New England Patriots receiver Julian Edelman played the majority of the 2019 season with torn cartilage, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
Edelman, 33, suffered the rib injury in Week 3 against the New York Jets — he left the game and did not return. Even though the injury might typically hold a receiver out of action, Edelman played in every game in 2019, with 16 starts. He was listed in the injury report with a chest injury from Week 3 through Week 9. He also dealt with a shoulder and knee injury. Both injuries will require surgery this offseason.
Edelman finished with 100 receptions (fifth-most in the NFL) for a career-best 1,117 yards and six touchdowns.
New England Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore marveled at Marshawn Lynch’s performance in the playoffs — even amid the Seattle Seahawks’ loss to the Green Bay Packers in the divisional round of the playoffs.
Lynch signed with Seattle just in time to play in the playoffs after the Seahawks saw injuries to a handful of their top running backs Chris Carson and Rashaad Penny. Against the Philadelphia Eagles in the wild-card round, Lynch had six carries for seven yards and a touchdown. And against the Packers, he had 12 carries for 26 yards and two touchdowns. While the yards per carry weren’t super impressive, Lynch and the Seahawks outlasted the Patriots by one round of the playoffs.
Lynch’s out-of-nowhere revival impressed Gilmore in a big way.
“What’s crazy to me is Marshawn Lynch not playing no ball and coming in during playoff time and scoring touchdowns. When everyone else has had 20 + games under their belt on the year. #Beast,” Gilmore wrote on Twitter on Sunday during the game.
What’s crazy to me is Marshawn Lynch not playing no ball and coming in during playoff time and scoring touchdowns. When everyone else has had 20 + games under their belt on the year. #Beast
The NFL’s best cornerback going against a former All-Pro wide receiver that retired in 2011 — who do you have?
Stephon Gilmore reached out to Chad Johnson to wish him a happy birthday, but it came with a twist. Gilmore challenged him to 1-on-1 WR-DB drills and the Johnson has three attempts to catch a ball — all in 3rd-and-8 scenarios.
Happy bday @ochocinco Best out of 3 1 on 1 reps for all the marbles lol. All 3rd and 8. Lol
New Orleans Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas and New England Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore were the only unanimous NFL All-Pros.
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The Associated Press announced its NFL All-Pro teams on Friday, and the New Orleans Saints had six players represented on the two lists. Wide receiver Michael Thomas, right tackle Ryan Ramczyk, linebacker Demario Davis, and returns specialist Deonte Harris were each selected as first-team All-Pros. Edge rusher Cameron Jordan and special teams ace J.T. Gray made the All-Pro second-team.
Interestingly, Thomas was one of just two players to be unanimously selected by the 50-strong panel of voters. He was joined by New England Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore, who tied the NFL lead for interceptions (6) on the league’s leading defense for total interceptions (25). That’s rare company for Thomas to join, but as the NFL’s king in both receptions (149) and receiving yards (1,725) there’s no doubting his qualifications. Depending on how the playoffs turn out, there’s a good chance Thomas and Gilmore may line up against each other in Super Bowl LIV.
The full list of Saints players who received All-Pro votes go as follows:
Wide receiver Michael Thomas, 50
Right tackle Ryan Ramczyk, 30
Punt returner Deonte Harris, 29 (plus 2 votes at kick returner, and 1 at special teamer)
Linebacker Demario Davis, 18
Edge rusher Cameron Jordan, 12
Special teamer J.T. Gray, 3
Kicker Wil Lutz, 3
Left tackle Terron Armstead, 2
Cornerback Marshon Lattimore, 1 (plus 1 vote at defensive back)
So this highlights a few issues with the Associated Press ballot. The biggest problem is that there are inconsistencies between position designations used by different voters, meaning Harris received nominations at punt returner (where he’s done most of his damage), kick returner, and special teamer. Similarly, Lattimore earned votes at both cornerback and defensive back. Until the Associated Press buckles down and makes it more clear which players are qualified for which positions, there are going to be more incongruities. At least Pro Bowl snubs like Davis and Ramczyk got their due.
Both Gilmore and Slater earned First-Team All-Pro honors and Thuney was named All-Pro second team.
Gilmore has earned this honor for the second year in a row, but this time he was voted in as a unanimous choice. Gilmore and New Orleans Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas were the only two players to get the nod from all 50 voters.
Stephon Gilmore and Matthew Slater have been named First Team All Pros. Joe Thuney is a Second Team All Pro. All three had the best season of their careers.
I have no idea why Devin McCourty keeps getting left off these lists. He was as good as he's ever been.
Gilmore was the anchor in New England’s stingy defense this season and he was tied for the NFL’s most interceptions with six. The Patriots led the league in interceptions with 25 and Gilmore was a pivotal reason for that. He’s accrued First-Team All-Pro honors and Pro Bowl nods in the past two seasons and could likely win Defensive Player of the Year this season.
