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April 12, 2024 51 mins
Former Patriots quarterback Brian Hoyer joins us in the latest episode of Pats from the Pats.The 15 year NFL vet, who had three separate tours with the Patriots,  shares the trials and tribulations involved in such a long career. Brian talks about his unique role during the practice week leading into Super Bowl 53. Plus, he revels one of the craziest moments he experienced as Tom Brady’s backup.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
It's time now for another edition of Pats from the
Past podcast. Matt Smith, Paul Prolo and please to be
joined by former Patriot quarterback Brian hoy Or.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Brian.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
Thanks for coming by, man, Thanks appreciate you on guys. Yeah,
we asked this of everybody. So I think people who
are football fans, Patriot fans know, is Brian gonna play?

Speaker 2 (00:24):
Is Brian not gonna play? What's what's going on with
Brian Hoyr these days?

Speaker 3 (00:27):
Man, I don't know. I think it would take a
great opportunity to come along for me to do that. Obviously,
I was in Las Vegas last year. I know I
can still play because I beat the Patriots last year,
one of the most tooche, one of the most It's
on my list, Brian, one of the Twitter sweet moments
of my career. So we'll talk about that later. But
you know, so I know I can still physically do it.
But at thirty eight years old, my kids are getting older.

(00:48):
You know, I think it would take a really great
opportunity for me, you know, to come along, for me
to to kind of look and see. But so I
know I can still do it. Body feels relatively healthy,
and you know, so we'll see. It's always open. People
always say, you know, if someone's offering you an opportunity
to play and you feel like you could do it,
you know, you know, I remember a former teammate saying,

(01:10):
play till they tell you you can't. So definitely capable
of it. It's just got to be I think, the
right opportunity at this point.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
You know, idiots like us sit there and oh, you know,
you can play, or it's time to go, and everything
like that. But I don't think the lay people realize
what's it like to make that decision as a family.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Yeah, when you have a.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
Wife who's supported you cross country trips, taking kids back
and forth, at some point in time, her decision or
her opinion, while always valued, you got to really listen to.
That's got to be hard, like from a as a
family standpoint, like at what point time do I need
to devote my time to them?

Speaker 3 (01:48):
Right? And that's a huge part of the decision making.
So that's why I said, like, it have to be
the right opportunity and all those things, because you know,
deciding to go to play in Las Vegas last year,
it was not an easy choice. It was an easy
choice because it was Josh in my relationship with him.
But it wasn't an easy choice in the regards of
what does this mean for my family? And thankfully we
had a great school here that allowed our kids to

(02:09):
kind of virtual school with the help of a tutor
out there. But it was rough. It was it was
a rough transition and they were all happy to come
back once the season was over. And so now my son,
he's going into seventh grade. He got accepted as Avarian brother.
So you know, those are all things that you have
to take into account, Like I want to watch him
play football at of course he's watched me play for
a long time. So maybe it's times, you know, for

(02:30):
a role.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
Reverse when you have when you came out of Michigan State,
I mean, you didn't get drafted, yep, And I don't
know what your expectations were heading in, but to then
have what a fifteen year career off of that, what
were your expectations sort of when you arrived here in
two thousand and nine, what were you hoping for.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
I was just talking about this with my son the
other day and I said, listen, when I didn't get drafted,
you know, I kind of thought Okay, the Patriots are
going to sign me. I'll learn for Tom Brady. Obviously,
I grew up I watched Bill coach in Cleveland, so
I always kind of had an affinity to him, and
obviously him being a great coach, I thought it was
a great opportunity to go learn. And I thought, you know,
maybe i'll make the practice squad if I get released.

(03:12):
At least I'll learn from these guys. And then sure enough,
I kind of worked my way up the ranks, ended
up being Tom's backup my rookie year. And you know,
the things that I learned in those first four years
were so invaluable to me that when I finally got
some opportunities to play, you know, you put those in
motion and then you just keep stack in years, stack
in years, and and you know the thing about the

(03:33):
quarterback position is if you're relatively competent and you're a
good guy, and you make some connections, you know, you
just extend your career, extend your career. That's I mean,
when I look at last year, if if Josh isn't
the head coach in Las Vegas last year, then you know,
maybe my my my career ends there. But you know.
Luckily for me, I've met a lot of great coaches,
played with a lot of great players, and made a

(03:54):
lot of great connections which allowed me to do that.

Speaker 1 (03:56):
That's a little bit unorthodox Brian as a rookie, Now
you're back up Brady, who's, by the way, is coming
off a knee surgery at that point, Tom, and you're
the only backup quarterback your rookie year. That was the
same way in twenty ten, you're the only backup court.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
Like, not a lot of teams did that.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Well, how did that? What was your thought process in that?
Like you want to talk about literally next man up
into your one pitch away, Yeah, you're one pitch away
at that point.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
I think I was too naive to even understand that
at that point. You know, now looking back, when you realize,
like Tom's coming off of major knee reconstruction, had you know,
some hiccups along the way. Man if I had had
to play that year, I don't know how ready I
would have been. Obviously, Bill believed in me, and Bill
O'Brien believed to me, and and so I'm sure it
would have you know, worked itself out. We had a

(04:38):
really good team. So I think I would have relied
on those guys around me, But you know, at that point,
you're just I was just thrilled to be an NFL
football player, and now I'm going to a meeting room
every day with Tom Brady and soaking up what I
can I can learn from him. And then you know,
that went for four years and then until I got
released in twenty twelve. So I mean, those years, like you,

(05:00):
those are kind of like, you know, the years you're
building your foundation of your career, and I couldn't have
done it in a better place.

Speaker 4 (05:06):
So I wanted to ask you a little bit about
that rookie season. You were part of some really good teams,
and you know, ultimately you were part of a champion
in eighteen, but you know, you had that great year
in twenty ten, twenty eleven, you go to the super
Bowl in two thousand and nine. You probably didn't recognize
it at the time, it's your rookie year, but do
you kind of look back and say, there was a

(05:27):
little bit of something amiss in two thousand and nine.
That's sort of the way it's kind of viewed here.
That was kind of a reset year, and we're very
spoiled because we've been right of a lot of when
I didn't know any better TENNISI is going to the
playoffs and all that stuff is not.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
I thought it was great. I'm like, man, I'm a
great But did.

Speaker 4 (05:43):
You did you sense any like sort of dysfunction at
the time, or you know, maybe looking back at it,
do you feel like that wasn't the same as some
of the better teams that you were on.

