was just immense, dwarfing all the other football players. That Patriot was Shelby Jordan.

Jordan was originally drafted in the seventh round by the Houston Oilers in 1973, from Division III Washington University in Saint Louis. He spent the '74 season on injured reserve, then started all 14 games the following season.

On May 3, 1976 Jordan was sentenced to two years in prison for selling cocaine to a federal narcotics agent, based on guidelines under the Youth Correctional Act for persons between the ages of 18 and 25. He returned to play ten games in 1977, and was the full time starter at right tackle for the next five seasons.

Jordan held out for a better contract in 1983, resulting in fines of $1,000 for each day of training camp that he missed. Chuck Sullivan and Jordan's agent eventually worked out a deal - with what seems today to be an odd ticky-tack detail. Rather than forgive the fines, or adjust the new contract based on subtracting those fines, Sullivan still expected that money to be repaid. The original deal was to have the money paid in two annual installments of $15,000. When Jordan came back wanting to make it three yearly payments of $10,000 each Sullivan withdrew his four-year extension offer. NFL free agency was still ten years away; at that point the Patriot contract offer was for Jordan to play for previous salary of $180,000, minus $38,000 in fines.

Nine days later the Patriots traded Jordan to Oakland for a 1985 fourth round draft pick. The Raiders immediately gave Jordan a raise and an extension. In the first of his four seasons in Oakland the Raiders won a Super Bowl.

Shelby Jordan was inducted to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2013. He and his wife fund and direct a Los Angeles-based nonprofit economic-development corporation that provides affordable urban housing and services for families and seniors.

D9-9TOyX4AU01-N.jpg

The Shelby Jordan holdout saga has taken another strange turn | UPI

Shelby Jordan named to CAC/SCAC All-Time Team | WUStL Athletics

Shelby Jordan (2013) - Hall of Fame | National Football Foundation




Happy 36th birthday to Antwaun Molden
Born January 23, 1985 in Warren, Ohio
Patriot CB, 2011; uniform #27
Waiver claim from Houston on August 31, 2011

Antwaun Molden was originally a third round draft pick by Houston in 2008. Despite the Texans having the worst defense and worst pass defense in 2010, he was unable to make it on to their 2011 roster. The Pats claimed him off waivers and he played in all 19 games that season, with two starts. He had 36 tackles, two interceptions, two pass deflections and one fumble recovery while with New England. He later played with the Giants, Jaguars and in the CFL for Toronto.

Football Journey: Antwaun Molden | espn, Mike Reiss

Nothing came easy for Patriots Antwaun Molden | CBS Boston

antwaun-molden.jpg




Happy 29th birthday to Kelcy Quarles
Born January 23, 1992 in Hodges, South Carolina
Patriot DT, 2014 (offseason) and 2015 (practice squad)
Claimed off waivers from the Giants on Aug 31, 2014

Quarles was with the Patriots for four days prior to week one in 2014, and on the practice squad for two weeks in 2015. he also spent time with the Giants, Colts and Browns, appearing in two NFL games.

Patriots sign DL Kelcy Quarles | Patriots.com

The New England Patriots signed DL Kelcy Quarles to the practice squad and released TE Allen Reisner from the practice squad today.​
Quarles, 22, was claimed off waivers from the New York Giants on Aug. 31, 2014 and then released on Sept. 3, 2014. He was originally signed by the Giants as a rookie free agent out of South Carolina on May 12, 2014. The 6-foot-4, 294-pounder, was released by the Giants on Aug. 30, 2014. He played in 35 games with 28 starts during a three-year career at South Carolina, finishing with 105 total tackles and 13 sacks. Quarles attended Fork Union (Va.) Military Academy for one year prior to transferring to South Carolina.​




Three other pro football players born on this date with a New England connection:

Josh Keyes, 28 (1993)
Boston College
The linebacker bounced between seven teams from 2015 to 2018, appearing in 25 games.

Bob Barrabee (1905-1984)
Born in Malden; Malden High School; Cushing Academy
An end for the Staten Island Stapletons in the early thirties.

Joe Carpe (1903-1977)
Boston Bulldogs, 1929
The tackle played in the NFL from 1926-1933, winning a championship in his rookie season with the 14-1-2 Frankford Yellow Jackets.
 
Today in Patriots History
Hank Bullough


Happy birthday to Hank Bullough, who would have been 87 today
Born January 24, 1934 in Scranton PA
Patriot Defensive Line Coach, Assistant Head Coach 1973-1977
Patriot Defensive Coordinator, 1978-19799

Hank Bullough is a major influence in NFL history, the architect of the 3-4 Fairbanks-Bullough defense. He passed away two months ago, on November 24, 2019. Bullough was a coach in New England for six seasons. Prior to that he had won a ring in Super Bowl V as the linebackers coach for Baltimore. After the Sullivans chose Ron Erhardt to succeed Chuck Fairbanks as head coach, Bullough became the defensive coordinator for the Bengals. While there in '81 Cincy made it to the Super Bowl, losing to the 49ers by five points due to four turnovers; in '83 the Bengals had the NFL's #1 ranked defense.


Recurring scheme: Making the switch to the 3-4 defense is an old trick for Patriots

Bullough said he suggested it to Fairbanks prior to the 1974 season.​
"We were the first," claimed Bullough. "We had gone through a tough season in '73 and our defensive line wasn't very good. We had drafted Steve Nelson and Sam Hunt and they were two good-looking kids at linebacker, and I said to Chuck, `Let's go to the 3-4,' and that's what we did."​
Nelson had played the 3-4 at North Dakota State for four years. Hunt was also a big, raw linebacker out of Stephen F. Austin, and the two young guys were in the middle with Steve King and veteran George Webster on the outside.​
"It worked out well because we had Ray [Hamilton] at the nose and we brought in Mel Lunsford the year before from Washington in a trade and Mel was decent against the run," said Bullough. "We had acquired Tony McGee from Chicago in '74 and he played the end on passing downs, and we had Julius Adams playing the other side."​
The Patriots went 7-7 that season, and really struggled in '75 with a 3-11 record. But by `76, with the infusion of rookies Tim Fox and Mike Haynes in the defensive backfield and talented Steve Zabel at outside linebacker, the Patriots had a standout defense.​
"The 3-4 definitely allowed you to have good matchups on defense," said Nelson.​
To this day, Bullough says of the 3-4, "It's the best defense in football."​


On the trail of the two gap 3-4 gives a good historical timeline on the evolution of the 5-2 Oklahoma defense, and tracking of defensive influences throughout the careers of Jimmy Johnson and Bill Parcells.

3 Philosophies of the 3-4 defense is a good primer for those that may want to learn more about defensive fronts and strategies.

34fairbanksbullough-300x154.png

The Fairbanks-Bullough 3-4 features 3 defensive linemen. The Tackles are head up on the Guards in 4-techniques, and the Nose Guard is in a head-up 0 Technique on the Center. Two Linebackers are in 30-Techniques over the Guards, and two more Linebackers are outside, somewhere between 1×1 and 3×3 off of the End Man on the Line of Scrimmage (which can vary much more depending on the offensive formation).​
The Defensive Linemen are playing a 2-gap technique, attacking and reading the Defensive Linemen. One of the Linebackers will be included in the pass rush in most cases. This version of the 3-4 Defense matches up well with Cover 2 and Quarters coverages because of its 7 man front.​


Here are a couple of 2011 articles by former PatsFans forum member (and current Patriots.com writer) Mike Dussault look at Bullough's defensive philosophy.

