Jerod Mayo was taking a break from his work with Pepsi's NFL Anthem program Tuesday morning, wondering why he didn't have any coffee, when I hit him with the tough question:
"Who plays you in a movie?"
The pause was telling - yet surely he had been asked this question before?
"Denzel." he replied with a laugh, which verbally confirmed what the pause had already told me about Jerod Mayo - more with it's breadth than it's blank silence.
Many would take his answer as a sign of some sort of narcissism, an egomaniac whose daydreams have the handsome leading man of many films as his alter ego - that is, until he offers, "At first I thought it would be (Wesley) Snipes, but it's Denzel Washington for sure."
The manner in which he answered made me curiously certain that he viewed himself as a quiet, studious person more than a man of action and intrigue, though a man of action is exactly what he is every time he takes the field for the New England Patriots.
The mellow, contemplative family man is what he is the other 165 hours of the week.
He came off as grounded - a self-aware man, just as member of the New England Patriots is expected to be - and as the interview progressed his answers were thoughtful and genuine, a pleasant departure from the Belichick-ian scripted responses that we would normally hear...and when I mentioned that fellow linebacker Brandon Spikes was probably better suited to have Snipes play him in a movie, he heartily laughed in agreement...
In his fourth season out of the University of Tennessee, Mayo is the unquestioned leader of a defense that always seems to start the year as a work in progress, yet meticulously works it's way into a cohesive championship-calibre unit - and where attitude reflects leadership, it's no wonder that the Patriots defense is sound and disciplined and almost always comes up with the game-changing play.
As we spoke of the Pepsi NFL Anthem program and how he had signed on to represent the Patriots along side Boston rock legends Aerosmith to augment the junction between sports and music, I heard the dutiful side of the 2010 Pro Bowl selection, the side that embraces opportunity as a means to better his family's life.
He cordially rattled off the company line - scripted - but with a fervor that told of his responsibility, and when the questions turned to football, he was just as enthusiastic - if not more so - yet his answers came easier, as if he leaves the outside world behind, entering a sanctuary where he can be himself.
We spoke of the Miami game, of the perfectly timed "Hug" blitz, of Dolphins' offensive guard Richie Incognito going after his legs and the intensity of the defensive huddle just before a big play in the game, a noticeable potency to his voice - but those are subjects for another day when we are focused on the upcoming game against the Houston Texans.
For today, we are visiting with Jerod Mayo whose life seems so unspectacular and so ordinary that no Hollywood producer would ever consider making a movie of it...
...but if they did, perhaps he would be portrayed like Denzel's character , Coach Herman Boone, in the film Remember the Titans - a man with passion for family and a passion for football, and with the disposition to happily tolerate curious writers who ask him odd questions.
Because he is self-aware, responsible and a role model...otherwise Pepsi wouldn't have him as a spokesman for their NFL Anthem program, nor would the squeaky clean Kraft family have him as a captain of their football team.
"Yeah, this is my sanctuary right here" Denzel's character says as he stands on the football field the night before his first game "..this, this is always right. Struggling, survival, victory, and defeat. Its just a game..but I love it."
Yeah, perhaps Denzel Washington was the right answer.
You can hear and download all of the Pepsi NFL Anthems here .
New England Patriots' Yearbook - 2012
a digital archive from the publisher of foxborough free press...
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Patriots re-sign Donte Stallworth
In the wake of the apparently major injury to Julian Edelman, the Patriots have re-sign wide reciever Donte Stallworth.
New England had brought Stallworth in for a workout recently and rumors abounded that he would be signed to counter for the injury to Rob Gronkowski, but the Patriots opted to go into their two games after Gronkowski broke his left forearm without making a roster move - but Edelman's injury left the team too thin at the reciever position to ignore.
Gronkoski's injury occured on Nov. 18 against the Colts, and Edelman left Sun Life Stadium in Miami on crutches, his foot in a walking boot.
On March 19th, Stallworth signed with the Patriots before the team released him on Aug. 27th. In 10 seasons, Stallworth has 320 catches for 4,774 yards and 34 touchdowns.
Stallworth had originally signed with the Patriots on March 11, 2007, a reported six-year deal worth $30 million with $3.5 million guaranteed that had clauses for under-performance that eventually allowed the Patriots to release him before the start of the following season.
Legal problems led to a suspension for the entire 2009 season.
During training camp, Bill Belichick praised Stallworth for his hard work, and his rapport with quarterback Tom Brady remained tight despite the layoff - and his release during final cutdowns was deemed a "tough decision" by the Patriots' head coach and came as a surprise to many players and media members.
Details of the deal were not made public.
New England had brought Stallworth in for a workout recently and rumors abounded that he would be signed to counter for the injury to Rob Gronkowski, but the Patriots opted to go into their two games after Gronkowski broke his left forearm without making a roster move - but Edelman's injury left the team too thin at the reciever position to ignore.
Gronkoski's injury occured on Nov. 18 against the Colts, and Edelman left Sun Life Stadium in Miami on crutches, his foot in a walking boot.
On March 19th, Stallworth signed with the Patriots before the team released him on Aug. 27th. In 10 seasons, Stallworth has 320 catches for 4,774 yards and 34 touchdowns.
Stallworth had originally signed with the Patriots on March 11, 2007, a reported six-year deal worth $30 million with $3.5 million guaranteed that had clauses for under-performance that eventually allowed the Patriots to release him before the start of the following season.