Speaker 3 (05:52):
Definitely wasn't the same. I think looking back now, knowing
what I know and being on some great teams, it wasn't.
There was definitely some learning curve, There was some adjusting
to new I mean, that was Bill O'Brien's first year
as a coordinator here, you know, so now I know
how important that is, you know, being a quarterback. When
you're learning, even if you're keeping somewhat of the system intact,
you're working with someone new and and that was you know,

(06:12):
so those were kind of I guess you call growing pains.
But I thought, like, man, we're going to the playoffs,
like we're this is I'm on the Patriots. This is
like a Super Bowl organization. Like okay, one year, you know,
we didn't win the Super Bowl and I'm like, oh,
we'll win it next year. I mean, I think that
that's kind of the expectation you have when you come
into that organization. And I've always said this, I've always
looked at it. When Tom Brady was the quarterback, I

(06:34):
never went into a game thinking we're not gonna win. Ever,
there was never And when I've been on other teams,
whether I was the quarterback or someone else is the quarterback,
and I'm like, man, I don't know how much a
chance we have this Sunday. And I can honestly say
every game that I ever played here backing Tom up,
that there was I never had that feeling. And obviously
a lot of other players around that. But you know,

(06:55):
when I talk with a lot of my old teammates,
I think that that feeling was very you know, similar.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Bring it up because it's again that's why I preface
it by saying we're spoiled. You know, when that's considered
a quote unquote down here. But you know, Bill infamously
said on that documentary, I just can't get these guys
to play there.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
I was playing in that game at the time, Tom
standing I'll get rushed by New Orleans Lewins, and I
think I remember thinking to myself, like, wow, I'm playing
in a Monday night football game. You know, like, okay,
one back game, we got crushed, but I'm playing in
a Monday night football game. That's pretty cool. And you know,
you see that and you really and then having been
on champion, champion team and teams that went to Super Bowls,

(07:35):
you realize like, we probably didn't have a chance to
go to the super Bowl that year.

Speaker 4 (07:38):
Right, And then you have that off season, which I
think is a very sort of important offseason. Ye kind
of springboards the second run of the Dynasty. You get Devine,
you get Gronk, you get Adan Hernandez. Did you sort
of sense like, wow, we're going to be a lot
better you sort of get into training camp in twenty ten.

Speaker 3 (07:57):
I think what I realized, you know, going into my
second year is a is like, wow, we added these
two tight ends. You add Devin who you know clearly
was a great player run off the batom, he's returning
kickoffs for touchdowns. You know, a first round pick like
you added, and those are you know, I'm just as
young as them. So it's kind of like, wow, we
got like some really good players. We had Chung the
year that I came. Yep, Julian was coming, you know,

(08:19):
kind of creating his way. And I mean, look, I
whether it was night being naive or I thought I
was on the greatest team with the greatest quarterback and
the greatest coach, I'm like you were, and I was
you were looking back. I understand like you guys say,
you're spoiled, But there was kind of a lull in
the action and having watching the Dynasty myself, you know,

(08:40):
I didn't do a ton of research on the Patriots
like what was before I came, But it was kind
of cool for me to see like what happened, you know,
prior to when I was here, and then kind of
see the years that I was here, my first stint
and then it kind of ends with my second stint
here as kind of the end of that show. But
it was kind of cool to see some of the
stuff that I didn't experience, to see you know, tie

(09:02):
log and interviewed and kind of making fun of Tom
and and you know, see these guys and like NuGen
and stuff, and and so for me that was kind
of cool to kind of see the part that I
didn't really live right.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
You were fourteen and two your second year, Tom was
the MVP. The backup quarterback's job is to always be
ready because you're one snap away, one play away. And
I assume, but I want to ask you you prepared
as such? I need to be I need to be
ready to go. Was there ever anything in your mind?
And I understand he's coming off major surgery, need reconstruction.

(09:32):
Was there every time you go? This guy's not missing
any snaps? You know what, They're gonna have to drag
like the bone's gonna have to be visible in order
for me to get in unless there's a blog because
he's not missing snaps.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
Yeah, there was a There was a game my rookie
year down in Miami and on Friday, probably I'll never
forget this. On Friday practice, we're kind of just we're
winding down like there might be one offensive period left
in practice, and Isaiah Standback was playing scout team gunner
and he's coming down the sideline and he was a
kind of a quarterback slash receiver and Tom's kind of

(10:07):
messing around, goes to grab him. His finger gets caught
in his jersey and he breaks his middle finger on
Friday with one period to go in practice, and I'm like,
oh God, like, I'm gonna play this. I'm gonna I
haven't practiced all week.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
This is just throw.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
This is throwing him, and I'm gonna have to play
in this game. He broke his middle finger and so
of course he goes and he sees Alex, and Alex
is working his magic and and he gets a I'm
pretty sure he got like a a block, you know,
like a injection to block so he wouldn't feel it.
He's like, if I don't feel it, my body will
just naturally do what it does. And he throws for

(10:42):
like three hundred and forty yards and I was like
everyone knew because he had to be added to the
injurroom sure, and people are like, oh, what is it? What?
His middle finger was broken? Right, And as a rookie like,
I'm you know, I'm nervous because I haven't. It'd be
one thing if you get a whole week of practice
and you know you're gonna play. It's literally like I
got like the last drive of practice on Friday, and

(11:04):
then it was like a constant monitoring process of like
where's he at? Where's he at? And we'd be doing
I was at BC the other day with Bill O'Brien
watching practice and we were talking about this story. I'm like,
he's like, remember we were going over to call sheet
and Alex is just like working on his finger, working
on his finger. And I mean that was the point
I realized, like, this guy is. I mean, for all
we know about him as a great player, the toughness factor,

(11:25):
I mean, the things that you saw that I saw
him play through and the toughness was I mean, it's incredible.
You could do a whole documentary on that.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
Well, talk about like Paul saying, what were spoiled?

Speaker 1 (11:34):
I think one of the things that we, you know,
loosely associated with the organization and fans take for granted
is it's the line about availability, right, you know, and
you know better than anybody, you know, if you're available
to play, you play. If you can't, you're sort of discarded. Yeah,
and you're out of sight, out of mind. And I

(11:54):
think the fact that he told the line every single week,
regardless of what's going on. Great player and everything like that,
But I think that that gets overlooked a lot of
times when you talk about him.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Yeah, he stepped up. He was there, ready to go.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
In all the years that I backed him up, I
never had to enter a game for his injury, which
I mean, that's amazing. I've had to do it multiple
times other places, oddly enough for two other Patriots guys,
Jacoby and Jimmy this past year. But in all the
years that I backed him up, all the big hits
that I saw, I remember, I remember him taking a
hit my rookie year or second year by Elvis Dumerville.
There's a great clip where he's exactly and I'm like,

(12:29):
my chinstr I mean, he got up, and you know,
he talks about it. He's like, I took pride in
showing people that they weren't going to hurt me. And
I mean, you go to the AFC Championship game in
twenty seventeen when his thumb gets all, you know, messed up.
I'm like, I'm playing this game. There's no way. I
just saw like his hands split open. There's no way
he's playing. And sure enough he you know, he wears

(12:50):
his red gloves out there and we kind of messed
with the media a little bit, but you know, he
through the work and commitments he had to play. He played,
you know.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
But you mentioned it, so let's bring that up right
there at that point in time that was Was that
Wednesday of the week or Thursday of the week, was it?

