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Category Archives: Rodney Harrison
Porter at it again
Miami Dolphins linebacker Jerry Porter and his ever-flapping gums are no strangers to Patriots fans or, for that matter, any NFL fan. Porter’s mouth is in a constant state of readiness, and is often in use, belittling his opponents and doing a hefty dose of trash talking. That trend has continued this week leading up to the big AFC East showdown between the Pats and the Fins this Sunday at Gillette Stadium. During a conference call with New England reporters earlier in the week, Porter started out by explaining just how he feels about the Patriots, and those feelings didn’t start when he joined the division.
Running game leads Pats over 49ers
News flash: Matt Cassel is an inexperienced quarterback.
News flash: Bill Belichick is a smart coach.
News flash: The Patriots are capable of improving from week to week, and learning from their mistakes.
Today the Patriots adjusted not only to the mistakes they made last time out against Miami, but also to some miscues that had them trailing San Francisco early in this game.
Randy Moss has been making noise about wanting “touchdowns, not field goals,” oh, and also the ball. Cassel went to Moss a couple times early on – once with a long bomb for a beautiful touchdown in the first half. But the next time he tried to go the long-bomb-to-Moss route, he got an interception for his troubles. He’s not an experienced enough driver to take that particular high-octane vehicle out for a spin at will like Brady used to; that’s just a fact.
By the end of the second quarter, though, the Patriots switched Cassel to a steady diet of short passes to Welker and Moss and gained traction with a balanced running game that saw contributions from Sammy Morris, Kevin Faulk, and LaMont Jordan, the latter before he went down with an injury in the second quarter.
The Patriots actually gained 233 of their 377 total net yards today on passes from Cassel, but two of the three touchdowns New England scored were rushing touchdowns. Factor in three field goals and that 111 of the total passing yards were gained by receivers–and you have a nice balance between Cassel showing improvement, and his veteran teammates and coaching staff also shouldering much of the load.
The game against Miami showed some defensive vulnerabilities, particularly against the running game, that were troubling. Give them two weeks, though, and the Patriots were not only holding San Francisco to a pathetic 3 first downs rushing, but the Patriots pass defense also showed an ability to stiffen up, holding the 9ers to an 11% third down conversion rate. Rodney Harrison in particular seemed to have shifted up a gear for this game, with a big interception in the third quarter.
It was also Harrison that delivered the final defensive coup de grace for San Francisco’s QB, JT O’Sullivan, in the fourth quarter, first with a tipped pass that Deltha O’Neal caught for the third San Fran turnover of the game, and then by flying in out of nowhere to elbow the ball out of Arnaz Battle’s arm in the waning seconds.
On the offensive side, the line also showed marked improvement over the previous ordeal against Miami. Matt Light was clutch, pancaking linebackers and opening holes for the backs. Most of the successful Patriots runs were off the left side today–including Kevin Faulk’s touchdowns. They even took a page directly from Miami’s playbook in week 3 for the second of those TDs, with a direct snap to Faulk on the 2-yard line.
Both the Patriots and 49ers entered this game in second place in their respective divisions, and both started inexperienced quarterbacks. But by the end of the game, only one of those QBs was looking rattled, while the other was holding his own, surrounded by veteran teammates.
Cassel’s still wet behind the ears, and he’s going to make mistakes. Gone are the days this team could be wholly focused on what to “take away” from opponents, and instead its vulnerabilities do sometimes take weapons away from them, like the long passing game today. But the all-or-nothing idea that this is a “lost season” for the Patriots without Brady is looking more foolish by the minute.
Posted in Bill Belichick, Randy Moss, Rodney Harrison
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Patriots defense need to make a stand
As much as I may criticize the offensive line and Matt Cassel’s performance so far this year, the game is played in three phases – offense, defense and special teams – and versus Miami the defense was the weakest link forcing the Patriots to come from behind and rely on the arm of Matt Cassel.
After the bye week, the Patriots
Posted in AFC East, Bill Belichick, Boston Sports, Brandon Meriweather, Buffalo Bills, James Sanders, Jerod Mayo, Miami Dolphins, Mike Vrabel, New England Patriots, New England Sports, New York Jets, Patriot Act, Patriot Nation Blogs, Patriots Game Previews, Patriots Roster, Robert Kraft, Rodney Harrison, Special Teams
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Patriots Bandwagoners, mount up!
Just as surely as the turf in Gillette Stadium is green and white, fair-weather fans of Patriot Nation are showing their true colors. Buck up troopers! This is only one performance of a long season and the first loss in 21 regular season games.
The Patriots played against one of their all time toughest rivals where generally Miami has at least one win a season against the Patriots. Last year was obviously (16-0) and exception.
Now having lived through the Tony Eason era and then some other obvious fun times before Drew Bledsloe, Bill Parcells and the honorable Robert Kraft created what has become known as one of the best Franchises in the NFL, this is not and will not become the worst of times.
Now time for some cool aid!
I have said before that I am not a big fan of Matt Cassel and he still has alot of experience to gain before he will really be… impressive.
