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Chat: Chat with Tedy Bruschi – SportsNation – ESPN Boston

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault

Chat: Chat with Tedy Bruschi – SportsNation – ESPN Boston

Jeremy (Boston) Hey Tedy. What was the locker room at halftime like in situations like yesterday when the team had a poor first half? Would Belichick and the coaching staff be all fire and brimstone, or would it be a more subdued atmosphere focusing on X’s O’s by position group?

Tedy (12:24 PM) Nine times out of 10, it was mostly subdued, focusing on adjustments and corrections. If anyone was going to go off the handle, it was going to be assistant coaches. Coach Belichick would mostly focus on the adjustments that needed to be made. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve seen him go off the handle too.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Halftime

Knee Jerk Reactions to Week 8: Pats vs Dolphins Barstool Sports: Boston

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault

Knee Jerk Reactions to Week 8: Pats vs Dolphins Barstool Sports: Boston

Nodding…

Far be it for me to criticize Belichick’s disciplinary methods. But if he’s benching Ryan for grabbing his nuts on a Pick 6 or Ridley for supposedly high-stepping into the endzone against the Jets, even my Belichick Infallibility Doctrine reaches its limits. I get that he’s from a family of football lifers and was raised to respect the game. But you can’t respect the game more than it respects itself. As long as the league promotes itself with exactly the kind of highlight reel shenanigans he can’t tolerate, he’s got to learn to just let it go. He can yell at guys. Fine them. Make them run laps. But when you take snaps away from the guys who actually get in the endzone, you’re not saving the world; your saving your opponents. End of rant. (Now there’s a muscle I don’t use too oftent. I’ll be sore tomorrow.)

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bill belichick

Bill Belichick Conference Call Transcript

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault

Bill Belichick Conference Call Transcript

Q: Would you agree with the assessment that the blitz was a greater part of the defensive plan in this game than we’ve seen in the first seven games of the season?

BB: I think it kind of worked out that way yesterday. Part of it was, I think the conditions played a little bit of a part in that but also the game plan. It looked like Miami was having more success throwing the ball in the inside part of the field on shorter throws. When we were able to pressure with a middle of the field safety then more of those throws went to the perimeter, which were harder. Alfonzo [Dennard] and Logan [Ryan] and Devin [McCourty] and Kyle [Arrington] all made real good plays or were right there on the coverage on the sideline. It just seemed more evident as the game went on that when we pressured and gave that look that [Ryan] Tannehill was going to try to get the ball there as opposed to on the inside part of the field and it was just tougher to throw and our guys were doing a good job defending it. Logan broke up the route to [Charles] Clay there before the half going down the sideline and Kyle had one right in front of our bench and Logan had one to [Mike] Wallace there right in front of their bench and Alfonzo was right there on a couple back-shoulder throws. I think as we had some success with it and it became apparent kind of what they were going to do with it or it looked like what their plan on it was, we felt like that was a good option for us. A couple times we got pressure and he had to hold the ball for a second and we were able to hit him so that helped it out too.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bill belichick, defense, pass rush

Patriots pressure saves the day (and maybe the season)

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault

The New England Patriots were two yards away from almost assuredly being blown out, something that has rarely happened under Bill Belichick. The lifeless Pats were down 17-3 as the Miami Dolphins facing a second-and-two at the Patriots 19-yard line. 

With another field goal the Dolphins would take a three-score lead, and after an ugly day from Tom Brady and the Pats’ offense, there was no reason to think the Pats would mount much of a comeback. Another touchdown and the game was likely over, as the Dolphins snapped the ball inside the Patriot red zone.

An incompletion later and it was third-and-two, a huge moment, that in retrospect might be a turning point in the 2013 season. That’s when Rob Ninkovich and Dont’a Hightower delivered. The Patriots brought the blitz and Hightower finished it off, sacking Ryan Tannehill for a loss of nine yards and forcing the Dolphins into a long field goal attempt in a brisk wind.

It was the first sack of the day for the Patriots, but it would open the floodgates and perhaps might’ve even saved the Patriots’ season. Yes, a loss would’ve only dropped the Pats to 5-3, but until that point, New England looked like a team that couldn’t do anything on either side of the ball.

On the next play, Dolphin kicker Caleb Sturgis missed the 46-yard field goal and the Patriots offense took over. Five plays later the Pats would get their first third-quarter touchdown of the year and the comeback was on.

When Miami got the ball back, needing to answer and stop any Patriot momentum, the Pats’ defense came with pressure again, and again it delivered as Logan Ryan forced Tannehill to fumble, setting the Pats’ offense up on the Miami 23-yard line.

The Patriots would tie the game on Brandon Bolden’s two-yard touchdown just three plays later. 

Two big sacks in an nine-play span and the complexion of the game had completely changed and it was because Bill Belichick and Matt Patricia finally decided to send the blitz after Tannehill.

New England has traditionally preferred a read-and-react style of defense, but on this day it was the attacking style that turned things around. Injuries have left the Pats vulnerable in certain areas and by taking away Tannehill’s time in the pocket, the blitz forced him into bad throws.

The sacks might’ve not only saved this game, but given the Pats a blueprint for how they can succeed going forward. Their problems on third-down continued in this one, but nothing gets you off the field like an unstoppable pass rush.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: analysis, new england patriots, patriots

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault


Make a gift to support your local Cheer for Dana-Farber squad today and you will be entered into a drawing for two Patriots tickets and tailgate party passes to the November 24 game against the Denver Broncos. Learn more and see official rules by going to www.cheerfordanafarber.org and clicking on “Support a squad.”

 

All New England cheerleading squads have been invited to raise vital funds for cancer care and research at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Cheerleading squads can raise money in their community through bake sales, car washes, and other fun activities. Each team that raises $1,000 or more will be entered to win the grand prize — a chance to perform a cheerleading routine during the pre-game show for the Dec. 29 New England Patriots game against the Buffalo Bills.

https://www.patspropaganda.com/make-a-gift-to-support-your-local-cheer-for/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: charity, cheerleaders, new england patriots

Breakdown of a Ninkovich Pressure

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault

Breakdown of Ninkovich’s rush/QB hit on McCourty/Cole volleyball INT, forcing quick (wrong) read & affecting throw pic.twitter.com/t3l5YpKheu

— Matt Chatham (@chatham58) October 28, 2013

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: rob ninkovich

What should we think about KT being overtaken by Collie and Dobson seeming to be on the field more and more often? And what about Gronk and Amendola’s seeming ineffectiveness being on the fiend together for the first time?

October 28, 2013 by Mike Dussault

It’s all still very fluid. I think we need to give Gronk and Amendola a little more time, let’s just wait until after the bye week before we start expecting them to be up to full speed.

As for Thompkins, sometimes it’s good for a rookie to take a step back and I think that is what yesterday was for him. He could very well still end up being a significant weapon before the year is out, but he was struggling to get off the line against the Jets, and that’s nothing something we’ve seen from him much this season.

Hopefully some perspective and rest do the trick for him and he starts showing quickness off the line he showed all summer.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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