January 27, 2012


Around the League, Week One

by Jeremy Gottlieb, Patriots Daily Staff
September 16, 2009

Brett Favre.

There’s two words sure to entice readers not to surf elsewhere/vomit, right? I’m sorry, loyal readers, I couldn’t help it. The thing is, I hate the guy. Loathe him. As far as I’m concerned, he resides in the upper stratosphere of the worst professional athletes known to man, resting comfortably alongside the likes of Alex Rodriguez, Terrell Owens and Kobe Bryant. I had promised myself following this summer’s installment of his stupid, boring, completely predictable, ego-maniacal, ongoing soap opera that I would do what needed to be done and just pretend he didn’t exist. It was working, too, even as all the ESPN robots and the like continued to suck up to him like he cured cancer. And then, Week 1 happened.

The headline for the Worldwide Favre Leader’s web coverage of the Vikings/Browns tilt read, “Favre, Peterson Lead Vikes.” It occurred to me nearly instantaneously that such a statement was patently untrue and absurd. Favre passed for 110 yards. Peterson rushed for 180 yards and three TDs, including a 60-yarder that was nothing short of breathtaking. If Favre absolutely needed to be included in the headline (which he probably did seeing as how the decision makers at ESPN would seemingly rather piss themselves continuously for all eternity than not treat him as the centrifugal force around which the entire universe revolves), shouldn’t Peterson’s name been listed first? Just a thought.

I could go on about how ESPN went on to feature one of their (and perhaps biggest) Favre shills Gene Wojciechowski’s postgame column, which naturally was all about Favre, or have the lead photo on both their front page and NFL page show Favre in the foreground and Peterson not only in the background but also out of focus. But I won’t. I need to stop before I’m the one who vomits. I’ll just end this little diatribe by noting that the chances of ESPN doing something like this again later in the season – that is to say hyping a washed-up, overrated, team and coach killing has-been over the best, most dynamic player in the league who also happens to play for the same team -are about as good as the sun rising tomorrow.

This Week’s Five Best Teams

1. Pittsburgh: Their bruising win over the Titans on Opening Night was not terrible artistic and losing Troy Polamalu for any length of time will definitely hurt. But until they lose, it’s hard to put them anywhere else, especially with Ben Roethlisberger being the best clutch quarterback in the league who isn’t named Brady.

2. New York Giants: They may be thinner at receiver and running back than in the past couple of years, but they still have a super defense and a (gulp) proven winner at quarterback in Eli Manning. There was never a time in their Week 1 win over the Redskins when it looked like anything but a sure W.

3. Philadelphia: There’s a caveat to this one since Donovan McNabb is now hurt (again) and the team the Eagles walloped last week – Carolina – seems to have a season ticket holder calling signals these days instead of an actual quarterback. But they are loaded with talent in all phases and showed it in abundance down in Charlotte.

4. New England: I’m gonna get hated on by the homer bashers for this one, especially considering how potentially disastrous the situation on defense looks. But with everything the Pats have on offense it won’t be long before they can afford to give up 30 points per game and still win. That’s how good Brady, Moss, Welker, et al are.

5. Green Bay: It took the Pack nearly the entire game to get anything going (sound familiar) on Sunday night, but when they did, Aaron Rodgers and Greg Jennings exploded. It helped that they played the Bears, who have 6-10 written all over them with Brian Urlacher going down and the fraudulent Jay Cutler at QB. But their offense still seems to have what it takes and their defense, which killed them last year, looks much improved.

This Week’s Five Worst Teams

1. St Louis: It took the entire lifespan of the NFL for there to be a winless team before last year’s Lions. It’s not out of the realm of possibility that this year’s Rams – completely devoid of talent beyond Steven Jackson – make it two in two years.

2. Cleveland: If the over/under on how long it would take Eric Mangini to go from hot, young coaching star to unbearable, pig-headed, soon-to-be-unhireable loser was six years and you took the under, you win!

3. Detroit: It’s amazing – the Lions are now just the third worst team in the league and we may as well throw them a party. How many teams can get pasted with 45 points in Week 1 as Detroit was last week and still have reason for optimism?

4. Jacksonville: The Jags hung with the Colts last week, as they usually do. And they may even beat the Cardinals this week in their home opener. But really, what’s there after Maurice Jones-Drew? Not much, which means we may only have to live through 15 more weeks of the insufferable Jack Del Rio.

5. Cincinnati: I know, the Bengals didn’t play that badly against Denver last week. And they were just over 30 seconds from winning. And this year’s edition of “Hard Knocks” on HBO was cool. But really, could what happened at the end of the Broncos game have happened to any other team but them? 5-11, here they come! Again!

What’s Trendy

Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland: An argument could be made that Cribbs is the best player on the Browns. Not too far-fetched when you look at the total sucktitude of the rest of the roster. Anyway, he reinforced the notion with a 67-yard punt return for a score in the second quarter, the seventh special teams TD of his career.

Jeremy Shockey, Saints: He caught two of Drew Brees’ six TD passes for the Saints against the Lions, two more than he’s had since November, 2007, when he was with the Giants.

San Francisco: The Niners went on the road to face the defending NFC Champs, managed less than one yard per rushing attempt and featured 57-year-old Isaac Bruce as their leading receiver yet still dispatched the Cardinals, 20-16.

What’s Not

Jake Delhomme, Carolina: In leading the Panthers to 169 yards of total offense and just three third down conversions in 19 tries, Delhomme passed for 73 yards, threw four picks and fumbled. He now has nine turnovers in his last two games, 11 in his last three. He also has a $40 million contract extension (almost $20 million guaranteed) which began at the start of the season. Go Panthers.