Legal problems led to a suspension for the entire 2009 season.
During training camp, Bill Belichick praised Stallworth for his hard work, and his rapport with quarterback Tom Brady remained tight despite the layoff - and his release during final cutdowns was deemed a "tough decision" by the Patriots' head coach and came as a surprise to many players and media members.
Details of the deal were not made public.
New England Patriots defeat Miami, clinch AFC Title
The Miami Dolphins' game plan coming in against the Patriots was to eliminate the big play and not turn the ball over - nothing fancy.
And nothing fancy is exactly what we got.
Playing fundamental football at it's finest in all three phases of the game, the Dolphins targeted the Patriots running game, employed their own ground game...and unleashed punter Brandon Fields.
The field position game was won by Miami all game as Fields continually pinned the Patriots in their own territory, twice inside the 3 yard line, forcing Brady to start from poor field position throughout the afternoon. But it wasn't enough as the Patriots ultimately took a gritty 23-16 road win to clinch the AFC East title.
The Miami run defense frustrated the Patriots early, and it wasn't until the Patriots recommitted to the run late in the 3rd quarter that the game really started to turn in their favor.
The Patriots had all of ten rushing yards in the 1st half, then exploded for 100 in the second, using the run primarily on a 16 play 77 yard drive that ate up 7:18 of the clock, all of Miami's time outs and any hope they had of upsetting the heavily favored Patriots.
Tom Brady went 24/40 for 238 yards and one touchdown, also suffering his first interception in four games. Wes Welker cracked the century mark, catching 12 balls for 103 yards and Aaron Hernandez 8 for 97. That total also put Welker over the 1,000 yard mark for the season.
Stevan Ridley also reached the 1,000 yard plateau in rushing yards on the season as he carried the ball 19 times for 71 tough yards.
No play exemplified how the running game opens up the Patriots' passing game than when they committed to run late in the 3rd quarter. On 3rd and 1 on the first play of the 4th quarter from the Dolphins' 35 and the Dolphins loaded up for a run, Brady went with the play action instead, hitting tight end Aaron Hernandez in stride for 31 yards and a 1st and goal.
The Patriots' defense held Reggie Bush to 65 yards rushing while forcing four Miami fumbles, though only managing to recover one. Rookie Quarterback Ryan Tannehill went 13 for 29 and 186 yards for Miami, who saw their playoff hopes take a big hit, falling to 5-7 on the season.
The Patriots improved their record to 9-3, clinching their 9th AFC East crown in the last 10 years, and their fourth in a row.
New England returns home to face the 11-1 Houston Texans next Monday night in a showdown that, should the Patriots win, would give them the head-to-head tie breaker and a huge boost in their quest for homefield advantage and a first round bye.
And nothing fancy is exactly what we got.
Playing fundamental football at it's finest in all three phases of the game, the Dolphins targeted the Patriots running game, employed their own ground game...and unleashed punter Brandon Fields.
The field position game was won by Miami all game as Fields continually pinned the Patriots in their own territory, twice inside the 3 yard line, forcing Brady to start from poor field position throughout the afternoon. But it wasn't enough as the Patriots ultimately took a gritty 23-16 road win to clinch the AFC East title.
The Miami run defense frustrated the Patriots early, and it wasn't until the Patriots recommitted to the run late in the 3rd quarter that the game really started to turn in their favor.
The Patriots had all of ten rushing yards in the 1st half, then exploded for 100 in the second, using the run primarily on a 16 play 77 yard drive that ate up 7:18 of the clock, all of Miami's time outs and any hope they had of upsetting the heavily favored Patriots.
Tom Brady went 24/40 for 238 yards and one touchdown, also suffering his first interception in four games. Wes Welker cracked the century mark, catching 12 balls for 103 yards and Aaron Hernandez 8 for 97. That total also put Welker over the 1,000 yard mark for the season.
Stevan Ridley also reached the 1,000 yard plateau in rushing yards on the season as he carried the ball 19 times for 71 tough yards.
No play exemplified how the running game opens up the Patriots' passing game than when they committed to run late in the 3rd quarter. On 3rd and 1 on the first play of the 4th quarter from the Dolphins' 35 and the Dolphins loaded up for a run, Brady went with the play action instead, hitting tight end Aaron Hernandez in stride for 31 yards and a 1st and goal.
The Patriots' defense held Reggie Bush to 65 yards rushing while forcing four Miami fumbles, though only managing to recover one. Rookie Quarterback Ryan Tannehill went 13 for 29 and 186 yards for Miami, who saw their playoff hopes take a big hit, falling to 5-7 on the season.
The Patriots improved their record to 9-3, clinching their 9th AFC East crown in the last 10 years, and their fourth in a row.
New England returns home to face the 11-1 Houston Texans next Monday night in a showdown that, should the Patriots win, would give them the head-to-head tie breaker and a huge boost in their quest for homefield advantage and a first round bye.
AFC Power Poll: Patriots leapfrog Ravens for #2, Date with Texans looming
In the world of Power Polls, there are so many different formulas to determine placement that perhaps the truth gets lost in the mad shuffle. That’s why our power poll is based solely on the one statistic that means everything above all else: Win and loss record. It’s incredibly unscientific but, as a person smarter than me once quipped, you can’t argue with record.
