And I thought I had a Patriots obsession…
https://www.patspropaganda.com/and-i-thought-i-had-a-patriots-obsession/
An Independent Patriots Blog
And I thought I had a Patriots obsession…
https://www.patspropaganda.com/and-i-thought-i-had-a-patriots-obsession/
ESPN: “Data” shows Sanchez no better than Henne
I’m not trying to win any love from Jets fans by saying I think this article is a bunch of BS but based on his playoff performance against the Patriots, when it was all on the line, I’m forced to refer to BB’s credo “stats (or "data” in this case) are for losers".
Digest this:
Sanchez now has two of the top four games, in terms of passer rating, for the Jets in postseason play. He finished with a 127.3 rating in a 28-21 win over the New England Patriots in the AFC Divisional Playoffs. That’s actually not the best of his five postseason games – he posted a 139.4 rating in his playoff debut, in a win over the Cincinnati Bengals in the 2009 AFC wild card round.
Sanchez is the third quarterback to throw at least three touchdown passes against Bill Belichick’s Patriots in the playoffs (since 2000). The others were Jake Delhomme and Donovan McNabb in losses in Super Bowl XXXVIII and XXXIX respectively.
Sanchez had three touchdown passes, tying the Jets single-game postseason record. He did so in Gillette Stadium, where he’d previously thrown one touchdown and seven interceptions.
The Jets won partly because Sanchez excelled when the Patriots blitzed. Based on our video review, New England blitzed 40 percent of the time when Sanchez dropped back to pass and he went 6-for-10 for 108 yards, two touchdowns and a 136.7 passer rating in those instances.
I have total respect for how Sanchismo played against the Pats. He needed to be perfect for the Jets to win the game and that’s exactly what he was. It just makes me want to smash him even more ‘11.
“I feel much better,” said Wright. It’s good to be back in it and it’s good to be working with the guys and getting back into a normal routine. It lasted a while. I’m just glad that it’s over. It was a lot longer than expected but I’ve moved past it and I’m just looking forward to next year.”
https://www.patspropaganda.com/i-feel-much-better-said-wright-its-good-to-be/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmJnc5C2LcQ
Brandon Tate Highlights
I really hope that Tater Tot has been busting his ass this off-season because the Pats really need him to take a big step forward in 2011. Yeah he had those kick off returns for TDs early on in the season but it seemed like once opponents figured him out he didn’t do much the rest of the way.
Just having this full season under his belt should go a long way in his development. He had some spectacular plays in ‘10 but we need more consistency out of him and it would be key if he could pick up a deep ball synergy with TFB. The lockout is killing guys like him right now…
https://www.patspropaganda.com/brandon-tate-highlights-i-really-hope-that-tater/
The Pats were back on the field at Boston College on Thursday and the media was there too. Well, they were outside the stadium with long-lens cameras and binoculars trying to discern just what the hell was going on as you can see below…
What bums me out most about this, is that my favorite part of mini-camps, especially right after the draft, is seeing all the new players and their choices in equipment. For the past three years we’ve done the “Rookie Eyeball Test” posts and they’re always a highlight of the post-draft void. Alas we can do nothing but wait unless one of the reporters to the left got a good shot of Solder, Ras-I or their rookie pals.
Here are the nuggets and observations that we’ve gathered thus far from the various media outlets.
Kevin Faulk was out there and looked by all accounts like he was well on his way to being fully recovered from the ACL injury he suffered against the Jets in week two.
Ryan Mallett delivered what some would call a “highlight” when he connected with WR Matthew Slater for a 65-yard bomb into the corner of the endzone and out of the reach of the safety covering. No, it wasn’t with pads or anything. But it was a pretty impressive throw.
Rapsheet also reports Darius Butler worked a lot in the slot. It’s really his best chance to make the team at this point. He looked just as out of place as an outside corner at the end of the season as he did at the start. Personally I think he’s a longshot to make the team at this point assuming Wilhite comes back okay.
Rob Ninkovich told Mike Reiss: “It’s huge for us to just come together. Whenever this lockout is over with, if you don’t get together, that’s months of not being with your teammates. So it’s good to just kind of get a little jump-start on some things, especially for the younger guys it’s going to help them.”
Rapsheet also reports that Tom Brady looked great after his off-season foot surgery: He was planting and throwing just like normal, which was really a positive sign. There was no limp and no sign of anything. Sounds like it worked well rushing into surgery right after the season ended.
Chris Price summed the session up as such:
The whole affair — which wrapped up in about 90 minutes — had the feel of a June T-shirt and shorts affair held behind Gillette Stadium. Not quite as slow as a walkthrough and not quite a haf-speed practice, we’ll call it almost quarter-speed. The players had a chance to work up a bit of a sweat (mostly during the 7-on-7s and two-minute sessions toward the end of practice), but in truth, it was more a chance to get back to football-related activity.
