The Best of the Week in PatsPropaganda
It was a quiet week on the free agency front. I’m assuming the Patriots are waiting for Vollmer to make a decision before rounding up some defensive tackles and wide receivers. The amount of money they allocate to Vollmer will be a big chunk of change so it’s smart to wait until that worked out so they know how much they can spend on the other needs.
Things should start to get interesting again in the next week. And look, it’s almost April, the draft will soon be upon us!
Here’s the best of the week…
Top Ten Games of Wes Welker’s Patriots Career –> must read if I do say so myself.
PatsPropaganda & Frenz 3/20: Free Agency Roundup
Adrian Wilson brings old-time toughness back to New England Patriots. – ESPN Boston
Farewell, Tuck Rule; Hello, Charles Woodson’s Illegal Head Slap
How Adrian Wilson Fits in with the New England Patriots
Resetting the Patriots’ needs-based depth chart – Extra Points – Boston.com
Penny slots: Why Wes Welker’s receiving class is getting shortchanged – WEEI | Christopher Price
If Brady retires without winning that elusive 4th championship (god forbid!), how do you think that will effect his legacy?
It’s still a Hall of Fame career. And while the two Super Bowl losses are the most recent in our memory, ultimately they’ll be somewhat of a positive on Brady’s resume. He put his team up late in the fourth quarter in both of them, but his defense couldn’t stop last-minute drives by Eli in either.
Getting to five Super Bowls in the free agency era is astounding any way you cut it. Not to mention SEVEN AFC title games and only missing the playoffs once, in his second year, on a tie-breaker.
So if he doesn’t get number four, it’s been an epic run of winning. We can debate Brady vs. Montana for eternity, but there’s no question Brady is an NFL Legend. Period.
If manning wins a championship with Welker while Brady couldn’t do you think that will have a negative effect on how the sports world sees Brady?
You’ll have to wait for the answer to this on Monday as it’s the topic of my B/R column.
In short, I think Brady has the chance to prove once and for all that he’s the better quarterback, but Manning has it a bit easier.
What season do you think Tom Brady became officially an elite quarterback? And Why.
First off, I have to say I really hate the term “elite” when talking about quarterbacks. People get so fired up about who’s elite and who isn’t. It’s not like once you get to being “elite” you stay there. Some players have elite runs in the playoffs then never put it together again.
But Brady is elite, we all agree on that, so I’ll answer this. I could say 2004, because three Super Bowl runs with flawless performances, especially the dismantling of the Steelers says there’s no doubt about how epically good he was.
But he was surrounded by great teams then as well, especially on defense. So let’s say 2006. The cupboards were bare and yet he still threw for 3,529 yards and 24 touchdowns. It was also about that time that the Patriots defense went from a dominant one that could take control of a game, to one that was a little too old and slow. Brady really had to carry the team for the first time in his career, and he got them almost all the way to the Super Bowl with arguably one of the most untalented Patriots teams of the last decade.
When Brady got some real weapons in 2007 it showed just how good he had become. Before that he was a smart quarterback, but after 2006 he was a truly explosive one, and once he had truly great players around him he proved how good he really was. Before 2007, Manning had all the stats and Brady just won games with mistake-free precision. But after that it was clear that Brady was every bit as dangerous as Manning.
How do you think the landscape of the AFC has changed since Free Agency began? With Welker going to Manning and Reed off to the Ravens, do you think taking the AFC Crown, and maybe even getting to the playoffs, has gotten even more difficult for us?
More on this next week once the vet defensive ends land, but so far I think it’s New England and Denver in an AFC supremacy arms race. Tier two has Houston, Baltimore, Indy, maybe Miami. But I think overall the AFC will be even more top-heavy than it was last year. Not that it really matters once the playoffs start.
With the moves the Dolphins have made this offseason (and the fact that they gave us a run for our money in the first meeting last year) it’s obvious they want to knock us off out AFC East throne. Do you think they’ll be a huge problem this year?
To be honest I was more worried about the Bills last year. I think a lot of it will depend on the schedule, because Miami has a good defense that has given Brady problems. If the Pats see them early in the year and they’re still working out the new passing offense it could get interesting.
If I’m the Dolphins I want the Patriots in New England as early in the season as possible. Because that’s the game that no AFC East team has been able to win. Beating the Pats outside of Foxboro is one thing, but Brady hasn’t lost at home to an AFC East opponent in the regular season since the Jets in 2006, in the last game at Gillette Stadium with grass.
Until an AFC East team can beat the Patriots twice in one season New England has to remain the favorites because they’re so consistent outside the division.
I like the moves the Dolphins have made, but they really didn’t do much on offense against the Patriots defense last year. They were under 300 yards of total offense both games, and Tannehill was sacked a total of 10 times. So yeah, they added Mike Wallace, but really I thought Reggie Bush was a pretty good anti-Pats defense weapon, they just misused him.
With the Pats bringing back their whole defense, plus Adrian Wilson (at least), I’d still give them the edge. It will depend on how big of a jump Tannehill makes and how quickly the Patriots passing offense comes together. If both games are at the end of the season like they usually are, I think Pats are pretty much a lock.