Posts Tagged ‘Shane Vereen’

Hi BSD readers – my name is Steve Falzone and I am a junior Communication major at Stonehill College. I will be interning as a sports writer for BSD this semester and am excited to hopefully provide you guys with some pretty good articles! Now, let’s talk Patriots.

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…..Well that just seemed way too easy, didn’t it? After the 42-14 shellacking New England put on the Texans in week 14, it was hard to think that a team led by the league’s best coach in Bill Belichick and arguably one of the best quarterbacks in NFL history, Tom Brady, would somehow manage to squander this one away. Even with the loss of Gronk, the Patriots offense clicked as we have seen it do the entire season, with players stepping up for a 41-28 win at Foxboro. The Patriots are headed to their 7th AFC Championship game under Belichick, in which they hold a record of 5-1 – not too shabby huh? Brady and Co. are set to face-off against the Ravens on Sunday at 6:30, let’s take a look at the 3 positives and 3 question marks the Patriots are facing as they head into Sunday’s match-up.

POSITIVES

1) BRADY BEING BRADY – Tom Brady showed up to play on Sunday, to nobody’s surprise. The polished QB went 25/40, throwing for 344 yards with 3 TD and 0 INT. His accuracy was pinpoint, showcased by his perfect throws to Gronkowski and Vereen for big gains. After this performance, you can’t help but feel good having the NFL’s most winningest QB in the playoffs on your side going into next week.

2) THE EMERGENCE OF SHANE VEREENWith Gronkowski out, the Patriots needed someone to step-up and have a big game. Not only did Shane Vereen step-up, but he went OFF for 41 rushing yards with 1 rushing touchdown, while also having 5 receptions for 83 yards and 2 TDs. If this is any indication of things to come, Vereen should play a large role in the upcoming games. Either way, I am sure his emergence is somehow messing with the Ravens’ game plan heading into Sunday.

3) HOME-FIELD ADVANTAGEIn the history of the Patriots, their all-time winning percentage at home during the playoffs is .813, tied with Denver for the best in the league. The Pats have won 13 of 16 playoff games at home, and on Sunday, all 68,756 seats will be rocking…need I say more?

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QUESTION MARKS

1) CAN THE PATRIOTS OVERCOME THE EMOTIONAL OUTPUT OF THE RAVENS? – Let’s face it: Ray Lewis and the entire Ravens team for that matter, are absolutely insane. Besides that, Terrell Suggs could be one of the scariest human beings on the entire planet – he’s pretty damn ugly, isn’t he? Anyways, before I get off-track, the Ravens are as determined as any team out there right now with the announcement of Ray Lewis’ retirement. Especially after their performance against the Broncos on Saturday, it is clear that this team refuses to give up. They want to win one last one for Lewis – and they’re hoping he doesn’t do anything to kill their chances (was that in poor taste?) However, according to ESPN, out of the QBs that Ray Lewis has faced 5+ times in the regular season and 1+ in the playoffs, Tom Brady is the only one vs. whom he has 0 INT and 1 or fewer sacks. The Patriots are grinders who are always fired up for competition, but will it be enough?

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2) WILL THE LOSS OF GRONKOWSKI HAVE A LARGE IMPACT ON THE PATRIOTS? – Before Gronk got injured this season the Patriots were 7-3; however, without him, the Pats have kept a highly respectable 4-1 record. Not bad for a team who is without one of their main stars and one of the best targets in the league. We have obviously seen that the Patriots can be successful without Gronk, but there is no denying that the team is much scarier and better with him on the field. New England has kept up a good reputation without their star off the field, but they need somebody to step-up and have a big game in order to not feel the effects of an absent Gronkowski.

3) CAN THE SECONDARY DEFEND THE DEEP BALL? - Two names: Boldin and Smith. Joe Flacco has one of the strongest arms in the league, and as we saw last week, he is not afraid to throw the deep ball to these two lethal targets. Last time the Patriots played the Ravens in week 3, Flacco has 382 passing yards with 3 TDs, 2 of which found themselves in the hands of Torrey Smith. The secondary needs to step-up and have a big game or else the Patriots will get burned down the field all day.

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Either way, Sunday is measuring out to be a damn good match-up. Stay tuned this week on BSD for my AFC/NFC Championship picks, plus more!

Gronkowski to have suregery this morning

Q: Can you talk about Shane Vereen’s performance tonight?

TB: Yeah, you know, there were a bunch of guys that made good plays. Shane had a great game. Really just a huge growing up moment for him, so very special. It was for everybody. There were a lot of guys that made a lot of plays. We needed it. It was a good football team with a lot of good plays, but we have another one coming in next week.

Q: What is it like for you to pass Joe Montana in most postseason wins?

TB: Well, I hope I’m around for a few more years. I know this was an important win for our team and that’s always the number one goal for me.

Q: Can you talk about mental toughness this week and guys making plays? There were a lot of changes and you lost a lot of players. How hard was it to make those changes and how important was it to see guys rise to the challenge?