Seemingly every sportswirter not in the city of Houston have either made a bold prediction that it is the Broncos and Patriots - not the Texans - that are the cream of the NFL crop and will meet in the AFC Championship game in late January...
...and that's beauty of this Power Poll. The only criteria is won \ lost record and the appropriate tie breakers. It leaves nothing to chance.
And the only way that the Texans are going to stop the confounded noise about being an AFC also-ran is to go into Foxborough, Massachusetts next Monday night and destroy the New England Pariots. Just a nail-biting win isn't going to quell talk of Houston losing their composure as the season progresses. It's going to take a solid victory.
Has there ever been a more under appriciated 11-1 team in the history of professional football?
1. Houston Texans (11-1) - The Texans find themselves in a precarious spot. At 11-1, they still have not clinched their division, thanks to the Indianapolis Colts and their sensational play. At 7-4 they are not going to catch the Texans for the division crown, but the have two opportunities to play spoiler to Houston's goal of earning the top seed and a first round bye. If the Texans can't handle the Patriots' relentless offensive attack next Monday night, the Colts - or even the Vikings for that matter - could drop the Texans right out of the top 2...
2. New England Patriots (9-3) - The Patriots leap-frogged Baltimore for the second seed in the AFC by virtue of having a superior conference record in a 3-team tie with the Ravens and the surging Broncos - two teams certainly heading in different directions. The Patriots host the game of the year against the Texans this coming Monday night, and the winner will have a leg up to the regular season conference crown. Rumor out of Foxborough is that...well, we'll cover that a bit later...The Patriots are on a serious roll...
3. Baltimore Ravens (9-3) - The Ravens are old on defense and just plain bad on offense. How this team has lost only 3 games is a genuine mystery. And to add injury to insult, Terrell Suggs, their best player on either side of the ball was left screaming in agony on the turf in Baltimore last evening...so it's a certainty that they will lose a few more...They might still win the division, but that's the only thing any Raven will win the rest of this season.
4. Denver Broncos (9-3) - When Peter King of SI.com picked the Denver Broncos to win the AFC this season, I was aghast at his ignorance. Now I am aghast at my own ignorance. But King has flip-flopped a bit on his prediction, as he is picking the Broncos and the Patriots to meet in Foxborough in late January for the right to represent the Conference in the Super Bowl...Brady vs. Manning once more? Yes, please! For the record, King now says it will be the Patriots in New Orleans against the Falcons...stay tuned...
5. Indianapolis Colts (8-4) - Colts fans and media are absolutely giddy about their team this morning. And why not? There hasn't been a better ending to a football game that I'vw witnessed in a long time. Watching Andrew Luck play should make fans for every other NFL team feel a little queazy aboput the future, especially those teams in the AFC South. This Colts team is going to dominate the division for years to come. Sorry Houston. You are about to learn this in a couple of weeks...
6. Pittsburgh Steelers (7-5) - And that is why one should never count out the Pittsburgh Steelers. That win against the hater Ravens last night will be talked about for years to come, solely because it was gutty Steelers football from back in the day. Old-school Steelers. The could still concievably catch the Ravens for the division crown, but those are some long odds even though Ben Roethlisburger should be back this week.
Lurking in the weeds: Cincinnati Bengals (7-5) One slip by the Steelers could mean everything to the surging Bengals...
A walk in the weather to ponder the Patriots' playoff possibilities
When the snow flies, is there a more intimidating venue in professional sports than Gillette Stadium?
Sure, when the sun is shining and the warmth of an autumn afternoon captivates your soul, Gillette may be the nicest stadium to sprawl out and watch football - go catch some dinner afterwards at one of the fine restaurants in the Patriot Place complex adjacent to the Stadium, maybe do a little shopping - hey, let's go check out the Hall!
But in the dead of winter, on a cold and snowy January's night, Gillette is a place where the opposition abandons all hope of getting to the Super Bowl. As intimidating as the Patriots already are with their physical move-the-sticks offense and their violent and improving defense, the snowscape at Gillette is even more imposing...
...I had this thought as I entered the high school's football field. A light snow had started to fall, big flakes, looping in from a 45 degree angle and making a perfect 3 point landing on the black cold patch of the track. I walk this every morning, rain, shine, blizzard...you could say that I'm a big fan of the weather, and the more inclimate, the better.
So, the weather is most assuredly favors the Patriots, what with a dry chill, raw wind out of the north east and fans tossing snowballs into the air in tandem, causing an impromptu snowstorm that the opposition can not escape.
But to gain this advantage, it is universally accepted that the New England Patriots would have to win every remaining game on their schedule. This would mean that going into the playoffs, the Patriots would be riding a 10 game winning streak, not an unprecedented accomplishment during New England's 13 year dynastic run.
How does it all work, though? The NFL's tie breaking procedures (see it here) gives us a clear view of what the Patriots need to do to gain homefield advantage and a 1st round bye. The AFC picture as it stands now:
1. Houston (10-1) Plays at Patriots next Monday Night...
2. Baltimore (9-2) Beat New England in week 3
3. New England (8-3) Wins AFC East with win at Miami on Sunday
4. Denver (8-3) Wins AFC West with win vs. Tampa on Sunday
5. Indianapolis (7-4) Plays Houston twice in final 3 weeks, lost to Patriots 2 weeks ago
6. Pittsburgh (6-5) Plays Baltimore on Sunday
Since head-to-head is the first option to break a tie if two or more teams have the same record, the Ravens are the only team that has that advantage over New England at this point.
