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Mike Dussault

PatsPropaganda Contributor Roundtable: Part II

July 17, 2016 by Mike Dussault

Our round table continues…

What does your opening day offensive line look like?

Pete Smith: Solder – Kline – Stork – Cooper – Vollmer

Rick Starke: Solder, Mason, Andrews, Stork, Vollmer.

Niko Davos: Nate Solder, Shaq Mason, Brian Stork, Jonathan Cooper, and Sebastian Vollmer.

Jamie Conway : I’ll go Solder-Kline-Andrews-Mason-Vollmer. Really just the fact that Scar’s back and hopefully that rotation garbage is vanquished should improve any line.

Adam Magnacca:  I think opening day line is Solder-Cooper-Stork-Shaq-Vollmer

Which running back gets the most touches week one?

Pete Smith: LeGarette Blount. The Patriots need to ease Dion Lewis back into the game plan.

Rick Starke: Whichever running back not named Brandon Bolden is on the least fantasy rosters.

Niko Davos: Lewis will probably be brought back slowly, I’ll go with LeGarrette Blount. I think McDaniels will try to establish the run against a stiff Cardinals’ pass defense, putting the young gunslinger in the best situations to succeed.

Jamie Conway: Will do a longer piece about this the week of the game, but this RB positional group will be more match-up oriented than any other on the roster. I’d say whoever our big back will be used up the middle and off tackle (hi, Chandler) against the Cardinals, just to keep them honest. 9-10 touches – Blount.

Adam Magnacca: In an ideal world, Dion Lewis gets the most touches for a back. However, they might be gentle with him coming off of injury and I’m fine with that.

What team in the AFC scares you the most?

Pete Smith: Kansas City. While it may seem like a distant memory now, this is the team that dismantled us in week 4 of 2014. Granted this loss also gave us the greatest montage intro content ever (thanks Trent Dilfer!), but it should serve as a reminder that the Patriots, especially on the road, are still capable of losing big on occasion.

Rick Starke: The New England Patriots IR squad. Maybe Pittsburgh.

Niko Davos: Has to be Pittsburgh. That offense is silly talented. Luckily the defense is a sieve and Brady consistently shreds them.

Jamie Conway: It’s only a half-team really, but Denver’s D.

Adam Magnacca: In the AFC I’m the most afraid of the Bengals. Their Defense is no joke with a formidable pass defense and Andy Dalton has only gotten better. Let’s not forget the Bengals were competitive in the post season with AJ McCarron at the helm.

Favorite Non-Super Bowl Pats Win?

Pete Smith: 2014 AFC Division Game vs Baltimore. Down 14-0 then 28-14. BB’s “do your job” speech. Terrell Suggs as the perfect villain. Ineligible, eligible receiver play. Double pass. The dime to LaFell. Harmon’s clinching interception. One of the most satisfying and electric games I’ve ever watched.

Rick Starke: 2004 AFCCG vs Steelers…or divisional round that year vs the Colts. Both just thorough thrashings that really encapsulated everything about the “Patriot Way”. Let your play do the talking.

Niko Davos: The 2013 comeback from down 24-0 at half against the Broncos. Why? Can’t stand the Broncos, can’t stand Peyton Manning. That one felt good, real good.

Jamie Conway: Ravens Divisional Round ’14, cuz @#$% them.

Favorite Current Player? Favorite All-Time Player?

Pete Smith: LeGarette Blount. LeGarette Blount.

Rick Starke: For non-Brady current favorites, either Ninkovich or James Develin. All-time: Tedy Bruschi.

Niko Davos: Other than the obvious (Brady), I have to go with Big Vince Wilfork for all-time, and Dont’a Hightower for current. You’ve got to love those lunch pail blue-collar type defensive studs.

Jamie Conway:  A. Edelman, he’s top 3 WR in the NFL but gets treated like a system guy.  B. C’mon. I mean I like Ben Coates, but there’s only one true love.

Adam Magnacca: My favorite current player has to be Gronk. He’s just impossible not to root for and he plays like a champion while having fun. Watching him against the Broncos the last three times they’ve faced off he’s played ferociously. It feels like Brady’s clutch gene is starting to rub off.

Which loss still haunts you the most?

Pete Smith: Super Bowl XLII. 