The Patriots 3-4 Defense in a nutshell | PatsPropaganda

New England Patriots Fairbanks-Bullough 3-4 Defense Essentials | PatsPropaganda

When people think of the 3-4, they associate it with Pittsburgh’s Zone Blitzing scheme. Pittsburgh’s Zone Blitz 3-4 is just one of three versions of this defense. The other two versions of this defense that are used much more than the Zone Blitz are the Phillips 3-4 and the Fairbanks-Bullough 3-4 [which the Patriots run]. Not all 3-4 defenses are created equal, nor are the players that play in these systems.​
Despite the fact that the Bullough can be confusing, the system relies on a lot on “bend; don’t break” thinking. The system will often give up short yards in the run, and blitzes are not common. The idea is that the longer the offense is on the clock, the longer it takes them to score, and the more plays the offense risks an interception, fumble, or a fourth down.​
The key to the success of Belichick’s style is flexibility of personnel. To be able to switch from a 4-3 to a 3-4 to a dime defense and all points in between requires versatility at nearly every position. Players have to be able to run and cover and hit. Linemen have to be strong enough to hold the point in the 3-4, but get upfield in a 4-3. Defensive backs have to be very good in zone coverage but competent in man coverage when needed. It requires special skills, but also an above-average football IQ. Compared with the base Dungy-Kiffin scheme, which probably started with as little as three or four fronts and a couple of zone coverages, Belichick’s hybrid is a maze meant to confuse and confound.​


Hank Bullough | Revolvy

Bullough's first coaching position was at his alma mater, Michigan State, where he served for 11 seasons. In 1970, he became linebackers coach for the Baltimore Colts of the National Football League (NFL) under head coach Don McCafferty.​
As defensive coordinator for the New England Patriots in the 1970s Bullough is credited, along with his college teammate Chuck Fairbanks, with being a significant figure in bringing the 3–4 defense to the NFL. After Fairbanks was suspended prior to the final game of the 1978 season, Bullough's and fellow assistant Ron Erhardt were named co-head coaches for the remainder of the season. After the season Patriots owner Billy Sullivan appointed Erhardt head coach instead of Bullough. Bullough would remain defensive coordinator for one more season with the Patriots.​
In 1980, new Cincinnati Bengals head coach and former Green Bay Packers teammate, Forrest Gregg wooed Bullough to install the 3–4 defensive system in Cincinnati. Two seasons later the Bengals would go to the Super Bowl where they fell just short against the San Francisco 49ers. While with the Bengals, Bullough also tutored **** LeBeau who, not only would succeed Bullough as defensive coordinator but, is credited as the innovator of the 3–4 zone blitz scheme.​
Bullough also served as defensive coordinator for the Green Bay Packers in 1984. He was named the head coach for the Pittsburgh Maulers of the United States Football League (USFL) for the 1985 season, but the team folded after the 1984 season he instead moved on to the Buffalo Bills, where he replaced Kay Stephenson for the final 12 games of the 1985 season.​


Within Patriot folklore Bullough is most well known for part of the fiasco of the 1978 season. Head coach Chuck Fairbanks had had enough of Billy Sullivan's cheapness and meddling from his sons, and word got out that Fairbanks had accepted a position with the University of Colorado. Sullivan fired/suspended Fairbanks - eight days before they were about to play a postseason game. Rather than name a single interim head coach, the mind trust decided to have Bullough be the head coach when the Pats were on defense, and Ron Erhardt the head coach when the team was on offense.

Typical bizarreness for the Sullivan-era Patriots.

Bullough suffered a stroke in 2014, but his children and grandchildren are still quite athletic.

All in the family: The Bulloughs are the 'First Family of Football' at Michigan State

01%2058%20Packers%20Hank%20Bullough.jpg



There is even a bit of discussion on Bullough's defense here on the PatsFans message board, from 2009: Thoughts about the switch to the 4-3

Michigan State football legend Hank Bullough dies at 85 | mlive.com

Henry 'Hank' Bullough obituary - East Lansing, Michigan
 
Today in Patriots History
Denver edges Pats in AFCCG, 20-18



January 24, 1973:
The New England Patriots hire Chuck Fairbanks as head coach.

Making a case for Chuck Fairbanks for the Patriots Hall | PatsFans.com

The first thing he did was fix a Patriots draft system that was pretty much broken at that time. In his first draft Fairbanks landed HOF OL John Hannah, RB Sam Cunningham, WR Darryl Stingley as well as NT ‘Sugar Bear’ Ray Hamilton. A year later he brought in LB Steve Nelson, RB Andy Johnson and LB Sam Hunt. The core of his teams in New England was being put together. Russ Francis and Steve Grogan joined the team in 1975.​

Chuck Fairbanks for Patriots Hall of Fame | Pats Propaganda

The Patriots had six-straight losing seasons prior to Fairbanks’ arrival, and hadn’t been to the playoffs in ten years. By 1976 the Patriots had (at that time) their best team ever, handing the eventual Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders their only loss of the season. Oakland would win the re-match in the playoffs in a hard fought game that featured a marginal roughing the passer penalty on Sugar Bear Hamilton on a third-and-18 incomplete pass that would set Oakland up for the 24-21 win.​
But to this day, many believe the ’76 Pats teams was one of their best ever, even if they didn’t even make it to the Super Bowl. Before that, the Patriots truly were nobodies in the NFL landscape. If we really want to talk about a coach who put the Patriots on the map, Fairbanks would have to be the original choice.​




Sunday January 24, 2016 at 3:00
2015 AFC Championship Game at Sports Authority Field
Denver Broncos 20, New England Patriots 18
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Gary Kubiak
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Peyton Manning
Odds: Patriots favored by 3

Patriots finish the 2015 season at 13-5
Broncos improve to 14-4; move on to Super Bowl 50 versus Carolina

On a 4th-and-10 with 1:34 left to play, Tom Brady connected on a 40 yard pass play to Rob Gronkowski, giving the Pats first and goal at the ten yard line. Brady hit Gronk again for the touchdown with twelve seconds to play, but a two-point conversion attempt to force overtime failed.


There was much second guessing after the game due to the Patriots twice going for it in the red zone in the fourth quarter - and failing both times. This was also the game when Stephen Gostkowski missed an extra point early; had that attempt been good then the Patriots would not have needed to go for two at the end of the game.

