reflections
NFL: Tom Brady leads New England Patriots past…

The way Tom Brady was getting everyone involved, it’s a surprise no linemen or linebackers caught passes.

Brady threw for 361 yards and three touchdowns and the New England Patriots (8-3) beat the Philadelphia Eagles in a rematch of the 2005 Super Bowl.

Brady, the six-time Pro Bowl quarterback finished 24 of 34, Deion Branch had 125 yards receiving, and Wes Welker caught eight passes for 115 yards and two TDs. Rob Gronkowski caught his 11th TD pass, and Aaron Hernandez had six receptions. BenJarvus Green-Ellis scored twice on the ground.

“It was more balanced today,” Brady said. “That’s how it needs to be. We did a good job maximizing all the guys.”

The Eagles (4-7) are all but mathematically eliminated from playoff contention. Filling in for the injured Michael Vick, Vince Young had a career-best 400 yards passing.

New England          7          17          7          7–38

Philadelphia          10          3          0          7–20

FIRST QUARTER

Phi — McCoy 2 run (Henery kick), 12:43.

Phi — FG Henery 43, 8:19.

NE — Green-Ellis 4 run (Gostkowski kick), 1:27.

SECOND QUARTER

NE — Green-Ellis 1 run (Gostkowski

kick), 13:12.

NE — Welker 41 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 7:09.

Phi — FG Henery 22, 2:11.

NE — FG Gostkowski 45, :51.

THIRD QUARTER

NE — Welker 9 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 11:27.

FOURTH QUARTER

NE — Gronkowski 24 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 8:35.

Phi — Avant 1 pass from Young (Henery kick), :32.

         NE          Phi

First downs          29          23

Total Net Yards          457          466

Rushes-yards          36-104          17-73

Passing          353          393

Punt Returns          2-13          0-0

Kickoff Returns          4-77          2-39

Interceptions Ret.          1-27          0-0

Comp-Att-Int          24-34-0          26-48-1

Sacked-Yards Lost          1-8          2-7

Punts          3-48.3          5-39.8

Fumbles-Lost          0-0          0-0

Penalties-Yards          3-20          10-60

Time of Possession          32:43          27:17

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

New England rushing — Green-Ellis 14-44, Brady 6-27, Woodhead 4-20, Vereen 7-18, Ridley 4-4, Welker 1-(minus 9).

Philadelphia rushing — Young 6-40, McCoy 10-31, Hall 1-2.

New England passing — Brady 24-34-0-361.

Philadelphia passing — Young 26-48-1-400.

New England receiving — Welker 8-115, Branch 6-125, Hernandez 6-62, Gronkowski 4-59.

Philadelphia receiving — Avant 8-110, Celek 5-75, D.Jackson 4-73, McCoy 4-30, Cooper 3-71, Harbor 1-25, Hall 1-16.

Missed field goals — New England, Gostkowski 39 (WR).

A — 69,144.

Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news.

Brady, Patriots rout Eagles 38-20
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, right, reacts with wide receiver Wes Welker, second from left, and tight end Rob Gronkowski (87), left, after Welker's touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011, in Philadelphia.

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, right, reacts with wide receiver Wes Welker, second from left, and tight end Rob Gronkowski (87), left, after Welker’s touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011, in Philadelphia. / AP Photo / Michael Perez

Written by
ROB MAADDI, AP Pro Football Writer


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New England Patriots Beat Miami Dolphins: Tom…

MIAMI — Tom Brady sat on the bench, his sweat-soaked hair hanging in his face as he fumed about his first interception in nearly 11 months.

A little later he was back in the same seat wearing a wide grin as teammates congratulated him on a record-setting performance.

Brady shook off a rare turnover to throw for a team-record 517 yards and four touchdowns, including a 99-yarder to Wes Welker, and the New England Patriots started with a victory for the eighth consecutive season Monday night by beating the Miami Dolphins 38-24.

Defensive end Jared Odrick picked off a deflected pass to set up a Miami touchdown and end Brady’s NFL-record streak of 358 passes without an interception.

Otherwise Brady and the reigning AFC East champions picked up where they left off last season, when he threw for 36 TDs and his team led the league in scoring.

New England totaled 622 yards, the most in franchise history and the most allowed by Miami. Brady’s performance overshadowed Miami’s Chad Henne, who threw for a career-high 416 yards.

The 906 net yards passing by both teams was an NFL record.

“They made some plays on us,” Brady said. “We made a few more than them.”

Brady, who went 32 for 48, became the 11th quarterback to throw for at least 500 yards. Norm Van Brocklin set the record of 554 yards in 1951.

“We’re pleased to have him on our side,” teammate Danny Woodhead said with a smile.

“Embarrassing,” Miami safety Yeremiah Bell said. “That can’t happen.”

The capper came with 5:44 left and the Patriots leading 31-17. After they stopped Miami on downs at the 1-foot line, Brady lined up in the shotgun on first down and threw from his end zone to Welker, who had slipped behind Benny Sapp near the 30-yard line.

“When I saw the coverage as we lined up, I knew there was a strong possibility I could be getting the ball,” Welker said. “I just wanted to make the most of the opportunity.”

He did, catching the pass in stride and sprinting untouched for the score to complete the longest play in Patriots history.

“I only threw it 25 yards. Wes did all the work,” Brady said. “When I saw him break away, that was awesome. Coach never lets us run that route in practice.”

Brady also threw touchdown passes on consecutive plays. He hit Aaron Hernandez for a 31-yard score, and when a replay review determined the receiver was down at the 1, Brady threw to him again for a TD on the next play.

His other scoring passes covered 10 yards to Rob Gronkowski and 2 yards to Welker.