Jay Cutler, Chicago: Four picks for the Bears’ franchise savior, each one worse than the last. Cutler may be the first franchise savior in history to assume such a mantle with a 17-20 record as a starter and never lead his team to the playoffs.

Leodis McKelvin, Buffalo: He’d do it again, 100 times out of 100. If it does happen 100 more times, look for the Bills to go 0-100.

And finally…

This week marks the regular season debut of the Cowboys new, multi-billion dollar palace when the Giants come into Arlington, TX. The over/under on how many punts bounce off that ridiculous video board that Jerry Jones won’t just move a measly 10 feet higher because, as he’s proven time and again since the last time Cowboys actually won a playoff game, he’s more interested in being gossiped about than actually winning, is 2.5. I take the over.

Jeremy Gottlieb’s ‘Around the League’ will be a regular weekly feature on Patriots Daily.

Initial Injury Report, Week Two

The Wednesday injury report is out for this second week of the season, and the one name that all Patriots fans are interested in is Jerod Mayo.

To no one’s surprise, the middle linebacker did not practice today because of a reported MCL sprain suffered in Monday night’s season opener against the Bills. It seems that barring a miracle, we’re not going to see Mayo out on the field Sunday against the Jets, and it is going to be at least a few weeks before he has a chance of playing. This is a tough injury for the Patriots, as Mayo seemed to be the one guy on defense they really couldn’t go a significant amount of time without.

Looking over the report, the already-thin linebacker position is going to be hobbling a bit more as both Adalius Thomas (foot) and Rob Ninkovich (calf) are on the “limited participation” list. Their status leading up to the game will be something to watch.

One pleasant surprise is that Matthew Slater participated in at least some parts of practice today. Slater’s injury in the final preseason game had looked very serious, and yet there he is, not only not on IR, but practicing today.

Connolly, Edelman, Pryor, Welker and Wheatley were all on the list last week, and are on it again this week. Shawn Springs and Sammy Morris were on last week’s list, but are not listed today.

Here is the full list:

Patriots Injury Report
Did Not Practice

LB Jerod Mayo (knee)

Limited Participation
OL Dan Connolly (back)
WR Julian Edelman (ankle)
LB Rob Ninkovich (calf)
DL Myron Pryor (calf)
WR Matthew Slater (elbow)
LB Adalius Thomas (foot)
WR Wes Welker (knee)
CB Terrence Wheatley (knee)

Full Participation
QB Tom Brady (right shoulder)

No Mayo? Send it back!

by Scott Benson, Patriots Daily Staff
September 16, 2009

It’s indication of our battered fan psyche post-Brady (post-Pollard?) that the Patriots’ most important defensive player is said to be lost to the team for as much as two months, and we think it’s good news.

Yet here is where we find ourselves today, as word begins to filter out that Jerod Mayo sprained ligaments in his right knee in the Pats’ dramatic win over the Bills on Monday night.

Chris Gasper of the Boston Globe was the first to report that sources close to the second-year standout say he could be on the shelf for 6-8 weeks; Ian Rapoport of the Boston Herald blogs this morning (again, with Encyclopedia Britannica graphics) that the defensive linchpin “should be out fewer than six weeks.”

Keep reporting and blogging, men: perhaps we can get this down to a couple of days.

Okay, maybe not. It’s clear that Mayo will not be among the Pats when they take to the Giants Stadium turf on Sunday for another all-important divisional game against an AFC East rival. That’s not good anyway you cut it. But what else may Mayo miss over the next 6 to 8 weeks?

1. Week Two – at Jets, September 20th

Normally I’d think, “okay, non-playoff team, new head coach, rookie quarterback, not a bad draw for being shorthanded,” but come on. It’s Rex Ryan, it’s Mark Sanchez (already the second best quarterback in the division)…it’s the Jets. And they played pretty well last weekend. In other words, lousy timing. Plus, they have Thomas Jones, Dustin Keller, and Kevin Faulk Redux in Leon Washington – it was the Buffalo backs and tight ends that hurt the Pats the most on Monday night. It would have been nice not only to have Mayo but to have fill-in Gary Guyton back amongst the mix on the outside.

2. Week Three – vs. Falcons, September 27th

Hey, wait a minute…isn’t there some sort of special dispensation available to the Pats here? The resurgent Falcons have established one thing above all else; with Ryan, Turner, White, Jenkins, Norwood and now Tony Gonzalez, they can hold possession and move the ball (6th in the league in total offense in ’08, right behind the Pats). Even with a sometimes-balky effort against Miami on Sunday, not a good draw here either. Good news here is this may be one that the Pats can steal with their offense alone. Being home doesn’t hurt.

3. Week Four – vs. Ravens, October 4th

Second straight playoff team. Is this a set-up? We know this is a tough draw for the Pats from past experience, though Baltimore’s consistently good defense was neither against the Chiefs last Sunday (how do you hold somebody under 200 yards and still give up 24 points?). The concern here is the Ravens have displayed newfound passing acumen (it was that which pushed them past Kansas City), and with Rice, McGahee and Heap inside the box, there would have been plenty for Mayo to do here. Like Atlanta, at least this one’s at home.

4. Week Five – at Broncos, October 11th

Okay, the Pats finally catch a break competitively-speaking, though it’s hard to completely buy into that because it’s the Broncos, its in Denver, it’s a conference game, and the guy on the other sideline used to practice against the Pats every single day. Still, maybe it’s finally catch a breath time for the Pats defense. But watch that Stokely – he’s a sneaky bastard.