TB: Yeah. I think that’s been the mark of our team. We’ve won 11 of 12. We were down 31-3 at home and battled back. I think we’re going to be in it. We have a lot of tough guys, mentally tough guys. Whatever happens, like what happened on the first play of the game, you’ve got to overcome it. We made some key plays when we needed to. Shane made them, Wes [Welker] made them, Brandon [Lloyd] made them, so it was a great effort. Offensive line was awesome, as usual.

Q: What are your thoughts on losing Rob Gronkowski for the playoffs?

TB: I don’t know anything about that. I haven’t heard anything.

Q: As a kid, did you ever think you would pass Joe Montana in the record books?

TB: I love playing and I love competing. I love being a part of this team and this organization. It’s a lot of mentally tough guys I think I’ve just been fortunate to play on some great teams over the years. I very much appreciate that and I never take that for granted. I’m always going to try to be the best teammate and leader I can possibly be.

Q: In the back of your mind, is there any disappointment that it won’t be a Brady-Manning AFC Championship game?

TB: I think the two best teams are in the finals. Baltimore certainly deserves to be here and so do we, so it’s very fitting. We played them early in the year; they got us. We blew a pretty big lead there at the end. We’re going to have to play our best game this week.

Q: You seem a little subdued. Has your mind already clicked forward a little bit?

TB: I’m tired, man. There was a lot of emotional energy spent: it’s a big build up to the week and we had four days of practice and you’re up and you’re down, you’re up and you’re down. I’m tired. I’m ready to go home.

Q: Is it deflating to see Rob Gronkowski leave the field with an injury?

TB: Sure. Like I said, we had a whole plan built for him and Woody [Danny Woodhead]. We run the first series of the game and all those plans change. I think a little of it was ‘What are we going to do now? How are we going to adjust?’ But we seemed to settle in there midway through the first quarter and put together a pretty good game. Obviously it’s a bummer to lose anybody, but someone of Rob’s importance or Danny’s importance, we need guys to step in and fill the void, whether it’s this game or any game after.

Q: Did you actually change the plan you had in place, or just change the players within the plan?

TB: Well, there are adjustments – like I said, we have certain plays for certain guys and Rob and Danny are a big part of the plan. That’s what Josh [McDaniels] does best: he gets guys in the best position to make plays and always comes up with a way to adapt and scheme things up and third down and red area, there’s’ no one better in the league.

Q: What was the explanation on Stevan Ridley’s forward progress call?

TB: I wasn’t happy. He wasn’t happy either. You know, that’s part of the game. He’s a good official. All the best officials are working this weekend. I think it’s just the heat of the moment and I get excited.

Q: That’s good.

TB: Yeah, it’s always good.

PatriotsflyingelvisShane Vereen, Running Back

(On whether he expected to play as much as he did)
“I don’t come into the game knowing how much anyone is going to play. I come into the game ready to go and if my number is called I do my best for the team.”

(On losing Danny Woodhead to injury)
“We hate to lose Woody. He is such a key part of our offense, but at the same time all of the running backs hold ourselves accountable to be able to step up when somebody does go down.”

(On whether he gets excited to match up against a linebacker)
Yes and no. I knew that the matchup was in my favor. But at the same time they are great defenders as well. So I have to do a great job at getting open. ”

(On playing the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship)
“It is going to be a great match up. It always is between us and the Ravens. We are going to have to go to work this week and get ready to play a great team.”

BB: We’ve really tried to turn the page on this one pretty quickly. We’ve already really started our preparations for the Rams. It’s going to be a short week here and we want to get on to them as soon as possible, so we ran through the Jet game. As I said yesterday, it was a tough, hard-fought game. It came down to a few plays. Fortunately, we were able to make enough of them to win and that’s good. There are plenty of things we can work on and learn from. We’ll try to incorporate those into our St. Louis preparations and make sure we address some of the things we feel like we need to work on from the Jet game, but at the same time, we need to get onto the Rams. That’s really where we’re at. It will be a big challenge for us this week, but I think the players are, based on the ones I’ve seen today that have been in and from last night, they’re excited to be 2-0 in the division and looking forward to the opportunity to play well on Sunday against a new opponent that we have to get to know and become familiar with. It’s a very young and aggressive and fast and explosive team. Hopefully we’ll be up to that challenge.

Q: What did you like about the idea of taking the ball to start with this overtime format now?

BB: I think like any game decision, it’s unique to that game. If that decision were to come up in the future in a different game, maybe it would be the same decision, maybe it wouldn’t, I don’t know. We just felt like in the game yesterday at that point, when I sent them out, that if we had an opportunity to take the ball first, then we wanted to do that. Of course, a touchdown could end the overtime and that would have been the optimal scenario. I didn’t think the wind conditions were really that significant; it was more of a crosswind than a downfield wind and based on the way the game was going, the conditions at the time and so forth, we just felt like that was the best opportunity. I think you could certainly make an argument for doing something else depending on how you wanted to handle it.

