The Boston Globe - 27.08.2019

(Jeff_L) #1

D2 Sports The Boston Globe TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2019


A must for receivers:


Pass the test of Tom


dence that he was 0 for 3 target-
ing undrafted rookie Jakobi
Meyers against Carolina.



  1. One of the justifications
    for fewer reps for the starters
    this preseason is the work that’s
    done in joint practices.
    Belichick is a pioneer of the
    practice of joint practices,
    which have become more prev-
    alent with the current collective
    bargaining agreement eliminat-
    ing traditional two-a-days.
    This preseason, the Patriots
    enjoyed productive sessions
    with the Detroit Lions and the
    Tennessee Titans. There is
    some talk that joint practices
    could replace preseason games.
    Good luck with that. Joint prac-
    tices are a supplement to, not a
    replacement for, preseason
    games.
    Not to go all Allen Iverson
    on you, but we’re still talking
    about practice... practice. It’s
    not the same as a game, and it
    never will be.
    You hear that coaches enjoy
    the joint practice because it’s a
    controlled environment, and
    the sessions are scripted to
    maximize the time. Well, games
    aren’t controlled or scripted.
    They’re competitive chaos. In
    that crucible, what works in
    practice doesn’t always trans-
    late to the games when the
    players play faster and try hard-
    er. Preseason-game injuries are
    the worst. But preseason games
    remain a necessary evil to pre-
    pare for the real games.

  2. Fear not, the Patriots de-
    fensive coaching staff is going
    to be just fine, despite the off-
    season defec-
    tions. One of
    the primary
    questions fac-
    ing the Patri-
    ots is how
    their rebuilt
    coaching staff
    responds fol-
    lowing a brain
    drain. New
    England lost
    quality coach-
    es, chief
    among them
    de facto defen-
    sive coordinator Brian Flores.
    Former Patriots linebacker and
    neophyte inside linebackers
    coach Jerod Mayo looks like a
    natural with a headset. He also
    seems to have a good rapport
    with Patriots secondary/safeties
    coach Steve Belichick, son of
    Bill.
    Fortunately, the creativity
    and aggressiveness in the de-
    fense didn’t depart with Flores.
    On the sack that injured Cam
    Newton’s foot, Adam Butler
    was the only player with his
    hand down at the snap of the
    ball as the Patriots aligned with
    seven defensive backs. They
    sent six rushers, blitzing line-
    backer Dont’a Hightower and
    defensive backs Jason Mc-
    Courty and Terrence Brooks.
    Kyle Van Noy’s sack on Caro-
    lina’s second possession also
    was well schemed. Coach Mayo
    presented a six-man front with
    safety Devin McCourty on the
    line of scrimmage. McCourty
    stayed home and the confused
    Panthers double-teamed rookie
    Byron Cowart with center Matt
    Paradis. That got Van Noy a
    one-on-one matchup on the
    edge with tight end Chris Man-
    hertz. Game over.

  3. Sorry, but I’m not as bull-
    ish on the wide receiving corps
    as some, even with Julian Edel-
    man, Josh Gordon, and De-
    maryius Thomas now all active
    and practicing. There are still
    caveats attached to this corps
    outside of Edelman, whose
    odometer is creeping up. We all
    know the history of rookie wide
    receivers with Brady (Deion
    Branch is the only rookie to re-
    cord 40 or more catches), and
    first-round pick N’Keal Harry


uGASPER
Continued from Page D1


has missed two-plus weeks
nursing a hamstring injury.
The veteran guys all have
mileage, injury, or availability
concerns. Thomas has earned
rave reviews, but he’s 31 and
has torn both Achilles’ tendons,
including the left one last De-
cember. Gordon is a brilliant
talent, but his addiction issues
have proven much tougher to
shake than opposing defenders.
The Patriots are going to
throw a lot of wide receivers
against the wall and see who
sticks. It’s doubtful all these
guys hit or survive the season.


