Today in Patriots History: December 20
MVP Gino Cappelletti leads league with 155 points scored
December 20, 1960:
Clemson QB Harvey White becomes the first player to sign a Boston Patriots contract.
December 20, 1964:
Buffalo Bills 24, Boston Patriots 14 at Fenway Park
The final regular season game of the 1964 season was essentially a playoff game as the 10-2-1 Patriots hosted the 11-2 Bills. The winner would advance to the AFL championship game, while the season would be over for the loser; the concept of wild card spots and expanded playoffs was many years away.
In the first quarter
Tony Romeo caught a 37-yard touchdown pass from
Babe Parilli. Although the Pats did not convert the extra point they were down by only one point, 7-6. In the second quarter
Jack Kemp – who had earlier thrown a 57-yard touchdown pass to
Elbert Dubenion – scored from one yard out, and
Pete Gogolak’s 12-yard field goal made it 17-6 Bills at the half.
In the 4th quarter Kemp scored on another one-yard run, putting the Patriots down by 18. Parilli hit Romeo again on a 15-yard touchdown and the Pats converted the 2-point conversion to close the gap to ten points. Buffalo held on to win the game, and then defeated San Diego by the score of 20-7 for their first AFL title.
The Bills limited the Patriots to just 33 yards rushing on 11 attempts, so the Pats had to air it out. Parilli went 19-for-39 for 294 yards, with 2 touchdowns and also two picks.
Jim Colclough averaged 22.3 yards per catch, with six receptions for 134 yards. The Pats picked Kemp off three times (twice by
Ron Hall, once by
Don Webb), but Buffalo burned time off the clock with a methodical running game (94 yards on 41 carries) once they had the lead.
Gino Cappelletti was named the AP and UPI Player of the Year, and also earned his third (of five) trips to the AFL All-Star Game. Cappelletti led the league with 155 points scored in 1964. To this day it is the 11th most points scored by a player in a single season. Every single one of those ranked ahead of him played a 16-game season rather than the 14-game season that was played back then. It was the third time in four years he led the AFL in scoring; the one other time he finished second. In 1964 Gino led the team in receptions, receiving yards, and shared the lead for most touchdown receptions. He was the American Football League MVP in '64.
Parilli was a first-team All Pro and All Star, and led the league in passing yardage (3,465), touchdown passes (31), game-winning drives (3), and comebacks (3).
Larry Garron made his third All Star game (ie, Pro Bowl), amassing 935 yards from scrimmage and nine touchdowns. Garron led the Pats in rushing attempts, rushing yardage, and shared the lead for touchdown receptions.
December 20, 1970:
Cincinnati Bengals 45, New England Patriots 7 at Riverfront Stadium
The
Joe Kapp Era mercifully came to an end in the Queen City on this day. Kapp went 7-for-21-for 101 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. For the Bengals
Sam Wyche was 7-for-14 for just 91 yards, but he threw two touchdowns and no picks. The future head coach of the Bengals and Bucs also rushed for 63 yards and a touchdown. The Pats finished the season with a 2-12 record, worst in the league;
Clive Rush and
John Mazur both went 1-6 on the season as the team’s head coach.
December 20, 1981:
Baltimore Colts 23, New England Patriots 21 at Memorial Stadium
The Pats lost their ninth consecutive game, and in doing so they won the first overall pick in the upcoming draft by losing to the Colts. Of course they used that pick on
Kenneth Sims rather than someone like
Chip Banks or
Mike Munchak so it wasn’t that big of a ‘win’; at least they nailed it when they grabbed
Andre Tippett in the second round.
Bert Jones threw three touchdown passes as the Colts matched the Patriots with a final record of 2-14.
Tom Owen got the start at QB in what would turn out to be his final NFL game, and threw a touchdown pass to
Don Westbrook. Westbrook also caught a TD pass from
Matt Cavanaugh. Those two scoring plays represent 67% of the touchdowns of Westbrook's NFL career.
