34 days till Patriots season opener: Every player to wear No. 34 for New England

Here’s a list of every Patriots player to wear the No. 34 jersey number

The New England Patriots are officially 34 days away from their 2023 season opener against the Philadelphia Eagles. So we’re continuing our countdown series by listing every Patriots player that has ever worn a No. 34 jersey.

It’s hard not to think of some of the standout running backs, particularly in the Bill Belichick coaching era, when it comes to Patriots players and the No. 34.

Rex Burkhead was the one that powered his way into the end zone in the 2018 AFC Championship Game to deliver the dagger to the Kansas City Chiefs in overtime. Shane Vereen had a team-high 11 receptions for the Patriots to help knock off the Seattle Seahawks at Super Bowl XLIX.

And Sammy Morris plowed for 727 rushing yards and seven touchdowns in 13 games to contribute to an 11-win season without Tom Brady at quarterback in 2008.

Let’s take a look at every Patriots player throughout franchise history that has worn the No. 34 (via Pro Football Reference).

Giants sign DB Darren Evans, place LB Jarrad Davis on season-ending IR

The New York Giants have signed DB Darren Evans and placed LB Jarrad Davis on season-ending IR as part of a trio of transactions.

[anyclip pubname=”2123″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8169″]

The New York Giants officially placed linebacker Jarrad Davis on injured reserve on Tuesday night, ending his 2023 season.

This comes a week after it was reported that Davis would be out ‘long term‘ following knee surgery.

Davis was signed by the Giants late last season, starting in one regular season game and the Giants’ two playoff games, racking up seven combined tackles and one QB hit.

In addition to Davis landing on IR, the Giants also waived/injured (second-year) rookie Leonard Johnson.

Johnson went undrafted out of Duke last year and missed the entire season after suffering a torn ACL leading up to the 2022 NFL draft. The Giants signed him to a standard three-year deal back in March but now he faces another setback. If (when) Johnson goes unclaimed on waivers, he will revert to injured reserve.

Finally, the Giants also announced that they have signed defensive back Darren Evans.

Evans was originally signed as an undrafted free agent last year but he was waived at the end of training camp. After going unclaimed on waivers, Evans joined the XFL’s Arlington Renegades and went on to win a championship ring alongside several other ex-Giants, including safety Will Hill.

[lawrence-related id=712562,712540,712547]

[affiliatewidget_smgtolocal]

Leonard Johnson anxious to join Giants, showcase what he can do

Cornerback Leonard Johnson is anxious to resume his football career and showcase his abilities for the New York Giants.

The New York Giants are looking for solutions at cornerback this offseason.

They will likely address the position in the upcoming NFL draft but in the interim, they’ve been adding some low-key options such as former Detroit Lion Amani Oruwariye and Leonard Johnson, a player who slipped through the cracks after injuring his knee last year before the draft.

Johnson was a standout at Duke, playing in 47 games with 39 starts, logging in 165 total tackles (10 for a loss), with two sacks, six interceptions, three forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries along with 17 passes defensed and two quarterback hurries.

Johnson was pegged to be a Day 3 section in last year’s draft, running a 4.54 40-yard dash at Duke’s pro day with a vertical jump of 33.0 and a broad jump of 10.5.

Johnson tore his ACL and meniscus two weeks before the draft and was scratched from everyone’s draft board. He wasn’t signed after the draft as an undrafted free agent, either.

He remained unsigned until this year when the Giants’ decided to take a flyer on the 6-foot, 194-pounder.

“I was getting all these pre-draft calls, and it’s crazy that the first thing they ask is, ‘Are you healthy?'” Johnson told the New York Post. “I had to tell them the truth. I think 13 teams told me, ‘When you are 100 percent, let us know. We’ll bring you up for a workout.’ I didn’t hear from any of those teams after I got cleared.”

They all forgot about him. The Giants didn’t. Johnson was actually working as a plumber in his home state of Alabama when the Giants called him.

Johnson’s pro football career is back on track. In fact, he is receiving basically the same contract (three years, $2.69 million) he would have been offered had he been drafted last year because of his eligibility status.

Johnson is healthy and ready to follow up on the strong workout he put in for the Giants earlier this year. Could he be the ‘find’ the Giants are looking for? He certainly hopes so.