Q: With a guy like Shane Vereen, who got limited reps and then gets forced into service, is it more about the kind of athlete he is or is it more about how hard he works in practice?

BB: I think it’s a combination of a lot of things but it really comes down to everybody on our team being ready to go, period. Just ready to go, preparing during the week, getting ready to do their job and then with however many and whatever opportunities present themselves in the game, being able to go out there and do it at a quality level. That’s what every one of our players prepares for. Playing time is not something that a player controls. Opportunity isn’t something that they control. They don’t call the plays and they don’t know what the defenses are going to be or what the other side of the ball is going to be, so those opportunities aren’t always 100 percent predictable. Sometimes you think this is the way it’s going to work out and sometimes it works out that way. Most of the time it doesn’t, but there are a lot of plays that you just don’t know what the opportunities are going to present. The most important thing is every player being mentally and physically prepared to do their job, to handle whatever adjustments have to be made before or after the snap, and then to go out there and do it. That’s everybody’s job. Shane is a good athlete. Shane has worked hard, he’s a smart kid and he had more opportunities yesterday than he’s had since the preseason. Like everybody who played yesterday, there were some good things to build on and there were some things they could have done better. We’ll just keep going forward and try to work on some things and build on some of the positive things. I think everybody’s job on the team is the same. I don’t think we differentiate from one player to the next. We try to approach it all the same way and we try to have them all approach it the same way. It’s preparation then performance with whatever the opportunities are that they get.

Q: You’ve talked before about ‘Finding the Winning Edge.’ When that book came out, what did it mean for you?

BB:  I’ve read a lot of books, so off the top of my head, I’m not familiar with the exact contents of that one. I’m not saying I haven’t read it or am not familiar with it, but I don’t have it right off the top of my head right now.

Q: We talked a little bit about the nature of the travel during this stretch. After going out to Seattle, are you relieved that you had a chance to come home and play a home game before going to London? Logistically speaking, does it make it easier having been through a situation like that, having to travel to Europe in the middle of the season, having gone through that before?

BB:  I think organizationally, it probably helps to have been through that. We have an awful lot of players on our team that are with us now that weren’t on that trip. Individually, I think there isn’t a great deal of experience for that. Organizationally, some of the things we know we have to plan for [that] we dealt with the last time, we can learn from and maybe improve on. But each year is different, each trip is different, each team is different. I think the needs of this team are a little different than the needs of the ’09 team when we went out there. There are some things that are definitely unique to this trip that were a little different from the other one, but at the same time there are certainly some things that we can reflect back on and use in our preparation this time. It’s always good to play at home [like] yesterday, but we know at the start of the year we’re going to have eight home games and eight road games. For every home game, there’s a road game and vice versa. It’s all going to come out the same in the end. There’s nothing really we can do about that. We’ll take them all as they come, like all the rest of the teams do in this league. We’ll try to do the best we can with each opportunity, but we really can’t worry about it because in the end, it’s eight and eight. When they come, it’s just the schedule. It’s out of our control.

Q: Do you like going on these types of trips to generate interest for the NFL abroad?

BB: Wherever they schedule them, we’ll show up and play them. That’s really what it’s about for us.

Q: You talked yesterday after the game about the secondary doing a good job of keeping the ball in front of them. Is that something that was an added point of emphasis this week or is that something you’re always emphasizing regardless of the week and you just did a better job executing yesterday?

BB:  It’s definitely a point of emphasis every week. There’s no defense that’s designed to give up 50-yard pass completions or anything like that. That’s really the worst thing that can happen defensively, is for the offense to get all their yardage or score on one play and not make them drive the ball and execute a number of plays and third down and red area and goal line and all those situations. If they just get it all in one play, then that’s it. It’s always a point of emphasis. It’s never anything that we want to have happen. We emphasized it last week; we’ve emphasized it every week. When we had as many big plays as we did in the Seattle game, it became more of a battle cry and I want to say one of the results yesterday of that [was that] we had more opportunities in the red area and we made a couple defensive stops in the red area and that’s good. That’s a good way to hold the points down rather than seeing it all go in one play and be a 50-yard touchdown. They have to drive it and it gives you a chance to stop them and we did that a couple times and came close to blocking one of the field goals. You make your opponent work to get their points and work to get their yardage. That’s much better than just handing it to them all in one play or one pass interference call or one play that gains a lot of yards. It’s a big point of emphasis, but it always is. Last week, we probably spent even more time addressing it.

Q: On Devin McCourty’s kickoff return, it looked like it was a return designed to go to the right. When you get a kick that’s fielded to the left part of the end zone, do you schematically always have an out with a blocker that’s a just-in-case guy, making a lane going to the left, which it looked like Marquice Cole was, which opened up the lane for Devin to hit and then he just kind of hit it?