Rick Starke: After working on my first article: 2006 AFC Championship game vs the Colts. HOW did they lose that game after that start?!

Niko Davos: 18-1. And it’s not close. I’ll stop there while I still have my hair and fingernails.

Jamie Conway: ’08 Season. Would have been 19-0, for real.

Adam Magnacca:  I’ll never forget “The Super Bowl That Shall Not Be Named” and I think that’s all I will say about that

 Favorite Tom Brady moment of all-time?

 

Pete Smith & Niko Davos:

Rick Starke: Every time he rushes for a first down/touchdown and is incredibly fired up. I don’t think I’ve seen that in a loss, ever.

Jamie Conway: SNL Sexual Harassment sketch. 

Adam Magnacca: My favorite Tom Brady moment of all time might be watching him juke Brian Urlacher on a scramble. A Brady run for more than 1 yard is exciting on its own and to see him fake out an all time linebacker was A.) Hilarious B.) Awesome.

Favorite Deflategate character?

 Pete Smith: Jeffrey Kessler. “Your honor is spot on.”

Rick Starke: Whoever finally ends it, hopefully with a pro-Brady conclusion.

Niko Davos: The GOAT Judge, Mr. Richard M. Berman, the one guy who didn’t see Brady through a villainous lens, and was able to make his ruling with practicality and common sense. Sounds crazy, huh? Let’s hope the rest of the gentlemen at the Second Circuit Court of Appeals take a page out of his book…

Jamie Conway: Kirk Minihane: DID YOU READ THE WELLS REPORT!!!

Adam Magnacca: I’m just so sick of Deflategate. I don’t care about the suspension, I’m fine with seeing what Jimmy can do and letting Brady stay fresh. I just hate that people are still convinced that Brady HAD to have orchestrated some evil plot to reduce the PSI by roughly 0.01. People…

 Favorite piece of Patriots swag to wear on gamedays?

Pete Smith: #88 Terry Glenn Home Blue ‘90s Jersey. The 90’s Pats “Futbol” jerseys with double flying Elvis shoulders were atrocious and beautiful at the same time. In the market for an Otis Smith jersey if anyone has any leads.

Rick Starke: I actually am against wearing gameday swag with logos on it. Seems like teams I cheer for lose when I wear their logos on gameday.

Niko Davos: This exact look, every weekend: Pats’ winter hat, Blue Wilfork jersey as a scarf, Brady red…

Jamie Conway: Portnoy’s The North Remembers hoodie.

Adam Magnacca: When it’s a big game I go to my original Reebok TB12 jersey. Can’t go wrong

Best live game experience (if applicable)?

Pete Smith: 2015 Week 10 Pats @ NYG  (27 – 26)

Rick Starke: My first attended Patriots game was the first ever Brady comeback…against the Chargers in the rain, down 10 with 3 minutes to go. I’ve only been to five games ever.

Niko Davos: November 22, 2012 at the Meadowlands, also known as the “Buttfumble” game. At that point in the season, the Jets fans were so livid with their team that by the second half they were high fiving the New England faithful every time the Pats punched one in. It was electric. A 35 point second quarter…will that ever be done again?

Jamie Conway: Every live game experience I’ve had was in the old stadium where you could walk down. So none.

Adam Magnacca: My favorite live Patriots game experience was seeing Peyton’s last game versus NE as a Colt. I was sitting in the 6th row (through a small miracle) and was on the side closest to James Sander’s game clinching interception. So much celebratory beer flew in the air. It. Was. Amazing.

Filed Under: Analysis Tagged With: contributors, round table

PatsPropaganda Contributor Roundtable: Part I

July 16, 2016 by Mike Dussault

As you might’ve noticed in the past week, it’s not just me Mike D posting content here on PatsPropaganda anymore. I’ve added a handful of contributors to help this season. All are passionate and knowledgeable Patriots fans and I’m excited that there will be more great content than ever on the site thanks to them. You can check out more on each of them here.

While some of their pieces have already been posted, I thought a good way to introduce everyone to some of the contributors would be a round table discussion with everyone, with topics ranging from their Patriots fandom to their opinions on the upcoming season.

Here’s part one:

What are you most excited for with the 2016 Patriots as we get ready to open camp? 