“I feel like I have so much more to prove because I haven’t played football in a year,” Johnson said. “I’m just so anxious to rehab with some NFL trainers knowing everything is going to be the right way. After getting hurt, all I could ask for was one opportunity. I was so close, why would I just give up now, honestly? I just want to get to New York and showcase what I can do, especially off of a leg injury this serious.”

Johnson can make this roster since will be up against a group of players who are largely unproven as Adoree’ Jackson is the only player who is certain to enter camp as a starter.

[lawrence-related id=708708,708693,708691]

[mm-video type=video id=01gxxeqq430cvhqfgqeb playlist_id=none player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gxxeqq430cvhqfgqeb/01gxxeqq430cvhqfgqeb-23475f85f075383a64e54e36b22aa58b.jpg]

Are Giants risking too much on players with an injury history?

The Giants added both quality and quantity to their roster this offseason, but are they risking too much on players with an injury history?

New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen entered the offseason intent on beefing up the team’s depth and talent at skill positions. Finally, the organization was going to provide quarterback Daniel Jones the help he has so desperately lacked.

And to Schoen’s credit, he did exactly that.

The big acquisition came early in free agency when the Giants acquired tight end Darren Waller, a big 6-foot-6, 238-pound target, from the Las Vegas Raiders.

That move was supplemented by the free-agent additions of wide receivers Parris Campbell, Jamison Crowder, and Jeff Smith. They also re-signed wide receivers Sterling Shepard, Darius Slayton, and Isaiah Hodgins.

But Schoen wasn’t done there. He also wanted to add talent and depth for defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, so a big-splash signing was made with linebacker Bobby Okereke.

Other notable defensive additions included defensive tackle Rakeem Nunez-Roches, safety Bobby McCain, and cornerbacks Amani Oruwariye and Leonard Johnson.

On paper, those are solid additions. There’s a lot the Giants can do with each of those players but there is one thing the vast majority of them share in common: a history of injury.

In seven career seasons, Waller has played a full slate of games just twice. He’s missed 14 games over the previous two seasons and his production has dipped considerably as a result.

“I believe wholeheartedly in myself, and I believe that through action and consistent performance Giants fans will believe, as well,” Waller said during his introductory Zoom call. “They can have questions at this moment about my health — those are legitimate concerns — but I believe I’ve addressed those issues. I’m willing to be the best I can be to be a weapon for this team — a tool that this team can use to get to the next level they want to go to.”

Similarly, Campbell had the first three seasons of his career marred by injury. He missed 34 total games before finally playing a full 17-game schedule in 2022.

“The injuries that I had, there were things that were just freak accidents. You couldn’t really draw it up. They weren’t avoidable to me. They were things that happened and just had some bad luck,” Campbell said during his first Zoom conference. “Like I said, was able to play all 17 last year, so I was extremely blessed.”

Crowder, too, has dealt with various injury issues in recent years. After a relatively healthy start to his career, he’s missed a combined 22 games over the past three seasons.

Giants fans are intimately familiar with Shepard’s injury issues, as well as those of running back Saquon Barkley and quarterback Daniel Jones, each of whom managed to stay healthy in 2023.

Defensively, the issues aren’t quite as pronounced. McCain has remained consistently healthy throughout his career, which is also true for Okereke and Nunez-Roches. However, Oruwariye has missed a combined six games over the past two seasons.

Johnson, of course, missed his entire rookie season after suffering a torn ACL ahead of the 2022 NFL draft.

Overall, the injury risk seems pronounced. But Schoen has done his due diligence on each individual player, including his own, and feels comfortable with the lot. He also understands that sometimes injuries are simply the result of bad luck.

“When I got the job, Daniel [Jones], he missed a lot of games the year before,” Schoen said, via the New York Post. “Saquon [Barkley] missed a lot of games the year before. Richie James missed the entire season the year before. Leonard Williams hadn’t missed a game his entire career. You’ve got to balance it.

“It’s football. There are going to be injuries. You evaluate the injuries on an individual basis. Were they preventable? How did they occur? You look at the film on some of the injuries. Is it something we could’ve done better? So we’re always going to continue to find a competitive advantage where we can. I have a lot of confidence in our training and our medical staff and the research that we’ve done.”