  1. Speaking of receivers, it
    was notable that Brady openly
    politicked for Phillip Dorsett
    following the third preseason
    game, saying he has a lot of
    trust in the wide receiver and
    ticking off all of his coachable
    qualities. “I love playing with
    Phil,” Brady said. It was a not-
    so-subtle message as the roster
    reductions approach Saturday.
    It was also reminiscent of
    last season when following a
    loss to the Lions, Brady cam-
    paigned for more James White
    in the offense at a time when
    the Patriots were trying to
    force-feed Sony Michel into the
    mix as a true dual-threat back.
    Michel was a nonfactor in the
    passing game the rest of the
    way.
    It’s not often that Brady
    speaks his mind so bluntly, but
    when he does, there’s a motive
    and a message behind it.

  2. It feels like the Patriots are
    all in on rookie quarterback
    Jarrett Stidham as Brady’s
    backup. In the second pre-
    season game, Belichick made
    sure to put
    him in an ad-
    verse situation
    by inserting
    him into the
    game when
    the Patriots
    had the ball at
    their own 2-
    yard line.
    Then he got all
    the post-Brady
    snaps against
    Carolina.
    The rookie
    looks the part
    with his physique and “first-
    round-arm talent,” as Raiders
    GM Mike Mayock would say.
    But he has been fortunate to
    have only one turnover this pre-
    season (a fumble). Plus, he pos-
    sesses a tendency to be a tad
    tardy and throw some hospital
    balls that could get receivers
    hurt.
    That being said, with the
    surfeit of talent in the second-
    ary, a dearth of depth at offen-
    sive tackle and tight end, and
    the need for redundancy at re-
    ceiver, Stidham has shown
    enough to roll the dice.
    The Patriots can sever ties
    with veteran backup Brian Hoy-
    er and redistribute a roster
    spot.
    Extra points: Don’t panic be-
    cause it’s only preseason, but
    the Patriots need to tighten it
    up when it comes to penalties.
    They forfeited a few chunk
    plays, including a 30-yard run
    by Michel, because of flags last
    Thursday. In three preseason
    games, they’ve been whistled
    for 34 penalties for 314 yards.
    Last year, they were the fourth-
    least penalized team in the
    league with 93 penalties for 744
    yards, the second-fewest penal-
    ty yards in the league... Stid-
    ham has thrown for the third-
    most yards in the NFL during
    the preseason (506)...Inhis
    preseason debut, Michel looked
    more like the big-play back he
    was at Georgia, instead of the
    guy who ran like a thorough-
    bred with blinders on last sea-
    son... It’s going to be fun to
    watch Michael Bennett practice
    his craft. Bennett’s sack against
    Paradis was a pass-rushing
    piece of art.


Chungwon’ttalkaboutcharge


By Jim McBride
GLOBE STAFF
FOXBOROUGH —Patrick
Chungwas sticking to football.
The Patriots safety met
with the me-
dia Monday
for the first
time since he
was indicted on a felony
charge of cocaine possession
in New Hampshire last week.
“If you want to talk some
football, we can talk some
football,’’ said Chung, who en-
tered a not guilty plea on Mon-
day and waived his arraign-
ment, which had been sched-
uled for Wednesday. “I’m here
to get ready for the Giants.’’
When asked if it’s been dif-
ficult to stay focused on foot-
ball, Chung remained on
point.
“I just come to work, and I
play,’’ he said. “I go to meet-
ings, get in the playbook, and
get back. I’m coming off an in-
jury, so I’m trying to get back.’’
Chung broke his arm in Su-
per Bowl LIII and also had
shoulder surgery in the offsea-
son to fix a lingering problem.
He’s practiced most of the
summer with a red non-con-
tact jersey but got to shed that
on Sunday.
“It’s a little hard to practice
with a red jersey on in pads, so
it feels good to get out there
and be able to get a little phys-
ical and use my body a little
bit,’’ he said. “So, it’s been
good. I feel good. I’m out of

the red jersey, so that’s a step
in the right direction.’’
Chung said wasn’t sure if
he’d play against the Giants
Thursday (“That’sBill
[Belichick’s] decision,” he
said) and wasn’t quite ready to
commit to being ready for the
Week 1 opener against the
Steelers Sept. 8.
“I don’t know. Right now,
I’m just trying to get right,’’ he
said. “That’s a while from now.
We still have a game before the
Steelers. So, right now, I’m just
trying to get the rust off and
get going.’’

