It was early in October 1976 and a wide-eyed Bill Belichick stood on
the sidelines of the brand new Pontiac Silverdome as his Detroit Lions
hosted the New England Patriots...
...this
assuming that Belichick has been wide-eyed about anything but
cheeseburgers, classic rock or stomping anything that got in his
way before or since, so one has to assume that the year 1976 - when
kids just coming out of school were weaned on Led Zeppelin, Bachman
Turner Overdrive and Mickey-D's, and were witnesses to the brutality
and horrors of the Vietnam War - was smack in the middle of Belichick's
formative years and have a great deal to do with his obsession to
control his environment, as well as everyone else's.
Belichick,
just a year removed from Wesleyan College and earning his stripes as a
special teams assistant first under head coach Rick Fazano and then
Tommy Hudspeth was in the midst of his second season as an NFL coach and
his first with the Lions - a mediocre season which saw them eventually
finish 6-8 and afterthoughts in the NFC Central behind the Minnesota
Vikings and Chicago Bears...
...it seems like a
lifetime ago - and for anyone under 30, it is - but Belichick's memory
of the game is crystal clear, intrigued by the size and power of the
Patriots as a whole and equally mesmerized by the innovative schemes of
Chuck Fairbanks.
Some years later Belichick would
proclaim that the Patriots team that the Lions had soundly beaten that
day was perhaps the best in franchise history - their size, speed and
philosophy on both sides of the ball to physically overwhelm their
opponent, to crush their will with violent overtones and cutting-edge
design and skill.
At the center of the offensive design
were innovators Ray Perkins and Ron Erhardt who along with Fairbanks
built a nearly unstoppable balance of force predicated on the size and
versatility of their running backs - boasting three backs that topped
the 700 yard plateau, Sam "Bam" Cunningham, Andy Johnson and Don Calhoun
leading a rushing attack that gained nearly 3,000 yards in 14 games.
210
yards per game average on the ground is unheard of these days, but if
Belichick has his way - and he does - the 2013 New England Patriots will
attempt to approach that level of ground production.
1976
saw a 6' 3" 225 pound fullback lead the team in rushing. The Patriots
carried five backs on the roster, plus the wild card of having the tough
as nails Steve Grogan shredding defenses with a 6.6 yards per carry
average - Johnson, Calhoun, Horace Ivory and Ike Forte joining
Cunningham to pound defenses for an average of five yards per carry...
...which
puts last season's 4.2 yards per carry and nearly 2,200 yard effort to
shame, but considering that the NFL is now a passing league in which
fundamental football has transformed from the run setting up the play
action pass, to the play action pass being offset by the run - the
Patriots' 136 yards per game was good enough to be the 7th ranked
rushing attack in the NFL, but not good enough for Belichick.
At
issue was a running game that in its infancy showed an a certain
immaturity, a running game that was at times all about glitz and glamour
and lacked a killer mentality. Though it's tough to find fault with
Stevan Ridley's 1263 yard effort in 2012, the running game fell into
chaos with the rest of the offense when they ran into a gritty Baltimore
Ravens' squad in the AFC title tilt...
...Ridley
flinched, ducking his head in anticipation of a Bernard Pollard (who
else) hit and getting knocked unconscious and losing the football at a
critical juncture - a direct result of a mind set that was focused on
finesse and technique rather than punishing the defense.
Before Ridley
lost the ball, the Patriots were very much in the game and driving -
the rest of the game was a comedy of errors and the horror of being
dominated, the result was watching the Ravens celebrate the championship
on the Patriots logo, which left a very bad taste in Belichick's mouth.
It
doesn't matter how dominating the offense was at points in the regular
season, because when it failed at the zenith of the season, it counted
for absolutely nothing - and the running game was part of that.
His
team needed to develop a tough mentality, to exude a confidence that
allows for a back to punish a defender, to deliver the hit and run them
over, not flinch and absorb the hit and get jacked up and lose the
football - and this offseason, the Patriots are accomplishing just
that...
The draft day acquisition of LeGarrette Blount
from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers should have told New England Patriots fans
everything they needed to know about the mind-set of the team going
into the 2013 season.
Blount is a throwback to an earlier time,
to the days of Cunningham, Johnson and Calhoun - and was brought in to
instill that mentality into the running game. A bigger back with a
history of physical confrontation, the bad boy from the University of
Oregon carries over that attitude with the ball in his hands, not trying
to dodge anyone, rather, to run them over - to deliver the blow, to
punish the defender.
The message got through to Ridley,
who showed up at OTA's looking like Tony Stark had gotten hold of him,
truly sculpted and at least 10 pounds heavier than his 2012 playing
weight of 220 pounds - the hope being that the transformation will give
Ridley the confidence to that he can deliver the blow and punish the
would-be tackler...
...not necessarily just to improve
upon last year's 4.2 yards and a cloud of rubber tire pellets, but to
punish and dominate defenses while they're at it - to break their will
and not give them the chance to hang around or sneak back into games.
There
are other options in the backfield with speedy Shane Vereen providing a
slashing change up to Ridley's hammering style, while Blount, Brandon
Bolden, Leon Washington and even Aaron Hernandez will vie for reps in
different situations - but the backfield belongs to Ridley...
...and
with the entire offense becoming bigger and faster, can the running
game approach the violent intent of that fabled 1976 squad? Only the
performance of the backs and the offensive line will answer that
question.
A fullback-sized Blount is game, as is a chiseled Ridley - can a string of brutalized defenders be far behind?
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