Denver Broncos defeat New England Patriots in wild finish | OregonLive

Tom Brady, Patriots denied by Broncos | The Boston Globe

On an unseasonably warm afternoon in which the Patriots never led, Sunday’s AFC Championship game wasn’t decided until the final seconds. A 4-yard touchdown pass from Tom Brady to Rob Gronkowski on fourth down — after a 40-yard completion on another fourth-down play — brought the Patriots within 2 points with 12 seconds left. But the 2-point try failed, Brady’s pass intended for Julian Edelman was tipped by former Patriot Aqib Talib and intercepted by Bradley Roby.​






Happy 30th birthday to Duron Harmon
Born January 24, 1991 in Dover DE
Patriot Safety, 2013-2019; uniform #30 (2013-17); #21 (2018-19)
Selected in the 3rd round (91st overall) of the 2013 draft, from Rutgers

Duron Harmon | patriots.com

Harmon was inactive for the first game of his pro football career (9/8/2013 vs Buffalo). He played in 128 consecutive Patriot games afterwards over seven years (111 regular season games, 17 postseason games).

During those 111 games he had 3,809 snaps on defense, and 501 on special teams.

Defensive Snap Counts (and percentage)
2013: 427 (39%)
2014: 280 (26%)
2015: 601 (55%)
2016: 506 (49%)
2017: 702 (66%)
2018: 636 (61%)
2019: 657 (65%)

In his seven seasons Harmon had 17 interceptions, 28 passes defensed and three fumble recoveries. He also had 175 tackles (137 solo).

Over the course of 17 playoff games Harmon played the Patriots were 13-4. He registered four postseason interceptions: late in the third quarter of the 2014 divisional round win off Joe Flacco; late in the fourth quarter to seal the win in the 2016 divisional round win over Houston; on the two yard line off Nick Foles in Super Bowl 52; and a year ago in the fourth quarter against the Titans.

Harmon has earned three Super Bowl rings, for the victories over the Seahawks, the Falcons and the Rams. On March 18, 2020 the Patriots traded Harmon and a 7th round draft pick to Detroit for a 5th round pick. He started all 16 games in 2020 for the Lions; Harmon will be an unrestricted free agent in March.











Happy 30th birthday to Michael Buchanan
Born January 24, 1991 in Homewood, Illinois
Patriot DE, 2013-2014; uniform #99
Pats 7th round (226th overall) selection of the 2013 draft, from Illinois

The Patriots acquired the draft pick used on Buchanan as part of the trade that sent Aqib Talib from Tampa to Foxboro. Buchanan played in 15 games his rookie season, registering two sacks and a fumble recovery. He also played in the two 2013 playoff games, and appeared in three games the following year before landing on IR with an ankle injury. He was waived on May 7, 2015 but he did get a ring for being part of the 2014 super bowl champions.




Happy birthday to Gary Jeter, who would have been 66 today
Born January 24, 1955 in Weirton, West Virginia
Patriot DE, 1989; uniform #99
Signed as a veteran free agent in 1989

The Patriots signed Jeter at the age of 34 for what would be his final year in the NFL. He played in 14 games, with seven sacks for New England. Jeter had been the fifth overall pick of the 1977 draft, splitting twelve seasons with the Giants and Rams. He passed away in 2016 at the age of 61.




Happy 28th birthday to Anthony Johnson
Born January 24, 1993 in Baton Rouge
Patriot DT, 2016; uniform #96
Signed May 9, 2016 as a free agent

Johnson split 2016 between the practice squad and active roster, appearing in four games with one start. He is credited with eight tackles and two QB hits in those games. From 2014-2018 Johnson played in 22 NFL games, also spending time with Miami, Washington, the Jets and the Colts.




Happy 49th birthday to Jay 'Sky' Walker
Born January 24, 1972 in Los Angeles
Patriot QB, 1994-95
Pats 7th round (198th overall) selection of the 1994 draft, from Howard

Walker spent 1994 on the practice squad and was allocated to Barcelona for the WLAF in '95. While there he once played in a game when he had to pass on every offensive play, due to no running backs on the roster being available. Walker later spent two seasons as a backup QB in Minnesota; he is now a state representative in Maryland, and owner of a financial services firm.

Quarterbacks' Sneak: WLAF to NFL | New York Times




Other January 24 pro football birthdays with a New England connection:

Dorsett Davis, 42 (1979)
Draft Day Trade
In 2002 the Pats traded a third round draft pick (later used on Davis) and a first (QB Patrick Ramsey) to Washington to move up from #30 overall to #21, selecting TE Daniel Graham. Davis played in 14 NFL games for the Broncos in 2003.

Greg Jerman, 42 (1979)
Born in Hyannis
Played on the offensive line for Miami and Buffalo from 2002-2005.

Tyler Catalina, 28 (1993)
Born in Worcester; Wachusett Regional High School
Offensive lineman was with Washington, Minnesota and Carolina from 2017-2019.

**** Smith (1912-1980)
Boston Redskins center, 1933.

Mike Purdy (1895-1950)
Dean Academy (now Dean College) in Franklin, MA; Brown University
Blocking back and wingback for three seasons in the early twenties.
 
Today in Patriots History
Danny Woodhead


January 25, 2016:
Dave DeGuglielmo is fired as offensive line coach, and Dante Scarnecchia is rehired for that position.


Happy 36th Birthday to Danny Woodhead
Born January 25, 1985 in North Platte, Nebraska
Patriot RB 2010-2012; uniform #39
Signed as a free agent on September 18, 2010

At 5'8 and 175 pounds, no college football powerhouses were interested in Danny Woodhead. He stayed local and attended the school his parents attended, division 2 Chadron State. While there he set NCAA records for most rushing yards in a single season (2,740), most 200 yard rushing games (19) and consecutive games scoring a touchdown (39).



Between his size and being a D2 player, the NFL took the same approach as colleges did, and did not invite Woodhead to the rookie combine. The running back was only able to show off his abilities at a pro day; his times in the 40 and vertical would have ranked second among running backs, and his 60 yard shuttle was better than any RB at the combine.

The Jets signed Woodhead as an undrafted free agent immediately after the 2008 draft. He spent '08 on injured reserve after tearing his ACL early in training camp, and was released after one game in '09. When the Pats signed Woodhead a few days later many suspected it was simply an intel move on New England's week two opponent. A roster spot had opened up when Denver was in dire need of a running back, and had bought high in a trade for Laurence Maroney. The Pats still had Fred Taylor, Sammy Morris, BenJarvus Green-Ellis and Kevin Faulk. Woodhead was inactive for the game vs the Jete, but Faulk suffered a season ending knee injury that day.

The next week Woodhead saw limited action, but gained 42 yards on three carries and scored a 22 yard touchdown in a 38-30 win over Buffalo. His playing time quickly increased as it was apparent he was not only a capable runner and receiver, but also a reliable player who rarely fumbled or dropped a pass, willing to effectively block much larger pass rushers.

Woodhead played in 45 regular season games in three years in New England. He scored 14 touchdowns and gained 2,181 yards from scrimmage, averaging 4.8 yards per carry and 10.7 ypc on 92 receptions; he also returned 22 kicks for another 48 yards. Woodhead also played in six playoff games for the Patriots, with one touchdown.



San Diego signed Woodhead as an unrestricted free agent on March 15, 2013; he retired from pro football on March 17, 2018. In ten NFL seasons Woodhead had 5,694 all purpose yards with 15 rushing touchdowns, 17 receiving TD, and two 2-point conversions.