Speaker 3 (13:07):
I mean it was Wednesday because I end up practicing
all day Thursday Friday.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
You're talking about not getting any reps. You had reps
at least mentally at that point time. You wouldn't have
been surprised if if Josh comes up to and goes
by the way you're up.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
I fully expected to play until I would say Sunday morning,
you know. And that was the I had just gotten
back like seven weeks prior to that, you know. And
I remember thinking to myself, well, you were the starting
quarterback in San Francisco at the beginning the year. This is
where you wanted to be. You're a starting quarterback in
the NFL, Like this was your goal anyway. So and
I'll never forget like that happening, and everybody kind of

(13:43):
just standing around, and i''m like, all right, come on,
like we gotta we gotta move on, like we got
to I gotta practice. And I was the only quarterback,
so I had to do every rep on offense and
every rep on scout team the remainder of the week,
and you know, I just remember having so much confidence
in the guys around me that I was like, I
feel good, I know, plan really well, and I'll be
ready to go if need be. But sure enough, Sunday

(14:05):
morning rolls around and he puts some you know, Canisio
tape on it, and I think the biggest thing was
could he take a snap? And once he figured out that,
he was going to, you know, power through that. I mean,
some of the plays he made in that game were incredible.
How winning the one to Amandola down the middle of
the field. I mean to throw that with the injury
that he had in his thumb, I don't even know
how you physically do that.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
How about the game winner on the back of the
line that there's only one place to balkns right, So
in that situation, Brian, like, at that point time you've
seen him do all these different things.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
The Miami gave me a rookie year.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
Are you beyond to mazed at that point or he
just goes, oh yeah, yeah, that's Tom.

Speaker 3 (14:40):
I mean, there was there was really three times in
my career where I felt like that was going to
be the case. So we talked about the two and
then the one. I think it was in twenty eighteen
after we lost to Tennessee. He hurt his knee at
the end of that game, and I didn't really know
the extent. It was the week of Thanksgiving, and I
think we had like a longer for whatever reason, we
had Thanksgiving off, but we practiced on Wednesday, and he

(15:01):
practiced the whole day Wednesday, and so I'm like, all right,
he's good. And then I'll never forget, like cooking my
turkey outside. I had like a big green egg. I'm
smoking the turkey for the first time. He calls me like, hey, babe,
I don't think I'm gona able to I don't think
I'm gonna be able to place on him. Like what
are you talking about. You just practiced the whole day.
He's like, yeah, this nee really like swoll up on me.
And you know, I'm gonna see what Alex can do.

(15:23):
But you know, he's like it just he's like I'm
as a friend, like I'm just telling you be ready
to go.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
It's interesting.

Speaker 3 (15:28):
So I remember being like, all right, where's the playbook?
Like we got to put the extra time in and
that was a Sunday morning where me, Josh and Bill
are all waiting for Tom to come down to be
like are you are you gonna go?

Speaker 2 (15:39):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (15:39):
And in my in my mind, I'm like, if he's
walking down here, he's gonna say I'm gonna play. But
it's just there was really three times in my career
where I was like, all right, you're probably gonna have
to play, and then sure enough, you know, it came
to the time for him to play, and he was
good to go.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
Do you have up the turkey?

Speaker 3 (15:56):
It got a probably a little overcooked.

Speaker 4 (16:00):
Oh oh yeah, A look, so how about some of
the times that you did you did get to play
some of the memories of that. Do you remember the
first game? I mean, I'm sure you do. Yeah, first
time you got in.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Well, that was the snow game in October against you know,
the Titans, which they had the oilers uniforms. I mean,
that was one that was one of the great UNI
games of all time. Yeah, and I had just gotten
engaged to my wife that week and my birthday. It
was a few weeks. It was a great October was
a great month my rookie year, and you know, so
we were killing those guys and I got to go
in and it was in the snow. And you know

(16:32):
that's for me growing up in the in the north,
like in Cleveland, when it snowed, you went outside to
play football in the backyard because you can get tackled,
it's not going to hurt. And so to me, that
was kind of like the welcome to the NFL moment,
Like here I am, I'm playing a game, it's snowing.
I scored a touchdown on a quarterback sneak and you know,
so I'll never forget that. And then really, the next

(16:53):
time I really played like an extending amount of time
was the following year. I think it was the last
game the year against Miami, who touchdown past Brandon Tate
there you go, yeah, and got crushed. It was it
was I got crushed on the play. They actually called
it rough in the passer play, but I was kind
of happy. My first touchdown was like a bomb, you
know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (17:10):
Do you show that one to your kids to say, hey, hey,
why don't you look at dad stay in the pocket
here and get his.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Head kicked in the touchdown pass.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
That was one of the routes that we called the
pistol route that they talked about in The Dynasty with Randy.
When Randy came, he's like, listen, I'm just gonna go
where the open places. And so, you know, I got
to go in and they call a pistol route, and
it's like you can go either way and you're only
supposed to make like one cut and then go the opposite.
And Brandon's like boom boom. So I'm like and then
finally I see which way he's going, and I just
I launched it. And you know, that was a pretty

(17:40):
good feeling to throw, you know, fifty yard touchdown pass
for your first touchdown pass.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
In eleven I think you attempted one pass.

Speaker 3 (17:48):
Yeah, it was Gronk's record.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
What's the go So let's let the fans know about
what destroy because I don't I don't necessarily remember that.
Maybe that's just because I'm old and the passage of time.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
Yeah, but I don't have to go with the CT no.