BB:  I think any time that you have to make that play, I think your description of it is pretty accurate. I think that’s right. Any time you catch the ball on one side of the field and the blocking pattern is more to the other side of the field as the runner starts to move across the field and follow that blocking pattern – if the coverage team sees that same pattern and over commits to it, sometimes there can be a seam created as the runner is heading to that side of the field and he’s able to undercut the coverage and just find that one seam there and hit it and not get to the blocking pattern. Sometimes you’re able to seal the coverage and take the blocking pattern the way it’s designed. Sometimes those flow defenders play over the top or play across the blocks and create a seam. I think that was pretty much what happened on that play. Devin was going to the right, a seam opened up and he was able to get through it and made a good run, good move on the kicker and was able to find that. That’s, again, fairly common on – whether it be a running play or a return that’s designed to go to the side. If the defense over pursues it, there’s a natural cutback lane there that a good runner can see and know when he can get in it and when he can’t. If those defenders hold on the backsides, if they don’t give up that cutback lane, hopefully that should give you a better chance to run to where the blocking pattern is designed because those guys are keeping their leverage on the backside.

Q: In your study of the end of game play of the forced fumble, is Rob Ninkovich’s play even more amazing that he was able to get the sack, which he shared with Jermaine Cunningham, but to get the half sack, the strip and recovery all in one play?

BB: It’s something that we talk about and work on every week and talk to the players and their awareness about not just hitting the quarterback, but having an awareness of the ball. We’ve seen Rob do that several times already this year. We saw it in the Buffalo game and we saw it in the Denver game and we saw in the Jets game. It’s not just sacking the quarterback, but as you go to tackle him that you have an awareness of where the ball is. As you go to make the tackle, if you can hit the ball or put pressure on the ball. As a quarterback, when you grip the ball, you don’t really have it secured like a running back does, when he covers the nose of the ball and has three points of contact between his rib cage, his elbow and the nose of the ball. It’s much harder to dislodge the ball when it’s there than when it’s in the quarterback’s grip. Rob has done that on numerous occasions, including last year as well. He has a good feel for that. It’s just an instinctive play that we coach and we talk about, but every play like that is different. It’s really the player’s awareness – in this case Rob’s awareness – that made it a game-changing play. Not only did he finish the tackle; he had that awareness of the ball being down to his left side and was able to knock it out and once he knew the ball was out then he instinctively rolled over Mark [Sanchez] and just came up and recovered it. It’s a heads up play by Rob that we’ve worked hard on it and Rob has really had several opportunities to do this year and he’s done it well in all of them. As you mentioned, it was a key play by Jermaine to be able to come inside on [Brandon] Moore and get to Sanchez’s legs and tie him up there so he couldn’t move. I think Sanchez really wasn’t able to avoid that hit and just didn’t have quite enough time to get the ball tucked way before Rob it him. It was a good play by both players

Q:  What were you most encouraged about and most discouraged about concerning yesterday’s game?

JM: I think there are a number of situational things that we talk about each week that are obviously critical to winning football games in the NFL. The turnovers are certainly a big part of that. I know we had a ball out and an opportunity for one of their defenders to catch an interception and it didn’t happen. The fact that you can come out of a game that was obviously a tight game, a division game against a team that knows us pretty well and we didn’t have any turnovers offensively. We did a decent job on third down. We converted our few opportunities down there in the red zone and we scored in the two minute to give ourselves an opportunity to win in overtime. I thought those situation things we talk about each week were positives for our team. We can do better and we have to do better offensively in terms of our overall consistency. We didn’t have a lot of negative plays. I think we had one negative run, one sack and a few penalties in there. We had some missed opportunities that were, whether we’re close on them or not, it doesn’t really matter until you make them. And we had some missed opportunities. We had some errors that we can correct and fix and that we need to, so we can continue to keep drives alive and be more productive during the entire course of the game. I think that’s a good thing for our team to see and we did enough things situationally right to be there and to have an opportunity to win it in overtime. At the same time, there’s plenty of room for us to get better and that’s all of us – coaches, players – and I think our guys will respond to that.

Q: What has been the struggle in slowing down the pace of the offense late in games?

JM: It’s never really one thing. I think yesterday we had the offensive pass interference call there, I believe on our first play when we got the ball back with maybe five and a half minutes to go. That put us in a situation where – anytime it’s first-and-20, those aren’t easy situations to overcome against a defense that plays the way the Jets do, and I would say most defenses. I think no matter what we choose to do, what mode we’re in, whether we’re using our up-tempo, whether we’re huddling, whether we’re trying to run the football, throw it, I think it really comes down to trying to make the best call we can and hopefully putting the players in the right situation to be successful and going out and executing in those pressure situations, which is really what it is. I thought we had a good two-minute drive there in the fourth quarter to put it into overtime and we have to be able to execute in the fourth quarter regardless of the mode that we’re in.

Q: We saw that Shane Vereen got the start in the backfield yesterday. When you are preparing for the first offensive series of each game, how do you decide which running back will start?