5. Week Six – vs. Titans, October 18th

For crying out loud. Who made this schedule? Where’s the Rams, the Lions, the Chiefs, the Browns? The reigning AFC South champs may have had a disappointing playoff finish last year, as well as an opening night conference loss to the Steelers, but do you doubt that this will be one of the hardest-nosed teams the Pats will play all season? And never mind what a loss may do to New England’s tiebreakers come December. If Rapoport’s right and Mayo will be lost for fewer than six weeks, it may be for this home game that he returns. That would be a big boost to a front seven that will be dealing with (among other things) Chris Johnson, Lendale White and Bo Scaife.

6. Week Seven – at Buccaneers, October 25th (London)

Blimey! Might Mayo miss some prime sightseeing opportunities? Or maybe he’d prefer to avoid the flight to London altogether. I wouldn’t put this matchup at the top of the Pats’ priority list, at least where Mayo is concerned. Will Tampa be able to get their footing by October? I’m guessing any team that’s starting Byron Leftwich at quarterback may take longer than that to come together.

7. Week Eight – Bye, November 1st

Let’s hope at this juncture, pinpointing Mayo’s exact timetable is still the biggest question surrounding the Pats.

8. Week Nine – vs. Dolphins, November 8th

Watching the Fins this last Sunday, I saw a team that seemed to lack confidence in its offense. It seemed every other play call was either a trick play (throwbacks, and that rapidly aging Wildcat) or a Chad Pennington throw out of bounds. I suppose that could change, but for now, I’m not going to assign any special significance to this game some two months away, even if it is a divisional contest. If Sunday was any indication, Miami’s offense could be circling the bowl by then. Sorry, Dol-fans. Your championships will have to continue being either ancient or imaginary.

So that’s an eight week timetable, and by my count, about half of it is fraught with peril. The other half, not so much. I suppose it could be worse. They could have drawn the Colts somewhere in there.

Wait…that’s the very next week.

E-mail Scott Benson at [email protected]

50th Anniversary Minute – the 1966 Patriots

by Brendon Rosenau, Patriots Daily Staff
September 16, 2009

Any Patriots fan worth his Stanley Morgan throwback knows that the first time the Pats appeared in the Super Bowl was 1986. But, did you know the Pats came within shouting distance of making history and appearing in the first ever AFL-NFL championship game?

You may recall in 1963 (last week’s history minute) the Pats made the AFL title game. They followed that with a 10 win season. However, in 1965 injuries ravaged the Pats and they limped to just four wins. 1966 was a fresh start and the Patriots took the field with hands-down the AFL’s best running back and a shot at history.

Second year running back Jim Nance ran roughshod over the AFL and helped lead the Patriots to an 8-4-2 record. Nance gained 1458 yards, an unprecedented 657 yards more than anyone else, scored 11 touchdowns, four more than any other RB, and averaged twice as many yards per contest (104.1) as any other back on his way to Player of the Year honors.

Behind Nance the Patriots went on a roll from November 13 through December and did not suffer a defeat in that six game stretch. After a 38-14 drilling of Houston, a game that Nance ran for 146 yards, the Pats were 8-3-2 and needed a win over the Jets in the regular season finale to advance to the AFL title game.

The Jets limited Nance to 78 yards and produced two of their own 100 yard rushers, Matt Snell and Emerson Boozer, to knock the Patriots out of the title picture and fire a preliminary round in the border war. Buffalo, the team the Patriots knocked out of the AFL playoffs in ‘63, won the last game and got the chance to play Kansas City for the AFL crown. The Chiefs of course won and would represent the AFL in Super Bowl 1.

Pro Bowl

Parilli, Jim Nance (FB), Cappelletti, Jon Morris (Center), Len St. Jean (RG), Tom Neville (RT), Jim Hunt (LDT), Houston Antwine (RDT), Larry Eisenhauer (RDE), Nick Buoniconti (MLB), Chuck Shonta (S)

All Pro

Nance, Cappelletti, Morris, Hunt, Antwine, Eisenhauer, Buoniconti

Leaders

  • Parilli – 2721 yards (3rd AFL), 20TD (4th), 20INT (3rd), 66.9 rating (4th)
  • Nance – 299 (1st), 1458 yards (1st, second place had 801), 11TD (1st, second place 7); 104.1 game (1st, 57.2)
  • Larry Garron – 319 yards, 4 TD; 30-416-5; 9 total TD
  • Art Graham – 51 catches (7th), 673 yards
  • Cappelletti – 43 catches, 676 yards (10th), 6 TD (6th); 16 FG, 35 XP (119 points) 1st
  • Ron Hall and Tom Hennessey 6 INT (6th)

If you have any distinct memories of this squad, we would love to hear from you in the comment box

Media Notes: “Todd” Light and other opening night observations

So at least we know why the Patriots struggled a bit in pass protection at times. They had six foot, 190lb Todd Lyght playing left tackle for them much of the night. At least that’s what Jon Gruden told us, several times. He wasn’t corrected directly, though at one point Ron Jaworski commented after Gruden and made sure to say MATT Light.

Some other quick hits:

  • The Patriots might be feeling a little peeved that the national media can’t get their names straight. In the ESPN pregame, Cris Carter referred to Patriots linebacker “O.J” Mayo.
  • Nice to see Frank Gifford in the pregame. His last years on MNF were painful, but he looked pretty good in his short stint.
  • The ESPN graphics had some new looks, but the down and distance markers “on the field” appeared to blur out players a little bit a few times.
  • Jaworski focused quite a bit on Brady’s knee, and showed us on the film how he felt that the knee was impacting Brady’s performance, specifically on throws.
  • It almost seemed like a reversal of the Joe Namath situation, with Suzy Kolber clinging to Tom Brady after the game, and doggedly chasing him across the field just to get a brief comment. She was charged with getting a Brady interview after the game, and she would not be denied. Most reporters would’ve just given up.
  • I love Randy Moss press conferences. I wish he’d do them every game. He is just as entertaining at the podium as he is on the field. He was the one who told us first that Brady had entered the huddle with 5:32 left and said that the Patriots would win the game, despite trailing by 11 at the time. Moss also said at one point “I’ve always been a fan of the Ryan brothers” when asked about the matchup with Rex Ryan and the Jets this Sunday.
  • The game worked out well for ESPN as it earned a 10.3 rating, representing an average of 10,224,000 households (14,001,000 viewers – P2+), the largest audience for any program on cable television in 2009.

