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Tag Archives: Randy Moss
Patriots have another tough game ahead
The New England Patriots welcome back Randy Moss and a Minnesota Vikings team that play better than their 2-4 record.
As much as fans were worried the San Diego team could have been a trap game for the Patriots, this week should raise moreĀ about Patriots team will show up on Sunday afternoon.
The Patriots have outperformed so far this year with a record of 5-1 (the loss coming against the Jests). Accordingly, what seemed like a tough schedule has turned into a schedule of the unknown.
Posted in New England Patriots
Tagged Bill Belichick, Brett Farve, Minnesota Vikings, New England, Randy Moss
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Patriots lose ugly on national stage to New Orleans Saints
Two years ago, when the Saints and Patriots met, it was the Patriots who were perfect. This time, the quarterback touching lofty new heights of perfection was wearing black and gold.
In pure football terms, it could turn out to be a watershed game, a kind of coming-out party for Drew Brees, who has already been the talk of the league this season, but joined the likes of his opponent tonight and Peyton Manning with a five-touchdown game through which he had a near-perfect passer rating. The Saints are playing a kind of football the Patriots should recognize–the kind we were witnessing two years ago. To an objective observer, they put on a beautiful show.
If you’re a Patriots fan, though, this game was ugly and excruciating.
It began competitively enough, with the Patriots ahead 7-3 midway through the first quarter. They scored that early touchdown on a beautiful line surge with a two-back set that left the New Orleans defense grasping at air, while Laurence Maroney scooted past them, between Stephen Neal and Nick Kaczur on the right side of the line, into the end zone. Then, the Patriots defense forced a Saints punt, and Wes Welker slipped away from at least two tackles on his way across midfield to begin another drive deep in Saints territory.
Around my office today, I’d been engaged in the usual pregame banter and predictions, and I had to be honest: I wasn’t expecting the Patriots to come out on top in this game. Though they’d barely been edged by also-undefeated Indianapolis, the Saints seemed like an even more formidable foe, especially with Fantasy Football stud Drew Brees at the helm. But by the time Tom Brady stepped to the line after that Welker runback, I was beginning to think, O me of little faith.
And that’s about when Brady, flushed out of the pocket and scrambling, spotted Moss down-field and heaved the ball hopefully in his direction, only to have the route jumped by Mike McKenzie for an interception.
That was bad enough, but on the ensuing Saints possession, the defense also began to go south. Brees completed a swing pass to runningback Pierre Thomas in the backfield on a 4th and 1. The primary Patriots defender, Derrick Burgess, dove at Thomas’s feet and missed just past the line of scrimmage. Adalius Thomas seemed to leave another engagement along the right sideline too slowly as the runningback swerved upfield, and also missed. By the time Vince Wilfork made a desperate effort to catch Thomas coming from midfield, he had no chance; Thomas also passed a seemingly apathetic Jonathan Wilhite on his way into the end zone.
In various midgame analyses, that interception and ensuing score were emphasized as the turning point of the game. Much was made of Brady’s miscues and the absence of Sebastian Vollmer (as well as the side drama of Belichick’s particularly acerbic responses to questions about Vollmer’s condition). A collapsing pocket and deceptive looks from the New Orleans defense were giving the Patriots offense fits, of that there is no doubt.
But I was more upset about the defense. If the offense this year has been mediocre, the defense, at times like tonight, has been terrible. With about ten minutes remaining in the first half, Brees faked as if he was going to make another short pass to Thomas, bringing Brandon Meriweather up while Devery Henderson ran behind him (Wilhite had let him go). Then Brees turned and fired downfield, completing a deep pass to Henderson that laid bare, once and for all, just how bad the Patriots defense can look. The offense wasn’t exactly piling up points, but that coverage was FUBAR.
If I had to pick one especially bad performance among a Patriots secondary that all shared a really bad night tonight, it would be Wilhite’s. He was lifted for a while in favor of Darius Butler after stumbling, staggering and getting burned for another touchdown in the third quarter; his back was literally to the ball and his man when the pass came in. Pathetic.