Danny Woodhead Retires: The Exit Interview | Sports Illustrated

Danny Woodhead made a name for himself in the NFL by being the everyman's player, the underdog, the undrafted running back with a diminutive 5' 8" frame, full of grit.​




Happy 50th Birthday to Vincent Brisby
Born January 25, 1971 in Houston
Patriot WR 1993-1999; uniform #82
Pats 2nd round (56th overall) selection in the 1993 draft, from NE Louisiana

The 1993 draft was one of the better ones in Patriot history, and certainly the best since the Chuck Fairbanks era. Drew Bledsoe was the first overall pick and the Pats picked up Troy Brown in the 8th round. With three second round picks the Pats added LB Chris Slade, OL Todd Rucci and WR Vincent Brisby.

Until Curtis Martin arrived in 1995, the Bledsoe/Parcells Patriots had no running game. (How else do you explain Bledsoe throwing 70 passes in one game?) Drew flung it around to Ben Coates, Michael Timpson and Brisby - a lot. In his first three seasons Brisby had 169 receptions for 2,504 yards and ten touchdowns. Unfortunately the completion rate on passes to Brisby was poor, with the receiver able to catch only 43.8% of the 386 passes thrown his way.

In 1996 Brisby signed a large contract extension, then dealt with a hamstring injury in training camp - and did not get on the field until week 12. Parcells famously stated that he "recovered from open-heart surgery faster than Brisby had (from the hamstring injury). That's the truth. I'm not kidding you."

Brisby's first catch of the '96 season did not come until the Super Bowl against Green Bay. He lasted three more seasons under Pete Carroll, buried on the depth chart behind Terry Glenn, Shawn Jefferson and Troy Brown.

Aug 15, 2000: Patriots Cut Brisby | Hartford Courant

Vincent Brisby, who caught 66 passes in 1995 but only 48 since, was one of eight Patriots cut Monday.​
Most people go with what and whom they know, and Patriots coach Bill Belichick, who spent 12 years as a Giants assistant, is no different. He has brought in Chris Calloway, who played seven seasons with the Giants and caught 22 passes for 314 yards and one touchdown last season with the Falcons.​
Among those cut, the biggest surprise was that Brisby hung on as long as he did. NFL, as TV analyst and former coach Jerry Glanville loves to say, means Not For Long. Yet Brisby, 29, who signed a multimillion dollar contract before the 1996 season, then was promptly injured, hung on despite catching zero, 23, and seven passes the next three seasons. He was healthy in 1999, but then-Patriots coach Pete Carroll thought so little of him that he didn't activate him for four of the first five games.​


Considering that Brisby had only three notable seasons it is a bit of a surprise to see where he ranks all time in Patriot franchise history:
  • 3,142 career receiving yards was ninth most in franchise history at the time (17th now).
  • 217 career receptions was eighth most in Pats history then (17th now).
  • 14.5 yards per reception ranks eighth best in club history (minimum 200 catches).

Former Patriot Vincent Brisby inducted into his Louisiana College Hall of Fame | patriots.com

Vincent Brisby Hall of Fame (2015) | University of Louisiana Monroe




Happy 54th birthday to Darryl Wren
Born Jan 25, 1967 in Tulsa
Patriot CB, 1993-94; uniform #27
Waiver claim from Bills on Aug 31, 1993

Darryl Wren played in twenty games over two seasons in New England. In '93 he started five games and had three interceptions, with 35 tackles. The Pats attempted to trade him to Seattle late in training camp in '04 for a sixth round draft pick, but that trade was voided when Wren failed his physical. He was originally a third round pick by Buffalo in '91, from Pittsburgh State.




Happy 56th birthday to Jerry McCabe
Born Jan 25, 1965 in Detroit
Patriot LB, 1987; uniform #52

The Holy Cross alum was a replacement player for three games in '87; he also spent the next three seasons with the Chiefs.




Some other New England pro football players born on this date:

Ken Bungarda, 64 (1957)
Born in Hartford
OT from Missouri was drafted by the Bengals in '79, also played with 49ers.

Ray Preston, 67 (1954)
Lawrence High School
Played in 122 games for the Chargers at linebacker from 1976-1984.

Tom Toner (1950-1990)
Born in Woburn; Swampscott High School
Linebacker was drafted by Green Bay in '73 and played for the Packers until '77.

Vito Ananis (1915-1994)
Born in Cambridge; Cambridge Rindge Tech; Boston College
Halfback and defensive back for Washington in the forties.

Jack Flavin (1900-1965)
Born in Portland, Maine; Portland High School
Fullback in the twenties with the Buffalo All-Americans.
 
Today in Patriots History
Danny Woodhead


January 25, 2016:
Dave DeGuglielmo is fired as offensive line coach, and Dante Scarnecchia is rehired for that position.


Happy 36th Birthday to Danny Woodhead
Born January 25, 1985 in North Platte, Nebraska
Patriot RB 2010-2012; uniform #39
Signed as a free agent on September 18, 2010

At 5'8 and 175 pounds, no college football powerhouses were interested in Danny Woodhead. He stayed local and attended the school his parents attended, division 2 Chadron State. While there he set NCAA records for most rushing yards in a single season (2,740), most 200 yard rushing games (19) and consecutive games scoring a touchdown (39).



Between his size and being a D2 player, the NFL took the same approach as colleges did, and did not invite Woodhead to the rookie combine. The running back was only able to show off his abilities at a pro day; his times in the 40 and vertical would have ranked second among running backs, and his 60 yard shuttle was better than any RB at the combine.

The Jets signed Woodhead as an undrafted free agent immediately after the 2008 draft. He spent '08 on injured reserve after tearing his ACL early in training camp, and was released after one game in '09. When the Pats signed Woodhead a few days later many suspected it was simply an intel move on New England's week two opponent. A roster spot had opened up when Denver was in dire need of a running back, and had bought high in a trade for Laurence Maroney. The Pats still had Fred Taylor, Sammy Morris, BenJarvus Green-Ellis and Kevin Faulk. Woodhead was inactive for the game vs the Jete, but Faulk suffered a season ending knee injury that day.

The next week Woodhead saw limited action, but gained 42 yards on three carries and scored a 22 yard touchdown in a 38-30 win over Buffalo. His playing time quickly increased as it was apparent he was not only a capable runner and receiver, but also a reliable player who rarely fumbled or dropped a pass, willing to effectively block much larger pass rushers.

Woodhead played in 45 regular season games in three years in New England. He scored 14 touchdowns and gained 2,181 yards from scrimmage, averaging 4.8 yards per carry and 10.7 ypc on 92 receptions; he also returned 22 kicks for another 48 yards. Woodhead also played in six playoff games for the Patriots, with one touchdown.



San Diego signed Woodhead as an unrestricted free agent on March 15, 2013; he retired from pro football on March 17, 2018. In ten NFL seasons Woodhead had 5,694 all purpose yards with 15 rushing touchdowns, 17 receiving TD, and two 2-point conversions.