Slater continues to add on to his decorated career as an elite special-teamer. He earned his eighth Pro Bowl nod this season and he now has five First-Team All-Pro honors under his belt — along with three Super Bowl championships. He scored his first touchdown this season on a blocked punt and arguably had his best year.
Thuney was the most consistent offensive lineman for New England this season and that’s why he’s earning this honor for the first time. He only allowed one sack all season showed tremendous growth in his fourth season.
Julian Edelman, Devin McCourty, Jonathan Jones, J.C. Jackson, Dont’a Hightower, Jamie Collins, Kyle Van Noy and Nate Ebner all received All-Pro votes, but didn’t make the cut.
“Yeah, Steph’s a very consistent player,” coach Bill Belichick said.
Cornerback Stephon Gilmore had played at a Defensive Player of the Year-like level throughout the first 16 weeks. His play provided a high level of confidence for the New England Patriots.
And then Gilmore had a bad day against a good receiver. Miami Dolphins receiver DeVante Parker caught eight passes for 137 yards in the Patriots stunning 27-24, Week 17 loss. Seven or those receptions and 119 of those yards came against Gilmore, via The Athletic’s Jeff Howe.
But that performance seemingly has not caused Patriots coach Bill Belichick’s confidence to waver.
“Yeah, Steph’s a very consistent player,” Belichick said during his press conference at Gillette Stadium on Thursday. “His performance, his preparation, his effort. So, I see the same thing from him week in and week out, day in and day out.”
It will be another challenge for Gilmore and the Patriots secondary this week going up against the Tennessee Titans on Saturday.
Led by quarterback Ryan Tannehill and receivers Corey Davis and A.J. Brown, the Titans were first in yards per pass attempt (9.64 yards) and fourth in scoring (30.4 points per game) since Tannehill took over Week 7.
Then again, Gilmore has put together a season worthy of DPOY honors as was tied for a league-lead in interceptions (six).
“He works hard,” Belichick said of Gilmore. “He always tries to do what’s best for the team. I think everybody has total respect for his commitment to the football team and his effort and dependability. Put me at the top of that list.”
Here are the best players on defense for Buffalo during the last decade.
The defense has been the stronger unit of the Buffalo Bills over the past 10 years. Defensive coordinators Leslie Frazier and Jim Schwartz have each guided their respective units to top-10 finishes during the past number of years.
As the 2010s close, it’s a natural time to review how the Bills have looked on the defensive side of the ball over the past decade.
Here are the best players on defense for Buffalo during the last decade:
Defensive tackle: Kyle Williams, Marcell Dareus
Kyle Williams was a fixture in Buffalo for 13 seasons. During his play in this decade, he led defensive linemen with 396 total tackles and 71 tackles for loss. Tack in 40.5 sacks in 121 games, and you have quite the player for the interior of the Bills line. Williams was named to six Pro Bowls during this time period.
Marcell Dareus is a story of what could have been. In 91 games, he recorded 300 total tackles and 35 sacks. He surely was dominant at times, but he just did not gel with the Sean McDermott regime. Dareus was a two-time Pro-Bowl selection with Buffalo and was an All-Pro with the squad in 2014.
The Wild-Card games are coming up. Who are some of the key players to eyeball this weekend?
There will be players in the spotlight as the NFL playoffs kick off. Some are well known while others are going to be regarded as stars because of their performances. A look at some of the players to keep an eye on as the Wild-Card round starts the postseason road to the Super Bowl
A.J. Brown
Much was made of DK Metcalf and his muscular frame coming out of Ole Miss to the Seahawks. However, the Tennessee Titans grabbed their own gem out of Ole Miss in the second round, A.J. Brown. The rookie season had four catches for 124 yards and a touchdown in the playoff-clinching win over the Texans. Brown finished the regular season with 52 catches for 1,051 yards and eight touchdowns. Brown became the team’s first 1,000-yard receiver since tight end Delanie Walker (1,088) in 2015. Titansonline.com adds: Brown joined Isaac Curtis (1973), Willie Gault (1983) and Randy Moss (1998) as the only rookies with at least four touchdown receptions of 50 yards or more since 1970. Brown averaged a whopping 20.2 yards on his 52 catches during the regular season.
Through the first 15 weeks of the 2019 season, the Patriots’ pass defense was historically great. Not so now. What’s gone wrong?
The most shocking game result in Week 17 of the 2019 NFL season was unquestionably Miami’s 27-24 win over the Patriots. New England was playing for the AFC’s two-seed, which they ceded to the Chiefs with the loss, so it wasn’t like Bill Belichick was resting guys out there. And while it was no surprise that the Patriots’ offense was unspectacular — Tom Brady completed 16 of 29 passes for 221 yards, two touchdowns, and one interception, and Sony Michel led the team with 74 yards and a touchdown on 18 carries against the Dolphins’ sub-par defense — it was the performance of New England’s defense that raised some red flags as the defending Super Bowl champs head into the postseason.