Since Baltimore defeated New England in week 3, The Patriots would have to finish a game clear of them, which means that Baltimore would have to lose two more games for New England to even have a chance to finish ahead of them for a top seed.
Such is the outcome of a field goal that may or may not have been good to give Baltimore that disputed win back in October.
On the other hand, even though Houston has a better record than than Baltimore and holds the head-to-head tie breaker over the Ravens by beating them earlier this year, if New England beats them next Monday night, all the Patriots would need is for Houston to lose one more game, a distinct possibility given their defensive struggles. This is much more likely scenario for the Patriots, but would only give them the 2 seed unless Baltimore completely collapses.
New England defeated Denver earlier this season, as they did the Colts. Denver is most dangerous and have the best chance of any team in the AFC playoff picture to run the table due to a most favorable schedule. Anyone who has been in Denver in the middle of winter knows the pain of that brand of cold as well, so it would be best to finish ahead of them at all costs.
Indianapolis and Pittsburgh are not in the conversation at this time.
What all this means is that New England has to take care of their own business, and hope that Houston, Baltimore and Denver all slip a time or two down the stretch.
Then they can come to Foxborough and slip and slide all over the field.
Sure, when the sun is shining and the warmth of an autumn afternoon captivates your soul, Gillette may be the nicest stadium to sprawl out and watch football - go catch some dinner afterwards at one of the fine restaurants in the Patriot Place complex adjacent to the Stadium, maybe do a little shopping - hey, let's go check out the Hall!
But in the dead of winter, on a cold and snowy January's night, Gillette is a place where the opposition abandons all hope of getting to the Super Bowl. As intimidating as the Patriots already are with their physical move-the-sticks offense and their violent and improving defense, the snowscape at Gillette is even more imposing...
...I had this thought as I entered the high school's football field. A light snow had started to fall, big flakes, looping in from a 45 degree angle and making a perfect 3 point landing on the black cold patch of the track. I walk this every morning, rain, shine, blizzard...you could say that I'm a big fan of the weather, and the more inclimate, the better.
So, the weather is most assuredly favors the Patriots, what with a dry chill, raw wind out of the north east and fans tossing snowballs into the air in tandem, causing an impromptu snowstorm that the opposition can not escape.
But to gain this advantage, it is universally accepted that the New England Patriots would have to win every remaining game on their schedule. This would mean that going into the playoffs, the Patriots would be riding a 10 game winning streak, not an unprecedented accomplishment during New England's 13 year dynastic run.
How does it all work, though? The NFL's tie breaking procedures (see it here) gives us a clear view of what the Patriots need to do to gain homefield advantage and a 1st round bye. The AFC picture as it stands now:
1. Houston (10-1) Plays at Patriots next Monday Night...
2. Baltimore (9-2) Beat New England in week 3
3. New England (8-3) Wins AFC East with win at Miami on Sunday
4. Denver (8-3) Wins AFC West with win vs. Tampa on Sunday
5. Indianapolis (7-4) Plays Houston twice in final 3 weeks, lost to Patriots 2 weeks ago
6. Pittsburgh (6-5) Plays Baltimore on Sunday
Since head-to-head is the first option to break a tie if two or more teams have the same record, the Ravens are the only team that has that advantage over New England at this point.
Since Baltimore defeated New England in week 3, The Patriots would have to finish a game clear of them, which means that Baltimore would have to lose two more games for New England to even have a chance to finish ahead of them for a top seed.
Such is the outcome of a field goal that may or may not have been good to give Baltimore that disputed win back in October.
On the other hand, even though Houston has a better record than than Baltimore and holds the head-to-head tie breaker over the Ravens by beating them earlier this year, if New England beats them next Monday night, all the Patriots would need is for Houston to lose one more game, a distinct possibility given their defensive struggles. This is much more likely scenario for the Patriots, but would only give them the 2 seed unless Baltimore completely collapses.
New England defeated Denver earlier this season, as they did the Colts. Denver is most dangerous and have the best chance of any team in the AFC playoff picture to run the table due to a most favorable schedule. Anyone who has been in Denver in the middle of winter knows the pain of that brand of cold as well, so it would be best to finish ahead of them at all costs.
Indianapolis and Pittsburgh are not in the conversation at this time.
What all this means is that New England has to take care of their own business, and hope that Houston, Baltimore and Denver all slip a time or two down the stretch.
Then they can come to Foxborough and slip and slide all over the field.
New England Patriots On a Roll; visit Dolphins on Sunday
Turnovers and stopping the run have been the New England Patriots' Defense's calling card all season. Unfortunately for the Miami Dolphins, their defense seems to have forgotten how important those things are.
While it is true that the Dolphins sport the 6th best rush defense in the NFL, it is also true that their 96 yards surrendered on the ground per game is not indicative of their struggles of late.
In the Dolphins first 5 games, they were a miserly 61.4 yards per game with 9 turnovers...but over the last 6 games, they have been a sieve, yielding 126 yards per game while causing only 2 turnovers -including no turnovers forced in the last 4 games.