Pete Smith: The running game benefiting from a healthy Blount & Lewis, and an improved offensive line. It won’t matter who starts at QB if these two play to the best of their abilities. An improved offensive line, aided by the return of Dante Scarnecchia, should pave the way for what I see as a top-5 RB combo in the NFL.

Rick Starke: Some football. The offseason seems longer every year, especially when certain particular “scandals” can’t seem to disappear. 3 out of the past 4 offseasons have been littered with ugliness, some manufactured, some really, really unfortunate.

Niko Davos: Oh come on. This one’s easy. Gronk and Bennett. Bennett and Gronk. On paper, the towering tight end duo is as difficult to defend as any pair Brady’s had to work with, including Moss and Welker. If the O-line can just be average this season, good freakin’ luck keeping the good guys out of the end zone.

Jamie Conway: Seeing how wide-open at least two of the stable of quick release receivers (Edelman, Amendola, Hogan, D. Lewis) and loping giants (Bennett and Gronk) will be on nearly every play.

Adam Magnacca: I’m most excited to get an inkling of how the team uses the new pieces they’ve gained this offseason. Are they going to use Bennett as another Y TE or will they see if they can use him as a move guy or maybe some weird combination of both? Will Shea McClellin be an edge guy or will be in the middle of the linebackers? There are so many interesting twists these and other new additions could create for the team this season

What are you most concerned about?

Pete Smith: Depth at Offensive Tackle. When Solder went down last year the Offensive Line never really seemed to be able to identify a reliable replacement at left tackle. This led to a constant shuffling and rotating of personnel upfront, and the line never seemed to really gel like previous lines. The Patriots did little to address these concerns with the addition of two primarily interior linemen in Thuney and Karas. This leaves the beguiled Marcus Cannon (a potential cap casualty), LaAdrian Waddle & Keavon Milton as the primary backup tackles. All things considered, this is a great problem to have, but one that I would have preferred seen addressed with a FA signing or trade.

Rick Starke: Depth at runningback has to be the biggest concern for all Patriots fans. I can’t see anywhere else on the roster that hasn’t been addressed. Perhaps the return of Dante Scarnecchia will be all that is needed to push the running game to the next level.

Niko Davos: The offensive line is by far the biggest concern. If you watched the godforsaken AFC Title game and saw Brady get hit 20 (!!!) times, that much is obvious. There is reason for optimism though, with the return of coach Dante Scarnecchia from retirement, tackle Nate Solder from injury, the infusion of new talent (Cooper, Thuney) and the expected in-house development. 

Adam Magnacca: I’m gonna go out on a limb and say I’m a little concerned about the Special Teams. It was not nearly as strong last year as it has been since Belichick took over. I’m hoping they tighten up in that area but we’re not really gonna see if what they’ve been doing will come to fruition until the preseason starts.

Under-the-radar player you think could breakout in camp?

Pete Smith: Jonathan Jones. Fits the mold of a typical Patriots corner. Has great speed (4.33 40), and great ball skills. Played in the SEC with Auburn. I was surprised he went undrafted, and with $35K guaranteed as a signing bonus for an UDFA, it reflects the value the Patriots saw in his skill set. According to multiple reports he’s looked good in camp so far, so I guess this is a bit of a safe pick.

Rick Starke: I’d love to see Kamu Grugier-Hill turn into more than just a bubble player. Freakish athlete Swiss army knife type players are certainly more bust than boom, but one more piece like that for the Patriots defense could push them into top-3 in the league realm.

Niko Davos: Tight end/fullback Clay Harbor was an interesting offseason acquisition that flew under the radar. He’s had a somewhat underwhelming career up until this point with Philadelphia/Jacksonville (26 catches in 2014 is his career high) but he’s a 6’3 250 pounder that can run a 4.6 40–yard dash, so the attractiveness from the Patriots’ perspective is clear. He has a Swiss-army knife skillset; one Josh McDaniels is drooling over as we speak.

Jamie Conway: Keshawn Martin or Nate Washington.

Adam Magnacca: I don’t know if it will happen but I want nothing more than for TE AJ Derby to explode on the scene. I want him to add another weapon to the TE room and scare the bejeezus out of the opposing D-Coordinators. If he turns into the Swiss army at TE who can line up anywhere and match up with anyone I would jump and down with joy.

Veteran player you could see as a surprise cut?