“Some of their scores ended up looking like it was kind of easy,” Miami coach Tony Sparano said.

Said Brady: “I wouldn’t say it was easy at all.”

He was sacked only once, and good protection gave his receivers plenty of time to work their way open.

Newcomer Chad Ochocino had only one catch for 14 yards. But Welker made eight receptions for 160 yards against his former team, and tight ends Hernandez and Gronkowski combined for 189 yards on 13 catches.

“It wasn’t a one-man band out there,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “We had a lot of contributions.”

The Dolphins’ defense returned virtually intact from last season and was expected to be the team’s strength, but Brady riddled them from the start.

He completed his first eight passes for 127 yards on the Patriots’ first two possessions, and both ended with TDs.

Brady’s first interception since Oct. 17 came early in the third quarter, when he tried to hit Julian Edelman in the flat. Sapp deflected the ball to the 304-pound Odrick, who rumbled 40 yards to the 9. Two plays later, Henne hit Brian Hartline with a 10-yard touchdown pass to make the score 14-all.

Brady was so rattled it took him 10 plays to put the Pats ahead to stay. They drove 73 yards and scored on his 2-yard pass to Welker.

Miami’s problems with Brady were nothing new. He and the Pats beat the Dolphins twice last year while outscoring them 79-21. Losing at home was nothing different for the Dolphins, either, who have dropped 10 of their past 11 home games.

“This is the first game, man,” linebacker Karlos Dansby said. “We’ve got 15 more. Know what I’m saying? We’ve just got to play well from here on out.”

There was one change for the Dolphins. They promised a more aggressive, exciting offense under new offensive coordinator Brian Daboll and showed it from the start, scoring on a season-opening drive for the first time since 2000.

They lined up 355-pound nose tackle Paul Soliai in their goal-line offense, did damage with quarterback keepers by Henne and gave newcomer Reggie Bush 20 touches. Brandon Marshall gained 139 yards on seven catches.

But Miami couldn’t keep up with Brady.

“Not the defensive performance we were hoping for,” Sparano said. “That’s an understatement.”

Notes: Patriots C Dan Koppen rode off in a cart late in the first half with a left leg injury. He was on crutches after the game. … Dolphins DE Tony McDaniel missed most of the second half with a hand injury. … Brady’s previous career high in passing yardage was 410 against Kansas City in 2002. … A statue of founding Dolphins owner Joe Robbie was rededicated before the game. The statue had been in a storage area during stadium renovations. … Celebrities in attendance included Dwyane Wade, Will Smith and Pitbull.

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That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

Wes Welker regrets taunting Rex Ryan with foot references

New England Patriots wide receiver Wes Welker(notes) helped to escalate the greatest week of trash talk ever when he made 11 references to feet in a press conference before the Jets game.

The podiatric digs, of course, were directed at New York Jets head coach Rex Ryan, who had been outed a few weeks prior as the co-star of some Internet foot-fetish videos made with his wife. Earlier in the week, Antonio Cromartie had called Tom Brady a naughty word, and I guess Welker felt like he had to respond.

He now wishes he hadn’t. From Karen Guregian at the Boston Herald:

When asked specifically if he felt any regret for taking on the Jets in that manner, Welker responded: “Yeah, sure I do.”

[...]

“I’m not going to get into any details about it, but I don’t think it’s worth putting coach (Belichick) in that situation,” he said. “So in a sense, I do regret it. … As much as you might want to get enticed into that stuff, at the end of the day, it’s just not worth it.”

[...]

“It’s not always easy to keep a lid on it,’’ Welker continued, “but at the same time, there’s a greater goal, and that’s winning the game and playing good football. That’s what matters. All that other stuff doesn’t matter at the end of the day.”

It’s worth noting that Welker isn’t apologizing to Rex Ryan. He’s not sorry for bringing a man’s personal life into the workplace, for dragging a man’s sexual proclivities back into the spotlight, or embarrassing a man and his wife.

His regrets are for making things harder on his own coach and organization. It doesn’t sound like he’s sorry for what he did, necessarily, as much as he’s sorry that his actions might have somehow hurt his own team.

In other words, I don’t think Welker would have felt much regret had the Patriots won.

Related: Wes Welker, New England Patriots, New York Jets

If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top.

Welker regrets comments about Rex Ryan

Updated Jan 25, 2011 4:22 PM ET

There is one more footnote to add to this season’s Jets-Patriots saga.

New England Patriots wide receiver Wes Welker told the Boston Herald on Monday that he regrets his decision to poke fun at Jets coach Rex Ryan by sprinkling numerous references to feet into his weekly meeting with the local media.

When asked whether he regretted the press conference prank, Welker said, “Yeah, sure I do.”

“I’m not going to get into any details about it, but I don’t think it’s worth putting coach [Belichick] in that situation,” he said. “So in a sense, I do regret it … As much as you might want to get enticed into that stuff, at the end of the day, it’s just not worth it.”

Welker’s comments, which included lines like “putting our best foot forward” and acting like “good little foot soldiers” were out of character for the Patriots, who were advised by coach Bill Belichick to avoid engaging in a trash talk war with the notoriously chatty Jets.

Belichick benched Welker for the Patriots’ first offensive series of last Sunday’s 28-21 AFC Divisional Round loss.

Welker, who is set to play Sunday in the Pro Bowl, told The Herald that in the future he will focus on not getting drawn into the trash talking.

“It’s about the team and going out there and playing good football. And not getting caught up in all the media hype. It’s just not worth it.”

But the 29-year-old admitted, “it’s not always easy to keep a lid on it.”

What are your opinions.