59 days till Patriots season opener: Every player to wear No. 59 for New England

Here’s a list of every Patriots player to wear the No. 59 jersey number

The New England Patriots are now 59 days away from opening up their 2023 regular season at home against the defending NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles.

So we’re continuing our countdown series by listing every Patriots player that has ever worn the No. 59 jersey.

Linebacker Terez Hall is the current Patriots player that wears the number, but there have been a total of 23 players that have worn it throughout franchise history. There are more recent examples like linebacker Anfernee Jennings, and then there are examples like Brian Stenger, who wore the number all the way back in 1973.

Here’s every Patriots player that has ever worn the No. 59 (via Pro Football Reference):

Former NFL linebacker explains why he is ‘juiced up’ for the Cheez-It Bowl

A former NFL linebacker is “juiced up” for the Cheez-It Bowl. OutKick contributor Bobby Carpenter – an Ohio State product and 2006 first-round pick of the Dallas Cowboys who played seven seasons in the league with the Cowboys, Rams, Dolphins, Lions …

A former NFL linebacker is “juiced up” for the Cheez-It Bowl.

OutKick contributor Bobby Carpenter – an Ohio State product and 2006 first-round pick of the Dallas Cowboys who played seven seasons in the league with the Cowboys, Rams, Dolphins, Lions and Patriots – explained this week why he is super excited for tonight’s Cheez-It Bowl matchup between No. 19 Clemson (9-3) and Iowa State (7-5).

“This is why I think it’s intriguing,” Carpenter said. “Not a great season for Iowa State, 7-5. I guarantee you, (Iowa State head coach) Matt Campbell is not feeling great about how it went down. This was supposed to be the year that they get it done, and they lose to Iowa early in the season and things kind of snowballed a little bit, and now (star running back) Breece Hall opts out for the game. So, it’s less than ideal when it comes to that. But, they’re going to be fired up, they’re going to be ready to go. If you would have told them at the beginning of the season, you’re going to play Clemson in a bowl game, they probably would have thought they were making the College Football Playoff.

Now, this isn’t the playoff, and Clemson obviously wasn’t as good – they were 9-3, lost to Georgia, struggled a little bit in the ACC, had a couple losses, but finished really, really strong.”

After a 2-2 start, the Tigers won seven of their final eight regular season games, and their offense that was much-maligned early in the season made improvements down the stretch, averaging 36.4 points per game over the last five games following the loss at Pittsburgh on Oct. 23.

Clemson’s attack will face a tough test against an Iowa State unit that ranks 10th nationally in total defense (309.2 yards per game allowed).

“Now, they’ve had some departures. Brent Venables is gone, defensive coordinator, they’ve lost some offensive staff as well. They’re in a state of transition, losing both coordinators,” Carpenter said. “Let’s see how far D.J. Uiagalelei has come. Let’s see how far that Clemson offense has come against a pretty good, when they put it together, Cyclone defense.”

Carpenter added that the Cheez-It Bowl features two teams he considered potential playoff teams at the outset of the season, and he thinks it will be a clash between two programs with similar mindsets in terms of culture and player development.

“This is a matchup that I would’ve said, at the beginning of the season, this could’ve been maybe a semifinal matchup,” Carpenter said. “Even after Clemson lost to Georgia, you’re thinking, ‘Man, Clemson’s defense is good. Got some dudes out there.’ And Iowa State, they had all this offensive firepower. They’re going to be, like I said, without a little bit of it with Breece Hall opting out, their star running back moving on. But they still have a lot of guys there.

“They talk about not having five-star recruits but five-star culture, and so this will be a battle of that because both of these programs I think pride themselves on culture and developing players. Clemson probably gets a little better players, but I think that this is something that’s going to be really big and very, very exciting.”

Clemson is a 1.5-point favorite heading into the Cheez-It Bowl, which is set for a 5:45 p.m. kickoff at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla., and will be televised on ESPN.

“This is a bowl game of the week outside of once we get to the weekend and the New Year’s Six and semifinals and all those things,” Carpenter said. “So for a midweek bowl game, something that’s going on that maybe might not attract a lot of your attention, may I steer you towards this game because I think it should be a good one. The line’s really tight, and it’s two teams that at the beginning of the year had high expectations.”

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Former Ohio State, NFL player on Clemson’s offense: ‘I don’t know if there are fixes’

Through six games this season, Clemson is averaging 20.5 points per game, which is last in the ACC and 113th in the FBS. The Tigers are averaging 142 rushing yards per game, which is 12th in the ACC and 84th nationally. Clemson (4-2, 3-1 ACC) heads …

Through six games this season, Clemson is averaging 20.5 points per game, which is last in the ACC and 113th in the FBS. The Tigers are averaging 142 rushing yards per game, which is 12th in the ACC and 84th nationally.

Clemson (4-2, 3-1 ACC) heads into Saturday’s game at No. 23 Pittsburgh (5-1, 2-0) as a three-point underdog, and a loss to the Panthers would deliver a huge blow to the Tigers’ hopes of winning their seventh straight ACC Championship.

Former Ohio State and NFL linebacker Bobby Carpenter appeared on SiriusXM Radio on Thursday and discussed Clemson’s struggling offense, which is averaging just 14.8 points against FBS competition this season.

“I don’t know if there are fixes,” Carpenter said. “When you can’t run the football and you’re struggling passing it, it’s a function of your offensive line. And any offensive coordinator, head coach, football mind will tell you, that is the toughest position group to get fixed because it has to work as a cohesive unit, and there are so many moving parts. So, I don’t think that’s a situation they can fix this year.

“Now, they can hop in the portal, try to get some guys for next season. But I don’t even know if that’s something that you can go from like worst to first in. They’ve got to probably be settled with somewhere in the middle as opposed to what they’ve been.”

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