Posted in AFC East, Bill Belichick, Boston Sports, Brandon Meriweather, Buffalo Bills, Jerod Mayo, Kevin Faulk, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New England Sports, New York Jets, Patriot Act, Patriot Nation Blogs, Patriots Game Reviews, Patriots Roster, Randy Moss, Robert Kraft, Rodney Harrison
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Patriots moving forward
I have to admit up front that I am one of the fans that ciriticized Matt Cassel and was looking for him to be bounced off the team when training camp broke.
I figured Matt Gutierrez had done enough to show he was as capable as Cassel to back up Tom Brady. Plus Cassel was not impressive last year or during this year’s training camp.
Cassel had to go or so I thought…..
It is true Cassel is no Tom Brady. Although Brady is who he is today, I liked the fact
Posted in AFC East, Bill Belichick, Boston Sports, Brandon Meriweather, Buffalo Bills, James Sanders, Jerod Mayo, MVN, Mike Vrabel, NFL News, New England Patriots, New England Sports, Patriot Nation Blogs, Patriots Roster, Patriots Training Camp, Peyton Manning, Randy Moss, Robert Kraft, Rodney Harrison
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Bradyless Pats overcome Favre and the Jets
Here was my impression of how this game would go, written for the NYT’s Fifth Down football blog:
This game carries with it a big and obvious question: What will be the true impact of Tom Brady
A Patriots Fan's Worst Nightmare
Tom Brady has managed to survive the punishing onslaught of 127 consecutive regular-season and playoff games, behind only Peyton Manning and Brett Favre in all-time longevity. Brady has played through sports hernias, taped-up knees, a separated shoulder injury that has lingered for years.
And so, for the first few minutes of the first quarter, it was refreshing to see him at the helm again, maybe dinged up but stubborn and bull-headed as ever, stepping up in the pocket despite the vulnerabilities he might be hiding and the relative shakiness of the offensive line in front of him.
This is the main thing Brady brings to the field for Patriots fans – the assurance, in his eyes and in the eyes of those who play with him, that Someone is In Charge. For the first and, so far, last moments of his 2008 season, we got to relax long enough to think that once Randy Moss and Wes Welker improved at hanging on to the ball, we’d be rolling.
Instead, it was Bernard Pollard rolling, over the pile and into the flexed left knee of Brady as he stepped up into the rush to send one down the sideline to Moss. Which Moss dropped. And recovered. But the CBS cameras were already swinging back to where Brady lay, writhing on the field.
I am not a squeamish person, but I had to look away as the announcers, audibly excited at a new development to hype and rehash, replayed the collision in macabre slow motion and dissected it in ever-more-florid language.
Once the initial AUGH and ARGH and DO NOT WANT subsided, however, there emerged a sense of inevitability about this turn of events. We’ve been lucky with him, and he is, in reality, probably overdue for something like this. Even before today, that seemed to be something the team was acutely aware of, as Bill Belichick seemed to be paying special attention to the quarterback depth chart from the very beginning of the preseason. Until today, it was Brady’s right foot that had become, as one of the CBS sportscasters put it, “the most-studied right foot in New England since Curt Schilling in 2004.” Almost no one has a career of any length in the NFL without experiencing something like this – and Brady is so long overdue, we were already thinking about it.
We’ve been so blessed over the last six years that it also seems gauche to act like this is the end of the world, especially before we receive any word about the severity of the injury or its long-term implications.
It didn’t hurt, either, that Matt Cassel picked today to put it all together. After Brady went down, the second-stringer who’d struggled through the preseason, led the team on his first scoring drive yet, and a 10-play, 98-yard drive at that. In the third quarter, Sammy Morris powered another scoring drive. The defense was also buckling down more effectively than they had in exhibition. There is, after all, more to the team than Brady, more to this team than any one player, and it’s important to remember that.
But.
Seeing the numb look in Brady’s eyes as trainers inspected his knee, seeing him gathered back up off the field again and helped to limp toward the sideline…watching every snap, crackle, pop and twist on that knee in the slow-motion replays…it’s the worst-case scenario for any fan. No matter how many times I watch a guy I’ve rooted for, grown attached to, laid out on the field, and then helped off it humbled and grimacing in pain, it doesn’t get easier to watch. No matter who it is.
And when that guy is your franchise quarterback, you can multiply that feeling by a hundred.
***
Conflicting emotions were also the order of the day on the defensive side of the ball, which put together some gritty series and held the Chiefs to 10 points. Richard Seymour and Rodney Harrison in particular played like animals, and Vince Wilfork was an oak tree in the middle of the defensive line. I still believe the front of the Patriots defense is its strength, though there was encouraging improvement from the secondary today.
That is, until the fourth quarter.
Oh captain, my captain
The Patriots announced their captains for the 2008/2009 season. The cast includes some familiar faces, Tom Brady, Tedy Bruschi, Rodney Harrison, Mike Vrabel, and Larry Izzo, who have all been captains before. Both Bruschi and Brady are serving their seventh seasons as team captains, while Izzo is entering his eighth season as a captain. However, the list has also has some first-timers. Left tackle Matt Light, nose tackle Vince Wilfork, and wide receiver Randy Moss have all been elected captains for the first time. Of course, the most intriguing name on the list is Randy Moss, who brought a less than team-first reputation when New England traded for him last offseason. However, this selection does reenforce what Coach Belichick and QB Tom Brady have said in the past about Moss being a leader in the locker room. Now, it’s offical and clear his teammates feel the same way.
