Tag Archives: New England Patriots

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012.[31 Team Pics]

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]Starting in 2012, Nike will replace Reebok as the provider for uniforms in the NFL Jerseys , all but putting Reebok completely out of business I am sure. The uniforms, however real or fake, have been circulating the web, and regardless of who designed them, they are pretty damn awesome.

The Bengals, Patriots, and Redskins instantly jump out as being the most dramatic designs – the creativity level for Browns uniforms has obviously reached its peak – and sorry Packers fans, looks like you might not be around in 2012.

Check out all of the uniforms below.

Buffalo Bills

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Miami Dolphins

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

New England Patriots

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

New York Jets

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Denver Broncos

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Kansas City Chiefs

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Oakland Raiders

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

San Diego Chargers

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Baltimore Ravens

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Cincinnati Bengals

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Cleveland Browns

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Pittsburgh Steelers

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Houston Texans

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Indianapolis Colts

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Jacksonville Jaguars

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Tennessee Titans

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Dallas Cowboys

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

New York Giants

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Philadelphia Eagles

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Washington Redskins

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Arizona Cardinals

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

San Francisco 49ers

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Seattle Seahawks

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

St. Louis Rams

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Chicago Bears

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Detroit Lions

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Minnesota Vikings

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Atlanta Falcons

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Carolina Panthers

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

New Orleans Saints

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

Tampa Bay Bucs

New NFL Nike Uniforms for 2012, Real or Fake? [31 Team Pics]

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees reportedly agrees to be named as plaintiff if players sue NFL

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees has reportedly agreed to join a high-profile list of plaintiffs if the NFL‘s players choose to file an antitrust suit against the league. Several media outlets, including ESPN, have reported that Brees will join Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and Patriots guard Logan Mankins as named plaintiffs in the class-action suit, if it comes to that. There would be nine named plaintiffs, according to ESPN.The players union has not taken steps toward decertification and a possible lawsuit yet, though, as the players and owners have agreed to a 24-hour extension in their labor talks.

New England Patriots Tender Ben Jarvis Green Ellis

On Wednesday the New England Patriots decided to place a level 2 tender on Ben Jarvis Green Ellis. If another team wants the services to Ellis they will have to give up a 2nd round pick. New England already has 2 2nd round picks and if another team is willing to give New England their 2nd round pick New England would have 3 2nd round. New England picks 33rd and 60th overall in round 2. Even if Green Ellis returns New England may still draft a #2 back because Danny Woodhead is the fullback on New England’s depth chart so getting a #2 back to compliment Green Ellis is critical. I listed Green Ellis at #10 of top running backs in the draft or free agency so I’m glad New England made this move.

Is Randy Moss Worth the Trouble? Titans Sure Think So

Randy Moss Titans

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Inside the Cool Springs Galleria, the last remnants of the latest shipment of No. 84 jerseys were on display at the Titans Locker Room kiosk. One couple came out of the adjacent Victoria Secret and picked a hanger off the rack.
“Eighty-nine dollars?” a woman asked. “Not worth it.”

Plenty of customers thought otherwise, with Randy Moss jerseys flying off the racks since he joined the hometown team. The Tennessee Titans last week were alone among the NFL’s 32 franchises in putting a claim in for the gifted and mercurial wide receiver following his unceremonious release by the Minnesota Vikings after just three unproductive and combative weeks.
Their take: definitely worth it.
“I think he’s going to be great,” said Titans Locker Room area manager Dan O’Reilly, who was working the mall Tuesday morning. “I can’t wait to see what happens on the field.”
All of Nashville is in anticipation, with Moss’ arrival rivaling the Cam Newton news for headlines and talk-radio rants in this Southeastern Conference hotbed. This might be the franchise’s boldest move since the Houston Oilers uprooted from Texas for the Volunteer State.

So it was, two hours later and about 18 miles to the north, Moss came off the practice field at Baptist Sports Park and stepped behind the podium at a crowded news conference for his first public words since that rambling five-minute New England Patriots lovefest Oct. 31 — and accompanying sideswipe at Vikings coach Brad Childress — following a Vikings 28-18 loss that led to his release.

Moss, fined $20,000 by the league for not speaking to reporters earlier this year, said even less this time than he did in Foxborough. And unlike in New England, when he vowed all future interviews would consist of him asking and answering all questions, he at least did the bare minimum.
After saying he’d take two questions “three at the most” — Moss began by sending a message to his mother and two siblings that he’s doing just fine, He acknowledged his respect for Titans coach Jeff Fisher, the most tenured head coach in the league going on 17 seasons. Then dove in.