Thomaspraised
JoshMcDanielswelcomed
back three projected top re-
ceivers in the last week inJu-
lianEdelman,Demaryius
Thomas,andJoshGordon.
It was a welcome boost for
the offensive coordinator, who
also has worked with a bunch
of younger receivers this sum-
mer inN’KealHarry,Jakobi
Meyers,GunnerOlszewski,
andBraxtonBerrios.
“Was I excited that those
guys are back? Yeah, for them
and for us,’’ McDaniels said
Monday. “They’re excited to be
back on the field and not in a
rehab situation. Certainly,
we’re excited to have them on
the field, doing the things that
they can do and trying to work
back in and gain consistency
as an offense.’’
McDaniels, who worked
with Thomas when both were

in Denver, raved about his im-
pact on the team, even though
he was just activated last
week.
“He’s a great guy, a great
teammate, works extremely
hard, worked hard on his re-
hab all year, and has been a
great influence on our entire
offensive group, not just the
receivers,’’ said McDaniels.
“This guy’s got a lot of knowl-
edge and he’s played in a lot of
important games and he’s won
a lot of big games and made a
lot of great plays.
“He’s a pretty decorated
player, it’s great to have him
back out there and now it’s
just about continuing to put
one day in front of the next
andtrytobuildcontinuityand
rhythm.’’

DTPennelreleased
The Patriots continued to
pare the roster in advance of
Saturday’s cutdown day, re-
leasing veteran defensive tack-
leMikePennelJr.
A sixth-year veteran, Pennel
had tumbled down the depth
chart behindLawrenceGuy,
DannyShelton,AdamButler,
and rookieByronCowart.
Guy has been a steady in-
side force for two seasons and
Shelton has had an outstand-
ing spring and summer.
Butler provides great inside
pocket pressure in sub-packag-
es, and Cowart has really
surged the last few weeks.
Additionally, defensive end

MichaelBennettshifted inside
in some sub-packages against
Carolina on last Thursday and
that likely will be the case dur-
ing the regular season as well.

Callingtheshots?
JerodMayowouldn’t budge
when asked if he’s calling the
defensive plays this season.
“Every day is different, this is
Coach Belichick’s defense, this
is his team, so whatever the
team needs me to do, I’m will-
ing to do.’’ Does that include
calling plays? “That’s one of
those questions you’ve got to
ask coach.’’... Full attendance
was a challenge at practice but
tight endsBenWatson(con-
cussion protocol) andLance
Kendricksandrunningback
DamienHarrisweren’t spot-
ted. Kendricks and Harris suf-
fered undisclosed injuries
against the Panthers... On
defense, edge rushersDerek
RiversandShiliqueCalhoun
weren’t seen... The team
waivedrunningbackRobert
Martina day after he was
signed... ReceiverMaurice
Harrisand defensive end
KeiontaDavis, who were
waived Sunday with injury
designations, went unclaimed
and reverted back to the club’s
injuredreservelist.Theycould
be released with an injury set-
tlement if they become healthy
enough to play this season.

Ben Volin of the Globe staff
contributed.

PATRIOTS
NOTEBOOK

JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
Patrick Chung (right), with Jason McCourty at his side, shed his red non-contact jersey for the first time this summer.

JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF
The Patriots’ Tom Brady,
pliability obvious, reaches
the end point during this
exercise at practice Monday.

Luck retiring is a courageous move


rarely hear. When he said,
“The last four years of my life
I’ve been in this cycle of injury,
pain, rehab, injury, pain rehab,
and it’s been unceasing, unre-
lenting, both in season and off-
season and I felt stuck in it,”
his conclusion became obvi-
ous.
“The only way I see out is to
no longer play football,” he
said. “It’s taken my joy of this
game away and... [pausing to
choke back tears] sorry. I’ve
been stuck in this process, I ha-
ven’t been able to live the life I
want to live, it’s taken the joy
out of this game. And after
2016, when I played in pain, I
made a vow to myself I would
not go down that path again.
The only way forward for me is
to remove myself from foot-
ball.
“I came to the proverbial
fork in the road, and I made a
vow to myself if I ever did
again, I’d choose me, in a
sense.”
For that, I think we should
applaud him, and outside of
the emotionally stunted dopes
who booed Luck in the heat of
their postgame shock Satur-
day, I am not alone. When the
Patriots returned to practice
Sunday, Luck’s decision was
still buzzing through the locker

