http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dskVNbXSvek
Wes Welker: #23 Top 100 Players of 2012 (by xmuscularghandix)
https://www.patspropaganda.com/wes-welker-23-top-100-players-of-2012-by/
An Independent Patriots Blog
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dskVNbXSvek
Wes Welker: #23 Top 100 Players of 2012 (by xmuscularghandix)
https://www.patspropaganda.com/wes-welker-23-top-100-players-of-2012-by/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jINQ9LZKfAc
Wes Welker 99 Yard Touchdown Patriots VS Dolphins On Monday Night Football (by NflClips29)
https://www.patspropaganda.com/wes-welker-99-yard-touchdown-patriots-vs-dolphins/
I think when we talk about the offense evolving this is a big part of it. He was safe money in the bank almost on every snap. Brady knew it, and defenses knew it, and that was the key that every game plan would start with when stopping the Pats.
So does Amendola have some similarities to Welker? Sure. But he’s not Welker, and the game plans against the Brady-Welker offense are now out the window. There is of course an element of risk, especially given the Pats track record developing receivers, but it immediately adds an element of change to the offense. You can’t make Welker the center of your game plan, coverages will have to adjust, as will the Patriots offense.
There are still many moves to come this offseason so it’s pointless to talk now about what the new offense will look like, but even if it’s Amendola-Hernandez-Gronk-Lloyd it should be a solid group that can move the chains. Let’s just keep building the defense up to better compliment them as well.
“Are they comfortable?”
https://www.patspropaganda.com/jullie-anne-are-they-comfortable/
What this eventually boils down to is the innate fear of change that fans have with regard to their team’s stars. Most people are loath to give up on something good until it’s been proven that a once-productive player can no longer perform at the same level. That’s understandable, but it’s a terrible way to run a football team. Belichick knows that, and he’s spent 13 years moving on from players at exactly the right time.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/what-this-eventually-boils-down-to-is-the-innate/
Good breakdown from Reiss on how it all went down…
The team’s offer, a two-year, $10 million pact with incentives that could have pushed it as high as $16 million but in the eyes of Welker would be extremely difficult to reach, wasn’t accepted. At that point, Welker and his representatives intensified their pursuit of other offers, and it helped that some groundwork had previously been laid with the Broncos. Likewise, the Patriots turned their attention to Amendola, who was their top choice if things didn’t work out with Welker (and in the eyes of some on the other side of the negotiating table their top choice all along).
Containing Russell Wilson is key for Patriots in Super Bowl 49 | The MMQB with Peter King Andy Benoit pretty much breaking it down to the basics here, with some great examples of what the Pats might do to contain Wilson.