“I’ve got big, broad shoulders and can carry a lot of weight,.” Moss said. “The process of getting here has been kind of crazy. You know, I left a lot of good friends, a lot of good guys in Minnesota, and I’m sorry it didn’t work out. But the show must go on.”
And it did.
“I didn’t want to go into Minnesota and mess anything up, but I guess everybody blamed me for it. So I’ll say it again: I ain’t coming here to start no trouble.”
– Randy Moss”I think when people start understanding the business side of football, it’ll make it a better league, but like I said, I’d just like to thank my family and friends for sending out calls and texts and everything positive,” Moss continued, with the former likely a reference his lack of a contract after this season, but who knows? “To all my critics … you gotta get paid to be negative, so I look forward to coming out and helping this team however I can and whatever my role is is what I’m going to do. Hopefully, I fit into coach Fisher’s team and go out and make some plays and keep winning.”

The first question had to do with whether Moss made the Titans (5-3), tied with Indianapolis for first in the AFC South with a road date Sunday against the Miami Dolphins (4-4), a Super Bowl contender.

“No, I do not,” he said. “I told coach Fisher, I’ve had pressure on me my whole life. This is nothing new to me. So instead of coming here and thinking Super Bowl, I just want to take it one day at a time, learn the plays, take it one game at a time and if down the road is the playoffs, we’ll have that when we get to that.

Wild turkey: Pats come back, Saints steal win in Dallas, Jets roll

NFL fans were treated to a football feast on Thursday, with three competetive games, one of which featured the wildest Thanksgiving finish in years. A rundown of the day’s action:
The appetizer: New England Patriots 45, Detroit Lions 24
When this game was announced in March, we ran the following headline about the game: “Patriots get to maul Lions on Thanksgiving.” Judging by the score of Thursday’s game in the Motor City, you’d think we were a mix of Nostradamus and Jimmy the Greek. But despite the 21-point margin of victory, this game was a pretty competitive affair that was in doubt for the first 45 minutes.
The Pats only pulled away after a 79-yard touchdown on third down tied the game and broke the Lions’ spirits. Second-year veteran Alphonso Smith(notes) played the role of turkey on that play, getting burned by Deion Branch(notes) and wildly flailing all over the field in his pursuit.
Tom Brady(notes) finished the game 21 for 27 with 341 yards, four touchdowns and no interceptions, giving him a perfect quarterback rating of 158.3 (the second time in his career he’s achieved that mark).
Detroit lost its seventh straight Thanksgiving Day game, the longest streak in franchise history. The team has been outscored by an average of 23 points in those games.
The main course: New Orleans Saints 30, Dallas Cowboys 27
New Orleans stormed to an early 17-point lead and it looked like Thanksgiving in Dallas would be as exciting as your typical Turkey Day in Detroit. But a late first-half field goal gave the Cowboys a bit of momentum headed into the locker room and the team rallied in the second half to take a 27-23 lead.
It was to be one of Dallas’ great Thanksgiving comebacks, on par with Clint Longley’s 1974 miracle against the Washington Redskins. When Roy Williams snagged a key third-down catch, the game appeared all but over. New Orleans had one timeout and Dallas could have run down the clock to under a minute. But before Williams went down, the Saints’ Malcolm Jenkins(notes) somehow wrestled the ball away from him (above). The Saints recovered and Drew Brees(notes) quickly led the team 89 yards en route to a touchdown and a 30-27 lead.
New Orleans left 1:55 for Dallas to score, but the team mismanaged the two-minute drill (maybe it was poor cardiovascular endurance) and couldn’t get close enough for kicker David Buehler(notes), who yanked a potentially game-tying 59-yard field goal a little left. That let Saints coach Sean Payton breathe a sigh of relief. The coach has tried to take one of those pesky pre-field goal timeouts, but it went unseen by the refs. Had an official seen it, Buehler would have had another chance to win the game. Instead, the defending champs got a much-needed victory in their battle with Atlanta for the NFC South crown.
The dessert: New York Jets 26, Cincinnati Bengals 10
An ugly first half, possibly affected by too much turkey and stuffing, was followed by an explosive second. The lowly Bengals took a 7-3 lead into the locker room, but two Brad Smith(notes) touchdowns — one of an end around to start the third quarter and another on a kick return in which his shoe popped off — helped the Jets to what became an easy victory. At 9-2, Rex Ryan and the Jets are living up to the preseason expectations they helped set.
It’s the second-best start in team history.

