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An Independent Patriots Blog
New England Patriots – T-Shirts Under $20 – NFLShop.com
Good deals today from NFLShop on tees under $20. You can also pick up one of our red DYJ shirts for $20 (shipping included), just use the paypal pulldown in the right-hand column!
It was a quiet week on the free agency front. I’m assuming the Patriots are waiting for Vollmer to make a decision before rounding up some defensive tackles and wide receivers. The amount of money they allocate to Vollmer will be a big chunk of change so it’s smart to wait until that worked out so they know how much they can spend on the other needs.
Things should start to get interesting again in the next week. And look, it’s almost April, the draft will soon be upon us!
Here’s the best of the week…
Top Ten Games of Wes Welker’s Patriots Career –> must read if I do say so myself.
PatsPropaganda & Frenz 3/20: Free Agency Roundup
Adrian Wilson brings old-time toughness back to New England Patriots. – ESPN Boston
Farewell, Tuck Rule; Hello, Charles Woodson’s Illegal Head Slap
How Adrian Wilson Fits in with the New England Patriots
Resetting the Patriots’ needs-based depth chart – Extra Points – Boston.com
Penny slots: Why Wes Welker’s receiving class is getting shortchanged – WEEI | Christopher Price
It was an action-packed week as free agency started, Wes Welker departed, and quite a few new guys signed up for a tour of duty in New England.
Overall I like the additions the Patriots have made. They’re going with the “throw it all at the wall” approach at receiver as we expected (and like they did last year), but this time around they’re pursuing younger receivers who aren’t at the end of the line like last year’s crop were.
Most surprising is that Aqib Talib is still available, but the market seems to be shaping up nicely for the Pats retaining him at an affordable rate. Kyle Arrington’s return also helps being back some stability to the secondary despite what some fans might think of him.
Overall it’s been a promising start to free agency that will continue in the coming days and weeks. It was an unfortunate way to start things off with Welker leaving for Denver, but we’re moving on now as the 2013 Patriots start to take shape.
Here’s the best of the week:
How Wes Welker Went from Tom Brady’s Favorite Weapon to Just Another Free Agent
Thoughts on Wes Welker’s Departure
Buh-bye Wes Welker: 10 Reasons New England Patriots Made Right Move
New England Patriots quickly shifted from Wes Welker to Danny Amendola – ESPN Boston
Welker move is about evolving the offense – Extra Points – Boston.com
Bill Belichick conducted a Q&A session on Twitter (seriously) | masslive.com
Patriots needs-based depth chart – Extra Points – Boston.com
New England Patriots 2013 NFL Draft Big Board: Real Time Updates and Analysis
Patriots have to add pieces to solve puzzle – Football – Boston.com
It’s a sad day in Patriots Nation, losing their all-time leading receiver to Peyton Manning and the Broncos after six years together. Most of my big picture thoughts can be found here, and I also put together a big picture retrospective here, but now with the details of the deal in focus it clears some things up.
This was not about money for New England. Welker got a 2-year, $12 million deal, and New England was offering 2-years, $10 million. They could’ve easily afforded more, but their refusal to shows what they thought of Welker in their offense moving forward.
This was more about the Patriots wanting to take their offense in a new direction. We’ve seen the Welker-based offense for six seasons and four playoff runs, and it’s been the same thing… unstoppable in the regular season, sputtering in the playoffs, every year. The good physical teams could effectively slow down the offense, despite Welker still having the same stats he was getting in the regular season.
I believe the Patriots no longer saw the offense on an upward trajectory with Welker. They’ve been there, done that, and were ready to reduce him to a back-up role and pay him as such.
Welker was a great crutch for Brady. He was always healthy and always open underneath, and the result was an offense that could rack up 12-14 play drives eating defenses up 6-8 yards at a time. But against the best defenses that kind of continued execution becomes extremely difficult, and as we saw against the Ravens, Giants and Jets, once they began to slow the Pats down it just continued to snowball, leaving the vaunted Pats offense looking completely ineffective like they did in the second half of the AFC Championship.
You will never see an ill word spoken about Welker here. It was an awesome offense and his connection with Brady was special. But the part of me that loves football is excited to see how the Patriots evolve now on offense. They still have plenty of cap space and free agency options, and let’s not forget it’s not like their offensive weaponry cabinet is exactly empty.
The third and final act of Brady’s career will not be connected to the high-flying 2007 offense or the surgical blitzkreig of 2010-2012. It will be something new, and something designed to avoid the pitfalls that kept the Pats from closing the deal from 2007-2012.
It’s sad to see as great a Patriot as Wes go, but it will be exciting to see what’s next.
The 20 best free agent signings of the Bill Belichick era – WEEI | Christopher Price
Great list, could see Ninkovich surpassing Seau, if Woodhead comes back he could move up a couple spots from 8 too…
Interesting stuff on McDaniels and the future of the Patriots offense. Sign me up for option A.
The Patriots can go three directions with the passing offense:
■ Retain Welker, add the outside X threat (probably in the draft), and move Welker to the outside Z position.
■ Retain Welker and keep him in the slot to work a high-low game in the middle with Rob Gronkowski, make Aaron Hernandez the X, and sign (Danny Amendola and Edelman) or trade (Percy Harvin) for the Z.
■ Move on from Welker, find a big-time X, fill the Z with a terrific athlete with the ball in his hands in a short area, and let Hernandez and Gronkowski rule the middle.
Patriots-based free agency chatter -ESPN Boston Patriots Blog
For those of you looking to ride the free agency rumor train there’s some fun speculation in this link. Personally I don’t really get too worked up about “the Patriots are interested in this guy” talk, in all likelihood they’re gauging interest and price for just about everyone on the market. That’s what good teams do.
It’s also quite common for agents to say the Patriots are interested in their players just because they know it will drive the cost up and/or force other teams to potentially get involved. So until the Patriots actually sign someone don’t expect there to much rumor-mongering here.
I can give you some broad strokes, because really what defines the Patriots is that they can morph into whatever they need to based on how they want to attack/defend the opponent. On defense the most basic way I pin down their base is the Double Nose. Most of the 2000’s they were primarily a […]