Danny Woodhead Retires: The Exit Interview | Sports Illustrated

Danny Woodhead made a name for himself in the NFL by being the everyman's player, the underdog, the undrafted running back with a diminutive 5' 8" frame, full of grit.​




Happy 50th Birthday to Vincent Brisby
Born January 25, 1971 in Houston
Patriot WR 1993-1999; uniform #82
Pats 2nd round (56th overall) selection in the 1993 draft, from NE Louisiana

The 1993 draft was one of the better ones in Patriot history, and certainly the best since the Chuck Fairbanks era. Drew Bledsoe was the first overall pick and the Pats picked up Troy Brown in the 8th round. With three second round picks the Pats added LB Chris Slade, OL Todd Rucci and WR Vincent Brisby.

Until Curtis Martin arrived in 1995, the Bledsoe/Parcells Patriots had no running game. (How else do you explain Bledsoe throwing 70 passes in one game?) Drew flung it around to Ben Coates, Michael Timpson and Brisby - a lot. In his first three seasons Brisby had 169 receptions for 2,504 yards and ten touchdowns. Unfortunately the completion rate on passes to Brisby was poor, with the receiver able to catch only 43.8% of the 386 passes thrown his way.

In 1996 Brisby signed a large contract extension, then dealt with a hamstring injury in training camp - and did not get on the field until week 12. Parcells famously stated that he "recovered from open-heart surgery faster than Brisby had (from the hamstring injury). That's the truth. I'm not kidding you."

Brisby's first catch of the '96 season did not come until the Super Bowl against Green Bay. He lasted three more seasons under Pete Carroll, buried on the depth chart behind Terry Glenn, Shawn Jefferson and Troy Brown.

Aug 15, 2000: Patriots Cut Brisby | Hartford Courant

Vincent Brisby, who caught 66 passes in 1995 but only 48 since, was one of eight Patriots cut Monday.​
Most people go with what and whom they know, and Patriots coach Bill Belichick, who spent 12 years as a Giants assistant, is no different. He has brought in Chris Calloway, who played seven seasons with the Giants and caught 22 passes for 314 yards and one touchdown last season with the Falcons.​
Among those cut, the biggest surprise was that Brisby hung on as long as he did. NFL, as TV analyst and former coach Jerry Glanville loves to say, means Not For Long. Yet Brisby, 29, who signed a multimillion dollar contract before the 1996 season, then was promptly injured, hung on despite catching zero, 23, and seven passes the next three seasons. He was healthy in 1999, but then-Patriots coach Pete Carroll thought so little of him that he didn't activate him for four of the first five games.​


Considering that Brisby had only three notable seasons it is a bit of a surprise to see where he ranks all time in Patriot franchise history:
  • 3,142 career receiving yards was ninth most in franchise history at the time (17th now).
  • 217 career receptions was eighth most in Pats history then (17th now).
  • 14.5 yards per reception ranks eighth best in club history (minimum 200 catches).

Former Patriot Vincent Brisby inducted into his Louisiana College Hall of Fame | patriots.com

Vincent Brisby Hall of Fame (2015) | University of Louisiana Monroe




Happy 54th birthday to Darryl Wren
Born Jan 25, 1967 in Tulsa
Patriot CB, 1993-94; uniform #27
Waiver claim from Bills on Aug 31, 1993

Darryl Wren played in twenty games over two seasons in New England. In '93 he started five games and had three interceptions, with 35 tackles. The Pats attempted to trade him to Seattle late in training camp in '04 for a sixth round draft pick, but that trade was voided when Wren failed his physical. He was originally a third round pick by Buffalo in '91, from Pittsburgh State.




Happy 56th birthday to Jerry McCabe
Born Jan 25, 1965 in Detroit
Patriot LB, 1987; uniform #52

The Holy Cross alum was a replacement player for three games in '87; he also spent the next three seasons with the Chiefs.




Some other New England pro football players born on this date:

Ken Bungarda, 64 (1957)
Born in Hartford
OT from Missouri was drafted by the Bengals in '79, also played with 49ers.

Ray Preston, 67 (1954)
Lawrence High School
Played in 122 games for the Chargers at linebacker from 1976-1984.

Tom Toner (1950-1990)
Born in Woburn; Swampscott High School
Linebacker was drafted by Green Bay in '73 and played for the Packers until '77.

Vito Ananis (1915-1994)
Born in Cambridge; Cambridge Rindge Tech; Boston College
Halfback and defensive back for Washington in the forties.

Jack Flavin (1900-1965)
Born in Portland, Maine; Portland High School
Fullback in the twenties with the Buffalo All-Americans.


I wonder what a Jets fan equivalent of this thread would look like.

Joe Namath


Buttfumble


Joe Namath


Toes
 
Today In Patriots History
New Orleans Super Letdowns



Sunday, January 26, 1997 at 6:30
Super Bowl 31 at the Louisiana Superdome
Green Bay Packers 35, New England Patriots 21
Head Coaches: Bill Parcells, Mike Holmgren
Quarterbacks: Drew Bledsoe, Brett Favre
Odds: Packers favored by 14

Final Records: Packers 16-3, Patriots 13-6

Perhaps if Tuna wasn't spending so much of his time negotiating a contract to coach the Jets, he could have focused a bit more on Desmond Howard and special teams.






Sunday January 26, 1986 at 5:00
Super Bowl 20 at the Louisiana Superdome
Chicago Bears 46, New England Patriots 10
Head Coaches: Raymond Berry, Mike Ditka
Quarterbacks: Tony Eason, Steve Grogan; Jim McMahon
Odds: Chicago favored by 10

Final Records: Bears 18-1, Patriots 14-6

Fun Fact I: the Bears did not take the lead in this game until less than two minutes remaining in the first quarter.

Fun Fact II: Many people still hold a grudge against Ditka for rubbing it in by giving the football to 'The Fridge' Perry to score at the goal line for Chicago's final touchdown, rather than to Walter Payton.

Key Stats: too many to count.
  • Six turnovers
  • 11 rushes for 7 yards
  • Eason: 0-6, one fumble lost, 3 sacks for -28 yards
  • Total Yards: 408 to 123
  • Time of Possession: 39:15 to 20:45
  • Offensive plays: 73 to 47
The Patriots had already won their Super Bowl the previous week in the Squish the Fish Game. Chicago had Buddy Ryan's 46 defense, something that the NFL had not yet figured out how to counter. Those other teams would do so within two years, and Ryan quickly became a loudmouth has-been.






