Today Nick and I jumped in on a cool new app that will allow us to bring you some stripped-down Patshows this offseason. It was a little wonky for us at first but we already got a pretty good handle on it and should be able to deliver even better results going forward. In this episode, we talked everything that has transpired in the past couple weeks — all the players who left, all the player who arrived and every little bit of Patriots new in between. It was good to be back talking Patriots football with my old pal Fitzy!
Patrick Chung Extended Through 2020
In honor of @PatrickChung23 getting an extension, here’s highlights of perhaps his best game as a Patriot, 2010 vs Miami: 1 punt block, 1 FG block (returned for a TD) and a pick 6! #Patriots pic.twitter.com/FOwvLmiG2h
— ’03 Kliff Kingsbury (@fearthe_beard11) March 17, 2018
When I started this blog, Patrick Chung was one of the early favorites. Seriously there are 42 pages of posts about Chung, or as I dubbed him early on, Patchung! because he played with reckless abandon and just patchunged the hell out of guys. That fearless playing style was what endeared him to us all, and made him an early favorite to replace Rodney Harrison who retired the year before Chung entered the league.
It didn’t quite work that way out of the gate, but ever since taking a brief hiatus in Philadelphia for a year, Chung has more than lived up to the lofty expectation of replacing maybe the toughest safety to ever don a Patriots uniform. Chung has now signed another contract extension, his third since rejoining the team, locking him up through 2020 and solidifying an area that I thought could possibly transition sooner than many thought.
With guys like Kenny Vaccaro and later Tyrann Mathieu available and Chung set to turn 31 in August with a $3.8 million cap hit, I wondered if it might be one of those year-too-early situations, but happily, I was wrong and Chung isn’t going anywhere.
Patriots Trade Parade Continues with Cordarrelle Patterson
After the season ends I dive into the free agency lists and try to figure out who might be a good fit for the Patriots. Then the Patriots go and blow all my study out of the water as they focus on trades like they did with their third of the past two weeks, acquiring Cordarrelle Patterson from the Raiders for a swap of late-round picks. Just as I got keen to the Patriots’ restricted free agency ways, they continue to keep me on my toes and that’s why sometimes it’s best to just sit back and let them do their thing.
Patterson’s addition was a bit surprising on the surface but as you dig a little further it’s a move that shores up a few different spots that have been affected by departures this offseason. Patterson was drafted with what was originally the Patriots’ 29th overall pick in the 2013 draft. The Patriots turned that pick into four other picks, and now they get Patterson for peanuts, with no guaranteed money. He’s not exactly cheap with a cap hit of $3.25 million, but should bring enough value to the offense and special teams to make him worth it.
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Pats Posits: Sunday Ramblings
The initial wave and excitement of free agency are over as we now start to settle in on the mid and lower tier free agents and the draft. The team building process is a year-long activity for the Patriots, but last week is the short little window that everyone loses their minds over. Each season I find myself caring less and less about talking people off the ledge. Bill Belichick has 18 offseasons of precedent and if you don’t understand how they do business you’re willfully not paying attention.
Sometimes they do make a splash, like with Adalius Thomas and Stephon Gilmore, but most often it’s things like swinging low-risk trades for affordable vets like Kony Ealy or Jason McCourty, signing vet free agents to short, affordable deals like Jabaal Sheard or Adrian Clayborn, grabbing unremarkable castoffs who turn into special players like Rob Ninkovich or making in-season moves to shore up weaknesses like Akiem Hicks or Akeem Ayers.
I included a few busts in there because in the NFL no one bats a thousand. It’s just as easy to point out personnel moves that missed the mark as it is those that were hit out of the park. The important thing, as most of us should’ve learned by now, is to build a team that is strong top-to-bottom because injuries and poor performance can torpedo any best-laid plan. I know having Tom Brady certainly helps cover up personnel misfires as does an established system and clear expectations handed down by a well-organized coaching staff that is designed to disseminate Belichick’s coaching points.
The bottom line is that the team building process is far more than one week in mid-March and there are plenty of moves to come despite the fact that outside of left tackle the Patriots already have a pretty impressive roster that could compete in the playoffs without adding any rookies.
I’ve gotten a little behind this week outside of the major acquisitions, so here are some quick-hit thoughts on all that has been going on.
Patriots Bolster Front Seven with Adrian Clayborn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwmfbwsDZYM
After grabbing Danny Shelton and Jason McCourty from the Browns, the Patriots added another solid and needed piece to their defense in Adrian Clayborn, a defensive end who should solidify an edge of their defense. As I wrote on Friday, the team needed another defensive end, a spot they struggled with last season after losing three veterans from the Super Bowl 51-winning team.
Patriots reached agreement with former Falcons’ DE Adrian Clayborn, per source.
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) March 16, 2018
The Patriots gave Clayborn a two-year, $12 million deal, which is par for the course with them, similar to what the gave Jabaal Sheard a couple seasons ago. Clayborn will be 30 this summer, so he’s not a long-term answer but will give them instant toughness that they lacked in 2017, resulting in in-season moves like adding James Harrison late in the year.
I know everyone will get caught up in the sacks of it all, it’s just what us fans do, especially now that we’re being inundated with Clayborn’s six-sack performance against the Cowboys. We want production, but I’m less concerned with how many sacks Clayborn will give us and more about the strength and ability to win in the trenches.
That’s what the Patriots defense requires, especially from the hand-down defensive ends and that’s what Clayborn can give them. I’m sure he’ll drop a little in coverage, but his job will be to set the edge and dominate his blocker, not just getting to the quarterback. Simply put, Clayborn fits what they do, and should fit in really well.
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Patriots Free Agency Reset, Visits Rundown
After re-signing Rex Burkhead and acquiring Jason McCourty via trade, the Patriots have picked up the pace of their free agency period the last two days, and with a number of visits reported there should be plenty more moves to come.
Once again there’s been plenty of outrage about the lack of big-name signings, which has left me wondering why people are far more enamored with an aging star over a promising player who never blossomed. The latter is always cheaper and come with far more upside. If anything the annoying part about them is they come to New England, resurrect their career and then move on to a bigger contract elsewhere. Guys like Akiem Hicks, Aqib Talib, even Brandon Browner are just a few that jump to mind in that regard.
The old stars get everyone excited because your mind immediately imagines them at the peak of their careers as if that is the player the Patriots are getting. Sometimes the Patriots do get one of those guys on a cheaper deal because they “want to win”, but most of the time they’re getting paid for past performance, not what they’re still capable of and that’s why the Pats avoid them.
Anyway, here’s a quick rundown of reported visits that the Patriots have scheduled and my thoughts on them. I try not to get too excited or invested when reports of interest or even visits are reported. Sometimes it’s smoke from the agents. Sometimes they can’t even pass a physical. Other times they leave and sign elsewhere. The point is, don’t get invested until they sign.
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McCourty Wonder Twin Powers Activate!
After momentarily announcing they were releasing cornerback Jason McCourty, the Cleveland Browns instead decided to trade him to our beloved Patriots, uniting him with his twin brother Devin and giving Patriots fans a feel-good moment after a disappointing start to free agency.
Trade: The #Browns have traded Jason McCourty to his brother Devin McCourty and the Patriots… They are swapping 6th and 7th round picks this year.
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) March 15, 2018
J-Mac, as he’s known on the social media accounts the twins share, has one year left on his contract that pays him a manageable $2.375 million. This gives the Patriots some reinforcement at the cornerback position that was a light after losing Malcolm Butler, who, oh by the way, will be making $30 million guaranteed on a five-year, $61 million contract. Yes, this is Patriots economics at work here.