What else stood out to you?

Making the Grades: Game 1 vs. Bills

by Jeremy Gottlieb, Patriots Daily Staff
September 15, 2009

There are close games and there are escapes. Make no mistake about it; last night’s Patriots 25-24 win over the snakebit Buffalo Bills in the 2009 season opener was the latter. Trailing by 11 points with just over five minutes to play and looking positively beaten, the Pats got off their asses and roared back to send the Bills to a hugely demoralizing loss. The performance of the offense during the length of the comeback was vintage. Its performance prior to those heroics ran the gamut from confusing to uneasy to frustrating, adjectives that perfectly encapsulate the performance of the defense (which might euphemistically be referred to as an, ahem, work in progress) as well. No one ever said you have to win pretty, though, and all that matters is that the Pats shook off nearly 55 minutes of doldrums, took advantage of a huge break and did what they had to do when it counted most. So, without further ado, here’s the first of what will be at least 16 report cards compiled and delivered by us, the illustrious staff of Patriots Daily University, grading the Pats on all phases of the game, both overall and by each individual position group.

OFFENSE: Overall Grade: B

Amazing what five minutes can do, eh? The offense as a whole was careening toward a solid C before Tom Brady led his two fourth quarter scoring drives.

Quarterbacks: B+

By the looks of it, Brady went out there for his first real action in a year and put forth a classic performance, reminiscent of some of most magnificent moments at the helm of the Pats ship. 39-53 for 378 yards and two touchdowns and a passer rating of 97.8 is a stat line to behold and Brady, exhibiting his trademarked cool under duress with his team down by double digits in the waning moments, was as big a factor in the win as anyone. But it must be pointed out that it took him awhile to settle in. He missed several throws over the first three quarters that he made in his sleep prior to all of his forced time off. He looked tentative at times in the first half and based on his play over the course of quarters 1-3, it would not have been out of the ordinary to wonder if he could bring his team back in the end if needs be, regardless of his past exploits. Granted, his offensive line did not do him many favors in the face of the tough Buffalo front seven, and it would be crazy to think that there would be no rust to shake off after all the time he missed. Still, the fact that he pushed all of that aside and finished off looking like the ’07 version of himself proved a huge comfort to any Pats fan worried about what the post-injury Brady would look like (and didn’t hurt his grade that much either).

Running Backs: C+

While Brady and the passing game got stronger as the game went on, the running game got worse. Laurence Maroney, at the top of the MSP list (that’s Most Scrutinized Pats for all you beginners), looked like the same guy who bulldozed his way through defenses in the later stages of 2007 in the first half, to the tune of almost six yards per attempt, morphed into the objectionable (and more familiar) Incredible Dancing Maroney after halftime, carrying five times for -3 lousy yards. Newcomer Fred Taylor managed just 25 yards on nine rushes but did get the goal line reps and responded with a 1-yard TD in the second quarter. Sammy Morris wasn’t out there much, though he did seem to be the intended receiver on the screen pass that turned into a pick-six by Bills defensive lineman Aaron Schoebel. Only Kevin Faulk really distinguished himself, naturally being the go-to guy on several third downs, converting three of them and submitting a nifty six catches for 51 yards.

Wide Receivers: B+

The Pats dressed only four receivers. Two of them didn’t catch a single pass. The other two caught 24 for 234 yards. Raise your hand if you know which two those are. Randy Moss: 12 catches for 141 yards. Wes Welker: 12 catches for 93 yards. Lather, rinse, repeat. After a couple of first quarter drops, the Pats most dynamic duo did what they do best,synching up with Brady to lead the offense. You can’t get much better than that. Pretty disappointing to see Joey Galloway, who at this point in his career would seem to be the perfect guy to play the role of third receiver continue to appear as though he’s not even active, just as he did throughout the preseason. Galloway will probably make some sort of an impact at some point this season; he’s too good and too experienced not to.

Tight Ends: A-

How about that Ben Watson? I always knew he had it in him. Quite a night for a guy who has been arguably the biggest disappointment of the last few years. Brady targeted him seven times and he produced six catches for 77 yards, two of those catches and 34 of those yards giving the Pats the win. Brady said after the game that Watson’s second touchdown, the winner, was the best catch he’s ever made and it would be hard to argue that point. Watson was covered on the play but Brady made a perfect, back shoulder throw and the catch, a diving, twisting job, was an excellent example of the freaky athleticism Watson has always possessed. New guy Chris Baker didn’t do much with just one catch, but it did convert a medium third down.

Offensive Line: C

Fairly tough night for the guys down in the trenches, especially Matt Light. Light was abused by Schoebel, a long-time nemesis of his. The Pats stalwart left tackle looked old and slow, was beaten multiple times and committed a couple of unsightly penalties. Dan Koppen didn’t have the best night either, chipping in a couple penalties of his own. Brady didn’t have a lot of time in the first half which certainly contributed to his shakiness pre -fourth quarter. Buffalo spent a long stretches dominating the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball, doing so against the Pats o-line in some troubling ways. The Bills pass rush wasn’t as simple as the Giants’ was in Super BowlXLII – it wasn’t just a four man rush running circles around Light, Koppen, Stephen Neal, Nick Kaczur and Logan Mankins. There was pressure coming from all over the place and until the Pats went hurry-up (which of course coincided with the Bills dropping seven or eight guys into zone coverage and thus not being nearly as aggressive up front), Brady didn’t have a lot of time to get comfortable. Hopefully, with tougher, faster and more skilled defenses like the Jets and the Ravens on the docket, the line will gel quickly.