January 26, 2000:
Bill Belichick drops lawsuit against Jets and NFL

Bill Belichick dropped the antitrust lawsuit he had filed against the National Football League and the Jets yesterday, one day after the judge in the case refused to grant a temporary restraining order that would have allowed Belichick to negotiate with other teams for a new job.​
Belichick filed the lawsuit on Monday, hoping that the judge would grant him the freedom that N.F.L. Commissioner Paul Tagliabue did not when he ruled last Friday that the Jets still own Belichick's rights.​
''The main purpose of the case from Bill's perspective was to seek emergency relief so he had the opportunity to coach now,'' Jeffrey Kessler, Belichick's lawyer, said. ''Since it became apparent the court wasn't going to give us that relief, we had to decide what other options we could pursue. That option didn't work out.''​
. . . . .​
'''His goal is not to not be a coach and get damages,'' Kessler said. ''He wants to be a coach. If necessary, if all else fails, then he will pursue his claim for damages. Right now, what he wants to do is be permitted to work again. He wants it very clear that what he is seeking was to become free. He's trying to avoid the damage. If it turns out he can't, we'll consider other alternatives.''​
The Jets had no comment on yesterday's development.​
Belichick's immediate future remains murky. A team that wants his services may have them, but it will have to pay compensation to the Jets. The New England Patriots, who asked for permission to speak to Belichick on Jan. 3, have had talks with the Jets to try to reach a deal, but so far those talks have produced no resolution.​
Meanwhile, the Patriots have also had talks with candidates who would fill the general manager and head-coaching posts separately, the two jobs that Belichick would presumably fill by himself if he had the freedom to make a deal with New England. Yesterday, the Patriots met with Dom Capers, the defensive coordinator of the Jacksonville Jaguars.​
The Patriots are one of just two N.F.L. teams that now need a head coach.​
 
Today In Patriots History



Sunday January 26, 1986 at 5:00
Super Bowl 20 at the Louisiana Superdome
Chicago Bears 46, New England Patriots 10
Head Coaches: Raymond Berry, Mike Ditka
Quarterbacks: Tony Eason, Steve Grogan; Jim McMahon
Odds: Chicago favored by 10

Final Records: Bears 18-1, Patriots 14-6

Fun Fact I: the Bears did not take the lead in this game until less than two minutes remaining in the first quarter.

Fun Fact II: Many people still hold a grudge against Ditka for rubbing it in by giving the football to 'The Fridge' Perry to score at the goal line for Chicago's final touchdown, rather than to Walter Payton.

Key Stats: too many to count.
  • Six turnovers
  • 11 rushes for 7 yards
  • Eason: 0-6, one fumble lost, 3 sacks for -28 yards
  • Total Yards: 408 to 123
  • Time of Possession: 39:15 to 20:45
  • Offensive plays: 73 to 47
The Patriots had already won their Super Bowl the previous week in the Squish the Fish Game. Chicago had Buddy Ryan's 46 defense, something that the NFL had not yet figured out how to counter. Those other teams would do so within two years, and Ryan quickly became a loudmouth has-been.


That week really sucked. First the Pats got destroyed in their first Super Bowl and then two days later came the Challenger Disaster. 1986 started out about as good as 2020.
 
That week really sucked. First the Pats got destroyed in their first Super Bowl and then two days later came the Challenger Disaster. 1986 started out about as good as 2020.
And then we had Buckner.

yeah, not a great year
 
Today In Patriots History
Brandon Bolden



Happy 31st Birthday to Brandon Bolden
Born January 26, 1990 in Baton Rouge
Patriot RB/ST 2012-2017, 2019-present; uniform #38
Signed as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 12, 2012 from Ole Miss
  • - Earned two Super Bowl rings with Patriots, with 11 postseason wins while with the Pats.
  • - His grandfather, Frank Pitts, played ten years in the NFL. Pitts was a split end who played in Super Bowl I and IV for the Chiefs.
  • - Named the 2012 FedEx Ground Player of the Week in week four. Bolden ran for 137 yards and a TD on just 16 carries in a 52-28 victory at Buffalo, which included rushes of 20 and 27 yards.
  • - The 8.6 yards per carry in that game ranks as the third most for a single game in Patriots history with a minimum of 15 rushing attempts. Only Curtis Martin (9.6 ypc on 17-164 vs Washington on Oct 13, 1996) and Tony Collins (9.2 ypc on 23-212 vs the Jets, Sept. 18, 1983) have better performances.
  • - Bolden needs just 20 more yards rushing to become the 35th player in franchise history to run for 1,000 yards. Rex Burkhead (1,026) passed Bolden on that list in 2020.
  • - His nine career rushing touchdowns ranks 30th in team history, tied with Mack Herron, Robert Edwards, Ron Burton and Jim Plunkett. Burkhead, James White and Cam Newton passed Bolden on that leader board last year.




In the 2014 'We're on to Cincinnati' Game Bolden was a huge spark, with two special teams tackles and forced a fumble on a kickoff that Kyle Arrington returned nine yards for a touchdown. Later that season Bolden blocked his first NFL punt in a win at San Diego that led to a Patriot touchdown. It was the Patriots' first blocked punt since 2010.

While with Miami in 2018 Bolden ran the ball twice against the Patriots - and he scored touchdowns both times. In 2019 the Pats began to use Bolden as a kick returner for the first time; he ran 23 kicks back at an average of 22.4 yards.

Career Regular Season Stats as a Patriot:
  • 98 games with eight starts
  • 231 carries for 980 yards (4.2 ypc), with nine touchdowns
  • 56 receptions for 484 yards, 8.6 ypc, three touchdowns
  • 1,464 yards from scrimmage and an average of 5.1 yards per touch
  • 12 touchdowns and 89 first downs
  • 781 offensive snaps and 1,721 special teams snaps




Happy 63rd birthday to Mike Hubach
Born January 26, 1958 in Cleveland
Patriot punter, 1980-1981; uniform #6
Pats 11th round (293rd overall) selection of the 1980 draft, from Kansas

Mike Hubach averaged 38.0 yards per punt as a rookie, dead last in the NFL in 1980. He was outperformed by Rich Camarillo in training camp, but head coach Ron Erhardt overrode special teams coach Gino Cappelletti, retaining Hubach to start the 1981 season - because Hubach also handled kickoff duties.

After five games and a 38.2 yard average the Pats waived Hubach. Rather than sign Camarillo they turned to Ken Hartley, who was even worse and lasted only two games. The Pats finally signed Camarillo, who became one of the NFL's best punters in the eighties and nineties.

Oct 7, 1981: Patriots still trying to find a punter | UPI

Oct 19, 1981: Punting-poor Patriots sign Rich Camarillo | UPI

Nov 7, 1981: Sports People: Camarillo Finds Niche | New York Times




Happy birthday to Judson Flint, who would have been 64 today
Born January 26, 1957 in Farrell, Pennsylvania
Patriot defensive back, 1979
Pats 7th round (177th overall) selection of the 1979 draft, from Memphis

Judson Flint missed all of his rookie season due to a knee injury. He was the last player waived after training camp in 1980, and was picked up by the Browns. Flint played in 38 straight games for Cleveland before being sidelined with a broken ankle, and played in only one more game after that. In his post-NFL career Judson Flint was a supervisor for the Mercer County Housing Authority in Pennsylvania until he retired in 2012. He passed away in 2018 at the age of 61.






Two other old timers born on this date with a New England connection:

Lefty Jamerson (1900-1980)
Hartford Blues
Lefty briefly (three games) played end in the NFL, and pitched (one game) for the Red Sox in the twenties. He later was a head coach at Memphis State and at Davidson College.

Larry Weltman (1899-1959)
Born in Pittsfield, MA; Pittsfield High School
At Syracuse he was a tailback on the football team, and known as a solid defender on the basketball team. Larry was a blocking back in the NFL for Rochester in the twenties.
 