December 20, 1987:
New England Patriots 13, Buffalo Bills 7 at Rich Stadium
Steve Grogan tossed a 7-yard touchdown pass to
Cedric Jones in the 1st quarter and
Reggie Dupard ripped a 36-yard run for a touchdown in the 2nd quarter. After that the Pats defense did the rest, limiting Buffalo to just 148 total yards of offense.
Garon Veris,
Andre Tippett,
Toby Williams and
Brent Williams combined for five sacks, and
Fred Marion had an interception to keep the 7-7 Pats playoff hopes alive.
December 20, 1992:
Cincinnati Bengals 20, New England Patriots at Riverfront Stadium
The two teams entered the game with a combined record of 6-22.
Jeff Carlson inadvertently did his part to insure that the Patriots would get the number one pick in the 1993 draft. The lefty from Weber State went 7-20 for 60 yards (3.0 yards per attempt), no touchdowns, two interceptions, and a 4.2 passer rating.
Jon Vaughan provided the lone Patriot highlight of the afternoon with a 100-yard kickoff return for the Pats only touchdown. The second-year running back from Michigan also had 58 yards rushing on 14 carries, and caught both Carlson passes thrown his way for nine yards. Cincinnati RB
Harold Green had by far the best day of his NFL career, rushing for 190 yards.
December 20, 1998:
New England Patriots 24, San Francisco 49ers 21 at Foxboro Stadium
Scott Zolak made his first start in three years, subbing for an injured
Drew Bledsoe while skeptics expected the worst. Zo led the Patriots to two scoring drives in the final eight minutes to silence his critics.
Robert Edwards (101 yards rushing, 52 yards receiving, two touchdowns) scored on a 5-yard run to tie the score, then
Adam Vinatieri kicked a game-winning 35-yard field goal with six seconds left to play. Zolak's numbers (205 yards, two touchdowns) were nothing special, but he did get the W over
Steve Young.
Credit the New England defense, who shut San Fran out in the second half. SF had one drive last for 7:45, but the defense stiffened and forced a punt. On the next drive
Willie Clay picked Young off and returned the ball to the 49. That set up the drive that culminated in Edwards' second touchdown, tying the score at 21. The Patriot defense forced two more three-and-outs, with their fifth sack of the game pinning SF back on their own 10 yard line.
Troy Brown returned the punt 14 yards to start the drive on the Niner 41 yard line. Edwards ran the ball on four straight plays, down to the 17 yard line, to set up Vinatieri's kick.
Overall the Patriot defense had five sacks, two interceptions, and one fumble recovery, holding San Francisco scoreless on their last five possessions. SF had just five yards of offense on the final three drives.
Jerry Rice led the Niners with five catches on six receptions for 115 yards, including a 75-yard TD early on.
Steve Mariucci's 49ers settled for a wild card as a result of the loss; after defeating Green Bay, they lost to NFC champion Atlanta in the division round.
With the victory the Patriots improved to 9-6, clinching a playoff berth for
Pete Carroll's club.
December 20, 2003:
New England Patriots 21, New York Jets 16 at Giants Stadium
On Saturday night the Pats won their 11th straight game, to give them the best record in the NFL. The Patriots struggled somewhat against the Jet defense, but New England's defense was dominant. The Pats D intercepted five passes off
Chad Pennington, and also racked up four sacks on the Jet quarterback.
On the second play of the game
Tedy Bruschi picked off Pennington, and on the next play
Tom Brady threw a 35-yard touchdown to
David Givens. Then early in the second quarter
Willie McGinest had a 15-yard pick-six to put the Patriots up 14-7.
Bethel Johnson ran the kickoff to open the second half back to the 40 yard line. Seven plays later Brady connected with Givens again, this time for a 5-yard TD to give the Pats a 21-10 lead.