Throughout most of the season, it’s been the defense that has kept the Patriots humming while the offense has performed in fits and starts at best. Through the first 15 weeks in 2019, New England allowed the NFL’s fewest completions (261) for the second-fewest passing yards behind San Francisco (2,666), for the fewest touchdowns (10), the lowest completion percentage (56.01%), the lowest yards per attempt (5.72) and the most interceptions (25). The Patriots allowed an opposing QBR of 57.39; the Bills ranked second in that time period at 76.73, You could argue that New England faced a relatively weak slate of opposing quarterbacks overall, but still, on that side of the ball, things were going at a historic level.
And then, over the last two weeks, it seems to have fallen apart. Against the Bills in Week 16 — a game the Pats still won to take their 11th straight AFC East title — and in that Dolphins loss, New England has allowed a completion rate of 60%, 42 completions for 548 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and an opposing QBR of 98.99 — only five teams have been worse over the last two weeks of the season in that regard.
The most worrisome character in this particular regression is cornerback Stephon Gilmore, who looked like the runaway Defensive Player of the Year through the first 15 weeks of the season. Then, he allowed just 38 receptions on 82 targets for 444 yards, no touchdowns, six interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 32.8. Among cornerbacks taking at least 50% of their teams’ defensive snaps, only J.C. Jackson, Gilmore’s teammate, allowed a lower passer rating.
But over the last two weeks — that tight win over the Bills and the upset loss to the Dolphins — Gilmore has allowed nine catches on 16 targets for 180 yards, one touchdown, no interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 131.5. Among cornerbacks taking at least 50% of their teams’ defensive snaps in that time, only eight have allowed a higher passer rating.
And it’s not just Gilmore. Jackson has been more vulnerable. Safeties Devin McCourty and Duron Harmon have not been as efficient and opportunistic of late. Perhaps most disconcerting for those aficionados of Belichick’s defensive brilliance over time is the seeming breakdowns between cornerbacks and safeties.
The first real example of things going wrong came with 7:25 left in the third quarter of the Bills game, when quarterback Josh Allen hit receiver John Brown for a 53-yard touchdown on a deep over route. The Patriots are running a man blitz here with McCourty as the deep safety, and Gilmore covering Brown in the defensive left slot. Defensive lineman Lawrence Guy forced a pressured throw from Allen, but Gilmore lost Brown on the fake outside to the seam, didn’t pick him back up, and McCourty was out in the weeds. It’s tough to remember an instance this season in which New England’s secondary was this out of sync.
“We kind of thought we had a beat on the play and we tried to be aggressive on it,” McCourty said after the game. “A call I made in the secondary where we try to be a little more aggressive and after you get beat on a touchdown, I came to the sideline and I’m like, ‘We’re not going to run that anymore.’ I think, like always, guys in our secondary, we move on fast and I think we always come to the sideline and understand exactly what it was and why a bad play happened for us, and then we fix it and got right down to it. A call that we liked coming into the week to be aggressive, and they kind of dialed up the perfect call against what we were doing, threw it away and then kept playing.”
Well, if that was a lone rogue incident, we wouldn’t be talking about a downward trend that really blew up against the Dolphins — the same Dolphins team that just fired Chad O’Shea, their offensive coordinator. So, there’s that. Well, in this game, Gilmore was exposed as he’d rarely been in a Patriots uniform, especially by Miami receiver DeVante Parker, who caught eight passes for 137 yards, and most of them against Gilmore.
Parker’s first reception, a 28-yarder from Ryan Fitzpatrick with 7:50 left in the first quarter, was another example of Gilmore in a schematic pinch.
Here are five takeaways from the Patriots’ 27-24 loss to the Dolphins in Week 17.
For the first time since 2009, the New England Patriots won’t walk into the playoffs with a first-round bye.
New England knows how important the first-round bye is and that’s why its 27-24 loss to the Miami Dolphins was so significant. The Patriots have clinched the No. 3 seed while the Baltimore Ravens and Kansas City Chiefs hold the top spots in the AFC. The Patriots are set to face the Tennessee Titans in the first round of the playoffs and they’ll have to get through some tough road games in order to make it to the Super Bowl.
The path for ring No. 7 just got much more difficult and the Dolphins exposed New England in all facets of the game. Here are five takeaways from the gut-wrenching loss.
Tom Brady potentially lost his last regular season home game
The legendary 42-year-old quarterback has spent two decades as the signal-caller for New England. He’s delivered Super Bowl victories and has had arguably the most dominant run in professional sports history. Brady and the Patriots have spoiled Boston fans year in and year out, but it could all be coming to an end.
Rumors have floated over the past few months that Brady’s time in New England will be over after this season. It’s been a very trying season for Brady, and he’s struggling more than ever to produce offensively. The Dolphins came into the game as one of the worst overall teams and Brady couldn’t deliver against them in crucial moments.
Brady’s pick-six likely changed the outcome of the game and his inability to score in the redzone has been a glaring issue all season. Joining another team or retiring seem to be more likely options than sticking around in Foxborough after this season.
If this is Brady’s last regular season home game, it’ll be a tough one to swallow.