And then we had Buckner.

yeah, not a great year
At least the Celtics beat Houston for the 1985-86 NBA championship. It was their 2nd in three seasons and 3rd in six years, following the short-term Heinsohn to Fitch transition (with a couple of bad seasons in between, including Cowens as one of the last player-coaches).

A few months after the NBA championship the Celtics drafted Len Bias.

None of us at that time would have ever imagined the Celtics would not win another championship for 22 years.

John Y Brown trading three first round picks for Bob McAdoo - all because his trophy wife Phyllis George said she liked McAdoo.

Uggh.
 
Today in Patriots History
Patriots Hire Bill Belichick



January 27, 2000:
Patriots name Bill Belichick their 14th head coach in franchise history.


New England traded three draft picks, including a 2000 first-rounder, for two Jet draft picks and the right to hire Belichick as the team's head coach.




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There is a very well detailed history of how the trade occurred below, including conjecture at that time that Oakland was the best fit for Belichick, to assessment of what the Jets received in return:

Was Belichick to New England the best trade in league history? | Grantland

In the meantime, both teams made moves. The Jets promoted linebackers coach Al Groh to the head-coaching gig. The Patriots, unsure if they could hire their desired candidate, expressed interest in the likes of Mike Martz, Tom Moore, and Gary Kubiak before interviewing Raiders defensive coordinator Willie Shaw, Bears offensive coordinator Gary Crowton, and Jaguars defensive coordinator Dom Capers.​


Kraft, Patriots still smiling on 20th anniversary of Bill Belichick trade | Boston Herald

Patriots owner Robert Kraft made a major decision two decades ago on behalf of the franchise that was initially met with eyeball rolls and skepticism on many fronts.​
When Kraft sent a first-round pick to the Jets for the right to hire Bill Belichick, the prevailing view was that he would ultimately regret the move.​
Funny how that turned out.​
Six Super Bowl championships, nine conference crowns and 16 division titles later, Kraft is smiling. The trade for Belichick is one of the moves that’s defined his ownership, and helped build a dynasty. In fact, it’s one of the greatest trades in NFL history.​



Looking back at Belichick's two decades of dominance | patriots.com
The numbers are staggering:​
  • 6 Super Bowl titles (two more than any other HC)
  • 9 Conference titles (three more than any other HC)
  • 17 Division titles
  • Career record – 311-148 (.678)
  • Regular season – 280-136 (.673)
  • Postseason – 31-12 (.721)
  • Patriots record – 274-103 (.727)


Lack of buzz about Bill Belichick hire 20 years ago comical in hindsight | Mike Reiss, espn

On Page 85, a story that gauged fan reaction to the hire was modest. Some were expecting a bigger name like Marty Schottenheimer, or a package deal of Dom Capers as coach and Tom Donahoe as general manager. "I think the combination of Capers and Donahoe was more promising," one fan was quoted as saying.​
In a story headlined It's all so crazy, it just might work, Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy wrote, "Belichick's behavior in recent weeks indicates he might be enough of a wacko to be an effective head coach."​



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Today in Patriots History
Troy Brown leads Pats to upset
over Steelers for AFC championship


Sunday January 27, 2002 at 12:40
2001 AFC Championship Game at Heinz Field
New England Patriots 24, Pittsburgh Steelers 17
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Bill Cowher
Quarterbacks: Tom Brady, Drew Bledsoe; Kordell Stewart
Odds: Pittsburgh favored by 10

Pats improve to 13-5; advance to Super Bowl 36 versus Rams
Steelers finish 14-4, with plenty of time to unpack their bags

It was reported that prior to this game Pittsburgh head coach Bill Cowher told his players to have their bags packed and business in order, in order to avoid distractions heading into the Super Bowl.

Oops.

Maybe the Steelers should have been more focused on special teams. Or not given the Patriots additional incentive with bulletin board material.

Here is a summary from the perspective of a Steeler fan:

The 12 Most Heartbreaking Playoff Losses In Pittsburgh Steelers History: #5

With the Patriots traveling to Pittsburgh for the AFC Championship Game, the Good Lord decided to make this game "special" for Coach Belichick. First, after a beautiful 64-yard punt by Josh Miller got Pittsburgh out of trouble and put New England in such, the Steelers were penalized for illegal procedure when Troy Edwards stepped out of bounds covering the punt. On Miller's mulligan, Troy Brown ran 55 yards into the end zone giving the Patriots a 7-0 lead. After a Kris Brown field goal cut the lead to 7-3, Tom Brady was knocked out of the game with a knee injury. Divinely, replacement Drew Bledsoe came in and looked like Johnny Unitas. He took New England down the field and threw an 11-yard touchdown arial to David Patten. The seven-point favorite Pittsburgh Steelers trailed New England 14-3 at halftime.
Another Steelers' mistake in the third quarter gave the Patriots the ball on Pittsburgh's 35-yard line after a fumble. But the Patriots were stuffed, the Steelers drove down the field, the Good Lord was concerned, so out came another heavenly "special." Kris Brown's field-goal attempt was blocked by a defensive tackle, picked up by Troy Brown, who ran about 10 yards before throwing a lateral pass to Antwan Harris, who ran 49 yards for a touchdown. The Patriots led, 21-3, causing all the angels to learn how to high-five.
If you have ever met a Steeler fan then you know that the Pittsburgh area is still salty, making excuses and conspiracy theories for every Steeler loss to the Pats to this day.








 
Today in Patriots History

Overshadowed by the 21st anniversary of the Bill Belichick trade and the 19th anniversary of Drew Bledsoe coming off the bench to defeat the Steelers for the AFC Championship are a few birthdays, highlighted by running backs Stevan Ridley and Fred Taylor.

It seems strange that Ridley is just one year older than one of yesterday's birthdays, Brandon Bolden.

Happy 32nd birthday to Stevan Ridley
Born January 27, 1989 in Natchez, Mississippi
Patriot RB, 2011-2014; uniform #22
Pats 3rd round (73rd overall) selection of the 2011 draft, from LSU

The 2011 draft was a good one for the Patriots, with the team selecting tackles Nate Solder and Marcus Cannon, running backs Stevan Ridley and Shane Vereen, as well as backups Ryan Mallett and Ras-I Dowling. The Pats originally had the 60th overall pick in the second round but traded down - getting Ridley 13 spots later, and picking up a fifth round pick that was used for Cannon.

As a rookie Stevan Ridley gained 5.1 yards per carry as part of a running back by committee that was headed by BenJarvus Green-Ellis. The following year Ridley had the best season of his career, rushing for 1,263 yards and 12 touchdowns. In the playoff loss to Baltimore old nemesis Bernard Pollard gave Ridley a concussion on a helmet to helmet hit, resulting in a fumble.

Ridley already had four fumbles in the regular season and would have four more in 2013, resulting in a loss of playing time. After fumbling for the third game in a row early in a game against the Broncos he was benched. Ridley was a healthy scratch the following week, with LeGarrette Blount assuming the role as lead running back.

The final play of Ridley's career with the Patriots came on October 12, 2014. The running back tore his ACL and MCL, landing him on IR. As a consolation prize Ridley did get a ring for the Super Bowl victory over Seattle that season.