Ty Law intercepted a pass intended for
Santana Moss in the end zone to kill the next drive; that would become a recurring theme throughout this game. The Jets scored on their next possession though to pull within five points. After forcing the Pats to punt
Rodney Harrison picked off another pass intended for Moss, but the Jets got the ball back near midfield after an interception. A 7-yard sack by
Richard Seymour and McGinest forced a three-and-out though to end that drive.
Antowain Smith (18 carries for 121 yards) chewed up nearly four minutes off the clock on the ensuing drive, and then
Eugene Wilson intercepted yet another Pennington pass intended for Moss to seal the victory.
December 20, 2004:
Miami Dolphins 29, New England Patriots 28 at Pro Player Stadium
The 2-11 Dolphins shocked the 12-1 Pats, who were favored by 10, on Monday Night Football. The loss put the Patriots one game behind 13-1 Pittsburgh in the AFC playoff race. It was just the second loss in the last 29 games for New England. It was also the first time in 32 games that the Patriots lost after leading at halftime.
The Pats were up 28-17 with 3:59 left to play after
Tom Brady's 2-yard touchdown pass to
Daniel Graham. Miami came back with a quick 68-yard scoring drive, making it 28-24 with 2:01 to play.
Jason Taylor pressured Brady on third down, and TB12 threw an ill-advised pass as Taylor hit his arm rather than take the sack.
Brendan Ayanbadejo picked the pass off, and Miami had the ball at the Patriot 21 yard line. On 4th and 10 with 1:23 to go,
A.J. Feeley connected with
Derrius Thompson, who was being covered by
Troy Brown, for the winning score.
Brady finished with four interceptions and no touchdowns. The only other time that has ever happened in his career was the 2003 '
They Hate Their Coach Game'. In both instances Brady and the Patriots recovered, going on to win the Super Bowl.
On a side note,
Bill Belichick saw more of a certain Miami player that he would make a point of acquiring.
Wes Welker returned a punt 71 yards to the 2-yard line to set up Miami's first touchdown. Welker had 226 return yards on the day (averaged 27.8 yards on five kickoffs, and two punt returns for 87 yards). Earlier in the season Welker stepped in to take over kicking duties (3 kickoffs, 1-1 PAT, 1-1 FG) against the Patriots when
Olindo Mare was injured, in addition to returning five kickoffs and five punts.
December 20, 2009:
New England Patriots 17, Buffalo Bills 10 at Ralph Wilson Stadium
A week after Carolina Panther defenders accused
Randy Moss of 'quitting', Moss came back with five receptions for 70 yards and a touchdown. The Patriots racked up six sacks (including three by
Tully Banta-Cain) on
Ryan Fitzpatrick and
Trent Edwards. The Pats limited Buffalo to 2-12 on third down, and were up 17-3 before the Bills scored with three minutes left.
Laurence Maroney had 81 yards rushing and one touchdown for the Pats.
December 20, 2015:
New England Patriots 33, Tennessee Titans 16 at Gillette Stadium
Tom Brady completed 23 of 35 passes for 267 yards as the Pats improved to 12-2.
James White filled in for an injured
Dion Lewis and caught seven passes for 71 yards, including a 30-yard catch-and-run TD.
The Pats scored on their first drive on a 5-yard TD pass to
Rob Gronkowski. Early in the second quarter a
Chandler Jones strip sack resulted in another score when
Akiem Hicks recovered the fumble for a touchdown, and a 14-0 lead.
After a Tennessee field goal,
Keshawn Martin returned the ensuing kickoff 75 yards. Two plays later Brady found
James White (7 receptions, 71 yards) for a nice 30-yard catch and run for another TD.
Stephen Gostkowski added a field goal and the Pats led 24-3 at the half.
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
December 20, 1947:
Peter Criss (drummer for
Kiss) was born in Brooklyn.
December 20, 1948:
Alan Parsons was born in London; besides his
Alan Parsons Project he worked on the production of various notable albums such as
Abbey Road and
Dark Side Of The Moon.
December 20, 1973:
Bobby Darin died at the age of 37.