Add to that the offense's struggle to get their own running game untracked and it's not difficult to fathom why they are fading into the AFC East sunset along with the Jets and Bills.
A season saving (for now) last second win over Seattle last Sunday stopped the bleeding of a Miami three game skid, leaving them at 5-6, just one game behind the Steelers and Bengals for the last wild card playoff spot. But that tourniquet won't hold if the Dolphins can't figure out a way to stop New England's running game and create some opportunities for turnovers.
Anyone besides me think that Bill Belichick is going to try and run the ball down Miami's collective throat when the teams meet on Sunday in a 1:00pm scrap.
The Patriots have the 6th ranked running game in the league with a solid 144 yards per game and, even more impressive, have shown the ability to close down games with tough running and moving the chains...and heading into December that's pretty darned important, but don't expect Belichick nor his players to beat their own drum loudly about it, if at all.
"I think we've done some things well in the last couple of games," coach Bill Belichick said. "I don't think that really has any bearing on this game; different team, different matchups, different schemes. It's all different."
When it comes to his team, Belichick is nothing if not understated. He will heap praise on the upcoming opponent at every opportunity but remains understandably vanilla in his language regarding his own squad's success.
The truth is that New England has been practically unstoppable during the five game winning streak that they carry into south Florida, averaging nearly 44 points with six of its staggering 28 touchdowns coming via the defense and special teams.
Tom Brady has been peerless in that stretch, climbing into the conversation of league MVP with numbers to back it up.
He has completed nearly 65 percent of his passes for 1,454 yards with 14 touchdowns and no interceptions while compiling a 116.3 passer rating - and is playing better overall than he has in his 13 year career - and that has to be a frightening prospect for a young Dolphins squad fighting for their playoff lives.
What is even more amazing about those numbers is that his receiving corps has been crippled by injury, playing without Versatile Aaron Hernandez nearly all season and now without all world Tight End Rob Gronkowski for at least the next few games. Wes Welker, Brandon Lloyd and Julian Edelman have all been nursing injuries as well.
Hernandez is back and looks to be playing at full tilt so with his brawn and speed he becomes the key to the passing attack as he is the proverbial "nightmare matchup" for linebackers and safeties alike, while Lloyd works the sidelines and Welker and Edelman cause chaos underneath.
But the key to this game for the Patriots on offense is to run the ball effectively early on, then use the aggressiveness of the Dolphins' front 7 against them by utilizing the play action pass. And any conversation about the Patriots' running game begins and ends with the offensive line.
Big and powerful and relentlessly violent, the Patriot's line play has been nothing short of spectacular this season. They open huge holes in the running game and leave no gap whatever uncovered in pass protection and trap blocking schemes involving the tight ends have been devastating for opposing run defenders. They are regularly praised as being one of the top units in the NFL.
The main beneficiary of the line play and having the future first ballot Hall of Famer Brady handing the ball to him is 2nd year back Stevan Ridley, who is just 61 yards shy of the 1000 yard mark with 5 games left. His determined running style and nifty moves in the gap has allowed him to find the first down marker, and his burst into the defenders helps him to cross it.
Speed merchants Shane Vereen and Danny Woodhead both contribute well in spot duty, but running the ball and catching it in the flat - and both are greased lightening when they get loose past the second level.
All of these things put together suggest another Patriots' rout, so with their playoff hopes on the line the Dolphins need to be just about perfect to have a chance - and they know it.
"Every game is a playoff game from now on out," Miami linebacker Kevin Burnett said. "Now is the time."
The Dolphins had better hope so, because they get the 49ers next week and a rematch with New England looming on the last day of the regular season - and it will be a minor miracle if they're still in the playoff conversation when they travel to snowy Foxborough at the end of December.
While it is true that the Dolphins sport the 6th best rush defense in the NFL, it is also true that their 96 yards surrendered on the ground per game is not indicative of their struggles of late.
In the Dolphins first 5 games, they were a miserly 61.4 yards per game with 9 turnovers...but over the last 6 games, they have been a sieve, yielding 126 yards per game while causing only 2 turnovers -including no turnovers forced in the last 4 games.
Add to that the offense's struggle to get their own running game untracked and it's not difficult to fathom why they are fading into the AFC East sunset along with the Jets and Bills.
A season saving (for now) last second win over Seattle last Sunday stopped the bleeding of a Miami three game skid, leaving them at 5-6, just one game behind the Steelers and Bengals for the last wild card playoff spot. But that tourniquet won't hold if the Dolphins can't figure out a way to stop New England's running game and create some opportunities for turnovers.
Anyone besides me think that Bill Belichick is going to try and run the ball down Miami's collective throat when the teams meet on Sunday in a 1:00pm scrap.
The Patriots have the 6th ranked running game in the league with a solid 144 yards per game and, even more impressive, have shown the ability to close down games with tough running and moving the chains...and heading into December that's pretty darned important, but don't expect Belichick nor his players to beat their own drum loudly about it, if at all.
"I think we've done some things well in the last couple of games," coach Bill Belichick said. "I don't think that really has any bearing on this game; different team, different matchups, different schemes. It's all different."
When it comes to his team, Belichick is nothing if not understated. He will heap praise on the upcoming opponent at every opportunity but remains understandably vanilla in his language regarding his own squad's success.
