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A History of Tom Brady Hot Taeks by Chris Simms

August 4, 2016 by Mike Dussault

Simms still pissed about this facemask or something?

Simms still pissed about this facemask or something?

Usually, I ignore the trolls here on the blog. I try to stick to football and educated analysis because there’s an entire market out there for people saying stupid things to get attention. And nothing gets easier attention with the NFL than someone saying something stupid about the Patriots. But when Chris Simms pops up for the THIRD TIME in two years on Boston media to tell us that Tom Brady isn’t a top-5 QB anymore, he needs to be called out.

First, I don’t give a shit about anyone’s rankings. I really don’t. Everyone’s got their top-5 this and their top-5 that and really, none of them matter. It’s all arbitrary opinions and everyone is entitled to their opinion and rankings however they want. My superpower is that I don’t get riled up by other people’s arbitrary rankings. What interests me is football. What happens on the field. Strategy. Not how a random someone stacks individual players in their own mind. You think Andrew Luck is the best quarterback in the league? Great for you.

But Chris Simms is an idiot and maybe if his dumb takes were a little more creative or at least backed up with, you know, facts, I’d have some respect for him. Let’s remember Simms coached with the Patriots for a season in 2012. Not that that should mean he’s pissing rainbows and happiness all over Brady and the Pats all the time, but maybe have a little respect? Or at least put forth some intelligent analysis about them?

Let’s take a look back at Simm’s horrible Patriots takes.

[Read more…] about A History of Tom Brady Hot Taeks by Chris Simms

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: chris simms, tom brady

Tweets of Note: Patriots Training Camp Practice #7

August 4, 2016 by Mike Dussault

The dog days of training camp are here. Guys are in and out of practices, making it difficult to know just who’s actually injured and who’s just being managed. But the good news is that one week from today we’ll get our first preseason game and things will really start to take shape.

Here are the tweets that stood out today:

[Read more…] about Tweets of Note: Patriots Training Camp Practice #7

Filed Under: Training Camp, Tweets of Note

Report from Kevin Faulk’s HOF Induction and In-Stadium Practice Notes

August 3, 2016 by Rick Starke

I attended the Kevin Faulk Patriots Hall of Fame induction and ensuing practice inside Gillette Stadium to cover it for us here at Pats Propaganda. This was my second time attending one of these inductions (the first being for Tedy Bruschi in 2013), so I went in with certain expectations for the event, and they were all met.

The Krafts really do go all out to help the fans and important players in team history connect and pay tribute to each other. They are model ownership, and other franchises should really take note. The red carpet, players from every era of Patriots football (the earliest players this time were from 1966), cheerleaders carrying out every Super Bowl trophy wearing white gloves ala Philip Pritchard (the keeper of the Stanley Cup), gun salutes from the minutemen, Bob Kraft himself presenting the players and putting the red jacket on them. Both this occasion and the Bruschi induction had fans spilling out as far as there was a viewpoint in all directions. Just a great environment.

A photo posted by @leojwhite on Aug 1, 2016 at 1:37pm PDT

Kevin’s speech was very direct, paying tribute to everyone in his life that helped him along the way…friends, families, teammates, coaches, ownership, etc. Not much in the way of stories from him, which seemed to be very fitting based on everyone else’s testaments to him during the ceremony.

After the speech, Bill Belichick came out and said some nice things about Kevin. Belichick rarely gets too candid or passionate about anything, so it’s great to see when it does happen, as it did here.

Following Belichick’s tribute to Kevin, there was a bit of a quick story time with other players that played alongside him. One of the striking things was that most of the other players on stage with him were defensive players, as they actually all worked against each other in practice every day and helped make each other great at what they did, and all constantly paid tribute to each other’s roles in drills, whether it was pass protection (Bruschi), or pass coverage (Willie McGinest and Ty Law). Patrick Pass was up there as well and discussed learning from Kevin. Ty Law also told a story about Kevin’s rookie year involving a little bit of hazing, in which the two of them and a few other players were at a bar doing copious amounts of shots, though Kevin wasn’t aware that he was the only one actually drinking liquor, everyone else had shots of water. Funny stuff.

Tom Brady showed up in a Faulk jersey and spoke as well! First time he has visibly been a part of any of these inductions, you could tell they had a great relationship.

A photo posted by @leojwhite on Aug 1, 2016 at 2:35pm PDT

Following the ceremony, there was practice inside of Gillette Stadium.