DEFENSE: Overall Grade: C

It may be easy to forget thanks to the late game heroics of Brady and the offense and the fact that during their last minute, desperation drive, the Bills were completely stifled. But there is no way to say the Pats defense played any better than mediocre all night.

Defensive Line: C+

In its first appearance of the post-Richard Seymour era, the line acquitted itself decently. Ty Warren assumed the mantle of being constantly double-teamed in the absence of Seymour and was subsequently quiet, accumulating zero solo tackles. Vince Wilfork , who would seem to be on tap to reap the biggest financial benefit of Seymour’s departure, was also fairly shadowy, save for the sorry, shamefully bad roughing the passer call he picked up for apparently going low on a third quarter sack of Bill quarterback Trent Edwards, even though he had the guy around the waist. It was one of a handful of putrid calls by an overzealous officiating crew. Jarvis Green, who started at Seymour’s old spot, showed that there’s more to his game than just being the ferocious pass rusher he’s been, making a couple of plays against the run. If Mike Wright or touted local rookie Ron Brace even played (they did) you wouldn’t know it. The line failed to generate any pressure on Edwards at all until that last drive. Thumbs up to them for accomplishing it then, thumbs down for not doing it any sooner.

Linebackers: C

This grade may involve somewhat of an asterisk considering that Jerod Mayo, only the best and most important member of this group, left the game in the first quarter with a knee injury and did not return (and by the way, fans, I hope you’re keeping multiple fingers crossed that this isn’t that big of a deal because if it is, the Pats may be cooked). But we grade what we see here at PDU, no matter who plays, and what we saw wasn’t pretty. Adalius Thomas had a nice night, making a few solid stops and wreaking some havoc in the backfield while also being victimized by another overprotective roughing the passer call that helped sustain the Bills’ fourth quarter touchdown drive. Youngster Gary Guyton, who stepped into the middle after Mayo’s departure, may be a pretty good player but he sure as hell wasn’t last night. Guyton was slow to the point of attack and seemed lost for long stretches. The Bills screen passed the Pats nearly to death and Guyton , who would/should be the point man in defending that play from his spot in the middle, looked like he’d never seen one before. Pierre Woods and Tully Banta-Cain were OK, both coming up with big plays down the stretch, particularly Banta -Cain, who was the only Patriot able to get close to Edwards on at least a semi-consistent basis all night. Newly acquired Derrick Burgess was brought in to rush the passer from the edge, both from a linebacker spot and as a down lineman and he did get some pressure and a sack for his efforts. I’m grouping him with the linebackers because he was wearing No. 55, making him look like past Pats linebacking greats Willie McGinest and Junior Seau (at least on the surface). As for rookie Rob Ninkovich, the only notable item was that for some reason, he is wearing Mike Vrabel’s No. 50. Thanks for the memories, Vrabes . All in all, the middle of the field was wide open for Edwards to throw into all night and maybe that was reflective of the Pats defensive game plan (try to get pressure up front, don’t let Buffalo receivers beat us deep, or something like that). But on the whole, the level of the defense that had me most worried headed into the season, didn’t exactly offer up any sighs of relief.

Secondary: B

The Pats revamped defensive backfield was pretty good and that was probably the plan. The Bills biggest weapons are receivers Owens and Lee Evans (though I’d bet running back Fred Jackson might have something to say about that after his great performance last night) so the Pats decided to make them the focal point. With the exception of the couple of times second-year man JonathanWilhite got trapped covering T.O. in the slot, the DBs did their jobs, holding Buffalo’s receiving tandem to a combined five catches for 71 yards. Veteran free agents Leigh Bodden and Shawn Springs both played well, particularly Bodden , who was right in the middle of a few important stops including a big hit on Evans on an important third down in the second quarter. James Sanders, now the captain of the secondary in the aftermath of Rodney Harrison’s retirement (as an aside, if you get a chance to watch Rodney on TV at all this year, do it – he’s awesome and he doesn’t give a fuck!), was solid with four tackles. Brandon Meriweather made his presence felt more on special teams last night, but was good in coverage too, and rookie Darius Butler, who didn’t play much, still managed to make an impact with a couple of solid fourth quarter hits. The Bills had more success in the passing game than one might have expected, but it was almost entirely due to the screen pass, the linebackers inability to defend it and Jackson’s star-like game (five catches, 83 yards and a score). Last year the secondary was the defense’s weak link. This year, it stands to be much better.

Special Teams: A-

The only thing keeping this from being a straight A is Stephen Gostkowski’s pushed 41-yard field goal attempt at the end of a really nice, 13 play drive in the first quarter. The Pats were better than solid returning kicks, with Maroney’s 52-yarder in the first quarter being the highlight. But it was the coverage that counted most, with the fourth quarter strip and fumble recovery of Buffalo’s Leodis McKelvin’s boneheaded return that led to the winning score obviously the key. McKelvin led the league in kick return average last season which may explain a) why he chose to run back the fateful fourth quarter kick despite his momentum going backwards and being three yards deep in the end zone, and b) failing to go down and trying to fight for a couple of extra, meaningless yards following Meriweather’s earth-shaking hit, which of course led to his being stripped by Meriweather and Woods and Brady’s subsequent heroics. This is the first season since the start of the Pete Carroll regime in which the Pats special teams has had a coach other than the venerable Brad Seely. The job now belongs to long-time Bill Belichick associate Bill Scott O’Brien and it looks like he and his unit will be just fine.

