Yes, I'm a Boston sports fan so #### you too
by: patsrock07
2008 Patriots Season Preview
Jul 23, 2008 | 10:06AM | report this

After having the only 16-0 regular season in NFL History, the Patriots are looking to follow that up by actually securing the Superbowl this year. On paper this team is as strong as any, but has 4 potential weak spots: Cornerback, Tight End, Running Back, and Right Tackle. Despite this the Patriots play a comically easy schedule, and should have little trouble securing a 1st round playoff bye week. So lets look at the Patriots position by position on their roster.

Offense:

Quarterbacks:  There isn't much to say that hasn't been said about the group's leader Tom Brady.  He threw for 50 touchdowns last year setting an NFL record as well as leading the league in completion percentage, yards, and passer rating.  He will look to continue his success this year with mainly the same supporting cast.  Backing him up will be an interesting battle in training camp.  The Patriots took Quarterback Kevin O'Connell in the fourth round of the draft and he seems likely to get a roster spot.  That leaves the two other quarterbacks from last years squad fighting for the backup position.  Matt Cassell has the most experience in the Patriots system, but hasn't shown much in the few opportunities he's had, most notably in the game against the Dolphins last year in which he threw an interception and was promptly replaced. Matt Gutierrez did not get on the field last year in his first year with the team and is an unproven commodity.

Running Backs:  Many times there is a question of which running game is going to show up for the Patriots.  The team returns their starter Laurence Maroney.  Maroney has at time appeared dominant while at other times wholly ineffective.  He turned it on in the playoffs last year and the Patriots hope that this is the player that will show up in the fall.  Backing him up will be Sammy Morris who ran effectively last year before suffering a freak injury that ended his season. Kevin Faulk remains one of the better third down backs in the NFL and is deadly coming off of screens and draws.  He lacks the ability to be an every down back so that job falls to Maroney and Morris

Wide Recievers:  Here also the Patriots return a player fresh off a record setting season. Randy Moss year broke the record for touchdown receptions surpassing the old record held by Jerry Rice.  He will look to have another productive season alongside slot specialist  Wes Welker who tied for the NFL lead in receptions last year with 117.  This duo work extremely well together as when moss is double teamed, it opens the underneath routes that welker preys upon.  When teams focus on Welker, Moss burns them deep.  The recieving corps did lose reciever Donte Stallworth to free agency, however he had been slipping in the depth chart during the season and the team feels that reciever Jabbar Gaffney will be an adequate replacement.  The team will also hope that Chad Jackson fill the potential he had when the Patriots drafted him in the second round.  Thus far he has been hampered by injuries, but he should be coming in healthy this season and If there was ever a time for him to show some development it's now. His skill set mirrors that of Stallworth, so much so that he even looks like him.

Tight Ends:  The pats have a solid group of tight ends though definetly not an elite grouping.  Ben Watson is the leader of the group and had a solid year although abbreviated due to injuries and overshadowed by the group at wide reciever.  He can dissappear at times and needs to show more consistency in his play. He has somewhat sub-par hands as well. Behind him is David Thomas who most say has the best hands on the team.  He didn't get on the field last year due to a foot injury, but looks to be healthy going into training camp.  The team also brought in Marcus Pollard who will look to fit in somehow with this group.  This group lacks a true blocking tight end as all three of the above are more recieving tight ends.  I would not be surprised to see them add another tight end to come in and block in three tight end sets. 

Offensive Line:  This is a group that performed very well all year long and then completely laid an egg in the superbowl.  The unit returns three Pro Bowlers in Matt Light, Logan Mankins, and Dan Koppen.  Light is a bit of an enigma.  He can at times stop elite pass rushers dead in their tracks and at others players can eat him up.  Mankins is an animal at the left guard spot.  He plays with the mean streak that teams love to see in their lineman and is a dominant run blocker.  Koppen is a very intelligent center who rarely makes the wrong call at the line.  On the other side Stephen Neal is a decent player but is often hurt and definetly not a superstar.  at the right tackle comes one of the more interesting story lines going into training camp.  The presumptive starter Nick Kazcur was involved in an offseason incident involving oxycodone and it is unknown as of now whether there will be discipline from the NFL.  If he is suspended then Ryan O'Callaghan will move to fill his spot.  O'Callaghan has a shot to be the starter regardless as there is not much of a drop off between the two players.  I see this being a hotly contested battle in training camp.  The team also signed free agent Oliver Ross who has also had a very productive year.  As backups the team has Russ Hochstein who can play both guards and the center position in addition to Wesley Britt, and Billy Yates.

