Awesome! (via NFL Fan Rally on Trafalgar Square)
The Best of PatsPropaganda This Week
Every Saturday we bring you a post only of the best links from here on PatsProp and from around the internet. It’s not often you’ll find a fan base as bummed out after an overtime win over their most hated rival as you did this week with Patriots fans.
Here’s what you might’ve missed:
PatsPropaganda Analysis
5 Points of Emphasis for Patriots vs. Rams
Patriots defense can’t get off the field on third-and-long
PatsPropaganda & Frenz Podcast NEW
Notes on Football Outsiders Patriots DVOA Rankings: Week 7
Notes on PFF’s Patriots grades: Week 7 Jets
Trying to keep a positive Patriots perspective
Under-reaction to the Jets gift to the Patriots
Local/National Analysis
October surprise: Five reasons to be excited about the Patriots prospects
Fourth-and-wrong – BostonHerald.com
Patriots pass rush will have to get better – Patriots – Boston.com
Breaking Down Rob Ninkovich’s Clutch Plays for New England Patriots | Bleacher Report
Late execution is killing them – Patriots – Boston.com
5 takeaways from Patriots-Jets – Extra Points – Boston.com
Lastly, the greatest Madden prediction of all time:
October surprise: Five reasons to be excited about the Patriots prospects
October surprise: Five reasons to be excited about the Patriots prospects
The team clearly needs to get its defensive house in order to truly be a legit Super Bowl threat. But at least there is a foundation in place to build upon. And that foundation begins up front. The Patriots right now are No. 11 on our Defensive Hog Index. It’s not an elite defensive front. But it’s getting there, and certainly the unit is MUCH better than it was in 2011, when the Patriots finished the year No. 25 on our Defensive Hog Index. New England stops the run as well as any team in football, surrendering a stingy 3.34 YPA. That’s third best in the NFL. The Patriots boast Vince Wilfork, the rock in the middle, and have surrounded him with a young collection of athletic defenders, including the young all-SEC linebacking corps of Brandon Spikes, who has lit up opponents with big hits this year, 2008 Defensive Rookie of the Year and 2010 Pro Bowler Jerod Mayo and rookie Dont’a Hightower. Chandler Jones, meanwhile, was the NFL’s defensive rookie of the month for September and already has 5.0 sacks this year. The Patriots are not a perfect team, folks. But there are certainly plenty of reasons to think this team will be in the mix when it all gets real serious in January.
It Is What It Is » Mike Lombardi on D&C: Rams going to take their shots in fourth quarter
It Is What It Is » Mike Lombardi on D&C: Rams going to take their shots in fourth quarter
Lombardi predicts the Rams will attempt to take advantage of New England’s unimpressive defensive secondary by airing it out. “I think they’re going to,” Lombardi said. “The Rams have a unique team. What the Rams are saying when they play you is, ‘We think you’re going to mess up. So we’re going to be as conservative as we possibly can be. We’re not going to blow this game. We’re going to try to get this game to the fourth quarter, we’re going to take our shot.’ And I think you’ll see them take shots up the field. “I think they will throw it down the field if they can make a few plays. That’s part of what they want to do, anyway. They know they’re not good enough. They know their offensive line is really a work in progress, and that’s being polite. … They have to control the ball, stay in a lot of third-and-shorts, keep 10-play drives, and really the Rams don’t mind if you keep the ball for 10 minutes, either. They just want to keep you out of the end zone. They’ll let you have a field goal if you keep it for 10 minutes.”
5 Points of Emphasis for Patriots vs. Rams
This week on Mike D’s 5 Keys we’re going the super obvious route. Sometimes these are abstract things, random points of emphasis we think the Pats need to focus on to win the game, but this week we’re just going to make it all about the Patriots doing the things they’ve been bad at doing all season long.
Unlike the Patriots, the Rams have been able to beat both the Seahawks and the Cardinals, so a victory over them would be a nice way to end the first half of the season.
This is a big game for the Patriots in an exhibition-type atmosphere, which could be good experience if they are lucky enough to make it to the biggest exhibition game of them all, aka the Super Bowl.