Stevan Ridley signed with the Jets the following offseason, but the knee injury lingered. He bounced around between six teams over the next four seasons, last playing in 2018. In 74 NFL games Ridley rushed for 3,102 yards and 24 touchdowns.






Happy 45th birthday to Fred Taylor
Born January 27, 1976 in Pahokee, Florida
Patriot RB, 2009-2010; uniform #21
Signed as a veteran free agent on Feb 27, 2009

Fred Taylor rushed for over 1,200 yards six times with Jacksonville from 1998-2008. The Pats signed the 33 year old Florida Gator a week after being waived by the Jaguars. Unfortunately his time in Foxboro was defined by injuries. Taylor suffered an ankle injury after the fourth game of 2009 against the Ravens; he would not return until the final game of the season. Then in 2010 a toe injury kept Taylor off the field for ten weeks.

In 13 games with the Pats he averaged 4.0 yards per carry, rushing for 424 yards and four touchdowns. Over 13 NFL seasons Taylor totaled 14,079 yards from scrimmage and scored 74 touchdowns. His 11,695 yards rushing still ranks as the 17th most in league history.


On a side note, Fred Taylor was part of a very one-sided trade. On Feb 13, 1998 the Jaguars traded QB Rob Johnson to Buffalo. In exchange Jacksonville received a first round pick, ninth overall (used on Taylor), plus a fourth round pick. Johnson had been a backup to Mark Brunell and Buffalo head coach Wade Phillips immediately named Johnson the starter, with the former USC QB signing a five year contract for what was big money back then.

Johnson suffered one injury after another and Doug Flutie took over, with far better results. Johnson infamously publicly whined 'I'm not a backup', and later owner Ralph Wilson meddled by forcing Phillips to start Johnson in a playoff game. Over the course of his career Rob Johnson was 12-17 as a starting quarterback - a shark contrast to the career that Fred Taylor had.




Happy 28th birthday to Damiere Byrd
Born January 27, 1993 in Camden County, southern NJ
Patriot WR, 2020-present; uniform #10
Signed as an unrestricted free agent on March 23, 2020

Byrd played college ball at South Carolina, where he was also considered to be the fastest player on the Gamec#cks track team. He went undrafted, signed as a rookie by Carolina in 2015. During the Panthers' 2017 season he played against the Pats - and suffered a broken arm on his only touch of that game, a 12-yard reverse.

After getting little playing time during three years in Carolina, Byrd signed a one-year contract as a free agent with Arizona in 2019. While there he was on the field more often, with 32 receptions for 359 yards and a 69.6% catch percentage.

Thanks to an absence of talent at WR on the 2020 Patriot roster, Byrd was suddenly thrust into a far more significant role. He finished the season with 47 receptions (3rd) for 604 yards (2nd) despite often being covered by opponent's top cornerback due to his speed.




Happy 56th birthday to Tom Rehder
Born January 27, 1965 in Sacramento
Patriot OL, 1988-1989; uniform #76
Pats 3rd round (69th overall) selection of the 1988 draft, from Notre Dame

Tom Rehder played in all 32 games during his two seasons with the Patriots, with zero starts. He was signed by the Jets as a free agent in 1990, and spent one season with the Giants.




Happy 65th birthday to Sidney Brown
Born January 27, 1956 in New Orleans
Patriot CB, 1977-1979; uniform #21
Pats 3rd round (82nd overall) selection of the 1977 draft, from Oklahoma

Sidney Brown had been recruited by Chuck Fairbanks when Brown was in high school and Fairbanks was the Sooners head coach. Brown spent his rookie season on injured reserve, then played in every game the following year. He was injured early in the 1979 training camp and spent another season on IR, and never made it back to the NFL after that.




January 27, 1970 at the Belmont Plaza Hotel in New York
Day One (rounds 1-7) of the 1970 NFL Draft

Like many drafts from this time period, the 1970 draft explains quite a bit about why the Patriots were as bad as they were in the years immediately following the merger.

With the fourth overall pick the Pats selected DT Phil Olsen. He spent his first season on IR and then escaped as a free agent in a front office oversight the following offseason.

The Pats didn't have a second round pick, having traded that away with Leroy Mitchell to Houston for Larry Carwell, Charlie Frazier, Sid Blanks and Ronnie Caveness. Carwell was a decent player but Mitchell was much better. Frazier was a past his prime 30 year old receiver. Blanks was strictly a backup, and Caveness didn't make the Patriot roster. The Oilers got the better end of the deal even before figuring in the 31st overall pick of the draft.

The third and fourth round picks were used on LB Mike Ballou and RB Eddie Ray; both were gone after one season. The Pats had traded their own fifth round pick to the Jets for OT Ezell Jones, who lasted a year and a half, but they also had a fifth from Miami from the dubious Nick Buoniconti trade. The Pats used that selection on Bob Olson, who did not make the roster and never played in the NFL.

The Patriots did not have a sixth round pick, having traded that away to Buffalo the previous year for safety/punter Tom Janik. That (Janik) would turn out to be by far the best value for the Pats of the entire 1970 draft. Then in the seventh round the Pats added Odell Lawson, who returned kicks for the Pats as a rookie, playing in a total of 16 games before moving on.




January 27, 2008
Mike Holovak passed away at the age of 88

Holovak was an All American selection at Boston College, playing in both the Sugar Bowl and the Orange Bowl. After Naval service as skipper of a PT boat in the South Pacific during World War II, he played professional football for the Los Angles Rams and the Chicago Bears.​
He later returned to Boston College to become head football coach. In 1960, he was hired as the first Director of Player Personnel for the Boston Patriots. He was named the team's head coach in 1961 and continued in that capacity through 1968.​
Holovak later served as general manager and president of player personnel for the Houston Oilers, now Tennessee Titans, retiring in 1998.​




Other pro football players born on this date with a New England connection:

Fritz Pollard (1894-1986)
Bates College; Brown University
Hall of Fame tailback from the 1920s was the first African American player in the NFL, as well as the first to be a head coach.

Deon Anderson, 38 (1983)
Born in Providence; Hope High School in Providence; UConn
Drafted by the Cowboys in 2007, the fullback spent four seasons with Dallas.

Dennis Cambal, 72 (1949)
Born in Waltham; Phillips Andover Academy
The tight end was drafted by Oakland in 1972, and later played for the Jets.

John Badaczewski (1922-1999)
Boston Yanks, 1946-48
Two-way lineman played in the NFL for eight seasons.
 
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TRANSCRIPT: Eliot Wolf’s Pre-Draft Press Conference 4/18/24
Thursday Patriots Notebook 4/18: News and Notes
Wednesday Patriots Notebook 4/17: News and Notes
Tuesday Patriots Notebook 4/16: News and Notes
Monday Patriots Notebook 4/15: News and Notes
Patriots News 4-14, Mock Draft 3.0, Gilmore, Law Rally For Bill 
Potential Patriot: Boston Globe’s Price Talks to Georgia WR McConkey
Friday Patriots Notebook 4/12: News and Notes
Not a First Round Pick? Hoge Doubles Down on Maye
Thursday Patriots Notebook 4/11: News and Notes
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