The truth is that New England has been practically unstoppable during the five game winning streak that they carry into south Florida, averaging nearly 44 points with six of its staggering 28 touchdowns coming via the defense and special teams.
Tom Brady has been peerless in that stretch, climbing into the conversation of league MVP with numbers to back it up.
He has completed nearly 65 percent of his passes for 1,454 yards with 14 touchdowns and no interceptions while compiling a 116.3 passer rating - and is playing better overall than he has in his 13 year career - and that has to be a frightening prospect for a young Dolphins squad fighting for their playoff lives.
What is even more amazing about those numbers is that his receiving corps has been crippled by injury, playing without Versatile Aaron Hernandez nearly all season and now without all world Tight End Rob Gronkowski for at least the next few games. Wes Welker, Brandon Lloyd and Julian Edelman have all been nursing injuries as well.
Hernandez is back and looks to be playing at full tilt so with his brawn and speed he becomes the key to the passing attack as he is the proverbial "nightmare matchup" for linebackers and safeties alike, while Lloyd works the sidelines and Welker and Edelman cause chaos underneath.
But the key to this game for the Patriots on offense is to run the ball effectively early on, then use the aggressiveness of the Dolphins' front 7 against them by utilizing the play action pass. And any conversation about the Patriots' running game begins and ends with the offensive line.
Big and powerful and relentlessly violent, the Patriot's line play has been nothing short of spectacular this season. They open huge holes in the running game and leave no gap whatever uncovered in pass protection and trap blocking schemes involving the tight ends have been devastating for opposing run defenders. They are regularly praised as being one of the top units in the NFL.
The main beneficiary of the line play and having the future first ballot Hall of Famer Brady handing the ball to him is 2nd year back Stevan Ridley, who is just 61 yards shy of the 1000 yard mark with 5 games left. His determined running style and nifty moves in the gap has allowed him to find the first down marker, and his burst into the defenders helps him to cross it.
Speed merchants Shane Vereen and Danny Woodhead both contribute well in spot duty, but running the ball and catching it in the flat - and both are greased lightening when they get loose past the second level.
All of these things put together suggest another Patriots' rout, so with their playoff hopes on the line the Dolphins need to be just about perfect to have a chance - and they know it.
"Every game is a playoff game from now on out," Miami linebacker Kevin Burnett said. "Now is the time."
The Dolphins had better hope so, because they get the 49ers next week and a rematch with New England looming on the last day of the regular season - and it will be a minor miracle if they're still in the playoff conversation when they travel to snowy Foxborough at the end of December.
Tom Brady vs The NFL: Stats, Intangibles and Goosebumps
He had me at hello.
The introduction to Sean Glennon's new book, The Case for Football's Greatest Quarterback; Tom Brady vs. The NFL reads like a note that I might write to myself. In November of 2001, I would attest to anyone who would listen to me that Drew Bledsoe should have gotten his starting job back...
...which is a mistake that most Patriot fans would have to own - though no one would blame them. How was anyone supposed to know what to expect from a 6th round draft pick? He had filled in well for the long time Patriot quarterback, but was essentially still an unknown quantity.
When Glennon writes that as the first sentence of the introduction to the book, it enticed me. It made me wonder if he thought it was a fumble. The affirmation of one's beliefs is a powerful motivator, and as I watched Charles Woodson knock the ball from Brady's hand and onto the snow covered field at Foxboro Stadium, I thought it was a fumble, and I still do to this day.
And "it", of course, is the Tuck Rule play. In the serene, surreal snowscape of Foxboro Stadium's last breath, many people find their argument against Tom Brady. Many believe he is the beneficiary of - and even a product of - that call. For sure, had the call of fumble been confirmed on replay, the Raiders would have gone on to play Pittsburgh the following week and Brady would have been cleaning out his locker.
I never did find affirmation of that belief in his book, but as I started into the first two chapters that covered Brady's college career and his first two seasons as a Patriot, Glennon's matter-of-fact style had me curiously certain that he didn't think that it mattered anyway - and it doesn't.
What does matter is that the first three chapters took me back to a cold, overcast night in early February of 2002 where I found myself at my friend Norm's house, drinking coffee, eating red hots and playing cribbage until the Super Bowl was about to begin...
The walk to Norm's house was a mess. Walking in the roads to avoid the slushy wet snow cone ice on the sidewalks, I was able to navigate my way the two miles from work to Norm's in reasonable time, and arrived just as he began to saute the onions and peppers for the red hots.
The coffee was already brewed and the cribbage board was set up on the table.
Norm went over to his circa 1970's refrigerator, beckoned for my attention and opening it, pointed to the two bottles of Heineken chilling in the void of the middle shelf. Closing the door, he shuffled to the cupboard and pulled out an almost empty bottle of Crown Royal and set it on the table in front of me. "This is our victory dance" he stated.
As he used a paper towel to wipe the considerable dust from the decorative bottle, Norm explained that he hadn't touched it in six years, not since he had consumed nearly the entire bottle after Desmond Howard broke his heart - and every Patriots' fan's heart - with his dagger of a kickoff return for a touchdown in the Green Bay Packer's victory over New England in Super Bowl XXXI.
I laughed at first, then recalled my own binge and the pain of that loss. Norm had known the exquisite pain of being a Patriots' fan for many years longer than I, as he was 20 years my senior, but with that age came a curious certainty, a knowledge like a sixth sense - like he knew what would happen.