Patriots vow no letdown against lowly Lions

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady  celebrates a touchdown by running back Danny Woodhead against the Indianapolis Colts during the third quarter during an NFL football game in Foxborough, Mass., Sunday, Nov. 21, 2010.

The New England Patriots shouldn’t worry about a letdown against the lowly Lions after beating two of the AFC’s best teams.
Even if they have one, it might be tough to lose to Detroit.
The Patriots go into Thursday’s game with an 8-2 record following wins over Pittsburgh and Indianapolis. The Lions enter their annual Thanksgiving Day home game at 2-8 after losses to Buffalo, which entered that game winless, and Dallas, which had just two victories at the time.
New England coach Bill Belichick said the Lions’ familiarity with the traditional holiday game should help them.
Not enough, apparently. Detroit has lost its past six Thanksgiving matchups by an average of 23 points, none by fewer than 11.
Never one to let complacency creep in, Belichick is stressing to his players that five of the Lions losses this season have been by five points or fewer.
“He really stays on top of us,” wide receiver Wes Welker said Tuesday, “and makes sure that were not getting overconfident or believing in the noise outside the locker room and understand that every game’s tough in the NFL.”
That reality was driven home on Nov. 7 when the Patriots took a 6-1 record into Cleveland to face the Browns at 2-5. By the end of the first quarter, the Browns led 10-0. Entering the fourth, it was 24-7.
“We saw what happens when you don’t execute, especially early in a game, with Cleveland,” tackle Matt Light said. “We can’t afford to come out and play a game like that, so when you’re playing on the road, and it’s an environment like this, it’s a short week, you’ve got to keep on top of everything.”
The Patriots didn’t do that before the Cleveland game. Several players said they weren’t focused during practice.
But this week, with only three days to prepare, they jumped right into their work for Thursday’s game after a 31-28 win over Indianapolis.
“We came in Monday and we didn’t even talk about the Colts,” quarterback Tom Brady said Tuesday. “We talked about the Lions and what we need to do to beat them. We talked about coming in and having a good day today, so we crammed a lot of information into these two days.”
The Patriots, as usual, heaped praise on an underdog opponent.
Coach Jim Schwartz “is one of the smartest guys I’ve ever worked with,” said Belichick, who had him as a scout from 1993-95 while serving as head coach in Cleveland.
Defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, the second pick in this year’s draft, is “a very disruptive young player,” tight end Alge Crumpler said.
“They’ve got a lot of weapons offensively,” Light said. “They’ve got a lot of guys defensively, especially up front, that play really well. It’s going to be a tough game.”
The Patriots’ defense may be suspect, especially against the pass, but their offense has developed into a balanced attack with the emergence of a solid running game. Against the Colts, they rushed for 168 yards and passed for 178.
Since BenJarvus Green-Ellis took over as starting running back after Laurence Maroney was traded and Fred Taylor was hurt, he’s rushed for six touchdowns and run for 76 yards or more four times in seven games.
Danny Woodhead, picked up after the opening game when he was cut by the New York Jets, ran for a career-high 69 yards, including a 36-yard touchdown on Sunday.
Neither was thrown for a loss in a combined 50 carries over the past two games.
“You never want to lose yards in a game, especially in the NFL. Yards are so precious,” Woodhead said. “We just go with what we see as running backs and the (offensive) line usually gives us something great to see and where to run, so we just play off of them.”
A strong running game gives Brady more options. Defenses become more susceptible to the play-action when they might commit to the run while Brady drops back to pass. That makes things even easier for one of the NFL’s top quarterbacks.
“Anyone who has ever played this game knows that you run it until they can stop it,” Brady said. “You can control the tempo of the game running the ball and I think that’s what we’ve done a good job of the last couple of weeks.”
And Detroit has allowed the seventh-most yards rushing this season, another encouraging sign for New England.
Starting with the 2008 season, the Patriots are 29-13, the Lions 4-38. Starting with the 2001 season, the Patriots have won three Super Bowls. Since 1958, the Lions have won one playoff game.
But even if they had a normal week to prepare, the Patriots wouldn’t waste time thinking about that. They take the Lions very seriously as another team trying to beat them.
“Everything that we do is so methodical,” Light said. “The focus really just comes from each guy understanding that you’ve got a job to do. You’ve got to get in (and) focus on it. You’ve got to work hard, so there’s no real rocket science to it.”