Coaching: B+

If the Pats had lost, there would be scuttlebutt today that Belichick was outcoached by Swampscott’s own Dick Jauron and his staff. The Bills, who fired their offensive coordinator barely over a week ago, had an exquisite game plan with all of the screens and intermediate throws designed to attack the Pats weakest link, the linebackers. It almost worked. A lot of credit must be given to Buffalo as well for the play of its offensive line, which featured three members who’s never before played a snap in the NFL. That’s coaching. But in the end, the Pats win this battle too. Belichick seemed to be fine with giving away the middle of the field all night in exchange for not allowing T.O. and Evans to get loose which they didn’t. And offensively, where the play calling may have been a bit stale in the first half, particularly on the two failed fourth down tries and in the red zone, it became a moot point when the hurry-up stuff was necessitated late and Brady was able to do his thing. It may have looked like the Pats had the short end of the coaching stick for a while there but trust us, Belichick doesn’t have an honorary degree from this institute of higher learning for nothing.

Jeremy Gottlieb’s “Making the Grades” will be featured weekly as part of PD’s post-game coverage.

PD Game Ball – TE Ben Watson

by Scott Benson, Patriots Daily Staff
September 14, 2009

Good thing they didn’t cut Ben Watson, huh?

I guess I never thought we’d be talking about that this morning, but after a frustrating night, I didn’t think the Patriots would come back from 11 points down with five and a half minutes left either.

It was Watson – and a double-comebacking Tom Brady – who pulled the rabbit from the hat. And you thought you were surprised by Buffalo’s performance.

Buttressed by an effective four-man pass rush, a disciplined Bills defense had forced Brady to take the under all night, leaving the Pats offense to piece together long, methodical drives that more often than not resulted in continued frustration for New England.

Yet twice in the final three minutes the oft-disappointing former first round pick split the drawn-in Buffalo defense right up the seam for two of Brady’s longest completions of the night, and the win.

The first touchdown was revelation enough; Watson ran up the hash, leaned toward the post and got position behind linebacker Keith Ellison so that he could gather in a pinpoint Brady liner to cut the deficit to five. It was a beautiful route, a play run to perfection after so many had fallen short, and what was most astounding was that Watson didn’t drop the ball. Admit it – you probably expected him to. I did.

Even more unexpected was the winning touchdown. Given another life by the special teams trio of Brandon Meriweather, Pierre Woods and Stephen Gostkowski (all honorable mentions for the first PD game ball of the regular season), the Patriots came right back to the same route. This time, Ellison saw it coming, giving Brady and Watson less room to work. It forced Brady to put the ball slightly behind the sometimes-clumsy tight end, who twisted in mid-air like Baryshnikov to spear the ball without so much as a bobble, sparing the Pats from a divisional loss that would have haunted them all season long.

Brady told Watson it was the best catch he’d ever seen him make. No argument there. Ben Watson, I can’t believe I’m saying this, but you get the PD game ball. Many happy returns, for your sake and ours.

E-mail Scott Benson at [email protected]

Gut Check – Game One vs. Bills

by Chris Warner, Patriots Daily Staff
September 15, 2009

Well, after the excitement of New England’s rather ridiculous, quite undeserved 25-24 win, it’s time to reflect on a past season opener with Buffalo: the Patriots’ narrow 19-17 victory in 2006.

That contest revealed a depleted receiving corps. Was last night’s game (ingredients: 90 percent horse dollop, 10 percent pluck) a bad omen?

We’ll get a better idea next week against the Jets. In the meantime, some quick thoughts.

Soft Serve, Crunchy Center: New England looked less than tough throughout. Failed short yardage plays on offense and defense. Pressure allowed on Tom Brady. Pressure lacking on Bills quarterback Trent Edwards (at least until he had to pass). The Bills looked better overall and should have won. In fact, had Pats prayer-answerer Leodis McKelvin taken a knee instead of fumbling the kickoff, they would have. Kudos, then, to Brandon Meriweather and Pierre Woods for ripping the ball free. Nice, Pulp-Fiction-style adrenaline shot, there.

Come What Mayo: As of this writing, all we know is that linebacker Jerod Mayo left the game in the first half. I’ll say no more about Pats play callers and Game One knee injuries.

Brady In Red: Great to see the old school unis, but let’s not make a habit of it. (Bad memories, people.) Not so great watching Brady lacking rhythm early. Solid overall (39 of 53 for 378 yards and two game-winning TDs), here’s hoping his fourth quarter momentum continues next week.

The Big Schobel: Bills defensive end Aaron Schobel made a big impact (a few, actually), sacking Brady once and returning a leaping interception for a touchdown. He did not make Pats tackle Matt Light look good, at all.

So Angry I Could Screen: Bills running back Fred Jackson had five receptions for 83 yards and a touchdown. Oh, screen pass. How ugly you are when the opponent utilizes you.

Let’s end on a good note (make it two):

How LoMo Can You GoGo?: Yes, Laurence Maroney only had 10 rushes for 32 yards, but when he got room to go, he went, looking ready and able.

It’s All About The Benjamin: If you heard that Randy Moss and Wes Welker had 12 catches each, who would you figure scored twice in the final 3:30? Would you guess tight end Benjamin Watson?

Nope. Me neither.

Call this the first of many roller coaster rides. Just like a child, we want to go again.

Email Chris Warner at [email protected]

Final Thoughts, September 14, 2009

by Scott Benson, Patriots Daily Staff
September 14, 2009

The banner at the top of NFL.com on Sunday morning read, “You’ve waited eight months for this.”