Defense:

Defensive Line:  This is one of the better defensive lines in the NFL.  The group doesn't necessarily put up the numbers of a 4-3 front, however, their job is to occupy blockers and the big bodies up front do that as well as anyone else.  The leader of the line is Richard Seymour who missed his first pro bowl in five seasons last year as a result of being injured. When healthy Seymour is the best 3-4 defensive end in the NFL and arguably the best D-lineman in the NFL. Vince Wilfork is an absolute beast on the inside who constantly commands a double team.  At the other end Ty Warren is the best pass rusher of the group and compliments the other two exceptionally.  At backup the patriots have defensive end Jarvis Green who would start on most teams. Mike Wright and Le Kevin Smith round out the unit.

Linebackers:  This unit underwent a major overhaul in the offseason.  This could be unit that puts up a lot of sacks as Mike Vrable and Adalius Thomas should both play exculsively on the outside this year where they are both most comfortable.  Both are very effective edge rushers and Vrabel is an all pro from last season.  On the inside Tedy Bruschi will return for another season.  Although he is nowhere near the player he once was he can still be effective in small doses.  In order to make those doses small, the patriots brought in a pair of other linebackers to give the team a three man rotation at ILB.  The team signed free agent Victor Hobson from the Jets.  Hobson is already familiar with a similar defense from his time playing under Belichick disciple Eric Mangini.  He should adapt quickly and I think will be a very solid contributor to this defense.  The team also used the tenth pick in the draft to draft linebacker Jerod Mayo out of Tennessee.  Mayo is an athletic backer who excells in space and has the speed to be very effective in pass coverage.  The team also drafted outside linebacker Shawn Crable who is a bit of a project, but has the raw skills to be a monster pass rusher.  Another interesting player is Vince Redd.  He is very raw but has a great deal of size and athleticism that could allow him to stick around if he can make himself a spot on special teams.  There is also the possibility that Junior Seau could return for yet another NFL season, however that is an unknown at this point. 

Defensive Backfield:  In my opinion the shakiest unit on the team.  The loss of Asante Samuel will hurt as he was their most consistent player in the backfield. Ellis Hobbs will now be asked to be the team's #1 corner and there is considerable doubt as to whether he can handle this.  The team signed free agent Fernando Bryant and at this time he is the presumptive starter opposite Hobbs.  The team also signed corner jason Webster and used a couple of draft picks here in Terrence Wheatley and Jason Wilhite.  Wheatley has a chance to make an impact this year as the nickel back while Wilhite will be in a battle to make the roster.  At safety the situtation is a little more stable. James Sanders is an extremely underrated starter. Rodney Harrison will man the Strong Safety position and should be solid unless an injury crops up as they seem to have done in recent years.  Backing up Sanders will be Brandon Merriweather who started to come on late in the season last year and could have a chance to start at some point this season.  We just have to hope that he spent a lot of time on the juggs machine this offseason as he dropped at least five passes that should have been intercepted.  Backing up Harrison will be free agent pickup Tank Williams who was once a highly touted young safety, but had some rough years with the Vikings. 

Special Teams:  The team returns Kicker Stephen Gostkowski to handle kickoff and field goal duties.  Gostowski has a booming leg and can pin a team deep on kickoffs.  On field goals, he is solid but not exceptional and his ability to kick in the clutch is largely unknown as the team was ahead pretty much all of last season.  handling the punting duties will be Chris Hanson who is more of a dicrectional punter than a power punter.  He excells at pinning teams down near the goal line.  Punt retruns will likely be handled by Wes Welker as Belichick likes surehanded players to handle that spot.  Kickoff returns are a bit of an unknown at this point. It is likely that they will be handled by a variety of different people as the season goes on.  Maroney, Faulk, and Hobbs have all handled kicks in the past, but the team drafted special teams specialist Matt Slater who also has a chance to return kicks if he has a good camp.

Team Strength:  The passing game.  The record setting unit from last year is mostly intact.  Look for another good season from this group although it would be hard to replicate the success of last season.

Team Weakness:  The defensive backfield.  Already a weakness on the team, it was further hampered by the loss of Asante Samuel.  A lot will depend on the ability of the rookies to play as well as the performance of Fernando Bryant.

Predicted Record 14-2: The Patriots schedule consists of potential blowouts. They play 6 of the 7 worst teams last year and play the Dolphins and Jets twice. They should be pumped up enough to beat both the Chargers and the Colts this year, but they will lose in Seattle because it is a notoriously tough place to play, and in Denver because they always lose to Denver.