JM: I think a lot of things could determine what the actual play of the game actually is. I don’t think we ever spend too much time talking about the very first play of the game. The guys know it’s going to come from a certain grouping of things, but like all the rest of our skill positions – there are one tight end sets that have [Rob] Gronkowski, there are one tight end sets that have [Aaron] Hernandez, there are three tight end sets that have three of the four guys in there and then we have some other ones, and the same is true for the backs. Yesterday, the way we started the game, we kind of had a rotation based on the grouping that was on the field and it just so happened we started the game with that grouping and Shane was in there. Any one of our backs could start the game. We have confidence in all of them. I believe even in Seattle, Aaron started in the backfield as the single back. There are a lot of different things that go into that. Hopefully we’re trying to make a good call to begin the game and have a positive play and get our first drive of the game going. It could be field position, did we start after a turnover on defense? Are we backed up? Did we have a kickoff return that gave us good field position? There are a lot of different things that could go into that – whether we’re going to go no-huddle, whether we’re not going to go no-huddle. What the defense is when you put the grouping out there could essentially be another factor. Shane is one of those guys and did some productive things for us yesterday.

Q: Brandon Lloyd was limited yesterday with only one catch and a couple of drops. Why did he struggle and have you seen struggles like this from him in the past?

JM: No, I mean each game is different, but we gave him the chore of really having an opportunity to go down the field on some of those different play-action type plays and you’re right, a couple of those catches would have been great catches. The funny thing is we always anticipate that he’s going to do it because he has so many times previously and I think he will going forward. I think it was one of those days where we were close on some deep throws. There were some missed opportunities there. I’m sure Brandon would like to make some of those plays and we have to work hard in practice. I think that’s where the timing and chemistry and those deep throws that obviously have a lower percentage chance of working. You really have to try to work hard in practice as much as you can in those couple days you have each week to try to master some of those things and get them to improve as best we can. I don’t think that has been a normal thing for Brandon to go like that and have one catch out of so many different targets, but it’s not just him. There are some other things we can do better to help some of those plays and situations. We have to do a good job of trying to make sure that everybody’s targeted inside the numbers, outside the numbers, down field and try to reduce as much offensive stress as we can and Brandon is definitely going to be a part of that.

Q: Are you still trying to figure out what plays will work with each offensive group? Is it hard to simplify the offense down to the few things you do really well?

JM:  I think that you always try to evaluate what the team does well and hopefully we’re making as many good decisions about what to do with our players and our offense as we can all the time. I think you’ll also learn as you go through this portion of the season, you learn each week if you, as you go, some of the things that, there are always some things you learn from each game, whether it be a new package that may have a chance to be productive for you or less of something else and more of this. I also think that there are so many factors that go into each week that it’s a different defense, like the way we attacked Seattle, it would have been hard to say that’s exactly the way to attack the Jets because they’re so different in terms of the way they play and the schemes they use and the player strengths they have on defense. You try to take the things that you do best that make sense to use against the team you’re playing and then try to do them the best you can that week. I think there’s always another factor that goes into it, which would be an in-game adjustment because I know there are certain games we go into expecting to be pressured a lot and maybe we don’t get blitzed. Or there’s a certain game we expect a lot of coverage and we get pressured a lot. In those situations, you may have to change what you anticipated would be a strength for your team as you go into it and try to do something else. It’s Week 7 of the season, going into Week 8. There are always things you can learn about your team so that hopefully you’re playing your best football as you head into the last half to last quarter of the season. So hopefully you’re really peaking at the right time. I hope I answered that.

Q: How much is Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez’s health affecting the efficiency of the offense at this point?
JM: Well every player that we’re playing with we anticipate them and expect them to be able to carry out their responsibilities on the plays they are out there on. There is no team in the National Football League at this point that is healthy anymore. There are a lot of guys that deal and play with injuries and I have a lot of respect and appreciation for every guy that does it. We just have to do a great job of executing whatever scheme or whatever assignment we’re asked to do. Those two are guys who have done a nice job of trying to do their assignments and showing a lot of toughness and all the rest of it. They’re two of many and at this point, like I said, whether a guy is a little bit limited, whether he’s out there all the time, whether he’s not out there, whatever it may be, if they’re capable of playing in the game to a certain point, maybe it’s a limited number of snaps, maybe it’s not. I think you have to put them out there and expect them to do their assignments well.

Q: With the Patriots set to face the team you previously coached, what do you take away from your experience with the St. Louis Rams?

JM: It’s always interesting to see someone else, and when I say someone, I mean that there are a lot of people in charge in every organization in different aspects of it. I think it was a learning experience to see how other people view trying to run their organization and do it successfully. Coach [Steve] Spagnuolo, Billy Devaney and Kevin Demoff, they had a certain way to do things and it was different than what I had experienced before and I’d say that’s pretty much in every area. But I would say that’s probably common among most teams in the NFL, that it’s very different. Whether it was the way they ran practice, how they carried out their walkthrough, the structure of their day during the course of the season, how we did the draft, what we did in terms of our preparation for the offseason although we had the lockout last year, just so many different ways to approach it and to try to be successful and certainly the people that I worked for last year, they have had a history of being successful in a number of different organizations and I have a great deal of respect for the way they worked. It was, it was a valuable experience for me to learn and see how other people do things and see how dramatically different it could be, how many different ways there to try to be successful doing this thing, which is obviously a very hard thing to do in this league because it’s so competitive. But, a lot of good players there… This defense is going to present a lot of different challenges than we’ve faced in certain weeks here, a little bit of a different style. Coach [Jeff] Fisher is a great coach. I obviously didn’t have the chance to coach with him there, but I’ve coached against him before. He does a great job with his team, his defense is aggressive. There are a lot of players on the defense that I’m familiar with and we expect it to be a great challenge there in London.

