If the New England Patriots learned anything from the past two
seasons, its that even the best laid, even keeled plans can take a
sideways turn into the surreal, even as far as to plunge into the maw of
the preposterous at times...
...and so as free agency
opened and the draft approached, it became very clear that
something extraordinary was going to have to happen - and that something
was insurance against the injury bug that destroyed yet another trophy
run in 2013, just as it had the year before.
And
it's not as if there was a need for superstars or starting quality
rookies, rather, prudence dictated that obtaining quality depth at every
position was imperative, with a focus on the defensive secondary and
the receiving corps - and they got both, in abundance.
It
wasn't a flashy draft and free agency was void of top-shelf headline
material, but the Patriots covered their bases like no other team could
have and came away with pure magic.
Even so, the
Patriots offseason has veered off into a weird H. P. Lovecraft-style
tale, complete with freakishly large men having their bodies cut open
and repaired under total secrecy while the team as a whole is
going through a collective strength and conditioning program and a
continued emphasis on getting younger and faster and staying healthy...
...which
has been a very real issue as several core members of the team missed
significant time last season, most notably the tight ends and in the
secondary. Had quality depth been in place, we may well be talking
"repeat" instead of relaying our hopes for getting a reasonable
facsimile of a full season out of several key players.
There's
no denying that football is a rough sport - as physically taxing and
destructive as any on the planet and sometimes surgery is the only way
to repair the damage, but what the Patriots tight end position has been
through for the past 18 months borders on absurd - and it has been just
recently in that span that we've learned of many of how broad the scope
really was.
Rob Gronkowski has now had four operations
on his right forearm and is scheduled for a procedure on his spine
within the next few weeks. Chances are high that Gronkowski will be a
candidate for the Physically Unable to Perform (PUP) list to start the
season, becoming eligible to be activated to the roster after six weeks
of the season has passed.
Aaron Hernandez had some
scope work done on his shoulder and new kid Jake Ballard is coming off
microfracture surgery that cost him all of the 2012 season - none of
this the kind of news that gives one any sense of optimism going
forward...
...and the psychological issue for these
players shouldn't be discounted either as there's a certain amount of
anxiety that comes with returning to the field after a major injury. We
saw it with Hernandez short-arming balls and favoring his rolled up
ankle after he spent three weeks on the skids, also with defensive end
Chandler Jones, who clearly did not display the same burst when he
returned from his own ankle issues.
But there's not a
better example of the effect that a physical injury has on the brain
that when the team opted to bring Gronkowski back too early. When
Belichick saw Gronk trying to block as an in line end, that should have
been the end for him until the AFC title game - at the earliest.
Giving
full effort, the mammoth tight end was reduced to delivering the
equivalent of a stiff arm to the defensive end, while holding his broken
right arm out and away from his body like a bird would a broken wing...
...sheer
brute strength and iron will in play more than technique, unable to
protect himself as a blocker without causing further damage to his
broken wing - a willing receiver, but the injury forced him into a
vulnerability that was a danger to his welfare and he should have been
shut down right then, at least until the Super Bowl
Hindsight
being what it is, it's easy to sit back and spout off about that now,
but the fact is that there were many who felt that way back then - and
these are the same people who believe that the Patriots have missed out
on at least one more trophy in-part because the athletically gifted tank
of a tight end, the very one who creates matchup issues just by
stepping onto the field, the one who opens up the field for others and
gives Tom Brady a reliable safety valve - was broken and unable to
contribute.
Truth.
It's scary to think
that the Patriots' offensive philosophy for the past three years in
large part took it's parameters from the mismatches that Gronkowski and
fellow freakish tight end Hernandez created in theory - a powerful thing
to witness, yet we've seen it so seldom the past 18 months that it
doesn't even rate a ripple on the NFL seismograph any longer.
Everything
on the offense suffered due to their injuries last season, and only the
determination of the running game and inspired efforts from Tom Brady
and Wes Welker and the stylings of one of the best offensive lines in
football had them in the AFC Title game...
...but the
wheels fell off as Gronkowski had previously been lost for the season
and Aqib Talib came up lame in the first quarter against the Ravens -
the result of both injuries were as predictable as the Patriots became
because of them, and Baltimore was able to focus on pushing New
England's offensive and defensive lines around without having to worry
about Gronk trampling them and Talib blanketing them.
Ah,
but the secondary is a story all unto itself, and we'll get to that
soon enough - right now the focus needs to be on the receiving corps -
which has gotten bigger by leaps and bounds, faster and younger by
design - a design that has put an emphasis on size to try and protect
their oft-injured stars by making the opposing defense defend the entire
field.
And that is the point, making the defense
defend the entire field. The Patriots have not been doing this, instead
relying on diminutive slot receivers and Brady's arm to move the sticks
while leaving their two best weapons, Gronk and Hernandez, on
individual islands with zero protection - and when one of them gets
hurt, which was inevitable given the protracted number of reps, we get
the heartbreak of 2012. And 2011.
If the Patriots are
to have a chance at their 4th Lombardi Trophy, things had to change -
and they have, at least on paper - not in the ranks of the tight ends
where depth is still an issue, but in the outside targets that in theory
will eliminate some of the hazards that have felled the tight ends in
recent years...
...the outside speed means that
safeties have to cover their deep zones, preventing them from sneaking
up in the box to chop their legs and forces the overall defensive scheme
of their opponents to go small - in effect, nickle and diming them -
and when that happens, we get to see things like running backs sprinting
trough gaping holes and the tight ends wide open down the slot.
But
chances are that we will not see the athleticism of the tight ends in
full effect until after Halloween, what with Gronkowski in Frankenstein
mode, but the duo of Hernandez, Ballard, Michael Hoomanawanui and either
Daniels Fells or undrafted free agent Zach Sudfeld filling the bill
while Gronkowski gets in game shape on the PUP...
...and
that should be enough, delaying the juggernaut without midseason
injuries cancelling it all together - particularly with the massive
upgrade at the receiver positions, which is where we focus next...
Tomorrow: Tape a cheetah to their backs...
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