Pete Smith: Marcus Cannon. He has a big contract and I don’t think anyone on the OL outside of Solder and Vollmer has job safety right now. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Patriots roll the dice on Waddle or Milton in place of Cannon.

Rick Starke: Somebody in the trenches, most likely. There are a LOT of defensive ends on the roster, and a LOT of offensive linemen on the roster. Maybe Blount.

Niko Davos: Would Aaron Dobson be a surprise cut? No? OK, I’ll do better than that… Obviously something is going to have to give with the offensive line so my attention is there. Although they probably don’t qualify as “veterans”, 2015 rookies and occasional starters David Andrews and Tre Jackson need to perform in camp to stick around. That goes for Josh Kline as well. Jackson has had injury issues throughout his short career, so I could also see him beginning the year stashed on the “PUP” list.

Adam Magnacca: Bill always has a surprise camp cut and while some might not be shocked I could see them not keeping Clay Harbor. Even though he had a signing bonus, the team doesn’t care about that at final cuts. I think the offensive positions are pretty full and I don’t know that he’s different enough from James Develin, who the team loves.

What position battle intrigues you most?

Pete Smith: Last two defensive back spots. The battle between veteran E.J. Biggers, Justin Coleman, Darryl Roberts & Jonathan Jones should be intense for what I think will be ultimately 2 spots. I’m high on Jones and hope Roberts can oust Coleman. I’m not sure Biggers is anything more than a veteran camp presence.

Rick Starke: The interior of the offensive line. Stork has lined up everywhere, so he’s not a lock at center, but definitely a lock as a starter. Between three years of trades, draft, and free agent finds, there is a logjam of players there.

Niko Davos: Running back. After not drafting a back (which I was admittedly upset by), it’s clear the Hoodie trusts what he has in-house. With Blount the only power back (Bolden is primarily special teams), Dion presumably being handled with caution coming off the ACL, who steps up in the early going? I’m a fan of James White, but he’s not a great runner between the tackles. We know exactly what Donald Brown is, and I’m not sure that’s a good thing. Can the shifty undrafted rookie DJ Foster make the two aforementioned backs sweat their respective roster spots?

Jamie Conway: D Tackle: Branch, PotRoast, Malcolm Brown and Vincent Valentine show how a free agent depth acquisition can turn a vulnerable group into a real strength. 

Adam Magnacca: I’m most interested in how the offensive line shakes out. I think it’s an incredibly young and competitive group and nothing but good can come from that competition. Worst case scenario, the depth on the team is A+ and those young guys not starting are hungry for snaps.

Part II comes tomorrow!

Filed Under: Analysis Tagged With: contributors, round table

Deflategate is Over, Tom Brady will Sit Four Games

July 15, 2016 by Mike Dussault

Tom Brady posted the below message on Facebook today, putting an end to Deflategate once and for all.

Tom Brady Deflategate

It’s hard to believe this thing dragged on for as long as it did, and you can revisit all the choice Deflategate posts from PatsPropaganda here. The 2014 AFC Championship seems like a lifetime ago now.

While it will suck not to have Brady for the first four games of the season, and my disgust for the NFL’s handling of the entire affair burns brighter than ever, I’m glad to get away from labor law. This blog has always been a football-first blog. Now we can go back to that. In fact, it really already started yesterday, taking a look at how Garoppolo is better prepared than Matt Cassel was in 2008, but faces a far more daunting slate of games.

Brady will sit those four games, one more lost draft pick will go by in April of 2017 and then Deflategate can fade into a footnote of Brady’s career. But it certainly sets the stage for one more necessary championship run. That fifth Super Bowl means everything now. Not only would it put Brady in a class by himself as a quarterback, it forces Roger Goodell to hand over the Lombardi trophy to Tom’s awaiting hands one more time.

That might be a hollow victory, watching Goodell Bot act like it’s no big deal. Like it was all business. That Brady doesn’t want to murder him. But it would mean something to all the Patriots fans who have passionately defended Brady from the start to get one more moment like that.