Eight months and a day for us, I guess. Some final thoughts as the Pats’ 2009 season finally arrives…

  • So, Boston Patriots, huh? It’s nostalgic, sure, but as I recall it, the City of Boston had one hand out while flipping the bird with the other when it came to “the Boston Patriots”. So screw that. It’s the New England Patriots.
  • The book on Richard Seymour is closed, apparently, with the late night press conference on Saturday. I’m happy the Pats will get that first round pick with no further trouble, but I’m still caught a little short over seeing the end of times for Seymour in New England. It’s probably just the aforementioned nostalgia; it’s certainly not that I buy the talk radio shtick that they’ll come up just short without him. That’s a ridiculous, hysterical assumption to make before they’ve even played a down.
  • I suppose he won’t be at tonight’s introduction of the 50th Anniversary team then. I’m assuming those of us watching at home will get a glimpse of ESPN’s own Tedy Bruschi as he returns to the Gillette Stadium field for the first time since his retirement.
  • That DIRECTV free Sunday Ticket promotion was intense. I’ve always wanted it though I never pulled the trigger, but after yesterday, I’m okay with not having it. I can’t watch eight fucking games at once. I ended up missing them all. I would have been better off sticking with the new Red Zone channel, which I would promote further if I could understand it. Can I get this channel or not?
  • Here is what I did see: both the Dolphins and the Jets seem to have very active, physical front sevens, and they both generate a pretty noticeable pass rush. Now, they’re going to have to back it up downfield, but it was evident to me that the Pats will have some formidable fronts to game plan for. Two words: that sucks.
  • I’m all in on Mark Sanchez. First, he throws the shit out of the ball. Second, very nimble in the pocket. He’s no runner; rather, he’s true to the pocket and moves to stay with it. Third, the basic fundamentals – so far, the ball fakes are all carried out with focus (believe me, there are “franchise quarterbacks” who don’t see this as part of the job requirements). He’s got the presence and competitiveness. He’s undoubtedly going to look like a bum against somebody (hopefully soon) but in the long run there’s no way he isn’t a top quarterback in the league.
  • I’m happy to report that the Dolphins offense seems to be comprised entirely of a series of trick plays that may or may not contain a live chicken. They didn’t come across as exactly confident in their ability to score. And this was against the Falcons!
  • So tonight, we see the rest of the AFC East. I’ve got the typical opening day jitters – as the day goes along, I’ll grow ever more concerned about Lee Evans, Terrell (friend Al suggests “there is no team in me” for a nickname) Owens, even Josh Reed and Roscoe Parrish. This is a pretty nice group of receivers for a team that couldn’t get through camp without firing their offensive coordinator.
  • I’m just saying – until we see an improved Pats rush playing in concert with the rehabbed secondary, we won’t know if New England can stop the pass any better than they did last year. I suspect most eyes will be on the comebacking Tom Brady and the Pats offense tonight (speaking of concerned – if they’re going to run any of those slip screens to the edge to knock the pass rush back and set up second and shorts, Welker and Edelman will be needed), but I’d argue the best barometer for this game – and the ones ahead – will be whether New England defense can get off the field consistently. Even with Buffalo’s variant of the no-huddle, which will make precise substitutions a challenge, this is an opponent that is (to be charitable) struggling mightily on offense, especially along the offensive line. The last thing we want is for them to be made suddenly respectable by what is supposed to be (what needs to be) a revitalized defense. There’s a real chance here for the Pats D to build some momentum – but they have to close the deal.
  • Also – nice matchup for new special teams coach Scott O’Brien, drawing Bobby April for his first game. I’m thinking if O’Brien and New England can win the field position battle here, it will be a big leg up for a defense that may need it.
  • Hey, ESPNBoston has launched. And right here are the first blog entries by our pal Mike Reiss.

E-mail Scott Benson at [email protected]

This Week on PD, September 6-September 12

by the Patriots Daily Staff
September 13, 2009

Here’s a rundown of the top five most-read posts on Patriots Daily for the week of September 6 through September 12, 2009.

  1. On recalcitrant Seymour, Fourth Estate stuck in first – Scott Benson’s Tuesday rant on a complacent local media was this week’s most viewed post.
  2. Seymour, No More – Readers kept Bruce Allen’s early take on the Richard Seymour trade at the top of the charts throughout the week.
  3. Loyal to the End? – Continuing the Seymour coverage, columnist Dan Snapp’s thoughts on loyalty kept things hopping on Thursday. Readers called it the best PD post of the new season.
  4. “There are some issues between him and the Patriots” – On Monday evening, Benson scratched his head over the early comments of Raiders head coach Tom Cable.
  5. Roster Reactions, Part 2 – The Media on The Trade – Earlier in the day, Benson looked at media reaction to the surprising trade.

We suppose in addition to thanking Richard Seymour for eight great years, we should also thank him for our most heavily trafficked week of 2009.  We thank you as well.

Matchups of the Week – Bills at Patriots

by Dan Zeigarnik, Patriots Daily Staff
September 13, 2009

The much anticipated season opener against the Bills is exciting because of what it represents for Patriots fans. It’s less about this week’s opponent and more about beginning our retribution for that wretched Giants loss. Last season was knee-capped in week one, literally, and now the fans are ready for the Pats to take back the mantle as the league’s best team. Before this can happen, several internal team questions need to be answered. With this in mind, here are 5 key matchups to look for during the Monday Night Football game against the Bills:

1) Dean Pees Vs. Alex Van Pelt

Dean Pees is a thirty-seven year coaching veteran entering his fourth full year as defensive coordinator. Despite the fact that under his tutelage the Patriots have not exactly been a defensive juggernaut, Bill Belichick and the front office seems satisfied with him. Opposing him this week will the newly minted offensive coordinator, Alex Van Pelt. He has been on the job since September 4th, after his predecessor, Turk Schonert, was unceremoniously fired after a lackluster pre-season performance. It will be interesting to see how the play calling on both sides will turn out

2) Buffalo Receivers Vs. Pats Corners

With the addition of Terrell Owens, the Bills receiving corps is clearly a strong suit. Besides T.O., the Pats secondary has to contend with Lee Evans, Roscoe Parrish, and Josh Reed. This is a tall order for the Pats’ weakest unit. Strong play from the secondary should mean success in the playoffs, and this is their first big test.