Speaker 5 (18:00):
No.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
But but like that was a at the time, that
was a big deal.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
Yeah, so it was that was the last game of
the season. It was Gronk and Jimmy Graham. I think
we're kind of battling like for the yardage record right
for tight ends for a season, I think, and they
were kind of going back and forth and their game ended,
and and I think we realized on the sideline that
Jimmy Graham had like four yards more than Rob. So
we go in and I just so I remember going in,

(18:28):
we were just gonna run the clock out, and then
Bill Grass me He's like, look, Kronk needs like five
yards to break the records. So like we'll just put
him outside and throw a hitch. Well, like a hitch
is like a five six yard route. Catch the ball,
but we have a conversion if they press you. So
like if the guy comes up and pressed, you really
can't run a hitch. So he runs a fade and

(18:48):
and to be honestly, I kind of forgot that because
I was like, all right, I'm gonna take three step drop,
I'm gonna throw a five yard hitch. I don't even
know if I looked out there and I dropped back
and I'm like, oh my god, he's running a go route.
And so I remember lofting the ball up to him.
He gets the record, and then it was kind of
questionable whether his feet were inbound so we had to
run like a quick play to make sure that it's
it's sat. So that was a pretty cool memory too.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
I love those kinds of things, though, because they're always
telling us like, oh, that's a great well that game.

Speaker 3 (19:15):
You know, that game was in the bag, and I
think that mental he obviously Rob, but also to Bill, like,
that's a huge record to break, and Rob will always
joke you know, I threw him that pass to break
that record, but I also threw him his first touchdown pass,
although it was in a preseason game in Atlanta that year, remember,
so yeah, you know he yeah, that's pretty impressive. Yeah, yeah,

(19:35):
I do.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
Remember, because I mean, like I can only imagine what
you guys thought on the field. Talked about this a
little bits. No, no, but no, but the fact, like all
of a sudden, these new weapons come in, we've got
to revitalize the offense.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
We need to do more.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
I mean, you guys must have like, oh, my goodness,
they're rookies, they're green and everything like that. But the
ability to see what these guys could do in the field, yeah,
was certainly eye open.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
Funny.

Speaker 4 (20:01):
I do remember Bronk dragging some guys against the Rams
I think, yeah, that was here yep into the end,
and I remember thinking that kind of stuff. I don't remember.

Speaker 3 (20:09):
I think we all I think we all noticed. I
think we all realized like, oh my god, these guys.
I mean, he had never really seen a pair like
this before. And I think Tom realized it early. And
I know Rob jokes like he thought Tom hated him.
But Tom. Tom would have those guys stay after practice
and we would throw to him, and we would have
Dane Fletcher I don't know if you guys really and like, hey, Dane,

(20:32):
can you come cover these guys because we only just
want to throw routes on air, I mean, and we'd
be like, all right, Dane, play uh play cover five,
which is like inside leverage two man, and then we
just run outbreaking routes to teach them like when you
get this coverage, you got to win your leverage, and
and so poor, you know, Dane was like a little
puppy dog. He'd be like, all right, we want to
cover again, and he'd be covering both guys back to back.
But you know, those were you know moments where I

(20:53):
looked at like Tom was building chemistry with these young guys.
And then the season rolled around. In it, I think
it showed like, I don't think anybody in the league expected,
you know, this matchup nightmare because the reality was and
looking back, I know more now, but as a second
year player, you don't understand like the matchups that it
created on teams. It was, you know, usually you put

(21:15):
two tight ends in a game, the defense is gonna
put three linebackers in the game and four dbs. Well,
once they realized we were thrown with these guys. Now
they're putting two linebackers in the game and five dbs,
and we were like, well, screw it. If they do that,
we're just gonna run the ball because both of them
were great blockers. And it was this constant mismatch like, okay,
we put that. We called it Detroit personnel. Two tight ends,

(21:37):
two receivers, and a half back. You put that person
on the field and you just wait to see what
the defense does. All right, did they put regular defense,
which is like the four down lineman, the three linebackers
and the four dbs. All right, well, now we're gonna
spread them out. We're gonna throw it because one of
those linebackers is gonna have to cover one of these
tight ends, and so we'd put you know, Rob on
these seam routes, Aaron would be on these little routes underneath,

(21:59):
and it became a mismatched nightmare. And then immediately when
they would sub in the nickel defense, they take a
linebacker out. Now we would just put them down and
run we called outside zone, you know, with the full
back slash tight end blocking the extra linebacker which is
now a dB, and they would just block till the
cows came home. And I think that was the unique

(22:19):
part of it was they were both great pass catchers,
but they both could block, I mean, just as well
as you know, any other tight end in the league.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Paul, you've historically always talked about the games that the
Patriot should win that they weren't in. But one of
the great what ifs that I don't think it's a
lot of attention here in New England is on that
eleven team, what if Gronkowski doesn't get hurt in the
AFC Championship game. You know, look, I'm surprised because I
don't think that was no disrespect to great Patriots team,
which stunned that they were actually favored against the Giants.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Who beat you in.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Foxborough that year. But a healthy Gronk, with a healthy
Welker and a healthy Hernandez that that game was so
close that a healthy Gronk I think, don't you think?

Speaker 2 (23:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (23:03):
I totally do. And to you a point, like all
the stuff that Brian's talking about offensively was why that
team was in the correct The Super Bowl was one
of the weaker Patriots defenses, Yes, certainly of any of
the Super Bowl era, right, And you have to think
if if you have Gronk and it took the Giants
a little while to figure out he wasn't himself, right,

(23:25):
you know? I think you even hear that in one
of the one of the micd ups. You know, he's
just a decoy out there. If Rob is healthy, you know,
how does that? How how different does that?

Speaker 3 (23:34):
I mean I look at Rob as clearly you know,
to me, having played with them, maybe I'm a little biased,
but the greatest tight end of all time, not only
because of his size, speed and when you think of
tight end's ability to run routes and catch, but because
he was such a great blocker. The teams had to
honor that. And I think that's what made him so
dynamic was you know, we look at Travis Kelcey today,

(23:55):
phenomenal tight end, but clearly Travis isn't blocking anything. Rob
would blow like he was the right tackle, and so
that allowed you to do so many things that you
could put eleven personnel in the game. But really it
was like, you know, and eleven personnel is one tight
end through receivers and a half back, but really you're
still kind of in you know, a full back mentality,

(24:17):
tight end mentality blocking and you could run which a
lot of back then, a lot of teams weren't running
the ball from those formations. And so Rob, I mean
really changed the game in that matter because he was
aligneman who was the premier pass catcher at the same time.
So you know, him being healthy in that game and
being able to threaten their defense with the vertical passing game,

(24:38):
you know, probably would have helped. I never liked to
look back and say what if, because there's you know,
so many plays in a game, so many players playing,
but Rob obviously was you know, a critical part of
that team. Question.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
So you go to Cleveland in twelve, right, yep, thirteen, Uh, okay, yep.
At some point time as you're apprenticing under Tom. You're
learning all this, it's got to be in your mind.
It's time for me to see if I can start.
Sure here gets your opportunity to do that. We're talking
about what is and should have and stuff like that,
as far as we'll h in that Super Bowl?

