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The Ravens embarrass the Patriots.
2009 Patriots Season Wrap-Up
An opening
game rushing play that should've gained about three yards goes off for
83 yards and a touchdown.
Typical.
That single play pretty much sums up the New England Patriots' 2009 season.
Whether it was defending a large fourth quarter lead, making basic play calls,
punching the ball in from the 1 yard line, or something as simple as
not letting a wide receiver run right past you, the Patriots managed to
make the mundane into a monstrosity. This was a season built upon a
foundation of late-game collapses, 4th and 2's, goal line fumbles, and
missed assignments. The fact that it came to a screeching halt in the
wake of a 24-0 first quarter deficit should come as no surprise. At no
moment throughout this entire 17 game run did the Patriots do anything
to establish themselves as one of the NFL's elite teams. Every
opportunity to do so was seemingly met with an indominable will to "blow
it". As a result, New England found itself overwhelmingly under
achieving at 10-6. What could have easily been a first-round bye,
became a wild card game. What could have been a young defense on the
rise, became a squad notorious for giving up important plays. What
could have been a season to build upon became a giant step backwards.
What could have been...
Yet this
isn't a time for all the "if's" and the "but's". This is a time to
reflect upon what is. And the Patriots are a team with a piss-poor pass
rush, sieves at the corner position, a razor-thin receiving corps, no
top running back, a banged-up quarterback, an over-matched offensive
coordinator, no defensive coordinator, and a coach who's clearly lost
his mojo. That's what the Patriots are. The debacle against Baltimore
cemented it. Sunday's game was the ugly head of an infection that's been
smoldering all season. When your opponent beats you by putting up one
more passing yard than they do points, there's clearly something awrye.
Bill
Belichick has his off-season work cut out for him perhaps moreso than
any season in his tenure. There's cancers to be cut out, weakness to be
stomped out, and bad trends to be reversed. Yet at the same time, the
Patriots were still a team capable of winning their division and claming
the AFC's third seed, despite all their flaws. It's easy to look at
this past season and claim the sky is falling, as it clearly didn't
measure up to what we've come to expect from this team over the past
nine years. The Patriots have clearly gone from being excellent to just
being good. Still, "good" is a decent starting point, all things
considered. A pass rusher here, a cornerback there, and perhaps the
return of Deion Branch or some other free-agent receiver, and,
suddently, New England returns to the Super Bowl conversations.
No good
thing lasts forever. Indeed the Patriots' reing of dominance couldn't
even last the length of a decade. Still, as we leave the 00's, an era
that will forever be defined by New England and their epic battles with
the Colts, I have hope for what lies ahead. There are still pieces left
missing to the puzzle, but they will be filled in time. The Patriots
went from being an old team to a young team seemingly overnight.
Expecting the youngsters to play like the wily veterans who claimed
those three titles is asking a bit much, as is expecting Brady to come
back from ACL surgery and act like nothing ever happened, or expecting
Bill Belichick to not miss a step when he's had a revolving door of top
assistants year in and year out. Rome wasn't built in a day, and neither
was the Patriots Dynasty. Returning New England to its former glory
will be a process. If it involves some trial by fire, or, in this case,
trial by the most embarrassing playoff defeat I've ever experienced, so
be it. All I know is that I want to see my team raise the Lombardi
again in the 10's. I want them to become the only franchise to ever
define two decades. As I've said many times before, "If you have Brady,
and you have Belichick, then you have a chance".
I believe
this team has more than just a chance.
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