As the second half opened, there was still hope, especially after the Patriots offense clawed back within a score at 24-17, featuring a long completion (finally!) between Brady and Randy Moss and another Maroney run into the end zone. That is, until the Patriots secondary once again was left with their pants around their ankles on the next New Orleans possession, and the game began to slip away, 31-17.
There was one last gasp for New England as they drove down the field in the third quarter, ultimately facing a fourth down and four deep in New Orleans territory, but an attempt to get the first down with a pass to Moss was once again thwarted by McKenzie, who played a superior game tonight. Another quick slice and dice of the Patriots secondary by Brees, and the game was well out of reach, 38-17.
I had thought it might be bad, but I still didn’t know quite how bad it would feel, especially watching Brady actually sidelined by the end of the game, standing grim-faced with Bill Belichick on the sideline as the final minutes played out.
Worse, all of the above only served to underscore themes that have already become all too familiar this season–this was no one-off fluke. “This whole game,” tweeted Joe Haggerty of Hacks with Haggs, “is Exhibit A in the case of Bill Belichick vs the people of New England on 4th and 2.”
We’re at the point in the season when team identities are starting to form, and while the Saints are looking downright magical, the Patriots seem to be establishing themselves in the middle of the pack — over .500 and capable of beating up on bad teams, but not flying among the class of the league this year. There will be no Comeback Player of the Year Award for Brady, as New England fans may have fantasized before the season began. And it’s even beginning to feel like the zeitgest of the league has begun moving away from us, to the west, and south.
An Ode to Wes Welker
Last time the Patriots played the Jets, Wes Welker was not active for the game. This time, he was the team’s leading receiver. One game was a loss. The other, Sunday’s decisive win.
You can’t say Wes Welker singlehandedly made the difference in this game (Leigh Bodden and his three interceptions might have something to say about that). But he came about as close as you can in as team-oriented a sport as football.
My father and I were sitting on the second deck near the lighthouse in the North end zone, and so whenever the action came close to that end of the field we had an up-close view. During the second quarter, with the Patriots driving from their own territory in front of us, Brady hit Welker with a pass that made my dad’s eyes pop behind his binoculars. Lowering them, he hollered, “Did you SEE THAT?”
It’s not a play that will make any of the highlight reels; the play was short of a first down and was an otherwise forgettable three-yard pitch and catch. But “pitch” would be an appropriate word for it — it had all the humming speed of a major leaguer’s fastball, down and away, spiraling toward the ground as if fired from a cannon.
Welker reached out with his hands of iron and stopped that missile with his fingertips just before it hit the ground. Then he curled up like a beetle hiding behind its carapace, as he always does, and let the defensive onslaught pile on top of him. When the dust cleared, he popped up and headed back to the huddle, ready to line up for his next diving self-sacrifice. After the nuclear holocaust: cockroaches and Wes Welker.
Not only can he seemingly catch anything, but the man comes across as literally impervious to the worst punishment a defense can throw at him. He takes smashing, ringing hits and pops up again just as he did after that play. Maybe it’s because he’s so small, and can curl up like that at the end of plays, letting the blows rain down on his back while he compacts his frame to protect himself.
When you actually attend a game, ironically, you see less of it. Sometimes you miss the subtleties as the game moves 90 yards away in the opposite end zone from where you’re sitting, as binoculars or a telephoto lens are the closest you’re going to get to the action, and it seems completely random when the stadium will choose to show a slow-motion instant replay on the Jumbo Tron. Without Joe Buck or the like to fill us in, I had no idea that Welker was setting personal best records during these individual plays, in which he had 15 catches for 192 yards.
But there was no question, even as we contended with drunks and spilling beer and squinting at the action downfield, that Welker was the standout player of this game. There was one play in the third quarter where the consensus around us was that Brady may have been trying to throw the ball away toward the right sideline, and still Welker snagged it. You’d have to be blind, blackout inebriated or not in your seat not to see his impact on this game.
What I find even more interesting in retrospect isn’t just the huge receiving numbers Welker put up: it’s another number next to his name in the box score. Zero touchdowns. In baseball, we would call this kind of thankless yeoman’s work being a dirt dog.