3) Tom Brady vs. Bills Pass Rush

Teams will be gunning for Tom Brady to see if he still has that pocket maneuverability. The opposing pass rush will try to frazzle Brady into making premature and errant throws. So far this preseason, Brady has performed reasonably well, but all eyes will be on him to show that he can do it when it counts.

4) Special Teams vs. Special Teams

Considering that Belichick consistently praises the Bills’ special teams, headed by Coach Bobby April, and they have been ranked best special team by the Dallas Morning News three of the last five years. This will be a formidable challenge for the Patriots.

5) Fred Jackson vs. Patriots Linebackers

With the trade of Mike Vrabel, the retirement of Tedy Bruschi, and the placement on the IR of Tyrone McKenzie and Shawn Crable the Patriots have depleted their already thin lineup at linebacker. It will be interesting to see how the Mayo, Guyton, Thomas, Woods, and Banta-Cain will come together to defend against the run. While Fred Jackson is no Marshawn Lynch, he is no slouch either, averaging 4.4 yards per carry.

Dan Zeigarnik is the newest addition to the Patriots Daily staff. Dan will contribute to our pre-game coverage this season with this weekly summary of the coming game’s top matchups. Welcome aboard, Dan.

Pregame Media Notes – Patriots/Bills

Here are a few items of note from the national media this week leading up to the Patriots season debut. We got some quotes from former Patriots safety Rodney Harrison, an exclusive interview with Tom Brady by ESPN’s Chris Berman, and a preview of what to expect on the ESPN programs this weekend, and before the game on Monday night.

First, a couple of quotes from old friend Rodney Harrison, on an NBC conference call previewing the 2009 season:

HARRISON ON REX RYAN’S COMMENTS ABOUT BILL BELICHICK: “When people make comments like that towards individual coaches or players, everyone takes offense. I don’t care what anyone says, you keep that quote in your mind and you put it up on a bulletin board. I don’t think that is going to make Belichick even more mad at him or make him hate the Jets more or for them to play harder, but the point of emphasis will be on that. He’s absolutely right that he shouldn’t go in there kissing Bill Belichick’s rings or anything like that, but I thought that was understood and really doesn’t need to be said out in public. I’m excited about this showdown, but I really don’t think they have what it takes to overtake Belichick and the Patriots.”

HARRISON ON NEW ENGLAND: “It comes down to number 12. It comes down to Tom Brady. If you look at what happened last year, Brady goes down and the Patriots are 11-5. They had a pretty good season in terms of everyone else in the league and they didn’t make the playoffs. If number 12 can stay healthy, the offense will put up 27, 28 points a game, the defense will give up 17, 18 points a game and the Patriots can end up being 12-4, maybe 13-3. If Tom Brady isn’t well and he’s not playing well coming off this knee injury then I think the Patriots will struggle.”

ESPN

Chris Berman’s Exclusive Interview With Patriots Quarterback Tom Brady

Coming off a record-setting season in 2007 with 50 touchdown passes, Tom Brady’s 2008 season lasted barely nine minutes due to a season-ending knee injury. Following knee surgery and year-long rehab, the three-time Super Bowl winning quarterback is back at the helm of the Patriots offense. Brady sat down with Berman for an exclusive interview, his first one-on-one television interview since his injury, to be featured on Sunday NFL Countdown (11 a.m.), SportsCenter “Sunday Conversation” at 11 p.m., Monday Night Countdown (5 p.m.), and available on ESPN.com.

NFL MATCHUP, SUNDAY 3 A.M. AND 7:30 A.M. ON ESPN
Bills @ Patriots – Ron Jaworski reveals how New England uses formation and alignment to create mismatches in its passing game.

Tom Brady’s Knee – Jaworski points out how quarterback Tom Brady, though back after a season-ending injury, has looked a bit uncomfortable and protective of his knee at times this preseason.

From the ESPN Pregame Show leading up to Monday Night Football, you can look for these features:

ESPN The Magazine’s “For Love or the Game:” Sammy Morris
Patriots running back Sammy Morris will featured in the season-opening edition of “For Love or the Game,” a Countdown segment that pairs a player with his significant other and a teammate to find out which of them knows more about the NFL athlete. Morris’ wife, Leslie, and his teammate Laurence Maroney battle to see who really knows Morris better.

EA Sports Virtual Playbook: Brady to Moss
Countdown’s Jackson takes viewers on the field to show how the return of Tom Brady will once again make him and Randy Moss the most feared passing combination in the NFL.

Did you know that Randy Moss has made his mark in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series?

A pair of former Boston sports anchors will be reporting from Gillette on the Patriots this weekend. Former WHDH sports anchor Wendi Nix will report for ESPN, while former Fox Sports Net New England reporter Kara Henderson will report for the NFL Network.

Monday Night Broadcast Outlets

TELEVISION: This week’s game will be nationally televised by ESPN and can be seen in Boston on WCVB-TV Channel 5. Mike Tirico will handle play-by-play duties with Ron Jaworski and Jon Gruden providing color. Suzy Kolber will be the sideline reporter.

NATIONAL RADIO: This week’s game will be broadcast to a national audience by Westwood One. Marv Albert and Boomer Esiason will call the game with Steve Tasker handling the sideline reporting.