Gronktastic
https://www.patspropaganda.com/yahoosports-kevinkaduk-rob-gronkowski-was/
An Independent Patriots Blog
I’ve been getting some questions in regards to the ProFootballFocus.com/ESPN Insider report that Tom Brady is no longer a top five NFL quarterback. As much as I usually ignore articles like this, it’s the dead season so I might as well weigh in.
As readers of this blog might know, I generally ignore arbitrary rankings whether they’re of teams or players. There’s an endless quest by sports writers out there to rank everything. They’re great click bait and instantly inflammatory if a fan feels his team or player is ranked too low.
And when you piss off fans your work tends to spread like wildfire and you end up on WEEI talking to D&C.
Do these rankings really matter on any given Sunday? Nope. And how boring would sports be if every team and player was easily rankable and that’s how it always played out.
So generally, I could really care less what PFF has to say. A couple years ago they were killing Vince Wilfork to the point where they had to come out and explain why. They also had Matt Ryan, Phillip Rivers, Peyton Manning, Aaron Rodgers, Drew Brees, Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Schaub, and Tony Romo ranked ahead of Brady in 2010. You know, the year Brady was the first ever unanimous MVP of the NFL.
PFF certainly has made a good run out of telling everyone how the Patriots really aren’t that good.
I’ve always issued caution when referring to PFF’s grades in general. They are but one analyst’s opinion and not the end-all be-all of football grades. The fact that the grades for each game are available by Monday, before All-22 game film is made available has always bothered me.
Regardless, it’s impossible for ANYONE, even with All-22 to accurately grade every play. They don’t know the play call. They don’t know the defense. They don’t know the coverage. They don’t know if there was a missed adjustment call. They don’t know much of anything except who was closest to the ball when it was complete or incomplete, or who tackled the ball carrier.
We also have no idea who is grading these games, how consistent they are and exactly what their football backgrounds are.
In general, I like PFF to run my own opinions against, but to take every stat and piece of information they pass on as indisputable truth is a stretch. They provide a little piece of the big picture.
Now, as for Brady, I’m not a blind homer. He’s in his late-30’s. It’s inevitable that he’s likely declined a bit in certain areas over the last few years, but to state that his decline is obvious is just hyperbole.
It’s also convenient to pile on Brady after what was unquestionably the most challenging year of his career. Not only for the receiver turnover but all the injuries (especially to Gronk) and that one big glaring arrest.
Is Brady still a Top 5 quarterback? I don’t really give a shit. All I know is that there is no other quarterback I’d rather have leading my team and what he did last year with the new receivers and all the injuries did nothing but cement in my mind that he’s one of the best of all time.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBIl9WA8a18
Best of Deion Branch | Career Highlights (by mike vaz)
https://www.patspropaganda.com/best-of-deion-branch-career-highlights-by-mike/
MustketFire.com: The New England Patriots: A Decade of Frustration
Nice thorough and fair recap of the last decade of disappointment. No one wants to hear Patriots fans complain, but I think it’s worth asking, what’s harder to go through as a fan? When your team consistently stinks, your expectations aren’t very high. You make the playoffs and it’s a good year even if you bow out in the conference championship.
Remember when the Jets went to back-to-back AFC Championship games in 2009 and 2010 and everyone was making it out as a sign they were ready to take the next step in 2011 and then everything fell apart. We don’t hear the Pats getting much love for losing the last two AFC Championships this offseason, do we?
The Pats have fell short on the biggest stages over the last decade. They had late fourth quarter leads in both Super Bowls they lost. They’ve been to the conference championship in six of the last ten seasons. They lost three of them.
No one will feel bad for Pats fans, but to know we’re in the the prime of the greatest run the Patriots might ever have and to continually fall just short for the last decade sure isn’t fun.
Depth is the Patriots line’s secret weapon. Stork is a well-regarded prospect. Marcus Cannon is a massive super-sub who played well in place of Vollmer and others last year. Guard Josh Kline played mistake-free and opened some holes in a spot start last year, and rookies Cameron Fleming and Jon Halapio ensure depth-chart competition. Some teams may boast a more talented top five, but none can offer a more prepared and capable top eight.
I’ve covered a lot of fun games, but for some reasons I’ll remember the game New England won to set the record for consecutive NFL wins (19) in 2004, because that story contained my favorite SI line. (The list of good lines is a very short one, believe me.) I’d written previously about Belichick having the biggest football library in the world—which he has since given to the U.S. Naval Academy library. In a quiet moment in the locker room after New England beat Miami to earn the record, I got Belichick about as celebratory as you’ll hear him. And I wrote, “ ‘It’s great to be in the history books,’ said the man who has read them all.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1532EgbnG7g
Best of Matthew Slater | Patriots Special Teamer (by mike vaz)
https://www.patspropaganda.com/best-of-matthew-slater-patriots-special-teamer/
Kirwan does it again with another great game planning article! Best quote of the whole thing: Football is like a chess match, and Brady is the master chess player. While everyone points to the Giants sacking their way to a win over the Patriots in Super Bowl XLII, since that day, Brady is 7-1 when […]