Now we can move on. Kind of. There will always be the idiots who make air pressure jokes. Who think this was about the Patriots and Brady cheating and not a corrupt NFL office. But when the NFL punishment circus comes their team’s way all we can say is “told ya”. I think more and more fans are aware of this now. John Cena’s joke at the ESPY’s confirmed that for me.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00sRBDl1J2I

This is really nothing new for Patriots fans. We got through it with Spygate and we’ll get through it with Deflategate. Because we have the best coach, quarterback and team in the NFL and their run is not yet over.

I leave you with the first ever piece I wrote that got any internet attention. I wrote it over eight years ago and it’s just as true as ever.

Embrace the hate. We’re Darth Vader. And the rest of the NFL is living on Alderaan.

Filed Under: Off Field Tagged With: deflategate, tom brady

What does Cassel’s 2008 mean for Garoppolo?

July 14, 2016 by Mike Dussault

Cassel 2008

Cassel celebrates a third quarter touchdown pass during their 17-10 win over the Kansas City Chiefs. Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

One of the common refrains you’ll hear with Tom Brady potentially sitting the first four games of the 2016 season is “well Matt Cassel took the Pats to 11-5 in 2008, so Jimmy Garoppolo will be fine!” I agree to an extent, but I don’t think it’s that cut and dry and it’s worth taking putting that season into context and how different things will be in 2016.

We all remember that fateful opening game in 2008. The Pats were in white jerseys at home. Like Belichick’s SB42 way-too-short cutoff red hoodie something seemed off from the start. Then there were the big GU patches to honor Gene Upshaw that would forever make this game instantly recognizable. Brady hadn’t played at all in the preseason and Matt Cassel looked terrifyingly awful.

When Brady went down after Bernard Pollard dove into his knees then limped off the field, we knew it wasn’t good. Anyone who had watched the preseason thought we were dead meat with Cassel. But Cassel managed to put together a solid season, completing 63.4 percent of his passes for 3693 yards with 21 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. That included two fourth quarter comebacks and two game-winning drives.

But the problem, as Bill Belichick said himself in his episode of A Football Life, was that the Patriots could not beat the good teams in the AFC. Their only win over an AFC playoff team was in Miami, in a Wildcat revenge game. They lost to the Steelers, Chargers and Colts, the only three teams outside their division that they faced with winning records, not including a 9-7 Cardinals team that never got off the bus in Foxboro. They feasted on the terrible AFC and NFC West divisions.

Had the Patriots faced a more daunting schedule, we likely wouldn’t have the 11-5 argument to make.

Still, Cassel did far better than anyone would’ve expected based on his preseason. He had a veteran cast of weapons around him including Wes Welker in his prime, Randy Moss and Jabar Gaffney. The defense however was at the end of the line. 2008 was their final gasp before the full turnover began the next offseason. Had Brady stayed healthy this probably would’ve been their downfall.

The 2016 Patriots are a little different. While they have a lot of veterans in place on offense, their defense is just hitting its prime. That’s what stands out to me most. The 2008 defense was not one that could singlehandedly win games. The 2016 should be.

Garoppolo also seems a far better fit for the Patriots’ offense at this stage. Simply put, he’s more talented than Cassel and his quick release should fit what the Patriots do with Julian Edelman, Danny Amendola, Rob Gronkowski and Martellus Bennett extremely well. He also has some of the athleticism that Cassel displayed which gave teams used to facing the statue-esque Brady a new twist.

Garoppolo’s first TD pass.

Belichick and Josh McDaniels had to adjust on the fly when Brady went down. Now they have an entire training camp to cater the offense to Garoppolo’s strengths. This is vital because 2016’s schedule is far more daunting than 2008’s was. This is why the comparison is a hard one to make. There are six 2015 playoff teams on the docket this year, including two (Cardinals and Texans) which Garoppolo would have to face.

And the other two matchups against Miami and Buffalo feature defenses that would push even Brady to the limit. Luckily three of the first four are at home. That counts for a lot against defenses that love to blitz.

Garoppolo should be ready for this. Most quarterbacks are thrust into the fire long before they’ve had a chance to apprentice for two seasons under a Hall of Fame quarterback. And if the Patriots are ever going to be able to get something for Garoppolo, now is the time to showcase him.

Cassel’s 2008 has some similarities, but he was a less-talented player facing less-talented teams. He performed as you’d expect a Belichick-prepared player would, and probably would’ve made some noise in the playoffs had the Jets just beaten the Dolphins in Week 17, allowing the Pats in.