Here are some quick notes from my observations there:

-It was all helmets and shoulder pads, so there wasn’t much in the way of contact, but a lot of passing in 11 on 11s still occurred.

-Gronk. Gronk. Gronk. Seriously, Gronk. I’ve seen him in camp for many years now. This is the best and fastest I’ve ever seen him look (and it’s not even close). If the Patriots chose to run their offense in a way to make it happen and everyone stayed in good health, he could go for 2500 yards this year. Obviously, they won’t run it that way…rest of the NFL: you could be in some serious trouble.

-The Patriots appear to have three legitimate quarterbacks on the roster. Jacoby Brissett was exclusively working with guys that are likely to be fringe players, but his accuracy, delivery, and decision making looked like he is built for NFL success. Jimmy Garoppolo no longer has the throwing form of Uncle Rico, but lost nothing on his quick delivery or accuracy with the change. Tom Brady is Tom Brady.

-Among the standout guys working with Jacoby Brissett’s group in 11 on 11s were fellow rookies Malcolm Mitchell, DJ Foster, and Devin Lucien. Darryl Roberts was over there as well on defense. I couldn’t really get a good look at Kamu Grugier-Hill because of where he lined up most of the time, but other reports were that he looked solid on that end. I think some of those guys were over there to get in reps instead of rotate or to keep building playbook knowledge.

-The closest comparison I can make for Malcolm Mitchell that most people could gravitate to is when you’re playing varsity football, and see the first couple freshman practices of the year, and see that one guy that stands out so much that you think “oh wow, he might get some varsity snaps this year”. He was clearly the best player in that whole group. He needs to work on his sideline awareness (a few one-foot-in grabs), but his routes were tight, he was very quick, he went after the ball, and his hands were like glue.

-DJ Foster was lining up all over the place, more than any other runningback on either end of the field. Slot, split out wide, behind the quarterback under center, next to the quarterback in shotgun. He was running swings, screens, and wheel routes from behind the line, and gos, slants, and Z-outs when on the line. He could be the real deal if he’s a solid ball carrier as well. He and Darryl Roberts had great battles whenever lined up across from each other, but Foster was torching everyone else that was put on him.

-I said very nice things about my expectations for Devin Lucien last week. I’m going to simply say that I hope he’s somebody that shows up big time in games, because I wasn’t incredibly impressed by him in practice, unfortunately.

-As far as the bigger named talent and the people with them go, Jamie Collins looked strong in coverage, particularly on one pass breakup against James White. If he can get as strong in pass coverage as the rest of his game is, the Patriots will need to resign him before he wins Defensive MVP.

-Deandre Carter saw a lot of balls thrown his way in 11 on 11 with the first teamers. He’s building trust with both Tom and Jimmy, and that can’t be good for players deeper down the roster or currently injured receivers not at practice.

–Aaron Dobson seems to be having another “can he put it all together like this on gamedays and stay healthy?” camp, for the fourth consecutive year. I already feel like this is quite a dead horse, but I’d love to see this story end in a new way. He looked good.

-College highlight films of Cyrus Jones give the impression that he is a very Tyrann Mathieu-like player, so I’m excited to see him in full pads and full contact. He was certainly solid…but if his game is as chippy as it seems, you can’t really break that out in athletic shorts.

Overall, it was quite a fun day of revisiting football memories and getting excited for a potential future. I am certainly ready for preseason action to start!

Filed Under: Training Camp Tagged With: Kevin Faulk

Tweets of Note: Patriots Training Camp Practice #6

August 3, 2016 by Mike Dussault

After an off day yesterday, the Patriots were back at it in full pads today. One significant injury addition is Donald Brown, who was seen talking with trainers on Monday night and was absent today. With Dion Lewis still out on PUP, and LeGarrette Blount being eased back from a hip injury this leaves the two RBs we limped to the finish with last year (White & Bolden), Tyler Gaffney, who’s missed his first two seasons with injuries and undrafted rookie (who’s primarily a pass-catcher) DJ Foster.

My worries about the running back position are well-documented and I hoped that maybe Donald Brown could revive his career, though I wasn’t expecting it. Now that Brown is out the lack of healthy depth is pretty glaring. I sincerely expect at least one more addition at the position and probably more over the course of the season.

Anyway, here are the tweets that stood out from today’s practice:

 

The crowd at #PatsCamp singing Happy Birthday for #TB12! https://t.co/nf7GtcLSVZ

— New England Patriots (@Patriots) August 3, 2016

Happy Bday, Tom. I guess. 39. One away from 40. Can we give him Benjamin Button disease now please?