For some reason, though he set team records last year and the year before, though he now stands as only the eighth player in the history of the NFL to have back-to-back 100-reception seasons (per Sports of Boston, which has an excellent writeup of Welker’s college and previous NFL accomplishments), Wes Welker has flown under the radar the way he sneaks in routes under safeties on the field. Randy Moss, the classic, willowy, fast-sprinting wideout, has set records of his own and garnered more of the attention, even among Patriots fans.
I think this game against the Jets has changed that once and for all. During some talk-radio listening yesterday, I heard the Sports Hub hosting a discussion about whether listeners consider Welker or Moss the Patriots’ No.1 receiver, or at least which was their personal favorite. (The host also alluded to Welker getting his toughness from the fact that he and his brothers used to hit one another with baseball bats. I can find no corroboration for this, but I don’t disbelieve it.)
Personally I think Moss and Welker are apples and oranges, but it’s for the best that way. Welker’s not usually going to win on a jump-ball, but Moss isn’t going to take the kind of beating Welker routinely takes going over the middle. Welker’s all about yards after catch; Moss is all about the circus reception in the end zone to put things to rest immediately. I think the Patriots’ biggest advantage comes not from having one or the other, but having both players on the team, and being able to alter game plans to focus on one or the other depending on opponent, or even check plays at the line based on the defense.
To return to the baseball analogy again, one is Brady’s fastball (Moss) and the other his curveball (Welker). One might play a bigger role than the other in a particular start, but both need to be established against the other.
Posted in Patriots Game Reviews
Tagged New England Patriots, New York Jets, Patriots, Randy Moss, Wes Welker
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Patriots' Brady & Moss Show prevails over Miami Dolphins
The game first got going in its early minutes with a spectacular play from one of the Dolphins’ rookie defensive backs, Vontae Davis. He timed his leap perfectly with the much taller Randy Moss’s jump for the ball, which happened to be slightly underthrown, and snatched it away for an interception the Dolphins would convert into three points.
On their next possession, Tom Brady and Moss took the field with Davis clearly in their sights. After a run from Laurence Maroney, Brady heaved a bomb downfield for Moss again, wasting almost no time in creating a rematch with Davis. This time, Moss big-leagued the rookie with a one-handed circus catch just hovering at the comprehensible limits of human ability. Jump that route, kid.
Back to Maroney again, who executed another crisp run off tackle, his third in as many handoffs, into the end zone for a 7-3 Patriots lead.
The offensive line, which last week committed 9 of 10 Patriots penalties, played most of the first half like a well-oiled machine, until Dan Koppen left the game with what looked like a right leg injury. After that, Brady found himself with a few more grass stains than might’ve happened otherwise, and an offense that put on a laser show at times during a roller-coaster first half had to settle for field goals more frequently than they otherwise might have.
The Dolphins, unlike the Buccaneers and Texans, were also formidable opponents, on both sides of the ball. Their first drive of the second quarter, featuring the Wildcat anchored by second quarterback Pat White and a bruising running game featuring Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams, was a brilliantly coached, brilliantly executed onslaught you just have to give Miami credit for.
Still, every time the Patriots got smacked in the mouth in this game, they bounced back instantaneously. Moss and Brady’s treatment of Vontae Davis would become a parable for the way the rest of the team responded to a series of clever attacks from the Dolphins.
As for Davis, he had a long rest of the afternoon following his early moment of glory, including an absolutely savage stiffarm from Moss in the third quarter that served the dual purpose of ridding the sprinting wide receiver of the rookie’s coverage and propelling Moss forward toward the end zone.
Meanwhile, by halftime, the core that’s emerging at the heart of this defense, Brandon Meriweather, Jerod Mayo and Adalius Thomas, was beginning to clamp down on the Dolphins’ running game. At which point the Dolphins took to the air, keeping the score within a touchdown until the final seconds of the fourth quarter ticked down.
In the end, though, Henne and his receivers were no match for the Brady / Moss show, especially once Brady started mixing in the seemingly indestructible Wes Welker, the way a pitcher mixes in an off-speed pitch after establishing his fastball. With a fatigued and shortstaffed offensive line, the running game also didn’t look quite as sharp as in the first half, but Maroney remained mostly effective heading into the later minutes.
