After Deflategate, Patriots still lead NFL with fewest fumbles | The MMQB with Peter King
Oh. Now we just need to see the NFL’s PSI numbers from the season to see what they tell us about how the air in footballs behave in a season-long sample.
An Independent Patriots Blog
After Deflategate, Patriots still lead NFL with fewest fumbles | The MMQB with Peter King
Oh. Now we just need to see the NFL’s PSI numbers from the season to see what they tell us about how the air in footballs behave in a season-long sample.
The Most Injured NFL Teams Since the 2009 Season – Man Games Lost
This one goes out to all the people who have been complaining for the better part of the last decade about how Belichick manages the Patriots roster. You know the ones. Those who cry because the Pats don’t break the bank on the top of their roster on veteran players who may or may not fit into what they do. No, their focus has long been having a strong 1-53 and that’s why regardless of the injuries that are bound to happen every season the Patriots remain in contention.
It’s a joke when you look at other teams who have had far less injuries yet still can’t figure out how to consistently win games.
The philosophy is pretty simple – spend money on the front seven and offensive line. Of course you have to pay your quarterback too, but wide receivers, cornerbacks, and running backs (really the second level of high profile football positions) are really just plug and play as long as you have the guys to block and the guys to get after the opposing quarterbacks.
It’s really not that revolutionary, yet every time the Pats avoid a big name in free agency at one of these positions many are up in arms. This is the difference between winning the offseason and winning in the regular and post season.
PatsPropaganda :: 2015 New England Patriots Regular Season Awards
Time to hand out some awards for the regular season!
PatsPropaganda :: Pats Posits: The Second Seed, A Very Long Preseason and Brady’s Ankle
The Posits are up. What a strange season it’s been. I have no clue how it’s going to end.
It’s hard to believe we’re about to close the books on another regular season but the strangest part is that I don’t really know who the 2015 Patriots are. Are they the dominant Dion Lewis-at-RB team from the first half of the season? Are they the “Sick Jamie Collins” defense they played a month with?
Really, the defining characteristic of the 2015 Pats seems to be getting by with what they had on any given Sunday. Players were in and out all season, still they lost just three games, two of which came in overtime, while also having 14-point leads in two of the three as well.
No, the 2015 will truly be defined by how well these injury-riddled Pats can come back together and perform under the pressure of the playoffs. How healthy will Edelman, Hightower, McCourty, Chung, Vollmer (and even Chandler Jones) be in two weeks? Can they step in and play at the highest level necessary to win in the playoffs? Or will they be just enough out of sync to not be able to make the one or two critical plays often needed to win a playoff game?
So in a lot of ways the 2015 season has felt like one long preseason. There are certainly things we know – that this defense is the best they’ve had since 2007, and in my view is the best and most promising for the long term since 2003. Malcolm Butler, Logan Ryan and Malcom Brown have emerged as legitimate building blocks, while free agent Jabaal Sheard has taken the pass rush to the next level.
But on offense things are far more murky because of unrelenting injuries. Can Steven Jackson convert a critical third-and-two? Can Edelman step in and make an incredible catch on third down while taking a big hit? Or will he not quite be up to game speed and make a critical drop? What about Amendola in that situation? Can Vollmer take on the kind of dangerous pass rushers with his bum ankle? Will Hightower and Jones be shadows of themselves, or will three weeks off get them back to near-100%?
Most of Pats Nation seems to count on everyone coming back, stepping in at 100% and making all the key plays like they did in last year’s playoff run. I am cautiously optimistic, but the 2015 Pats’ fate will depend entirely on how fast the offense can “re-click” and we just don’t know for sure how close to 100% many of the vital players are.
Usually you know who your team is by this point. You know where the expectations lie for them. This year I’m not so sure, and given how the playoff field is lining up, I don’t see a Colts-esque slam dunk anywhere for this Patriots team.
Obviously the playoffs will define the 2015 Patriots and each game will come down to a small handful of critical plays the Pats will either make or not, but right now we still just don’t know the true impact of all these non-season-ending injuries that have thus far been the only consistent trait of the 2015 Pats next to Tom Brady and Malcolm Butler starting.
PatsPropaganda :: New England Patriots Have Their Best Defense in a Decade
Lots of long-term stats in this one. Love this defense!
PatsPropaganda :: Ranking the Patriots’ Potential AFC Playoff Opponents
Who scares you the most?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2zzX2mkoHk What better way to celebrate the premiere of Bill Belichick: A Life in Football than the closest thing we’ve ever seen to it, his NFL Films Sound FX episode. Here’s part one! (Source: http://www.youtube.com/)