Malcolm Mitchell’s hands are really quick. You can tell when he’s the guy who makes the catch.

— Jeff Howe (@jeffphowe) August 3, 2016

Mitchell continues to show up. My biggest hope is that he can stay healthy, because missing any practice time at this point could really set him back. With Chris Hogan now nursing an injury, Mitchell’s reps should only increase. Really excited to see him play next week.

Markus Kuhn was playing next to Malcom Brown. More Rob Ninkovich at linebacker as well today.

— Mark Daniels (@MarkDanielsPJ) August 3, 2016

Kuhn’s been showing up a lot in the early days, getting plenty of reps with the top unit next to Brown. He was under the radar this offseason, but is an experienced pro and could carve out a role for himself.

Cam Fleming started practice playing at right tackle opposite of Nate Solder. Cannon has typically been in that spot.

— Mark Daniels (@MarkDanielsPJ) August 3, 2016

Don’t think anyone will be complaining about Cannon taking a back seat.

Jonathan Jones has been a nice surprise. Looks like he’s ahead of Roberts, Biggers, etc. for that fifth CB spot. Still hasn’t lost a 1v1

— Mark Daniels (@MarkDanielsPJ) August 3, 2016

Generally most of us saw it as Jones vs. Roberts for the fifth spot and so far that’s played out. Long way to go still.

DT Alan Branch, who opened training camp on the non-football injury list, practiced for the first time today.

— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss) August 3, 2016

Good to have the big man back.

Rookie G Joe Thuney stood out in 1-on-1s, handling Malcom Brown and Terrance Knighton in consecutive reps.

— Kevin Duffy (@KevinRDuffy) August 3, 2016

Another real surprise is just how solid Thuney has been. Those are two really good defensive tackles, both with different styles. Thuney stopping both of them is really noteworthy. I’m excited about the rookie.

Brady was 16 of 25 in team drills. Garoppolo 13 of 21. Brissett 4 of 5.

— Jeff Howe (@jeffphowe) August 3, 2016

Rep report!

Filed Under: Training Camp, Tweets of Note

10 Patriots Training Camp Off-Day Notes

August 2, 2016 by Mike Dussault

We’re five training camp practices into the 2016 Patriots season and while we’re far from knowing anything definitive, we can start to get a sense of how things are shaping up for this campaign. Here’s 10 thoughts on what we’ve seen so far.