The larger issue in adding players with an injury history is the Giants’ history themselves. They are routinely among the most-injured teams in the league and since 2009, lead the NFL in man games lost. They were again among the worst in 2023.

Some of that can be — and has been — blamed on the turf at MetLife Stadium. The Giants set out to change that this offseason and although they didn’t go with grass, they did swap it out with something deemed to be safer.

What does it all add up to? That remains to be seen but the Giants are ultimately banking on players with a long injury history to remain healthy while also bucking their own injury trend in 2023.

[lawrence-related id=708511,708499,708493]

[mm-video type=video id=01gxpteffqmpa6qq15d9 playlist_id=none player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gxpteffqmpa6qq15d9/01gxpteffqmpa6qq15d9-bb38a025ae9a7ba2ccd69583193410de.jpg]

Giants signing CB Leonard Johnson to 3-year contract

The Giants are signing former Duke CB Leonard Johnson to a 3-year contract

The New York Giants are continuing to stay active in the free agency market. According to reports, the team is set to sign former Duke cornerback Leonard Johnson to help bolster their largely unproven and unaccomplished cornerback unit.

A three-year deal for an undrafted free agent coming off an injury? It is standard since Johnson is technically an undrafted free agent who was not previously signed by an NFL team.

The 6-foot, 194-pound Johnson suffered a torn ACL while training for last year’s draft and was out-of-sight, out-of-mind, so to speak, for most teams.

Johnson recorded 165 tackles, defensed 16 passed and had six interceptions in his four years for the Blue Devils.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbx61yex5whq8aq player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=]

Ex-Duke CB Leonard Johnson visiting Giants

Former Duke cornerback Leonard Johnson, who is returning from a torn ACL, is visiting the New York Giants.

The New York Giants will have several free agents in for a visit on Monday including former Duke cornerback Leonard Johnson.

Aaron Wilson was the first to report news of Johnson’s visit.

The 6-foot, 194-pound Johnson tore his ACL while training for the 2022 NFL draft and subsequently went undrafted. Prior to that, the Duke standout was viewed as a potential seventh-round pick or priority undrafted free agent signing.

Before his injury, Johnson put up solid but unspectacular numbers at the Duke Pro Day:

  • Height: 6-0 3/8
  • Weight: 194
  • Hand: 8 4/8
  • Arm: 31 1/8
  • Wingspan: 75 4/8
  • Bench Press: 12
  • Vertical Jump: 33.0
  • Broad Jump: 10.5
  • 40-Yard Dash: 4.54
  • Short Shuttle: 4.27
  • L Drill: 6.87

Johnson has had a positive recovery from his torn ACL and should be ready to play come training camp.

The Giants are likely a fan of Johnson’s versatility. He can play multiple spots in the second and is viewed as a solid developmental talent.

[lawrence-related id=707739,707725,707723]

[mm-video type=video id=01gvz4jq9vak7an85d8f playlist_id=none player_id=01eqbvhghtkmz2182d image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gvz4jq9vak7an85d8f/01gvz4jq9vak7an85d8f-a8006f58a350318660b5b9cea8df26aa.jpg]

Seahawks met with Duke CB prospect Leonard Johnson before his pro day

According to a report by Aaron Wilson, Seattle met with Duke corner Leonard Johnson before his pro day.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbycpfe4qgv9nf6 player_id=none image=https://seahawkswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Nobody knows what will happen, but we’d be surprised if the Seahawks don’t pick a cornerback at some point in the 2022 NFL draft. The team has a need at this position after allowing D.J. Reed to sign with the Jets and they’re doing their research on this year’s cornerback class.

According to a report by Aaron Wilson, Seattle met with Duke corner Leonard Johnson before his pro day.

Johnson (six-foot, 194 pounds) posted six interceptions and 16 pass breakups during his time in college as well as 10.5 tackles for a loss.

Here’s how he measured up at his pro day:

Height: 6-0 3/8
Weight: 194
Hand: 8 4/8
Arm: 31 1/8
Wingspan: 75 4/8
Bench Press: 12
Vertical Jump: 33.0
Broad Jump: 10.5
40-Yard Dash: 4.54
Short Shuttle: 4.27
L Drill: 6.87

Highlights are hard to come by for Johnson, but here’s an old clip.

