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A collection of thoughts, analysis and other Patriots-related material from an outside-US source.

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31 January 12

2011 Defense: Best the Patriots Have Ever Brought to a Superbowl?‏

At the beginning of the 2011 season, Patriots fans were quietly optimistic about a renewed defense, augmented with free agent defensive linemen, some new and some newly healthy defensive backs, and a knowledge that Bill Belichick was changing the defense to a more 4-3 look, with the hope that the defense would be much more stalwart than in 2009 or 2010. However, absent a good performance against the Buccaneers in a preseason game, fans saw a defense no more tight or play-making than years previous. Throughout the regular season, although the Patriots continued to pile up wins, critics mentioned these were in spite of the defense, not aided by it.

The regular season statistics were against the defense, who ranked 31st in yards allowed (and were mostly 32nd for the year), as well as being poor at 3rd down stops, and stopping big plays downfield. However, there were a few bright spots, namely being tough in the red-zone, picking up some key turnovers (CB Kyle Arrington tied for the league lead in interceptions) and ranking mid-league in points allowed (which, some referred to, was the key stat, after all, points not yards determine wins).

Coach Bill Belichick was constantly questioned and queried about his defensive personnel choices, which were perhaps not misguided, when career special-teamer Matthew Slater played almost a full game at safety, and ex-quarterback turned wide receiver was used primarily in games as a slot defensive back (noted by many as the toughest spot in the NFL to play). Some of these moves were indeed ‘misses’, as were a number of free agent and previous draft choices (i.e. Albert Haynesworth and Taylor Price [one could say Ras-I Dowling or Shane Vereen were draft misses, although its too early to determine the value of the pick]).

However, all this negative criticism and poor statistical feedback had seemly no effect on the mental attitude of the defense - no quote could be found from a Patriot complaining of the lack of quality depth or making excuses for poor play, the team were consistent in beleiving with a bit more hard work and continued application of the defensive gameplan, it would all come together and the Patriots would have a solid if not respectable defense. And, in the end, it did come together. Right in time for the playoffs.

Statistically, the Patriots finished the regular season with a points-allowed-per-game ranking of 15th in the league, and a yards-allowed-per-game ranking of 31st (the two statistics which one can point to as the best measure of a teams’ defense). Through two playoff games, the Patriots have allowed 15 points per game, and 325 total yards per game. If these averages were compared against the regular season results, the Patriots would be 9th in the league in yards-allowed (up from 31st), and 3rd in the league in points-allowed (yes, the Patriots have a top 3 defense.). Justification for the comparison of such a
small sample size (2 games) to the regular season (16 games) is that the Patriots have obviously played two good teams in the playoffs, both by the nature that the teams made the playoffs by winning their division, and also that both these teams had some good offenses (the Broncos had the number 1 rushing offense in the league, and the Ravens had the 10th ranked rushing offense, so they aren’t slouches).

Despite these favourable comparisons, a team that has maybe had two strong defensive games may not necessarily be well regarded as a whole - so a more accurate comparison would be to look at the 2011 Patriots compared to the postseason statistics of every other Patriots team that has played in the Superbowl. Most fans remember Tedy Bruschi, Rodney Harrison, Richard Seymour, Ty Law - these guys have won Superbowl rings in New England, and are synonymous with good, tough, playoff-caliber defense. By looking at the yards-allowed and points-allowed statistics of the Patriots 6 previous Superbowl teams, perhaps the quality of the current defense can be determined.

The defenses in questionable are obviously the losing Superbowl teams from 1985, ‘96 and ‘07. The three winning teams are from 2001, ‘03, and ‘04. Studying the main defensive statistic, yards-allowed-per-game, the 2011 postseason Patriots lie somewhere around the middle, giving up less yards than the ‘07 or ‘04, exactly the same amount as the ‘03 team, and slightly more than the other Patriots Superbowl teams (the ‘96 team is the strongest in this category).

The real interesting statistic, however, is points-allowed-per-game in the postseason. With one more game to be played, the 2011 Patriots have given up less points than any previous Patriots Superbowl team (with the exception of the ‘96 Pats, who gave up the same amount of points). Should the Pats keep the Giants to just two touchdowns, we’ll have seen the greatest defense the Patriots have ever put out to play defense in the postseason. And that defense includes players like Sergio Brown, Nate Jones, Julian Edelman, Gerard Warren, and Dane Fletcher. None of those guys are headed for Canton. One Patriot who will be is Coach Bill Belichick, who, if he pulls this off, will arguably be the greatest defensive mind in the history of the game, and he almost gave himself nothing to work with.

23 January 12

Second Half Thoughts

By clamping down on the run and forcing Flacco to beat them with the arm, the Patriots have unearthed another threat - Flacco beating them with his feet. This might led the Pats to take a man out of coverage to go to a spy position.

Potentially a big injury to Gronkowski, but the Pats were able to move the ball down the field regardless of his injury, although Gronkowski later came in on a goal line situation for the touchdown. Interesting to see if he’ll still run pass patterns on a questionable ankle.