It’s a tall order for Garoppolo facing four very good defenses, but should be better prepared than Cassel was with all this time to prepare. I have no doubt Belichick will have Garoppolo ready to go with a plan that suits his strengths, which just happen to be very similar strengths to Brady’s.

And in the long run, getting a look at Garoppolo now is really what’s best for the Patriots organization.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5KvrEZOaR6Q

Filed Under: Analysis Tagged With: 2008, jimmy garoppolo, matt cassel, tom brady

Deflategate Day 535: En Banc Hearing Denied

July 13, 2016 by Mike Dussault

Deflategate En BancIt’s looking more likely that ever that Tom Brady will be sitting the first four games of the 2016 season. The second circuit court denied Brady and the NFLPA’s appeal for an En Banc hearing on Deflategate, leaving limited options for the defamed quarterback. Brady could try to take it to the Supreme Court, but he’s just about out of options.

For Pats fans, there are so many emotions. Everyone is sick of Deflategate. Even those of us who are apoplectic at the way the NFL treated their star player are ready to be done with it. And by now it’s easy to find the silver linings.

Jimmy Garoppolo is now poised to play at Arizona, vs. Miami, vs. Houston and vs. Buffalo. Three home games, but four defenses that are daunting. In the long term, it’s great for the Patriots to get a look at Garoppolo now, in his third year. Next offseason will be the last time the Pats could move Garoppolo and get something for him. So this will be an audition as much as anything.

And really, even with Brady, the Pats usually sputter a bit out of the gate. Even a 1-3 record wouldn’t be insurmountable, while 3-1 or 2-2 are usually par for the course anyway. So to the 31 teams who are reacting like the Bills, nah-nah-nah-poo-poo the Patriots are still going to be fine, not only this season, but for future seasons because they’ll truly know what they have in their backup QB.

Plus Brady gets a lighter training camp and shortened season which can only benefit the soon-to-be 39 year-old. He’ll have four weeks to stew and will be ready to unleash hell on the Cleveland Browns on October 9th, before making his first home appearance against the Bengals. I’m most curious how Brady studies the offense in those first four games, what he sees and how he can help implement ways to use new players like Martellus Bennett.

But it still sucks. The NFL played dirty from the start with this whole affair. From refusing to correct false information in the media, to planting lies in the media to support their version, to moving the goal posts after the appeal, the NFL was in it to win it the entire time. Forget the actual truth and evidence. They saw their chance to finally get those Patriots, and pulled out all the stops to make sure they prevailed.

Maybe Brady tries to go to the Supreme Court. He certainly has the legal team in place for it. Maybe, like many would love, he opens a defamation lawsuit against the NFL (that’s where things would get uber interesting). Or maybe this really is the end of a crazy charade that lasted over a year-and-a-half all over footballs that were .4% below what the Ideal Gas Law predicted they would be.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: deflategate, tom brady

Patriots 2016 Preview: Defensive Overview

July 11, 2016 by Mike Dussault

We’re just 17 days away from the start of Patriots training camp! The offseason always seems so long but somehow goes by so quickly. As we gear up for a huge new season here on the blog (more on that in the coming days), I’m posting some excerpts from my 40-page Patriots 2016 preview.

Here’s my defensive overview,  you can buy a digital copy of the preview book its entirety here for just $4.

2015 Defensive Statistical Rankings

Overall DVOA – 12th           Yards-per-Game – 24th (339.4)

Passing DVOA – 10th           Points-per-Game – 10th (19.7)

Running DVOA – 13th          Third Down – 10th (37 percent)

Fourth Down –  10th (44 percent)

The Patriots had perhaps their best defensive season since the dynasty days in 2015. After much concern about transitioning from Darrelle Revis and Brandon Browner, the Pats seamlessly transitioned to Malcolm Butler and Logan Ryan, and saw their third down defense enter the top-10 in the NFL after being ranked 16th in 2015.

Most encouraging was that the Pats stuck primarily with the Cover-1 Robber defense that they used most often in 2014 as well. Man defense is critical in today’s NFL and the Pats held up well minimizing zone defenses that can be picked apart.

Jamie CollinsWhile the offense was decimated with injuries, the defense had better injury luck. Both Jamie Collins and Dont’a Hightower missed some games, but everyone was available for the playoffs and they turned in two solid performances.