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Embarrassed Last Week, Patriots Do the Humbling

PITTSBURGH — At one point in the first half Sunday, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was spotted blistering his offensive line for some perceived infraction. It was hard to tell what had Brady upset. He was barely touched by the Pittsburgh Steelers, who possess one of the most harrowing defenses in the N.F.L. And the expectations for the running game against a defense that had not yet allowed a 75-yard game had to be minimal.
But Brady’s fierce demand that even barely noticeable mistakes be fixed is one reason the Patriots have lost two consecutive games only twice in eight seasons. And after a thorough dismantling at the hands of the Cleveland Browns last weekend, the Patriots corrected their errors again, dominating the Pittsburgh Steelers, 39-26, to remain tied for first place in the A.F.C. East with the Jets. The Jets avoided dropping out of first when they held off the Browns, 26-20.
“It’s an emotional game,” Brady said. “Part of playing quarterback is trying to make sure everyone is into it.”
The Patriots’ play may be emblematic of the topsy-turvy nature of the league this season — from week to week, it seems almost impossible to predict what will happen.
“That’s the N.F.L.,” Patriots Coach Bill Belichick said. “If you knew what was going to happen in this league, you’d make a lot of money.”
In their 34-14 loss to the Browns, the Patriots’ defense was shredded by Peyton Hillis’s 184 yards rushing, and the unit continued a troubling inability this season to consistently pressure the quarterback. And the offense was entirely inept.
But against a better opponent, the Patriots were more balanced and more efficient than they had been all season. They pressured Ben Roethlisberger — “We were able to hogtie him down a couple of times,” Belichick said — while protecting Brady enough to allow the short passes on which the offense thrives. All that helped set the stage for the annual showdown with the Indianapolis Colts next Sunday.
“We know what they are all about,” Brady said of the Steelers. “I thought we showed what we were all about, too.”
In recent years, that game has often seemed like a battle for N.F.L. supremacy and for home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. This year, each team has substantial flaws and there are no guarantees either will be in the postseason. But with a difficult schedule over the final two months of the season, the Patriots will stake claim to being the best team in the league if they can successfully traverse the Steelers-Colts fortnight. At least for a week.
The Patriots were different from the minute they stepped onto the Heinz Field turf. They forced the Steelers to punt after three downs, and on one of them, Gary Guyton slapped down a Roethlisberger pass attempt, the first sign that a pass rush that had generated only 13 sacks in the first eight games would be more successful Sunday against the Steelers’ injury-riddled offensive line.
When the Patriots had the ball, they relied heavily on their tight ends, often deploying two tight-end sets. The first drive shredded the Steelers’ defense, including a 19-yard touchdown pass over the middle to tight end Rob Gronkowski.
It was the first of three scoring receptions for the rookie Gronkowski.
“The last time I had three was a as sophomore in college, and that was Washington State,” Gronkowski said.
Roethlisberger was sacked twice on the next drive. When the Patriots got the ball again, they drove easily, although they settled for a field goal. Still, even when the Steelers tried to change the rhythm of the game by using a no-huddle offense, they had little luck.
Roethlisberger was sacked again early in the second quarter, thwarting another drive. The offense, already missing the starters on the left side of the offensive line, lost its catalyst when receiver Hines Ward was knocked out of the game on a hit to his head late in the first quarter. The hit to the side of Ward’s head by James Sanders left him wobbly on his feet. He sustained a neck injury on the play, but he spent the rest of the night on the sideline lobbying doctors to let him return.
The Steelers could muster just a field goal through the first three quarters because Jeff Reed, who is enduring an erratic season, missed a 26-yard attempt in the third quarter. So dominant were the Patriots in the first half — they allowed just 134 yards of offense — that the one-touchdown margin might have seemed like a disappointment.
The Patriots are so young that they must have wondered if they would be able to close out a team as talented and resilient as the Steelers.
But in the third quarter, the Patriots powered through the Steelers again. Their opening drive of the second half took 10 plays and 78 yards — where were the sacks or turnovers that usually define Steelers games? — and ended with another Gronkowski touchdown reception. When another drive was capped by a Brady run up the middle for a 3-yard touchdown, the Patriots led by 20 points and the buoyant Steelers crowd was silent.
By midway through the fourth quarter, the fans, clutching Terrible Towels at their sides, made an even stronger statement about their discontent. They headed for the exits just moments after Sanders intercepted a pass from Roethlisberger and returned it 32 yards for a touchdown that gave the Patriots a 19-point lead. Gronkowski’s third touchdown reception sent much of the rest of the crowd to the parking lots.
When the Steelers began the season 3-1, relying on the running game and defense in Roethlisberger’s absence, they looked like the best team in cheap football jerseys. When the Patriots had the best record, 6-1, they looked to be the team to beat. Supremacy is ephemeral in the N.F.L. this season. At least until next Sunday, it belongs to the Patriots again.