The Seahawks have also used an official top-30 visit on Cincinnati cornerback Ahmad “Sauce” Gardner, who’s projected to be a top-10 pick.

[lawrence-related id=86704]

[listicle id=86969]

Former Tiger reflects on his ‘growing pains’, how a mentor helped him ‘change tremendously’

Former Clemson wide receiver Ray-Ray McCloud met with reporters this week for the first time as a member of the San Francisco 49ers. On Tuesday, the 49ers officially announced the signing of McCloud to a two-year deal, which was first reported last …

Former Clemson wide receiver Ray-Ray McCloud met with reporters this week for the first time as a member of the San Francisco 49ers.

On Tuesday, the 49ers officially announced the signing of McCloud to a two-year deal, which was first reported last week, and he was made available to the media on Tuesday.

The former Buffalo Bills, Carolina Panthers and Pittsburgh Steelers receiver/return specialist explained what led to his decision to ink with the 49ers as a free agent.

“Well, it certainly wasn’t the taxes that brought me here,” McCloud said, smiling. “But definitely me and (49ers receiver/running back) Deebo (Samuel) were very close before the NFL, honestly. So, the process of just watching Deebo, the plays he made here, the offense being a top-tier offense, and my time being in the NFL watching the 49ers. Coach (Kyle) Shanahan’s track record speaks for itself, and the plan that the organization laid out for me from special teams to offense and just me as a player, I thought it was a great opportunity.”

Throughout his four-year NFL career, McCloud has played in 48 games (eight starts) and tallied 64 receptions for 390 yards while adding eight carries for 84 yards on offense. He also has recorded 72 kickoff returns for 1,614 yards (22.4 average) and 81 punt returns for 767 yards (9.5 average).

McCloud sees himself as a good fit for the 49ers, not only on special teams but offensively as well.

“The offense itself is explosive, and I’m a playmaker, I’m explosive,” he said, “and I don’t think there’s a more explosive offense that puts the ball in players’ hands in space like the Niners.”

Prior to playing for the Steelers from 2020-21, McCloud suited up for the Bills (2018) and Panthers (2019) after being selected by the Bills in the sixth round (187th overall) of the 2018 NFL Draft following his career at Clemson (2015-17) during which he recorded 127 receptions for 1,226 yards and four receiving touchdowns.

Last season with the Steelers, McCloud appeared in 16 games (five starts) and finished with career highs in receptions (39) and receiving yards (277). He also added 35 kickoff returns for a career-high 776 yards (the third-most in the NFL in 2021) to go with 12 punt returns for 367 yards.

The Tampa, Fla., native was asked what clicked for him that allowed him to establish himself as an NFL player in Pittsburgh last season.

“I think in life itself, you go through growing pains, and I came out of college early and those were my growing pains my first two years — just learning how to be professional off the field,” he said. “On the field, I felt like it was football, just slowing the game down for myself. But off the field, I felt like it was for me where I needed to grow at. I got a mentor in my life that came in my life and helped me change tremendously, and when I found a home, I told myself I’m going to make this home, and that’s what it was.”

McCloud revealed that mentor to be Leonard Johnson, a former NFL cornerback who played with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, New England Patriots, Panthers and Bills before finishing his career with the Arizona Cardinals.

Johnson, who now serves as a coaching assistant with the Bills, took McCloud under his wing after former Panthers defensive coordinator and current Bills head coach Sean McDermott pointed McCloud and his potential out to Johnson.

“He played with Coach McDermott at the Panthers, and when he came to coach, he came to Buffalo, and I guess McDermott had brought him in,” McCloud said. “Because when we met, he said McDermott said, ‘There’s a kid on my team that has a lot of potential, help him out,’ or whatever. And he kind of was watching me all camp, like training, and I’m like, ‘Who’s this dude that keeps watching me, he keeps eyeballing me?’

“He was just watching me, and then in the offseason, we actually ended up being, my house, 10 minutes away from him in Tampa and I stayed at his house the whole offseason… Life principles, giving me books to read, got me a schedule, proper structure. We were waking up at 5 in the morning just to go on walks to get our mind right, little things like that, and eating better. So, for me, I think that was a big turning point for me.”

–Photo for this article courtesy of USA Today Sports Images 

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks