2010 New England Patriots

Thrashen

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The Patriots kept DT Mike Wright, DE/OLB Rob Ninkovich, and former Montana OLB Dane Fletcher on defense. A small improvement from Week 1 of the 2009 season"¦.where Wright and Ninkovich were the only players lacking proper melanin.

Wright will (finally) start alongside Wilfork. Ninkovich will either outright start alongside Banta-Cain, or be rotated in frequently with former Jet, Murrell (or rookie Cunningham). Again, this is a small increase from last season, when no white players started on defense. Barring injuries to the "real"Â￾ athletes on the roster, Dane Fletcher will be used in a racially preordained fashion, as a "white special teams demon."Â￾

Should the Patriots start Wright and Ninkovich and defense, along with possibly 7-8-9 whites on offense (5 OL, Brady, Welker, Gronkowski, and Edelman)"¦.I believe they will have the most white starters in the NFL this season.

It's easy to envision the rotund veteran, Algae Crumpler, starting over Gronkowski. Julian Edelman, who obviously possesses the ability to play outside alongside Randy Moss, will likely be regulated to Welker's "understudy"Â￾ in his culturally acceptable role as a slot / possession receiver.

Then again, the only other viable WR's on the roster are the unproven Brandon Tate and rookie Taylor Price (Sam Aiken was cut). Edelman may not start, but will certainly get playing time.
 

whiteathlete33

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Good news for Tom Brady.

NBC's Peter King reported during halftime of Thursday's game that
Patriots owner Robert Kraft has finalized a four-year contract extension
with Tom Brady. Per ESPN's Adam Schefter, it's a four-year, $72 million
deal with $48.5 million guaranteed.

The deal will become official on Friday, making Brady the highest paid
player in NFL history on a per-year basis at $18 million annually. That
distinction will be shortly lived, of course. The extension, which will
keep Brady in New England through 2014, will set the bar for Peyton
Manning to land an even bigger long-term deal from the Colts. Locking
up Brady gives the franchise much-needed offensive stability with Randy
Moss' Patriots future up in the air beyond 2010. Sep. 9 - 10:05 pm


This means Peyton Manning will get an even bigger contract. He deserves it as I think he's better than Brady and the best qb in the league and maybe of all time.
 

Bart

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Randy Moss was taking plays off and sulking much of last year. First game into this season and he's griping already. The Pats should unload that sorry clown. During the playoffs he all but disappears anyway.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=Am505J6oANamqJUmCXtI9XBDubYF?slug=dw-mossrant091210

(snip)

There were a million things for Moss to discuss postgame Sunday, including his own five-catch, 59-yard effort. Or he could've had no media session at all. Since he was, by no means, the story of the game, he wasn't in high demand.

Instead he chose an inopportune time to deliver a convoluted speech about how he's "hurt"Â￾ over not having his contract extended and how he believes this will be his last season with the Patriots, yet fans shouldn't take it the wrong way.

Although, he's not all that sold on all the "fans."Â￾

"Around here in the New England area, I think a lot of people don't want to see me do good,"Â￾ said Moss, who stated last week that he felt unwanted. "The reason why, I don't know and I don't really care."Â￾

That was essentially the poorly chosen opening remark of a sloppy, meandering 15-minute news conference. There's nothing like slapping the audience before trying to win them over.

"I want you all to know [media] and the fans, the real fans, to know that I'm not here to start any trouble,"Â￾ Moss said. "I'm here to play my last year out on my contract."Â￾

Oh, boy. Terrell Owens(notes) and Chad Ochocinco(notes) were down the hall in the Bengals locker room managing to be relatively un-divalike despite a frustrating defeat. So leave it to Moss to step into the role and turn the spotlight not just on himself, but on a contract "controversy"Â￾ that few were even discussing.

He even declared that if the Pats, who are trying to end the holdout of guard Logan Mankins(notes), wait until after the season to offer him a new deal, "that would be a smack in my face."Â￾

This was painful to watch. (snip)
 

whiteathlete33

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Surprisingly Moss said a few days ago he wouldn't complain about his contract situation during the season. He said he would just play it out for now. It only took one game for his TNB to shine through.
smiley2.gif
 
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God bless Moss, what this country needs is yet another over paid slurring ebonics speaking athlete lecturing the white fan base during the whiteman's recession over not making enough money after a half azzed performance. I literally couldn't script this better.
 

Don Wassall

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The more black athletes are coddled and pandered to, the more persecutedmanyfeel. It's a strange phenomenon, but is further evidence that holding blacks and Whites to different standards of behavior and achievement is counterproductive all the way around (except for the PTB of course).
 

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Caste Football Looks at the 2010 New England Patriots

The Patriots, like the Colts and Packers, have a predominantly White starting offense but few Whites on defense. But for the NFL, that still rates as "relatively White friendly" in a league in which over 75 percent of offensive and defensive starters are black. Special teams aren't as black because kicking and long snapping is a one hundred percent "White thing." Why is that exactly? Since black quarterbacks are supposedly routinely blessed with "rocket arms," shouldn't the NFL be filled with black kickers with "rocket legs"? And shouldn't some of those "rocket arms" be in charge of making long snaps to punters? Hmmm. . .