At halftime, with the Patriots up 14-3 on the St. Louis Rams, Norm was again shuffling around in the kitchen, washing his crystal tumblers with the old throwback logo etched carefully on their face, returning with the glasses and the bottle, placing them between us on the coffee table. He said nothing, just winked.
A flurry of activity found the scored tied at 17 with just over a minute remaining in regulation. I looked at Norm who said simply "It's time." Against the backdrop of John Madden criticizing Bill Belichick for not taking a knee and playing for overtime, Norm twisted the cap off of the whiskey and poured equal amounts in both glasses, then retrieved the Heinekens from the fridge.
As Brady coolly spiked the football with 7 seconds left and inside Adam Vinitieri's range, I turned to Norm, who already had his beer opened and tumbler in hand ready to ingest the smooth spirit.
"No way we win this game." I said, staring at the TV screen as Vinitieri lined up for the 47 yard field goal - excited beyond reason, 30 years of loyalty to the Patriots about to be realized, though I was half expecting Desmond Howard to suddenly come running out of the Superdome tunnel to miraculously block the attempt, sending our Patriots to yet another championship game defeat..."No way"...
But Norm was confident. "It is time, young Grasshopper" he said in his best Master Po voice, winking "It is destined.", a tear running down his cheek, 40 years of waiting for this moment about to be justified.
The third chapter of the book gives the finest written account of the drive that I've ever read - to the point that the memories that it evoked game me goosebumps, just as Madden had when he finally realized that he was wrong about chastising Belichick for trying to win the game in regulation.
That drive to win Super Bowl XXXVI is why Tom Brady is the best quarterback that ever played the game. Glennon didn't need to write another word after the introduction and the first three chapters. But he did and his comparisons between Brady and many of the best quarterbacks in history are, by design, subjective. It's like reading reader's digest condensed versions of each passer, only to be informed at the end that he doesn't stack up.
And the book isn't going to convince a Peyton Manning fan or a Joe Montana fan that Brady is better. Nothing would. If God appeared to a Manning fan as a burning bush, claiming that Tom Brady was the best Quarterback of all time, and that their penalty for not believing was to be confined to the desert for 40 years, they would immediately go home and check online listings for dwellings in Barstow.
With this is the case, why write a book such as this in the first place?
For the same reason that I wanted to know if Glennon thought it was a fumble: To affirm his own belief that Brady is the greatest quarterback of all time and, as we know, affirmation of our personal beliefs is a powerful motivator - motivating enough to do the exhaustive research.
And not just technical research, for the book is well balanced with fact in numbers as a way of comparison and also with chapters dedicated to telling the story of each season as it unfolded, told with the same passion as the account of the final drive.
I'm not a numbers guy, which means I don't feel that statistics should be a sole representation of a player's total body of work. Glennon runs heavy on stats for the individual matchups, but also presents each competitor in a light which accentuates their individual personalities and the intangibles that they brought to the field.
And what is made clear is what Brady has over the rest of the group is the ownership that he takes over the offense, the team, the franchise and the league. None of the other players mentioned in this work were as charmed as Brady, but all had the opportunity to grasp the brass ring that is the National Football League, and to own it.
Only Brady did, and he still does.
Not Manning, not Elway, not Favre, Marino or Young. Joe Montana had the cool factor like Brady, but even his intangibles fall short of Brady's - which will become clear as you get further into the book.
The career of Tom Brady is the closest football will ever come to a reasonable argument of the theory of Randomness vs. Determinism, and that is the only argument left for anyone after reading this book. Was the way Brady's career unfolded a series of random accidents and karmic response or was it the product of a defined string of events that, given the conditions at the time, nothing else could have happened?
That's a question for philosophy students, not for any of us. But Sean Glennon presents the facts about Brady in such a light that it doesn't even matter - Tom Brady is the best Quarterback ever to lace up a pair of cleats, that much is made abundantly clear in this book.
He just is.
The introduction to Sean Glennon's new book, The Case for Football's Greatest Quarterback; Tom Brady vs. The NFL reads like a note that I might write to myself. In November of 2001, I would attest to anyone who would listen to me that Drew Bledsoe should have gotten his starting job back...
...which is a mistake that most Patriot fans would have to own - though no one would blame them. How was anyone supposed to know what to expect from a 6th round draft pick? He had filled in well for the long time Patriot quarterback, but was essentially still an unknown quantity.
When Glennon writes that as the first sentence of the introduction to the book, it enticed me. It made me wonder if he thought it was a fumble. The affirmation of one's beliefs is a powerful motivator, and as I watched Charles Woodson knock the ball from Brady's hand and onto the snow covered field at Foxboro Stadium, I thought it was a fumble, and I still do to this day.
And "it", of course, is the Tuck Rule play. In the serene, surreal snowscape of Foxboro Stadium's last breath, many people find their argument against Tom Brady. Many believe he is the beneficiary of - and even a product of - that call. For sure, had the call of fumble been confirmed on replay, the Raiders would have gone on to play Pittsburgh the following week and Brady would have been cleaning out his locker.
I never did find affirmation of that belief in his book, but as I started into the first two chapters that covered Brady's college career and his first two seasons as a Patriot, Glennon's matter-of-fact style had me curiously certain that he didn't think that it mattered anyway - and it doesn't.