With everyone returning except Chandler Jones, there’s little reason to think they won’t be even better this year.

One factor could be a significantly tougher schedule in 2016. Instead of cake walks with the AFC South and NFC East, they’ll now have to face the daunting NFC West and AFC North, which feature a number of top quarterbacks and difficult matchups.

The major additions on defense include Chris Long, Shea McClellin and Terrence Knighton. While Rob Ninkovich and Jabaal Sheard should take the starting defensive end roles, Long is more than capable as the designated pass rusher and rotational defensive end.

Prior to two years of injury, Long showed little sign of dropoff in an otherwise healthy career. He’ll surprise anyone writing him off and I expect this trio to be even better than they were with Chandler Jones. By the end of 2015, Sheard had surpassed Jones on the depth chart anyway, playing more snaps in both playoff games.

McClellin gives the Patriots a third linebacker/edge hybrid player who can do a little of everything like Hightower and Collins, though he worked with the defensive ends in minicamp. He also gives them long term insurance as both Collins and Hightower enter the final years of their deals (though I’d expect both to re-sign before the 2016 season is done).

Acquiring Knighton, picking up Alan Branch’s option, the release of Dominique Easley and the drafting of Vincent Valentine all signal the direction of the Patriots’ defense schematically. No longer are they interested in undersized three-technique penetrators.

No, now it’s now all about size in the middle and essentially a paired down version of Belichick’s old 3-4 defense. Malcom Brown is an outstanding athlete, and though he doesn’t quite have the height of the other three tackles, he and the others will be able to occupy the middle of offensive lines while the linebackers and defensive ends make the plays.

It’s exciting to return nearly the entire defense, along with some solid additions in both free agency and the draft who should contribute immediately. Expectations should be through the roof, but they’ll be tested right out of the gate and see every variation of offense that exists in the NFL. They’re built to deal with all of them.

Filed Under: Analysis Tagged With: defense

Brady (2) and Gronk (9) top NFL’s Top 100 of 2015

July 7, 2016 by Mike Dussault

The NFL wrapped up their Top-100 of 2015 last night with Tom Brady coming in second (to Cam Newton) and Rob Gronkowski coming in ninth. You’ll have to click through to YouTube to watch the segments (Brady / Gronk). While the NFL has taken great steps forward making their content available online, they still won’t let you embed their stuff. Baby steps I guess.

Of course there’s some outrage that Brady wasn’t number one, but as someone who really doesn’t invest much time or energy in rankings, I say whatevs. Brady was brilliant in 2015, his second season in three years where his offense was effectively dismantled by injuries. Even in games where he lost key guys and the team was deflated (sorry), he still produced.

Most QBs would’ve folded after seeing Gronk go down like he did in Denver. Not Brady. Still led an epic drive with scrubs to force OT. As we saw in 2014, with a little injury luck in 2016, the Pats will be hard to keep out of the Super Bowl. Brady’s shown no sign of slowing down.

Despite Brady’s brilliance, which, let’s face it, everyone’s used to, it’s hard to say this wasn’t Cam Newton’s year. Yeah I know he sucked in the Super Bowl, but Brady also sucked in the 2010 AFCDG after being the unanimous MVP of the regular season. He still was #1 on the Top 100 that year. Everyone loves new flashy objects. That’s what Cam was after his superstar breakout season, so kudos to him.

And what does it matter? Not a whole lot. At least we get an extended segment on Brady since he’s in the Top 10. Other than that I don’t really care who was ranked where.

As for Gronk, he clearly belongs in the Top 10. It’s especially encouraging that he’s had two healthy seasons after 2011-2013 all ended with him in major surgery and rehab. You need to look no further than the final drive of the AFC Championship to see how unstoppable Gronk is. Huge fourth-down catch, huge touchdown and was open for the two-point conversion as well. That was all him and Brady, in a huge moment, doing what Top-10 players should do.

At that point Edelman was on one leg and everyone knew it was going to Gronk. They still couldn’t stop it.

If Gronk has the same injury luck for the third year in a row, the Pats offense will once again be a mostly unstoppable force.

 

 


#1 – Tom Brady – The Top 100 Players of 2011 by joshespinoza2

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Rob Gronkowski, tom brady, top 100

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