After the Wildcat and the running game overwhelmed the Patriots defense, Belichick hunkered down with his defenders on the sideline, scribbling on his whiteboard and talking a mile a minute. Slowly, the Patriots began to contain the running game. After Chad Henne and his receivers beat the Patriots deep, the New England defensive backs retook the field with a fixation on creating a turnover, which they very nearly did, and for a touchdown, no less, were it not for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Henne by rookie Patrick Chung.
In the end, though, that particular touchdown didn’t matter. What mattered was the aggression and redoubled determination the defense was playing with, and the quickness with which they were adapting. By the time the Dolphins were running an attempted double-reverse at the end of the third quarter, Adalius Thomas was there to stop Chad Henne cold–for a loss. At third down and a train ride, there was Thomas again, right beside Davone Bess, thwarting an attempted screen.
This is the Bill Belichick New England fans focus on, the Bill Belichick standing among his defensemen on the sideline with a whiteboard. A man who so commands their respect, loyalty and trust, and who does it with such discipline, that his team responds immediately, elegantly, with an almost religious zeal.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Adalius Thomas, Bill Belichick, Dan Koppen, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, Patrick Chung, Patriots, Randy Moss, Wes Welker
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Patriots trounce London Buccaneers, but question marks remain
Even when Tom Brady screws up, he sets a record.
In the first half, he tried to hit Randy Moss in the end zone for a touchdown but threw somewhat awkwardly off his back foot and it looked like he didn’t get enough on the throw, which was intercepted by Tanard Jackson.
With that, Brady officially sets a team record of 183 consecutive passes without an interception. You have to go back to 2005 for the last time he threw a pick inside the red zone.
A familiar scene – Patriots lose to Broncos
If you include the playoffs, Brady was 1-5 coming into this game against the Denver Broncos in his career. As a matter of fact, it’s the only NFL team against which he has a losing record.
If you count today’s game, that total is now 1-6.
Somehow we’ve gotten used to the Patriots falling on their faces against Denver. I don’t think I’ll ever completely scrub the memory of the 2006 playoff game against the Broncos from my brain, especially not the part where hundreds of people at the Sports Depot in Allston screamed like we were all on a sinking ship as Champ Bailey ran that INT back for a touchdown…
Posted in Patriots Game Reviews
Tagged Champ Bailey, Denver Broncos, New England Patriots, Patriots, Randy Moss, Wes Welker
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Patriots push past Ravens, rise to 3-1

The Patriots took the field in pink gloves and shoes to benefit the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation this afternoon.
As last week’s game drew to a close, it looked as though things might be coming together for a Patriots team that is still assimilating many new faces and looked overmatched in week 2 against the division rival Jets. This week that trend continued with a win over the undefeated Baltimore Ravens match the Jets’ record at 3-1 after they lost to New Orleans today.
Posted in Patriots Game Reviews
Tagged Ed Reed, Fred Taylor, New England Patriots, Patriots, Randy Moss
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Consistently inconsistent, will Patriots remain above .500?
Always take the ‘W’ no matter how you get it. During a tremendous comeback versus Buffalo in week one, a loss to the Jets in week two and a win versus a solid Falcons team in week three, The Patriots did something they do not often do. They did settled for field goals when normally they would have scored touchdowns.
The team mantra still seems to be inconsistency on offense, whether it is coming from Tom Brady, Sammy Morris or coach Bill Belichick. Missed opportunities converting on third and fourth downs, Brady overthrowing receivers or receivers dropping balls.
Patriots win a wet one over Falcons
Instead of saving a comeback for the final minutes, the Patriots regrouped after a somewhat lackluster first half to win decisively over the Atlanta Falcons on a gray and drizzly afternoon in Foxboro today. The win puts them back above .500 and kept the Patriots breathing down the neck of the first-place Jets, who notched their third win in Tennessee.
Patriots face Falcons expect them to air it out
If anything has been proven over the past two games it is that Brady is throwing the ball alot. Over 100 times in fact versus the team running the ball just over 40 times.
This is not a balanced attack, but also do not expect it to change much this week. OK maybe a bit more balanced, however, facing a stout Falcons run defense will not help Brady. The Falcons defense have been successful in turnovers having five forced fumbles and an interception.
Posted in New England Patriots
Tagged Bill Belichick, New England Patriots, NFL, Randy Moss, Wes Welker
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