Speaker 2 (25:12):
Do you think at all about what is and should is?
You guys are rolling a.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
Little bit before the Pittsburgh game. Yep, you know, does
that one come? You know, if I don't get hurt?

Speaker 3 (25:20):
Ye, I wonder if Yeah, that's that's probably when I
look back at my career and even more so being
a Cleveland kid who grew up and getting finally a chance,
you know, like you said, back up Tom for three years,
go to a super Bowl, don't win the Super Bowl,
you know, get released the next year, out of football
for ten weeks, and then now here I am on

(25:40):
my hometown team, get a chance to start, win two games.
There's a night game, big game, you know, there's a
lot of hype and tear my aco. I think that's
probably if I look at back at like if I
could say, there's one huge what if? Now, granted I
end up rehabiting and coming back and being the starter
again there the next year, but you know, you just
Tomember like our coaches got fired after that year because

(26:01):
we didn't win another game. And you know, so for me,
that's probably like when I look back, like you know,
we talk about like branch realities and multiverse and all
that stuff, like maybe somewhere in some you know reality,
I didn't get hurt and ended up staying there and
maybe don't go to nine different teams. But you know,
if everything works out for a reason, if I was

(26:22):
still playing there, then I went and came back here
in seventeen and won a Super Bowl.

Speaker 4 (26:25):
So what do you consider your best season?

Speaker 3 (26:30):
Oddly enough of me playing you know, when statistically looking,
you probably look at Houston as my best year. It
was that I only ended up playing like nine full
games due to injury and actually.

Speaker 4 (26:40):
Getting benched nineteen touchdowns.

Speaker 3 (26:42):
Yeah, and so that was great. But I look at
the stretch I had in Chicago, and that was with
a guy offensive coordinator, Dallala Loggins, who had a little
influence from this tree, the Patriots tree, but also he
was with me in Cleveland with Kyle Shannan, and he
kind of melded those two systems together. And I think
I had four or five games in a row three
hundred yards passing at least two touchdowns in every game.

(27:03):
And then of course again of what if break break
my forum on a Thursday night game. Those those Thursday
night games weren't very very.

Speaker 4 (27:10):
There's no injury problem here, We're going to change the kickoff, Matt.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
So you know, that was probably my best stretch, I
think statistically, you know, Houston was a crazy year because
I start Week one and then somehow after, you know,
battling for the job on hard knocks, you know, I
get bench for a Ryan Mallet and then it doesn't
work out with him. I come back in, we go
to the playoffs, and then self admittedly play like the

(27:36):
worst game in my entire athletic career, going back to
like first grade. You know, it was just one of
those days things weren't working and then that was it.
And I think that's the reality of like a guy
like me in the NFL. You come in undrafted, you
don't have a lot of hype behind you, and anytime
you falter, they're like, well that's why, that's why. And
so I'm thankful that I was able to have the
career I have. But you know, if you're a first

(27:58):
round pick, you're gonna get multip opportunities because that's why
you were a first round pick. So I mean, that's
just the way the cookie crumbles and you learn how
to work the business side of it. But yeah, probably
Houston was probably my best year, which that was reuniting
with Bill O'Brien in this system and knowing you know,
kind of that.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
Brian you talk about you talked earlier about parent your
son's in seventh grade, you know, maybe has a little
bit more of a realization about what it was that
you were doing, what you were going through, just from
a parenting and a teaching standpoint. The fact that you
were in Pittsburgh, Arizona, San Francisco, Chicago, three tours with

(28:36):
New England, Like, is that a good teachable moment for
your kids? Like, who knows what they're gonna do. But
you know what got'd be resilient in life, babe.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
Yeah, I know. That's the thing. Is what I try
to relate to them is you know, you said resiliency,
you know, dealing with adversity and look, I know I'm
talking about playing in the NFL. I know that people
have a lot of different, you know, things that.

Speaker 4 (28:58):
They deal with, but those are Mary Pratz.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
Right, those are yeah, but my kids, I mean they've
lived in the military, right, so but I think, you know,
it teaches you that, you know, things aren't always going
to go your way in life, and you have to
figure out how to you know, work your way through
those times. And you know, I was always grateful that
I always had the opportunity to come back here because
after being in all those places, I craved the culture

(29:21):
of New England. I craved the tough we're gonna make
We're gonna do everything we can to win. And sure
were there days that were miserable that we all kind
of came in after practice and was like like I
don't want to go to this meeting. Yeah, but I
also after being on teams that you know, it was
fun on Wednesday, it was fun on Thursday, it was
fun on Friday. But Sunday rolled around and you got
your butt kicked. Like I was thankful to come back

(29:44):
to this culture and be around guys that you know,
I kind of started my career with and now they
had become like the leaders of the team, like the
mccordy's obviously Tom was still here, but you know, Julian
high Tower, you know, guys like that, David Andrews, you
know the guys who you know they got it and
it was I was excited to be back. So you know,
you never know what path you're going to take. And

(30:06):
you know, everyone always jokes like success is kind of
like always upward. It's it's up and it's down, and
you know, so just like my career, there's highs and lows,
and you know, I wouldn't change a thing I think
along the way. I always tell my agent this, like,
you know, at every fork in the road, I always
felt like we made the right decision.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
That's great. I hope I am not screwing this up.
One more kid question.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
When you were traded back here was that Halloween?

Speaker 3 (30:29):
It was Halloween night. I remember being there.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
You got this isn't I mean we want to talk
about we're dad's you know, you remember going out trick
or treating with your kids.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Okay, he's in the NFL.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
It's a little bit different, but at the end of
the day, still a dad. You're traded back to Hey,
we're going back to New England.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
This is great.

Speaker 3 (30:45):
Tell us a story. So I remember leaving the facilities
in San Francisco that day and I was like, all right,
see tomorrow, Kyle, see tomorrow. And I think might have
been the day before Halloween because we had to go
get the costume. And so I got home, took my
son to like the Spear Halloween store, get his costume,
get to the checkout line, get to the car, and
Kyle calls me back and he's like, Hey, we're going

(31:09):
to trade you back to New England. And I was
like what He's like, Yeah, they offered to trade us Jimmy,
and as part of the deal, like they need a
backup quarterback, so like, you know, we're going to trade
you back to New England. And I just remember being
in shock because you know, I thought i'd seen it
all at that point, but I'd never been a part
of a trade. And the way it worked out, it

(31:29):
wasn't like they agreed to release me and I could
sign here and because of comp picks and things like that.
But I remember having to like go home and like
break that to my wife because we had moved, but
we had never moved in the middle of this season,
and I was like, all right, so I'm gonna have
to go to New England on Tuesday night. And then
I remember it was the bye week here, so I practiced,
stayed an extra day, met with Jerry Schaplinski, who was