Any time the team can play on a big stage it’s good. Especially for the youngest team in Bill Belichick’s tenure.
The Pats need the bye week to regroup and get healthy, and if they’re able to end it on a positive note it could be even more of a catalyst for the second half of the season.
My 5 Super Obvious Points of Emphasis…
1. Only give up THREE 20+ passing plays – I wouldn’t be so bold as to ask for zero, but when you’re averaging six per game you gotta take what you can get. There’s little doubt the Rams are going to toss some bombs up, and with Brian Schottenheimer running the offense we know what kind of game to expect.
The Rams have a great one-two punch in Jackson and Richardson at running back, so we’ll see a lot of them, and then a lot of play action bombs away.
Our safeties cannot bite on play action!!!!!
And I never thought I’d be begging it for it but we must BEND, NOT BREAK!!!
Well, only break three times. I can live with that.
2. Defensive third downs under 40% – Really 40% is sub-average but when you’ve been over 50% (dreadful) three of the last four weeks you have to adjust expectations.
It would also be helpful to be under 30% on third and longs specifically since they’ve been averaging 41% on those for the season.
If the defense continues to be consistent with their run defense they should force a number of third down situations. But it doesn’t matter if you force them if you can’t get off the field.
I don’t care if it’s blitzing pressure or coverage just get off the field on third down.
3. Protect the edges – The one thing we can’t allow on offense is for this to become a Giants-esque attack from the Rams, and that begins with edge rushers Chris Long and Robert Quinn.
Luckily the Pats are strongest at the edges with Sebastian Vollmer turning in a stout season.
But there could be problems in the middle too. I loved Michael Brockers coming out of LSU, and he could cause problems, especially if we’re sans Mankins and/or Connolly.
There’s no secret, get to Brady with four, keep seven in coverage, and you’ve got a chance to shut down the Patriots offense.
As long as Brady has time, and there’s no chaos in his face, there shouldn’t be any problems. Let’s not let there be any problems.
4. Catch the football – It hasn’t been obvious to me but the Patriots are actually leading the league in drops with 17 in seven games.
Brandon Lloyd’s got five drops to lead the team. It’s time for players like him and Gronk (four) and Wes (four) to start stepping it up.
There’s no excuse. Start executing.
5. Finish – We decided Finish would replace “Win” as our fifth and final key last week and what happened? The Patriots actually finished a game off! So it’s back, obviously.
The Pats have had their fair share of big games they couldn’t finish off since 2006, but this year it’s been a major problem early in the season as well. Dare I hope we’re just getting it out of our system early!?
We can only hope that last week’s performance by Rob Ninkovich will help spark the revolution in future crunch times, because Brady and the offense were still lacking that killer touch until their backs were against the wall against the Jets.
They must finish on both sides of the ball, in the red zone and at the end of the game.
These are the five areas that have haunted the 2012 Patriots thus far. It would be wonderful to see improvement in all of them, but I doubt we will.
If there’s one thing I’d most hope for it’s that they manage the deep balls better. Those are absolute killers.
Otherwise, let’s get into the bye week healthy, get healthier, regroup and make another run at the shiny silver trophy.
This is by far the youngest Opening Day roster coach Bill Belichick has assembled with the Patriots. The average age of New England’s roster right now (the team could have added four more tight ends late Sunday night) is 25 years, 274 days, according to STATS, LLC. That’s more than a year younger than the 2010 squad (26-280). The third-youngest team was Belichick’s first, the 5-11 juggernauts of 2000 (26-329). Where the youth really shows up is on defense. The average age of the starters is 25. The only other Belichick team to be under 27 was the ’10 version at 25.1, according to numbers from Pro-Football-Reference.com.
Patriots coach Belichick goes young with roster – Patriots – Boston.com
REMINDER
I’ll take a young nucleus of Mayo, Spikes, Hightower, Jones, and yes, even McCourty, with old vet Big Vince leading the way. Talent infusions are definitely still needed at defensive tackle and defensive back, but that core is a solid foundation.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/patriots-youngest-team-in-belichick/