 

10 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NFL, New England Patriots, Tom Brady, Laurence Maroney, Randy Moss, Wes Welker, Jerod Mayo, Richard Seymour, Vince Wilfork, Rodney Harrison
 
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justanotherfan
Jul 23, 2008
11:52 AM
patsrock'
From one avowed Pats' fan to another. A quite succinct piece. But a lot of what went wrong with the team least year stemmed in terms of the SB and they're taking the Giants too lightly.
Once Neal went down injured during the game Brady lost much of his protection. And no one stepped up to the plate adequately.


They'll win the division comfortably and then may well have to take on the likes of either the Charger, Colts or Jags in the playoffs. This time around however there can be no excuses. And at the same time Belichick's attitude and approach'll have to change. He'll be under intense scrutiny once the season commences. Not just from the fans, the press but from a whole gamut of individuals who mightn't have had an interest in the game before. But whom are now interested to see what'll happen next.





justan' aka tophatal ..........

SRMgenius
Jul 23, 2008
12:12 PM
In 3 years the Pats miss the playoffs

justanotherfan
Jul 23, 2008
1:16 PM
SRMgenius
I seriously doubt that'll happen. Pioli is one of the better GM's within the NFL. And this franchise has known how to build through the draft. And that can't always be said about a lot of the other teams within theb NFL.


justan' aka tophatal .......

SRMgenius
Jul 23, 2008
1:45 PM
Strongly disagree...that o-line is irreplaceable and the practice of using old guys on defense can only work so much...when that o-line fades, so will the Pats into the vast depths of mediocrity. Remember the Cowboys of the 90's? By the end of the 90's they were well on the decline...So it will be for the Pats of the 2000's

justanotherfan
Jul 23, 2008
2:33 PM
SRMgenius
They aren't going to go the route of Seau . They'll build through the draft and when and if need be they'll seek an aged veteran but not one who'll be over the hill.
Mark my words they've learnt that to their cost.

justan' aka tophatal ........

jmacsmac
Jul 23, 2008
3:18 PM
Patsrock: Again, nice piece. I wouldn't be surprised if things go exactly as predicted, but as I've said before, the teams that were so bad last year could be a bit tougher this year.

As to Tophat and SRMgenius...
The Pats have a proven system in a division that shows nothing but inconsistency. They do pull in many veterns, but just look at their line for proof of growing talent. This will continue.
I think my frustration with the Pats grows out of a similarity to my Broncos. The fans always expect contenders, and are really disappointed when it doesn't happen. I think the Pats are destined for a lull in the next few years, and they may miss the playoffs, but I don't see them falling out of competition as long as this system is in place.

justanotherfan
Jul 23, 2008
5:17 PM
jmacsmac
That could definitely be the case if Brady underperforms. But at the same time I doubt that the lull will be one that'll continue over prolonged period of time.
It really is about however you go about scouting your talent.

The Broncos have been a team that over the years has been built around a formidable running game. Stout defense and a more than competent offensive regimen under the tutelage of Shanahan.
Alas that hasn't been evident all that often the last couple of years. I was somewhat surprised that they cut RB Mike Bell.




justan' aka tophatal ..........

patsrock07
Jul 23, 2008
7:23 PM
Those who are unfamiliar with the Patriots fail to realize the core of this team is far different than the ones from the earlier superbowls. The offense which is the new strength of this team is quite young with the exception of Moss. All the lineman except maybe light are in their 20's. Welker is only 28 and Maroney is only in his 3rd year. Plus, Brady should be playing at the same level for another 4-5 years.

On defense the D-line is young and almost perfect as a unit. If the team can resign Wilfork than this unit can be the foundation for the next 5-6 years. The linebacking core is old, but they added new blood with a top 10 pick. For the Patriots to risk a high pick on a linebacker makes me think that he is the real deal. The secondary is young if not supremely special. Their window is at least as open as the Colts.

Lakerdabest
Jul 25, 2008
2:15 PM
hate to brake it to you no one in the NFL likes the Patriots you cheat to win games and the Dolphins will beat the Patriots once this season

patsrock07
Jul 26, 2008
5:16 PM
Hate to break it to you, I don't care if the rest of the NFL's fans hate the Pats. Oh and by the way, Andrew Bynum = overated.

Last edited by patsrock07 on July 26th at 5:17 PM.

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ABOUT ME


patsrock07
I am a 17 year old kid from Massachusetts
who loves football wth an unequivocal passion. During football season between my high school practices and games, BC games, and Patriots games I spend roughly 30 hours per week on football related activities. Thats not quite enough though so I write and comment on basically every NFL blog I can find.
Time stamping is done in Pacific Time.