(31:51):
the quarterback coach, met with Josh a little bit. All
the players went to their you know whatever they were
doing for the bye week. I flew back to California.
We got the biggest suitcase I because, by the way,
Bill's like, hey, we're playing in Mexico City in two weeks,
so I hope you have a passport, and did you? Yeah?
I did, And so I packed as much stuff as
I could, took the red Is on Saturday night, came

(32:11):
home or came here Sunday, landed Sunday morning, went and
saw three different houses, picked one went to her to
school and being the school that my kids still go
to this day. And you know, it was a whirlwind,
you know week. But that's I mean, look, like I said,
I know that we're privileged. This is the NFL, so
not comparing it to other people's situations, but that was
a week that took a huge toll in my family

(32:33):
and my wife and and you know, I couldn't have
done the career that I had without her and her support.
And thankfully we were you know, we met when we
were in high school, so we had a strong foundation
and and you know, but in a way it made
our kids, you know, kind of mature and deal. And
so my son we went out to Vegas last year
and he goes to baseball practice with a bunch of

(32:53):
kids that he doesn't know, and by the end they're
all laughing and he's he's immediately so he knows how
to adapt. And so there's positives and negatives to all
sides of it.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
Did you get to trick or treat?

Speaker 3 (33:02):
No? No, Well, I remember being like waiting for the
deal to be worked out and Bill calls me. He's like, look,
are are you gonna get here or what. I'm like, Bill,
I'm just waiting for like the airline ticket. I got
a bagpock in my car. I was at the kids
like Halloween party at school, and I'm like, I'm just
waiting for like the ticket.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
That's so I'm not going to ask you the question
about the Eagles Super Bowl in seventeen.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
We'll gloss over that not only anyone knows anyways.

Speaker 4 (33:28):
Okay, So in twenty eighteen. Obviously you're part of your
championship season. For you, I want to go before that
to the Kansas City game in the AFC Championship game
and just what it was like because for Matt and I,
you know, again there's you know, that same theme of
us being around. Sure, we've both been around for all

(33:48):
of these Super Bowls, so we've gotten a chance. That
one stands out for us. That Kansas City AFC Championship
game was one of the greatest games that I've seen,
and I just want to know what it was like
from your perspective watching that overtime drive.

Speaker 3 (34:01):
Yeah, I mean me, I think that's my favorite game
as a Patriot ever. Love to hear that because in
a way, looking back, that really was the Super Bowl
in my in my opinion, I know, we had to
go the next week and beat the Rams, and the
defense played an incredible game, but to go into Kansas City,
it's like, you know, minus five degrees, no one's given
us a chance to win. And the effort that everybody

(34:24):
put in that week to that game to then get,
like you said, get to this overtime win, I think,
and you see it on our faces running on the
field I think it was kind of a true, like
we're getting goosebumps talking about it, like a true like
us against the world moment. No one was there to
support us other than the guys on that sideline. No
one in this everyone in the stands, you know, wanted

(34:44):
us to lose. Really, everybody kind of wanted this changing
of the guard. Here's Mahomes, you know they're going to
beat the Patriots, and it was kind of like against
all odds type thing, and so fittingly comes down to
this two minute drive where here's Tom and the famous
you know Julian quote or too old at his age,
and you know, methodically drives us down and win with

(35:06):
a touchdown. I mean, it's to me, it was like
the ultimate team win. And when I always think of
my time with the Patriots, it was always the best
teams that I've been on. And I'm not just saying
because we were the most talented or had the best
coaching staff. I'm talking about the group of men that
were in the room, and we were so close knit
as a team. And like I said, I think you

(35:27):
see that when you see on the field, and I
think it's I'm right behind Kyle Van noy and Tom's
jumping into Kyle's arms, and it was like it was
like this moment, like this is this is we have
to go win the next week because this game was
so important and so critical to that and the belief
that it gave I think everybody in that team and.

Speaker 1 (35:46):
Look fortunately for the rules and everything like that coin toss.
You win, you know you're getting the ball as you're
sitting there and you're seeing you know, the personnel, everything
like that, Is there any doubt in your mind? You
guys are going down and scoring At that point in time.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
It was kind of like a member. It was kind
of like a back and forth. You were just hoping
you got the ball. And I think at that point
it was like the thing that always I always looked
back was they I couldn't imagine. I couldn't believe that
they couldn't cover Julian because really we ran the same
play from both sides and we had this little motion
and kind of and you were like when they when
he hit those two plays, You're like, man, we're in

(36:21):
the driver's seat. We just got to go and not
make any mistakes. And you know, we had I think
we had running with Rex ye, a touchdown.

Speaker 4 (36:28):
So but three third and tens.

Speaker 3 (36:30):
Right, and you know, it was a play called China,
and it meant like a shoot and an inn the
ch for shooting and in and and I'm like, all right,
well it worked once and usually sometimes as a quarterback
you kind of like get to the point where like,
all right, we just ran that play like there's no
way it's going to work again. And you know that
was just Tom basically, you know, dropping back seeing the

(36:52):
coverage and here comes Julian. You know, several times I think,
I don't know if Hogan had a great catch on
that drive, but had right regulation, Yeah, it was kind
of a similar play. But clearly, you know, this is
the greatness of Tom and Josh and all those guys
working together. They were having trouble cover in the middle
of the field and so just continue to expose it
until they fix it. And you know, they didn't fix

(37:14):
it in time, and luckily for us, you know, I
was able to take us down and win that game.

Speaker 1 (37:19):
So Paul brings up and I think a lot of
Patriot fans would agree, spoiled, Yes, first world problems. What's
the best game? Interesting to hear that you say that,
but you got to go when you got to beat
the Rams in Atlanta, And I'm not sure that fans
quite know the role that you played that week and
your experience with McVeigh and that system. Talk a little

(37:42):
bit about what how you saw your role that week
as getting ready to.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
Play the Rams.