  1. Shea McClellin has continued to work as defensive end, while Rob Ninkovich has continued to see time at linebacker, which makes me wonder about the Pats depth at linebacker. It was one of the priority areas to fill this offseason as I saw it, especially with Jerod Mayo retiring. Jonathan Freeny struggled to get off blocks as the middle linebacker in fill-in duty last year and I’m not too psyched about seeing more of that. I thought McClellin would slide right in at linebacker, the position he seemed to settle into the last two seasons in Chicago. I’m sure things will be fluid with how the linebackers and defensive ends play, but if the Pats start getting gashed on the ground, you wonder what their regular personnel will look like, whether it’s a 4-3 or 3-4, both of which you’ll see at times.
  2. I’m really trying to warm myself up to the fact that Donald Brown could be a significant part of the team’s plans early in the season, at least until Dion Lewis returns to the fold. Along with MLB, RB was one of the biggest needs I saw this offseason and I really wanted to attack both spots in the draft. Rich Hill had this piece on Brown which made me feel a little better about him. I just don’t want to see the offense end up as one-dimensional as it was at the end of last year and there isn’t much more depth this year even at this point.
  3. I’m trying to contain my snark on Aaron Dobson because there really would be nothing better than seeing him live up to his draft status and add an element of size that the offense could use on the outside. But here’s the thing — I never thought Dobson fit the Patriots offense. Look at the receiver who have been successful in this system. If they’re not small, shifty and instant open, they’re physical with reliable hands. Dobson doesn’t really fit either of those molds. He’s a good red zone target, where his success in practice is showing up, but I need to see more of him in the open field. If he’s catching the ball with his hands (something Tom E. Curran said he still wasn’t doing earlier this week) and not immediately falling down after making catches in the preseason we could be on to something.
  4. DeAndre Carter has been this year’s little guy who’s just making plays and I’m excited to see if he can light it up in game, especially if he’s getting extended snaps with Tom Brady. Either him, Keshawn Martin or Chris Harper should be groomed as potential Edelman/Amendola replacements with a roster spot. And with Martin missing some time with an injury the door appears to be open if Carter can show something.
  5. Chris Long has been getting lots of time as an interior rusher. It seems clear how things are shaking out at defensive end, as Sheard seems like he’ll slip into the RDE spot for Chandler Jones, while Ninkovich and perhaps McClellin see time at the other spot. Long will take the role Sheard had early last year as the top designated pass rusher. Perfect role for Long at this point. He can ease into things, worry less about injury since his run defense snaps are limited, and focus on what he’s done best over his career — getting after the passer. I continue to believe the pass rush will be better this year with this main trio of DEs.
  6. The rookies are earning a ton of praise, with Joe Thuney, Cyrus Jones and Malcolm Mitchell leading the way. But don’t rule out Ted Karras at right guard either. After Jonathan Cooper went down, Karras got significant reps there, though Josh Kline saw time with the 1s last night. Shaq Mason is being eased back too and will be in the mix. Thuney however seems like he just might be a lock to step into the starting left guard spot ala Logan Mankins as a rookie in 2005. Jones has shown up well in the kick and punt returns and that will take some heat off of Edelman and Amendola in that regard.
  7. Reports have been up and down on Chris Hogan, who suffered a shoulder injury on Sunday and was not seen on Monday. I’ve seen everything from Hogan being a perfect fit to others saying he might not make it on the field in two-receiver sets. Certainly any time he misses doesn’t help, though the belief is that his injury is nothing significant. Overall it’s a little disconcerting that the Patriots two prize offseason free agency signings aren’t exactly showing up like we thought they might. Still early of course, but I’ll have eyes on both Hogan and McClellin all preseason.
  8. Gronk and Bennett have looked unstoppable for good portions of training camp so far and that’s what we really expected. Now we just hold our breath and pray both have full healthy seasons in them. If they both have 19 games in them, look out because records will be falling. Even if one of them misses some games here and there the offense should still be in pretty good shape. But what it’s all about is having those two guys feeling good in early February. Not sure who could stop them if they do.
  9. Not much mention of Tre Flowers, Rufus Johnson and Geneo Grissom yet. All three should get significant looks as far as the long-term health at the defensive end position. At least two of them should make the team, though Grissom is the only one who plays special teams. That helps his chances to make the team, but muddies how much we can project of him in the defense. In that regard, Flowers could be the heir apparent should anything happen to the top three guys. These are three important players that I’ll have a microscope on in preseason.
  10. Kamu Grugier-Hill has been drawing a lot of praise, but he also falls into that category of not being quite sure what his ceiling in the defense is. Sure, he will probably end up a significant special teams player and those are important, but I’m more curious what his role is on defense. Is he Patrick Chung? Or is he truly a linebacker?

Filed Under: Training Camp

Top 7 “Look We Beat the Patriots!” NFL Youtube Games

August 2, 2016 by Rick Starke

As many of you may or may not have heard, the NFL has uploaded 96 games as voted by fans, three per team, to Youtube. Every team obviously has a minimum of three games, some have many more, some have many less. The Patriots have the third most games available, a total of 10 (the Packers and Cowboys are tied with thirteen each).

Many of the games voted for show quite a recency bias, and also who teams are VERY excited to beat. The other fans hate our Patriots. You already knew that and so did I.

Let’s take a look at the seven games voted by other teams fans and relive them a little, ranked by heartbreak, and also ranked by what we learned:

7: Monday night football at Carolina, November 18 2013

This game had the lowest stakes of all the games, it barely puts up a fight. It has distinctiveness for several reasons: The Patriots were beaten after a bye week, which is quite a rarity around Belichick coached teams. This was the game that it became clear that Aqib Talib wasn’t a big subscriber to “The Patriot Way”, losing his cool because of some personal nonsense with Steve Smith.

Finally, and most importantly, it was a national stage for the (un)official unveiling of the “Shaq Rules” for Gronk, where he gets officiated differently both for and against due to him being so much bigger and so much stronger than anyone that is tasked with covering him.

6: Super Bowl XX vs Chicago Bears, 1985 season

The Patriots were just incredibly overmatched (as would have been basically anyone in that game), and it took no time for that to become evident. All stories seem to reflect a very “happy to be there” attitude for the fanbase, as it showed hope for future versus a not so great pastfor the Patriots at that point.