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New England Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick addresses the media at Gillette Stadium on Friday, July 27, 2012.

BB: Second day of camp – just trying to grind through it, take it one day at a time here. Hopefully we have a good day today.
Q: Can you talk about Dont’a Hightower and what kind of impact you expect him to have as a rookie?
BB: Dont’a obviously comes from a real good program. [He] was a very productive player early in his career and of course had an outstanding year last year. He’s done a lot of different things, did a lot of different things at Alabama. He played primarily inside, a little bit outside and played some defensive end in some of their nickel four-man line things. What’s he doing to do here? I don’t know. We’ll see how he does. But he’s had flexibility in college in a good program at a high level of competition. He’s a smart guy, works hard, he’s got some different skills. We’ll see how they all play out.
Q: When you have a player like that, how difficult is it to balance when they’re young taking advantage of versatility and making sure you go step by step so they get established in a role?
BB: That’s a good question because if you wait too long to move him or to try something else then you’re too far behind and it’s harder to work out. If you throw it all in there at once, sometimes that can be overwhelming and then you don’t get one thing right. It’s a good question. You try to find that balance. You take it at a pace that you think the player can handle and sometimes you’re right, sometimes you’re wrong and you have to adjust it one way or the other. Until you work with a guy and you’re trying to do something like that with him, you have to try to figure it out on the run sometimes and that can be challenging. But he’s a smart kid and he definitely understands football and football concepts – that comes pretty quickly to him so that’s good. He might not know exactly what every part of his assignment is, he just spatially knows where he’s playing, who is next to him, can figure out kind of how he’s supposed to fit things. It just instinctually comes to him so that can cover up for maybe not knowing exactly precisely what the exact assignment is but just being able to figure it out.
Q: Any roster moves today?
BB: We added an offensive tackle, Darrion Weems from Oregon.
Q: From looking at the film from yesterday, how would you evaluate Rob Gronkowski compared to how he used to practice before his ankle surgery?
BB: I think when you get to training camp, you try to keep from making minute-to-minute evaluations on anybody. You look at a body of work and I would expect everybody after the first day to get a little bit more refined, get a little bit better timing, get a little bit better football playing – anticipation, execution and all that. We’ll see how that goes after a few days. I would say that about all of our players. Get out there, we got going yesterday, hopefully things will be better today for everybody. Hopefully they’ll be better tomorrow than they were today. At some period of time after we’ve had an opportunity to get everybody acclimated and get everybody enough reps and opportunity to do something then we’ll sit down and we’ll really take a closer look at the evaluation. We try not to evaluate play-to-play at this point in the season.
Q: Some pictures surfaced of Tom Brady cliff diving in Costa Rica. What are your guidelines for players during the offseason on what they are and aren’t allowed to do?
BB: We have rules – there are NFL rules and then there are club rules. Those are handled between the club, the league and the players.
Q: Would something like that be inside or outside the organization?
BB: I wouldn’t comment on any of our club rules and any discipline that we have is all handled internally, not publicly.
Q: Would it fall under the category of skiing or something like that?
BB: Like I said, wherever anything falls is between a club and the player or players that are involved – whatever the situation is.
Q: Have you seen the pictures?
BB: What difference does it make? Do we have any football questions here?
Q: Can you talk about having Ras-I Dowling back? If healthy, what can he mean to the defense?
BB: Yeah, it’s good to see him out there. I thought Ras-I made progress last year when he was on the field. He missed some time in camp and then he came back and then he wasn’t able to finish the season. Look, that’s really the key for any player – is to be out there on a consistent basis, to be out there, get the instruction, practice, watching all the film, correct it, do it again, gain reps, not only gain confidence but gain the technique and confidence of doing it against high level competition. That’s the key for him. That’s key for any young player. He was able to do some of that last year and make some progress. Hopefully he’ll be able to do a lot more of that this year. Of course it’s great to see him out there and he had a good spring and was able to perform throughout the spring in our practice sessions so that was good. Certainly it’s something that he nor any of the rookies were able to do last year because that wasn’t available. I think that helps everybody. That’s all relative – so is everybody else in the league but as an individual, it certainly helped those guys to be able to have the time on the field this spring leading into training camp that they didn’t have last year.
Q: Does that also apply to Shane Vereen?
BB: It applies to everybody – our players, everybody else’s players, I’m sure. Not only our rookies this year but our second-year guys who didn’t have that buildup last year heading into training camp, even though they had the season, there’s some experience. Certainly the spring that leads up to it is an important part of the preparation process. It’s good they had and I’m sure they all benefitted from it.