Speaker 3 (37:47):
Yeah, I mean as a backup quarterback, you always prepare
to play. We talked about that earlier, but the reality is, like,
you know, Tom's healthy. I mean, could something happen in
the game, yes, But you know, for me, I always
think like how can I you know, especially at this this,
you know, the last game of the year of the
Super Bowl, Like what am I going to do to
contribute to the team to help them win? And because

(38:07):
I was a veteran guy as a backup and had
played in a lot of places, I always had great
conversations with Devin and Jason and high Tower and Gilmore,
And you know, when I would we would play a
team that maybe it was a system that I was
in and I'm running the scout team, I'm like, hey, listen,
this is how they're teaching these quarterbacks, this is what
they're looking at. And I'll never forget, like get into
the hotel in Atlanta, and you know, you practice a

(38:29):
week before you travel, and I'm like, all right, some
of these plays are similar to what I ran with Kyle,
who obviously influenced Sean. And I remember, you know, being
in the hotel room. I'm like, because you have to
have an off day, even though you're traveling there for
the super Bowl, it's an off day and you know
your family's not there yet, and so you kind of
hunkered down in the hotel. And I saw a thing
on like Yahoo. It's like here's and it's like kind

(38:51):
of they did like a hard Knock show, but it
was on Amazon. And here's like some clips from the
year that the Rams did, you know, miked up and
and I'm listening to like the play call that they
have on these clips from training camp, and I'm like, well,
I know that play. I run that play before. And
as the week went on, I kept watching more and
more of their film and being like, I know the
offense that they're gonna run and having meetings with Bill

(39:13):
and Map and was Matt still.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
There or was it flow this flow yeah.

Speaker 3 (39:16):
And being like listen, I know, you know, they don't
really have an answer for this they don't really have.
You know, if you bring this pressure, you know, they
have to throw hot things like that, and you know,
so I took a lot of pride in that. And
one of the like my prodest moments was after the
Super Bowl Devin and Jason kind of talking that to
the media and being like we were on it. We
we had a great feeling because Brian gave us a

(39:37):
great look. He sat there and talked about, you know,
their their offensive system, and you know, that was a
way for me to feel like I actually contributed in
some way because I never stepped on the field, but
you know, you got to do whatever you can to
help the team win. So, you know, something that I
was proud of and fortunate of having been in those systems.
I could relate that to those guys.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
So when you show your kids your Super Bowl ring, yeah,
any kid goes, oh, that's a nice RNK deb But
you didn't play.

Speaker 2 (40:00):
Well, hold on for a second, you're right, I didn't play.

Speaker 4 (40:03):
That's the one I came up with a defensive game plan.

Speaker 1 (40:05):
However, however, and like that's that's the power of team, right,
isn't it.

Speaker 3 (40:11):
Yeah, And that's what I would always say about the Patriots.
We always had the best team. And I'm talking about
the relationships closeness. There's nothing ever been comparable to the
locker room that I had, especially as I got older.
I mean it was great as a young guy, but
as an older player, you appreciated even more. And you know,

(40:31):
they did a great job. In seventeen eighteen nineteen, we
did these things in the offseason called like the team
of Teams, and it was a way for you to
bond with other players on the team. And so there'd
be like two offensive players, two defensive players, maybe a
special teams player, a coach, a trainer, a football ops guy.
And we did these like challenges. So like we'd have
field day out on the out on the field and

(40:51):
be like the egg toss or the frisbee throw or
you know, a sack race, or one day we went
down to Fenway. I remember we did this great like
baseball challenge and one day we'd paintballing And it was
a way for you to connect with guys that you're
not always sitting there every day with in the meetings.
And that's where I felt like you had this closeness.
You know, I go in and sit with the dbs
at lunch one day, and the next day I'd sit

(41:13):
with the linemen, and you had these relationships with guys
where in all, honestly, it was almost closer than some
of the college's college teams, where you're spending all this
time with these guys because we all go home to
our families, but when you came in here, it was
like your second family in true you know, and I'm
not just saying that like as clichey.

Speaker 4 (41:29):
See he glossed over that. Do you see what he
did there before? The whole thing. Bill doesn't deserve the credit.

Speaker 5 (41:35):
For that, right right, right right that he gets right right,
this guy right right When you came back again third
time in twenty twenty, was there a hint of disappointment
when they end up signing Cam, Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 3 (41:49):
I mean, well, that whole scenario is so in twenty nineteen,
you know, Bill comes to me, obviously that was Sidham's
rookie year, and he says, look like, we got to
manage this roster a little bit. Are you okay with
like kind of waiting, you know, we'll let you go
and we'll resign you after the first week. And I
was like, sure, like, you know, I love, you know,
being a part of this organization. And and all of

(42:11):
a sudden, my agent calls me. He's like, hey, Indianapolis
is offering you a great deal. And I was like,
I felt torn, but it was an opportunity that I
looked at like.

Speaker 4 (42:19):
In the long run, this will pretty good money.

Speaker 2 (42:21):
Yeah, yeah, great.

Speaker 3 (42:21):
It was a great deal. And so in a way,
I kind of thought like I never really left, you know,
so like Thirdston, I was gone for four months and
then I was right back, and with Tom moving on,
I'm like, wow, this is my opportunity. And so I
remember training like the hardest, and this was during COVID
and and trying to train on your own and trying
to be as prepared as I could. And you know,

(42:42):
so obviously I was disappointed when they signed Cam because
that was like something I had always dreamt of. You know,
I had started for all these other teams, but I
had never really played for the Patriots, the one team
that I kind of considered myself that was the team
that was my team. So it was it was disappointing,
but like I said, you know, it's not something that
I had never lived through before. And you try to

(43:04):
navigate it the best you can.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
I mean, obviously people will look at when Tom left
and there's clearly a void on the field. You saw
some of the ups and downs that happened after that.
It wasn't just on the field where that void was felt.
I assume that that was felt in the locker room,
and it probably was difficult and challenging.

Speaker 2 (43:27):
For someone like you.

Speaker 1 (43:28):
By Paul mentioned this earlier, you saw when things were
going really well, so a Devin, So it Matt. People
like that when things aren't going well and you guys
are some of the leaders and everything, like how do
you try to sit there and recapture what you know
is the right way to do things? You know what
winning football is, and yet that's not happening on the field. Yeah,

(43:49):
that had to be just tremendously frustrating.