We’re still expecting some more posts from the beat crew, including a Mike Wright interview with Tom E. Curran that should be good. More to come on what could possibly be the last day of real Patriots news until August or even September…
Found this nugget from an old BB press conference. Interesting to hear him talk about the two offensive systems that he doesn’t use. Well, maybe that’s not entirely true, there are surely concepts from these offenses that BB has plucked for his own modified version of the Erhardt-Perkins offense.
Q: The “Air Coryell” offense of the early eighties, was that an extension of what Paul Brown came up with?
BB: Yeah. I would say it’s an extension, yes. I would say it would come from that tree.
Q: Do you ever look back and study the tape of what Paul Brown did and use that in your offense at all?
BB: Well, again, basically what Paul [Brown] did was he ran the west coast offense. What’s called today the west coast offense, that was really Paul’s offense. As that has spread through the league. There are a lot of different versions of it, from [Mike] Holmgren, who is probably the purist. His offense is probably most like what San Francisco ran back in the ‘80s with Bill Walsh. Then you have Andy [Reid] and Jon Gruden, all the different offshoots that come out of that, [Mike] McCarthy, basically the whole NFC North, right? Green Bay. So, there’s a lot of offshoots of that and they have their own individual adaptations of it. For example, I-Formation was a very minimal part of that offense as Bill Walsh ran it, not as Paul Brown ran it. Paul ran a lot of “I” when he had [Paul] Robinson and Ickey [Woods] and those guys. He ran a lot of that I-Formation. So each coach has modified it a little bit.
Q: Is what [Don] Coryell ran considered the west coast offense?
BB: No. I think there are elements of it, yeah, but it was a much more downfield passing game and less replacing runs with those drive routes, the underneath crossing patterns, the wide routes by the backs, a lot of slants, the plays that come with a high frequency in the west coast offense. A lot of those are really replacements for runs. The Coryell passing attack is much more of a downfield passing game.
Q: When you went up against that, how did you try to stop it?
BB: The Coryell teams? Well Don’s offense when he was out at San Diego, that was one of the most explosive offenses I had seen, and still have. They had Kellen Winslow, Chuck Muncie and then the receivers were [Wes] Chandler, [John] Jefferson and [Charlie] Joiner. And they had Dan Fouts and they also had a real good offensive line, too. They were good. Then Joe Gibbs really took the Coryell offense, which was mainly a one-back offense -as opposed to the west coast offense, which had some one back but it was really more of a two-back offense than a one-back offense-and Gibbs took the Coryell system and, obviously, when he went to Washington, had great success with it. Then that spread to Dan Henning and Joe Bugel and guys like that who went on to be head coaches and took that offense with them. I think that the Joe Gibbs offense is much closer related to the Coryell offense than the west coast offense is.
Q: If the Coryell Chargers had won that 41-38 game against the Dolphins, would that have changed how that offense was used moving forward?
BB: I don’t know. I don’t think anyone ever thought that offense wasn’t a good offense, whether they had scored 38 in that game or 44. But a lot of that goes with other teams hiring people from that system or leaving it and going to the next team and taking the offense with them. It’s like what we’ve seen out of San Diego this year. We of course played the Jets, which was [Brian] Schottenheimer, then we played San Diego, which actually wasn’t San Diego, it was Norv Turner, but it was San Diego because there was a lot of carryover there. Then we played Buffalo, which was San Diego, and then we played Cleveland, which was [Rob] Chudzinski, and that was San Diego. Now we’re playing Cam [Cameron] and that’s San Diego. The Norv influence between San Diego and Dallas with [Jason] Garrett there, in seven games we’ve had a lot of similarity in the offensive systems that we’ve seen, predominantly San Diego but to an extent the Norv Turner system, which is somewhat similar to the San Diego system. Again, that is a function of those coordinators and head coaches going from one system into another and taking it with them. That’s just like it was with [Bill] Walsh, [George] Seifert, [Mike] Holmgren, [Jon] Gruden, Ray Rhodes and then all the other disciples that have come through, too, like [Mike] McCarthy and those guys, Dennis Green. They all took the west coast with them. So it was prevalent and in terms of league-wide it was used in high percentages throughout the season. I can’t remember exactly how the Coryell system went, but my sense of it was that it didn’t break apart too much. Now when Gibbs went to Washington then it was Dan Henning, although his coaches stayed together for the most part for quite a while. Bugel went to Arizona. Who else? But [Don] Coryell and Sid Gillman, that was a very well thought out and excellent passing system with a lot of production.
Well it was an anti-climactic Sunday but of course now I’m happy to have a MNF game getting me through the first and hardest day of the week. One thing that jumps out to me after watching a lot of other teams play on Sunday is the level of parity in the NFL this year. […]