Q: Are you monitoring Rob Gronkowski more closely because of the ankle injury?
BB: We monitor every player on our roster, absolutely.

Q: Do you look at him more closely?
BB: We monitor every player. Depending on what those players need then we give them whatever attention it is that they need. We do that with everybody. You think we walk in here and say, ‘We don’t care about you guys today – we’re just going to care about you guys’? We care about everybody. I don’t know any other way to do it.
Q: Throughout your time here, we’ve seen you invest a lot of draft picks on tight ends, with Daniel Graham, Ben Watson, David Thomas and obviously Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez. What is it about the tight end position that gives you what appears to be an affinity for the position and have you always had that affinity?
BB: I think all the positions on the field are important. You can acquire players in different ways but the most important thing I think is to try to put together a competitive team. That’s what we try to do every year. How the draft turns out, you never know. None of those players were really – what was [Daniel] Graham – 21 [overall draft pick]. There were a lot of players picked before him and certainly some of the other people that you mentioned. You don’t know how a draft is going to go, you don’t know what guys are going to be there when you pick at 30, 40, 50, whatever it is. We try to take advantage of those picks and do the best we can with whoever we’ve taken and we’ve, obviously I’ve been here quite a few years, sometimes you take one position, sometimes you take another position but there’s no set, ‘OK, well we’re going to take ‘X’ number of tight ends’ or that type of thing, no.
Q: You’ve joked about it in the past about it – after one draft you joked that it was surprising that you didn’t take a tight end. Is it the versatility you like?
BB: It was in jest. Really, it isn’t a goal of mine to every year draft a tight end, honestly it isn’t. I don’t mind taking them, but I’ll take any position, I’ll draft anybody if they can help our team.
Q: Aaron Hernandez spent part of the practice working with the wide receivers. Is that an expansion for him or is he different than the other tight ends?
BB: The nature of that position is you’re working in the passing game and in the running game and in pass protection. All of those players will do those things at various points in time – maybe not every day but over the course of a number of practices they all do them.
Q: Does Aaron Hernandez’s skill set allow you to do more than most tight ends?
BB: Aaron is a good receiver, there’s no question about that. There are certainly some things we work with him on that are specific routes to him or his position, are the one that he would run or run more frequently that others, sure.
Q: Do you have any impressions of how Alfonzo Dennard is adjusting?
BB: I think Alfonzo has done a good job of trying to pick things up here. Our system is a little different than what they ran at Nebraska. He’s worked hard. He certainly got a lot of attention there the first couple of days before everybody else got here. That was good for him to get a little bit extra coaching, extra work there but he seems to be doing alright.
Q: How has Jonathan Fanene done?
BB: He’s been here one day.
Q: So you’re not going to put him in the Patriots Hall of Fame quite yet?
BB: Again, I don’t think we want to get into a ‘How did he do on this play? How did he do on that play?’ We’ll go a little while here, we’ll have a lot of plays, a lot of days strung together – we’ll be looking at a couple hundred plays instead of a handful on the first day. I think it’s a little too early to get too high or too low on somebody on the first day of practice.
Q: Some of the things that he’s done in OTAs, mini-camp and now, do they match up with what you saw on film?
BB: Yeah, oh yeah. He’s got good playing strength, he’s quick. He’s definitely a guy that’s going to be real competitive in that group. It looks like a pretty good group, there’s a lot of competition in there but I think he’ll be very competitive with them.
Q: When you put together a roster and you have a third tight end on the depth chart, how much of a blocking assignment is that. How much does it play into a guy winning that job?
BB: It depends on who else you have and what his other skills are.
Q: So your extra tackles and all that combine?
BB: Yeah. Ultimately, each player has to establish his own value to the team in whatever form that is. Ultimately when you put together the team all the jobs have to be accounted for somehow. It doesn’t have to be by this person or that person but somebody has to do it. Somebody has to cover kickoffs, you have to put a kickoff team out there so who is that going to be? What group of people, what combination of people is that going to be? You figure that out and maybe that plays into the final decision. Or maybe you have that pretty well covered and it’s the kickoff return team or it’s short yardage and goal-line or whatever it is. In the end, you have to take a look at all those things – they’re all factors. That’s how we try to put together the team – look at all the jobs that have to be done, try to figure out where our depth is and if there’s one void there then you have to figure out how you’re going to fill that. Is it change your scheme or find somebody to do it on your roster or find somebody that isn’t on your roster to try to do it? Those are the issues.
Q: When you bring in Visanthe Shiancoe and Daniel Fells, is it important that their skills match up with the starters’ skills, so that if the starter gets injured they can come in and do similar things?
BB: I think you could look at it that way. It would depend on what you’re trying to do – what that person’s role is. If their role is strictly to be a backup player and you’re never going to play the guy until the person in front of him gets hurt, then that would probably be good. But if that wasn’t the case and you were going to use that player in other ways and other combinations with other assignments or utilize his skills, I would say maybe not necessarily, you wouldn’t necessarily want that. It would just depend on what that player’s skills were and how it meshed with the other ones and what your scheme was.
Q: With a player like Aaron Hernandez who is a bit of a tweener between a receiver and a tight end, is it important to have another player like that on your roster so you’re not relying on that first player?
BB: Again, if you have that then you could put that player in there for him. If you don’t have that, then you would have other players on your roster who would do things maybe not quite the same but fill a similar role. If he’s an inside receiver and [Wes] Welker is an inside receiver then they’re not the same but they’re both inside receivers, as an example.
Q: Donte’ Stallworth talked about his maturation as a wide receiver. Do you see the changes since he was last here in 2007? Do you see a better route runner?
BB: Yeah, definitely. I would say Donte’ has really matured a lot since he was here in ’07. He’s been a very positive example and influence with what he does on a daily basis but also some of things that he’s done with other players on the team. He’s shown a lot more leadership and he’s a very professional athlete, he really takes his job seriously and acts in a very professional way. He’s a great example for all of us on a daily basis. I would say that’s definitely grown since he was here in ’07. He’s been through a lot but he handles himself very well and like I said, very professionally. He’s a great example for all of us on a daily basis