Speaker 3 (43:52):
It was, and I think twenty twenty was such a
unique situation because of the COVID year, because of like
what you were allowed to do. Obviously, you know, cam
in late and there's no real training camp, and it
was just it was a it was an odd year
all the way around. And so you know, next year
it was like, Okay, we're getting back to like what
you know, at least to me, felt similar to what

(44:13):
it was obviously was different with our team routine routine,
and and then Matt comes in and I remember thinking, like, God,
they have to be like telling the guy, like where
what to do out here a practice because he was
learning so quickly that I was like, I've never seen
a rookie pick up a system like this. And it
became pretty apparent that he was going to be the starter.
And I truly, you know, my time with Cam was

(44:35):
was great. I came to you know, really know him
and appreciate him for what he was, and he was
hilarious and he was great in meetings and and so
I know, like his time here was kind of you know,
looked at like it wasn't really you know, a success,
but he he impacted a lot of guys and we
would there was things that Cam did and sayings that
he would say that carried with us after even he

(44:55):
was not here anymore. And so, you know, I really
enjoyed and I've had a lot of experiences like that,
like kind of these polarizing figures, you know, Cam Newton
or when I was in Chicago with Jay Cutler, people
were always like, well, what was that like? And I
was like, I really enjoyed it because you got to
see a personality of someone who from Afar you don't
really know, like what's the deal. And so being in
a room with Cam for a year and a half

(45:16):
really it was always made me smile. So it was
it was that was kind of cool opportunity about that.
But you know, you get to twenty twenty one where
you know, Mac ends up winning the job and and
you kind of get back to like what I thought
was really, you know what we had always done the
Patriot way, and I mean, for lack of a better term,
but but there was also a new energy with some

(45:37):
of the newer guys like Kendrick Bourne, Judaon Mills, Hunter
Henry and so it kind of was a new flavor.
And really that was one of my more enjoyable years
playing here because it was kind of like in a
sense of changing of the guard, but we were still
playing good football.

Speaker 4 (45:53):
So Cam was great with us, by the way, Yeah
he was. Also he was it was you know, on
field obviously probably not up to you know what he
had become accustomed to.

Speaker 2 (46:01):
It seemed like a good teammate.

Speaker 3 (46:03):
Yeah, Well, he was great gat It was great to
deal with and we all joke about like the nicknames
and stuff, and like some of those nicknames lasted with
guys well passed fantastic when Cam was gone. He was
a great to night and a great, a great guy.

Speaker 4 (46:13):
So you got a chance to play again the following year.
I was at twenty two when I got twenty against
So again it's like this kind of blessing curse at
the same time, great career and every time you sort
of get a chance to get it in the spotlight,
something happens. It just has to be we did.

Speaker 3 (46:31):
That was rushed. I mean I remember being emotional about
that one because it was like, you know, I got
to play a chance to play in twenty twenty. But
that was the.

Speaker 1 (46:38):
Whole like co COVID, that was a mess.

Speaker 3 (46:41):
We found out on Saturday, then the game got plays
flew in on the day of and not making excuses,
it was just it was odd. It was one of
the most odd experiences I ever had. And so this
time in twenty twenty two, you know here it is
like Max Hurt, You're gonna play full week of practice,
have a really good drive to start the game. Things
going well and then boom, you're out. And that was

(47:03):
to me was like, man, that was probably my last
chance to really play for the team that I love,
and so that was that was a a tough.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
One, last one for me.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
Here, Brian, is I hear you say that the team
that I love, and we talked about, you know a
little bit about some of the other places you want
and everything like that.

Speaker 2 (47:19):
We call this the Patch from the Past podcast. Do
you identify as a Patriot?

Speaker 3 (47:23):
Yeah, one hundred percent. I was kind of thinking. I
figured you'd ask me this on and so I was thinking,
you know, I was here some former fashion ten years
out of my fifteen, which is kind of crazy to
think when you hear like, oh he was on this
many teams, but you know, nine to twelve and a
training camp and then seventeen eighteen, nineteen, twenty, twenty one,
twenty two. I mean, so my kids are from here.

(47:44):
You know, we've kind of made this our home. And
you know, when I look at my career, although I
played the least on this team, I also kind of
look at myself like this is that's who I am.
And I had a lot of great memories other places,
but I've had the best memories here.

Speaker 4 (48:00):
So I do want to ask you about coming off
the bench last year, you know, in Vegas, and what
that was like too. So to rally the troops after Jimmy.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
Went down, Yeah, that was a I'm thinking to myself,
of all the times to get thrust into a game,
this is the one. And and Jimmy got hurt, like
right before halftime and kind of toughed it out a
little bit, and I'm like, oh, kind of similar, like
he got hurt, but then he went back out. He
played a few snaps like oh, he's probably okay, and
then they take him in They're like, listen, we got

(48:30):
to tame him the hospital. I'm like, all right, here
we go. And and you know, of all teams to
go against, I'm like, well, I know this team, I
know this defense, and I know our offense really well.
And so I was like, all right, I'm just gonna
go out.

Speaker 4 (48:41):
There and I'm throwing a bomb.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
Well, that play we developed against our defense in training
camp a few years because there was a lot of
times where we call play and Devin had seen it
so many times that they would teach him to rob
the guy who which was Julian at the time, our
number three receiver running a speedo and so I'm like,
oh God, here we go. This is the play, and
we made adjustment to put the outside guy on a

(49:03):
deep route in case they did that. So I remember
getting the snap. I kind of knew that down a
distance it could be that defense, and all I watched
was Peppers, and as soon as he went down, I
don't even know if I looked to Trey, who I
was throwing the ball to, I'm like, I know that
area of the field is exposed, and sure enough, that
kind of got the jitters out, and then you just
go play football. And then you know, as the game's

(49:25):
going on, I'm realizing, like, just don't screw it up,
you know. I mean, we're winning, we're kicking some field goals,
that our defense is doing pretty well. But I remember
the feeling I had after that game of like just
bittersweet because I remember going up to my team and
the guys that I love, the guys that I consider brothers,
and I could just see how dejected they were. I know,
I knew, you know, based on staying in touch with them,

(49:47):
how tough of a year it was. And so I
was elated because it was kind of vindication for me
to come back and beat the team after being told
basically to go retire. And I felt great, but I
also it hurt my heart to see these like I'll
never forget David Andrews just being like exhausted and you know,

(50:07):
beaten down or Slater and and all those guys, and
so it was kind of like a mix of mixed
emotions and looking back, I should have just you know,
been done after that game and been like, all right,
you know, I did my part, you know, because the
rest of the year for us was it was downhill.
But it's something that you know, it goes down as
like a as a great memory, but also like a
bittersweet one too.

Speaker 1 (50:27):
I mean, he said it. We're professional athletes. I'm not
looking for anything specially anything like that. But let's not forget.

Speaker 2 (50:35):
They're human beings too. Yeah, they're human beings, and to and.

Speaker 1 (50:38):
To hear like, wow, this is great for me individually.

Speaker 2 (50:41):
Oh shoot, you know, these.

Speaker 1 (50:43):
Are my guys and they're going through a tough time
and I just helped extend that tough time.

Speaker 3 (50:49):
You know.

Speaker 2 (50:49):
Really interesting, Fran, Thanks for the time, great, Thank you
for downloading this podcast, Subscribe on Apple, Google Play, and
everywhere else you listen. Like the show, please rate and
review us. Listener comments and ratings help keep us high
in the podcast rankings so new listeners can find us.
Be sure to check Patriots dot

Speaker 3 (51:08):
Com for more news and more podcasts.
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