uSULLIVAN
Continued from Page D1

room, carrying an undercur-
rent of support and under-
standing not simply for what
Luck is doing, but for how dif-
ficult his fellow players know it
must have been to do it. That is
a brand of bravery they all can
admire.
“As a player in the league, I
appreciate it,” 11-year veteran
Jason McCourty said. “Because
for all of us, it’s very, very hard
to walk away, whether we’re in
our prime, whether we’re
washed up and barely can get
from Point A to Point B.
“Mentally it’s hard to get to
a sport you’ve been playing
since you were a kid to say
goodbye. You love it. You’ve
done it for so long. It’s a part of
your routine. It’s a part of you.”
But it’s not all of you. And
with Luck standing up to say
that out loud, he can have such
a positive impact on others. I
get the risk to football, a game
struggling to keep its youth
participation numbers up even
as its television ratings contin-
ue to soar.
I understand there could be
future players who see what
Luck did and choose basket-
ball, baseball, or soccer in-
stead, looking for less contact.
But Luck was adamant that
he has no resentment toward
the game, actually thanking it.
“In a philosophical sense, I

want to thank football for so
many wonderful moments in
my life, the pressure, circum-
stances, environment that
forced me to grow in so many
meaningful ways,” he said.
“It’s the greatest team sport
in the world. I certainly feel
like I’ve gotten my fair chance,
and I’m very grateful for every
snap I got to take.”
That he is choosing to take
no more (though who knows
what might happen in his fu-
ture?) is notable, bringing to
mind recent shocking retire-
ments by Barry Sanders or Cal-
vin Johnson, or for older gen-
erations, Jim Brown or Sandy
Koufax, athletes in their prime
no longer willing to pay the
price to stay there. That he is
met in equal parts by support
and surprise is reflective of our
changing attitudes.
“I think as the culture shifts
and we are educated more on
our physical health, the long-
term effects of the game on our
bodies, another thing that has
gained a lot of traction is the
awareness around mental
health,” said Patriots special
teamer Matthew Slater, “and I
think there’s certainly been a
shift from the time I came into
the league until now in terms
of guys retiring maybe what
some would consider at a
young age.

“I think that’s good. I think
perspective is important, and I
think at the end of the day, you
have to realize this is just foot-
ball, just a job, it’s not life or
death.
“If you’re dealing with pain
day after day after day, month
after month after month, year
after year after year, it’s going
to have an effect on you.”
Luck feels the pain.
An ongoing ankle/calf inju-
ry is only his latest malady. He
has torn cartilage in his ribs,
sustained a partial tear in his
abdomen, suffered a lacerated
kidney, been diagnosed with at
least one concussion, and, of
course, the shoulder surgery.
That list is why Patriots backup
quarterback Brian Hoyer used
the car-crash analogy.
“Not only that, but the men-
tal stress,” Hoyer said. “We’re
fortunate to do what we do, no
doubt about that, but we sign
up for a lot of mental, physical
stresses. You can’t put yourself
in our shoes, but if he sat down
and decided that’s what best
for him and future of his fami-
ly, that should be celebrated.”
Cue the applause.

Tara Sullivan is a Globe
columnist. She can be reached
at [email protected].
Follow her on Twitter
@Globe_Tara.

Andrewshospitalized,


treatedforbloodclots


missed a week of practice in
the altitude of Colorado
Springs after a win in Denver.
The Patriots won both games
Karras started, including a vic-
tory over the Raiders in Mexico
City.
Karras has also played right


uANDREWS
Continued from Page D1


guard – including two starts
last season – and will be aided
by playing between established
guards Joe Thuney on the left
and Shaq Mason on the right.

Jim McBride can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@globejimmcbride.
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