 

The New England Patriots announced today the signing of second-round draft picks DB Ras-I Dowling and RB Shane Vereen. Terms of the contracts were not disclosed. The patriots also signed rookie free agent DE Christian Cox out of Utah.

 

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. – The New England Patriots announced today the signing of second-round draft picks DB Ras-I Dowling and RB Shane Vereen. Terms of the contracts were not disclosed. The patriots also signed rookie free agent DE Christian Cox out of Utah.

In addition, the Patriots released first-year QB Jonathan Crompton.

Dowling, a defensive back from Virginia, was selected by the Patriots in the second round of the 2011 NFL Draft with the 33rd selection overall.  Dowling, 6-1, 198 pounds, started 25 of 40 games at right cornerback for Virginia, recording 160 tackles (115 solo). Dowling, 23, who played in all 12 games with two starts as a true freshman, was voted a team captain as a senior.

Vereen, a running back from California, was selected by the Patriots in the second round of the 2011 NFL Draft with the 56th selection overall. Vereen, 5-9, 205 pounds, finished his college career with 2,834 rushing yards (5.10 avg.) and 29 touchdowns and 674 receiving yards on 74 receptions and six touchdowns. In addition, the 22-year old returned 24 kickoffs for 551 yards and two punts for 10 yards. His 29 touchdown runs tie Marshawn Lynch (2004-06) and Jahvid Best (2007-09) for third on Cal’s all-time record chart behind Russell White (35; 1990-92) and Chuck Muncie (32; 1973-75). His 4,069 all-purpose yards rank fifth in school annals behind Deltha O’Neal (4,998; 1996-99), Russell White (4,943; 1990-92), Marshawn Lynch (4,574; 2004-06) and Chuck Muncie (4,194; 1973-75).

Cox, a 25-yaer old rookie free agent from Utah was a first-team all-conference defensive who originally came to Utah as a walk-on. The 6-3, 250-pounder earned all conference honors in 2010 after starting all 13 games and finishing with 53 total tackles and 4.0 sacks.

Crompton, 6-3, 222 pounds, was originally drafted by the San Diego Chargers in the fifth round of the 2010 NFL Draft out of Tennessee. He was waived by San Diego on Sept. 4. Crompton was signed to the San Diego practice squad on Sept. 5 but was waived from the squad on Sept. 7. He was signed to the New England practice squad on Nov. 3.

 

 

 

 

Shane Vereen Interview

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Shane Vereen Interview

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Vereen is a dynamic speedster with not only kick returning ability but the receiving skills to contribute early.  He is a very mature player that will be a great addition to a locker room.

While Vereen declared for the draft early, he also graduated from school a year early.  He has NFL bloodlines, as his father was a drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 70’s.

He has legitimate track speed coupled with great acceleration and excellent lateral movement to make defenders miss in the open field.  He is an outstanding receiver because of his great ball skills and natural ability to make the hands catch but also due to his extensive experience lining up in the slot for Cal and running routes.

Vereen is not a contact runner and is a bit narrow in build.  Cal’s scheme featured wide open lanes in which to run and the biggest knock on Vereen is his ability to fit in a pro style offense.

This guy will definitely make an impact as a third down back and kick returner right away because of his athleticism and ball skills but he has potential to be a feature ball carrier.  He will flourish in a pass heavy offense because of his blocking ability and hands out of the backfield.

Cal Football 2010School: California
Position: RB
Hometown: Valencia, CA
Date of Birth: 03/02/89
Height: 5102
Weight: 211
Bench Press: 31
Vertical Jump: 34″
40 T: 4.50
Projection: 3rd Round

From ROOKIE DRAFT.com

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