Here is a breakdown of the captains by team unit:
Offense: QB Tom Brady, LT Matt Light, WR Randy Moss
Defense: LB Tedy Bruschi, LB Mike Vrabel, S Rodney Harrison, NT Vince Wilfork
Special Teams: Larry Izzo
Finally, some light at the end of the Patriots' preseason tunnel
I have to disagree with Jamie on one point about this game – I thought this defense showed great improvement against the run.
Okay, let me specify – against the run inside. The times the Giants broke off big runs, it was when they switched up (especially in the middle quarters of the game) and came around the edge (at times the DB’s responsibility). This resulted in the YPC average Jamie cited, but I thought this game showed a real strength of this year’s team for the first time – the defensive line.
Within this unit, I thought two players stood out above the others: Jarvis Green and a rookie, Kenny Smith. Green’s moment came midway through the second quarter with the Giants on the Patriots’ 45 yard line. Green stuffed Giants RB Ahmad Bradshaw for no gain. On the next play, the left side of the Pats defense played as a unit, closing up the gaps and scrambling to leave the Giants stymied at the 45 again.
On the third play, Carr dropped back to throw. That’s when Green hit his blocker, the 6′ 5″, 315-pound Kevin Booth, and with three great heaves No 77 was in his quarterback’s lap.
Throughout this enounter, Green kept his right hand high on Booth’s jersey, and as he slowly walked Booth back toward Carr, took that right hand off Booth long enough to hook Carr around the shoulder and pull him down to the ground. Booth didn’t go down with them, but it was close. I watched that play several times, but I’m still not over the immense strength Green showed – and I thought it was the finest series, offensive or defensive, from the Patriots all night.
Smith, meanwhile, came off a double team in the next series to stuff Bradshaw in the backfield for a loss. He looked powerful, huge – and also very, very, VERY big on that play.
Linebacker John Lynch, who looks like he could be Wes Welker’s brother, was another bright spot. He showed wide-eyed intensity similar to his lookalike this game, and was also a big part of stuffing power runs through the gaps. Like Rodney Harrison (who got a few bone-rattling pops in on Giants WRs as well), Lynch played this game like he’s only got one gear: full tilt.
DBs, on the other hand, did not acquit themselves so well. In the series where Green owned Kevin Booth, the Giants tried running the ball up the middle twice and throwing once, and never got past the 45 yard line. Once they switched up, they ran all over the Pats secondary. Lynch looked silly on one passing play for a Giants touchdown, falling down trying to catch a receiver. Kenny Smith also looked slow and clumsy trying to chase Giants backup QB David Carr. It was as if the Patriots defense, as a unit, had resolved to do one thing right this week if it was the last thing they did, and that thing was stop the run up the middle. Meanwhile, they still seemed taken by surprise on other kinds of plays.
Then, there was the offense. Cassel actually looked more collected in the pocket and seemed to read the field better, but never got close to a score. Gutierrez, who’d looked more solid than Cassel last week, played most of the game, also didn’t score, and threw interception after interception. Kevin O’Connell gave the WCVB homer broadcasters something to crow about, but the opposition by that time was the Giants’ C team or worse – it was enjoyable to see the Pats finally score a touchdown or two, but not something you could really carry with you into next week.
Meanwhile, the O-Line…ugh. I’m still trying to decide if Brady’s absence or the compromised O-Line have been more of a factor in this putrid preseason. Part of me wondered if the presence of the key veterans on defense – Rodney and Tedy especially – has helped that unit gel quicker than a Brady-less offense.
Other times I’m just lighting votive candles and joss sticks, and making sacrifices to Jobu for Brady’s health, just thinking about him stepping up in the pocket behind that line.
Posted in New York Giants, Rodney Harrison
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Lynch visits Patriots
The Patriots hosted former Tampa Bay and Denver safety John Lynch on Wednesday and it shows the concern the Patriots at safety now that safety Tank Williams is on IR and James Sanders has been hurt.
A few fans may remember the Patriots tried to obtain Lynch in 2004, but Lynch preferred Denver at that time.
The 36 year-old Lynch would bring his experience and durability to a team that is now lacking healthy and quality depth at safety and is an injury (Rodney Harrison, Brandon Meriweather or Sanders) away from being a disaster.
Meriweather, Sanders and even Ray Ventrone, who are learning under Harrison, would be able to learn more from the 9 time Pro-Bowler.
I was hoping Lynch would have joined the Pats in 2004 and provided a dynamite tandem with Harrison. Although both Harrison and Lynch are aging, both still bring a toughness to the game very seldom seen today in the NFL. The Colts oft injured Bob Sanders and the Ravens Ed Reed are considered the best tacklers and run stuffers today.
IN BILL WE TRUST!!