What does matter is that the first three chapters took me back to a cold, overcast night in early February of 2002 where I found myself at my friend Norm's house, drinking coffee, eating red hots and playing cribbage until the Super Bowl was about to begin...
The walk to Norm's house was a mess. Walking in the roads to avoid the slushy wet snow cone ice on the sidewalks, I was able to navigate my way the two miles from work to Norm's in reasonable time, and arrived just as he began to saute the onions and peppers for the red hots.
The coffee was already brewed and the cribbage board was set up on the table.
Norm went over to his circa 1970's refrigerator, beckoned for my attention and opening it, pointed to the two bottles of Heineken chilling in the void of the middle shelf. Closing the door, he shuffled to the cupboard and pulled out an almost empty bottle of Crown Royal and set it on the table in front of me. "This is our victory dance" he stated.
As he used a paper towel to wipe the considerable dust from the decorative bottle, Norm explained that he hadn't touched it in six years, not since he had consumed nearly the entire bottle after Desmond Howard broke his heart - and every Patriots' fan's heart - with his dagger of a kickoff return for a touchdown in the Green Bay Packer's victory over New England in Super Bowl XXXI.
I laughed at first, then recalled my own binge and the pain of that loss. Norm had known the exquisite pain of being a Patriots' fan for many years longer than I, as he was 20 years my senior, but with that age came a curious certainty, a knowledge like a sixth sense - like he knew what would happen.
At halftime, with the Patriots up 14-3 on the St. Louis Rams, Norm was again shuffling around in the kitchen, washing his crystal tumblers with the old throwback logo etched carefully on their face, returning with the glasses and the bottle, placing them between us on the coffee table. He said nothing, just winked.
A flurry of activity found the scored tied at 17 with just over a minute remaining in regulation. I looked at Norm who said simply "It's time." Against the backdrop of John Madden criticizing Bill Belichick for not taking a knee and playing for overtime, Norm twisted the cap off of the whiskey and poured equal amounts in both glasses, then retrieved the Heinekens from the fridge.
As Brady coolly spiked the football with 7 seconds left and inside Adam Vinitieri's range, I turned to Norm, who already had his beer opened and tumbler in hand ready to ingest the smooth spirit.
"No way we win this game." I said, staring at the TV screen as Vinitieri lined up for the 47 yard field goal - excited beyond reason, 30 years of loyalty to the Patriots about to be realized, though I was half expecting Desmond Howard to suddenly come running out of the Superdome tunnel to miraculously block the attempt, sending our Patriots to yet another championship game defeat..."No way"...
But Norm was confident. "It is time, young Grasshopper" he said in his best Master Po voice, winking "It is destined.", a tear running down his cheek, 40 years of waiting for this moment about to be justified.
The third chapter of the book gives the finest written account of the drive that I've ever read - to the point that the memories that it evoked game me goosebumps, just as Madden had when he finally realized that he was wrong about chastising Belichick for trying to win the game in regulation.
That drive to win Super Bowl XXXVI is why Tom Brady is the best quarterback that ever played the game. Glennon didn't need to write another word after the introduction and the first three chapters. But he did and his comparisons between Brady and many of the best quarterbacks in history are, by design, subjective. It's like reading reader's digest condensed versions of each passer, only to be informed at the end that he doesn't stack up.
And the book isn't going to convince a Peyton Manning fan or a Joe Montana fan that Brady is better. Nothing would. If God appeared to a Manning fan as a burning bush, claiming that Tom Brady was the best Quarterback of all time, and that their penalty for not believing was to be confined to the desert for 40 years, they would immediately go home and check online listings for dwellings in Barstow.
With this is the case, why write a book such as this in the first place?
For the same reason that I wanted to know if Glennon thought it was a fumble: To affirm his own belief that Brady is the greatest quarterback of all time and, as we know, affirmation of our personal beliefs is a powerful motivator - motivating enough to do the exhaustive research.
And not just technical research, for the book is well balanced with fact in numbers as a way of comparison and also with chapters dedicated to telling the story of each season as it unfolded, told with the same passion as the account of the final drive.
I'm not a numbers guy, which means I don't feel that statistics should be a sole representation of a player's total body of work. Glennon runs heavy on stats for the individual matchups, but also presents each competitor in a light which accentuates their individual personalities and the intangibles that they brought to the field.
And what is made clear is what Brady has over the rest of the group is the ownership that he takes over the offense, the team, the franchise and the league. None of the other players mentioned in this work were as charmed as Brady, but all had the opportunity to grasp the brass ring that is the National Football League, and to own it.
Only Brady did, and he still does.
Not Manning, not Elway, not Favre, Marino or Young. Joe Montana had the cool factor like Brady, but even his intangibles fall short of Brady's - which will become clear as you get further into the book.
The career of Tom Brady is the closest football will ever come to a reasonable argument of the theory of Randomness vs. Determinism, and that is the only argument left for anyone after reading this book. Was the way Brady's career unfolded a series of random accidents and karmic response or was it the product of a defined string of events that, given the conditions at the time, nothing else could have happened?
That's a question for philosophy students, not for any of us. But Sean Glennon presents the facts about Brady in such a light that it doesn't even matter - Tom Brady is the best Quarterback ever to lace up a pair of cleats, that much is made abundantly clear in this book.
He just is.
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