Some patterns run by the Patriots receivers seem to end up with multiple receivers in the same area. This could be a factor of the Pats trying to be overcomplicated with route combinations to try and unlock this Ravens defense. (submission from reader Steve)

Great timely interception by Brandon Spikes, doing a terrific job of making a one-handed catch, and then getting a nice return. It seemed like a big momentum shift for the Pats, but then got too greedy with the attempted deep ball to Slater.

The phrase ‘great players make big plays in big games’ has to apply in this game to Vince Wilfork, who’s been a huge playmaker in this game, showing up in critical moments with QB pressures and run stops.

See you all in SUPERBOWL 46!

21 January 12

Patriots rushing season totals

A list of the Patriots regular season rushing totals:

Benjarvus Green-Ellis: 667 yards (avg 3.7)

Stevan Ridley: 441 yards (avg 5.1)

Danny Woodhead: 351 yards (avg 4.6)

Tom Brady: 109 yards  (avg 2.5)

Shane Vereen: 57 yards (avg 3.8)

Kevin Faulk: 57 yards (avg 3.4)

Aaron Hernandez: 45 yards (avg 9.0)

Wes Welker: 30 yards (avg 7.5)

Julian Edelman: 8 yards (avg 2.0)

Rob Gronkowski: 2 yards (avg 2.0)

Brian Hoyer: -3 yards (avg -0.8)

TOTAL: 1,764 yards

19 January 12

Pats-Ravens no longer a rivalry game

As we approach the AFC Championship game, it seems like most years the teams often in the game know each other pretty well, and are often division or conference rivals (Colts, Ravens, Jets, Steelers and Patriots).

But leading up to this week, it sure doesn’t feel like a typical AFC rivalry game. Both teams are being incredibly respectful to one another, without even any feud between T-Sizzle and TB12 to put up on bulletin boards. The most newsworthy comment from a player on either team this week came from Ed Reed, and he was talking down his on quarterback and offensive line, not the opponents.

Perhaps both teams want to avoid giving the other any extra motivation. Perhaps there really is a mutual admiration or respect for the other team (despite three close-fought games in the past three years). Or maybe, for two teams with aging players, this week is all about business, and all the talk is going to be done on the field on Sunday.

17 January 12

Curran: How the Pats could lose

On PFT Live today, Tom Curran from CSNNE talked about how the Patriots offense could be slowed: “Hit Gronkowski, hit Welker, hit Hernandez.” Curran stressed that keying on these Pats offensive weapons, together with getting quick pressure on Brady is the key. To break it down further, the game will become a series of line matchups, to see if “can Suggs beat Nate Solder, can Ngata beat Dan Connolly before Wes Welker comes out of his break.”

PFT Live host Mike Florio also commented on how if the Pats win this new-school offense vs old-school defense game, another similar challenge will be waiting in the Superbowl against a strong defensive team in the Giants or 49ers. Therefore, one of the most important storylines for the Pats playoff hopes is the health of the offensive line, which has used 9 different players over the course of the season.

16 January 12
  • What's your score prediction for the AFC Championship game between the Patriots and Ravens?
15 January 12
When (Tom Brady’s quick punt) works during practice, players turn to Mesko and blurt out the following words: “Salary cap!”.
Brady said the team has been practicing the play for seven years and his hope was to land it inside the 5.
(from ESPN Boston)

When (Tom Brady’s quick punt) works during practice, players turn to Mesko and blurt out the following words: “Salary cap!”.

Brady said the team has been practicing the play for seven years and his hope was to land it inside the 5.

(from ESPN Boston)

Posted: 3:27 PM

Fourth Quarter Thoughts

  • Great punt playcall by the Patriots, loved to see Brady kick that one down to the 10 yard line to keep everyone healthy. Lack of class from Von Miller on the play though.
  • Tebow completed a few more passes in this quarter, but as we’ve seen all season, the defense solidified in the red zone and didn’t allow any points after Denver having a fourth and goal from the 3.
  • From this view, the Pats stout run defense will be needed again next week against either the Ravens or Texans strong rushing attack.

Posted: 2:48 PM

Third Quarter Thoughts

  • Great to see a huge confidence booster for the Patriots defense, who are destroying the Broncos offensive line on almost every play.
  •  Tebow is being let down by his receivers, who’ve dropped a number of easy completions. The Patriots have only had one or two dropped passes all game.
  • Denver has gone away from the option, which hasn’t been successful all night against this defense.
  • Looks like time for the Patriots to take Tom Brady and some other key offensive and defensive starters out of the game, with an insurmountable lead, and much bigger opponents to come in future weeks.

Posted: 1:41 PM

Second Quarter Thoughts

  • The best running back for the Patriots in this game seems to be Aaron Hernandez so far, with multiple first downs.
  • Logan Mankins has missed a couple of downs, being replaced by Ryan Wendell.
  • Great discipline and penetration by the Pats defensive line which is causing all sorts of problems for Denver’s option running game. In the second half, I’d expect Denver to go more towards a conventional offense

Themed by Hunson. Originally by Josh