This was also the “not quite” decade for Boston/New England sports. The Celtics won titles in 1981, 1984 and 1986, The Bruins made Stanley Cup appearances 1988 and 1990, the Red Sox made the World Series in 1986, and the Patriots were in this Super Bowl in 1986. Growing up in the 90s and barely remembering 80s sports, my dad always mentioned how everything was so close to great. Glad we got to see that fully come to fruition twenty years later.

5: AFCCG vs Ravens, 2012 season

This game was uglier than it showed on the scoreboard, and it was quite a frustrating game to watch. Talib goes down in an AFC Championship game, Gronk rebroke his arm the week before versus the Texans, Edelman was stuck covering an Anquan Boldin that was playing out of his mind, perhaps accidentally inhaling some deer antler spray owned by Ray Lewis in the locker room. We can’t prove whether that did or did not happen, so let’s launch and investiga……..nah.

4: Superbowl XXXI vs Green Bay, 1996 season

This one felt so close, yet so far. Everyone could smell the potential comeback when the Patriots scored to be down seven before Desmond Howard returned the ensuing kickoff for a touchdown. In hindsight, we all know if it was close and there was a potential comeback, Drew was throwing a 4th quarter pick. Drew Bledsoe, if you’re reading this, I apologize for that dig. Please send me a bottle of Doubleback (free plug for your wine. We good?).

3: AFCCG at Colts, 2006 season

HOW DID THEY LOSE THIS GAME. Period, not question mark. The first half had all the makings of a complete and total rout, and it’s almost as if they convinced themselves it was all over after the Asante Samuel pick-6. They were absolutely winning the Super Bowl if they hung on here. Despite the loss, this game holds a special place in my heart because of the amount of offensive lineman touchdowns (Logan Mankins and Jeff Saturday). Unfortunately, this also officially kicked off the “Peyton Manning can beat Brady!” train, which made for a great rivalry but also was the beginning of the end of being able to really poke fun at Peyton without recourse, and who among us Patriot fans didn’t love those days?

2: AFCDG vs Jets, 2010

Six weeks earlier, the Patriots absolutely destroyed the Jets on national television. This time, the Jets defense came in like bullies, and the Pats D allowed Mark Sanchez to look like a god in this game. Gross. Kudos to Rex Ryan for having a plan and executing it perfectly, let’s all hope that this game is his crowning jewel, and never to be matched, replicated, or topped.

1: Super Bowl XLII

Okay, we all know that this game is the helmet catch. The Eighteen-and-one. This one still stings. What did we learn? How to cope with having it all and losing it. I’m sure for other fan bases, this season echoed every superhero movie that exists: “That menacing villain is so powerful! How can they be stopped?! Save us, hero!”, and somehow, in the final battle, it all went to hell.

To end this on a happy note, the three games selected by Patriots fans were Superbowl 36, Superbowl 49, and The Snow Game vs the Raiders. We’re lucky to have many great memories, as is obvious by the healthy amount of respect shown to the Patriots from other fanbases.

Filed Under: Off Field, Videos

A New England Tradition: 15th annual Travis Roy Foundation Wiffle Ball Tournament

August 1, 2016 by James Conway

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPm42Oai4jc

The 15th annual Travis Roy Wiffle Ball Tournament will be taking place next weekend so we wanted to take a quick break from training camp coverage to help get the word out.

As a few of the lucky ones to have been in Trav’s orbit before and after his injury, his story is that of a life interrupted that became a life much more impactful than that of his dreams. Travis Roy is a beacon of light and a gravitational force and we wanted to alert anyone who was interested in donating to the amazing Travis Roy Foundation.

The Foundation is currently holding its annual fundraising push with its 15th annual WIFFLE ball tournament with replicas of Fenway, Wrigley and the Field of Dreams, appropriately enough (Contributor Jamie Conway’s brother, Ian, is on the “Hardshells” in case you want to boost their fundraising, or Trav manages “The Point”).

New England is lucky to have a man like Trav among its citizens, a person who perseveres despite seemingly insurmountable hardship. If you’re interested, please donate. It’s an amazing program he’s created.

Mike D. note – I played against Travis in high school and was amazed to discover that Jamie and I shared a connection to him. His injury had a profound effect on me having achieved my own dream of playing college hockey at the exact same time. To see it taken almost immediately away from him almost instantly, a player I had competed against and had enormous respect for, gave me a new perspective on my own career and pursuits. Please support Travis’ foundation if you’re able to! And if you’re unfamiliar with his story, the video above tells the heart wrenching story.

Filed Under: Off Field Tagged With: travis roy

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