New England has the NFL's predominant stereotype buster in receiver Wes Welker, who led the league in receptions in 2010 and has averaged an astounding 116 catches over the past three seasons. Despite a great career at Texas Tech receiving and returning kicks (and where he was, like the vast majority of White players at "taboo" positions at the big college programs, a walk-on), Welker went undrafted and was cut by the Chargers after signing with them as a free agent and excelling in training camp. He was picked up by Miami, where he played very well but was still nearly cut by Nick Saban, who was on a mission to make the Dolphins as black as possible, before the Patriots, to their credit, saw his potential and traded for him. Otherwise Welker would have been just another one of hundreds of talented White receivers over the past 30 years who never played in the NFL or had very limited opportunities and were quickly forgotten.

Welker blew out his knee in the final game of the '09 regular season, but looks to have made an amazing recovery as he scored two TDs in the Pats' season opener. He claims to be only about 80 percent, but that's still enough to dominate.

And even when 100 percent Welker isn't blazing fast, just very quick and smart. While a few other teams are seeing the value in a "Wes Welker type," the real moral of the story is that Welker isn't that exceptional; the United States is filled with Whites who have the ability to play receiver at the highest possible levels. All they need are the same opportunities when it comes to recruitment and development that blacks get.

Another excellent example is Julian Edelman, the former quarterback at Kent State who instantly transformed as a rookie into a passable imitation of Welker. He's already better than the majority of established WRs in the NFL. Far from being "flukes," Welker and Edelman are but the tip of the iceberg of a very large talent pool of White receivers. The same holds true of every other position. Three decades of institutionalized discrimination, eagerly reinforced by a compliant media in service of a larger agenda of marginalizing Whites in the U.S., has brainwashed Whites into thinking that White men are inferior football players and inferior athletes, just another example of how things have been turned upside down in the American matrix of all-out Cultural Marxist indoctrination and rigid conformity.

Tom Brady, now 33 years old, is the captain of the New England offense. In his second season coming back from a horrific knee injury, he looks to be back in top form, which means he is one of the very best the NFL has to offer.

The Patriots' offensive line is always top notch. All five starters are White as are all of the backups except one, a rare defiance of the norm in a league that is supposedly a "copycat" one but very rarely in a way that goes against the long-entrenched norm of artificially engineered black domination. The best of the group, Logan Mankins, is involved in a contract dispute. His place at LT in the interim is being held down by Matt Light, the tenth year man out of Purdue. Dan Connolly starts at LG, Boston College grad Dan Koppen is the center, Stephen Neal is the RG, and German-born Sebastian Vollmer is the RT. All but Vollmer are long established veterans.

Backups are Nick Kaczur, Ryan Wendell, Mark LeVoir, and rookie Steve Maneri from Temple.
Brady is backed up by Brian Hoyer, a second year man out of Michigan State.

Rookie tight end Rob Gronkowski from Arizona has all the tools needed to be a real star. He's big and fast and has great hands. However, New England under Bill Belichick hasn't utilized the TE as much as other teams, and the Patriots also drafted another tight in the third round, Aaron Hernandez, after grabbing Gronkowski in the second round. Gronkowski certainly has the ability, but between Hernandez and star receivers Welker and Randy Moss there may not be enough targets to go around, at least for this season.

After five seasons serving his racial apprenticeship, Mike Wright finally gets a starting gig at right defensive end in 2010. Wright will likely not rack up huge stats in New England's 3-4 defense, but he is very solid both rushing the passer and stopping the run.

The team's depth chart currently shows Rob Ninkovich as the starter at ROLB. Ninkovich was a big-time player at Purdue, but battled injuries early in his NFL career. He saw almost no action in his first four seasons, spent with New Orleans, Miami and then New Orleans again, before finally playing as a backup for the Patriots last season.

Dane Fletcher, a rookie out of Montana State, made the squad as a backup OLB.

The Patriots' defense has been the team's weak spot the past few seasons. Too bad Belichick and the rest of the NFL won't give more opportunities to "Mike Wright types" and "Rob Ninkovich types," instead preferring to waste high draft picks year after year on morbidly obese black linemen who rarely pan out, and defensive backs who are too often long on perceived "potential" and short on production. But at least on offense the Patriots continue to defy the status quo.

Just eight of Belichick's 14 assistant coaches are White.

NUMBER OF WHITE STARTERS: 9

NUMBER OF WHITE PLAYERS ON 53 MAN ROSTER: 20

GRADE: C-
 

icsept

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Great preview. 20 out of 53 is probably tops in the league. I wonder how long it will be before someone complains about the lack of diversity in the O-line.

Hopefully Edelman will get back healthy and be a major contributor because Moss may be fading out this year.

Belichik got what he deserved last year for fielding that atrocious coal black defense. Good luck to Ninkovich and Wright this year now that their racial apprenticeship is over.Edited by: icsept
 

Don Wassall

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icsept said:
Great preview. 20 out of 53 is probably tops in the league. I wonder how long it will be before someone complains about the lack of diversity in the O-line.

Hopefully Edelman will get back healthy and be a major contributor because Moss may be fading out this year.

Belichik got what he deserved last year for fielding that atrocious coal black defense. Good luck to Ninkovich and Wright this year now that their racial apprenticeship is over.



Thank you. The Packers have 24 Whites on their roster to start the season. Off the top of my head, this is the first year since we've been doing the team reports thatjust oneteam has more than 20 White players. Taking almost nothing but blacks in the first few rounds of the draft is driving the demographics; even though so many of them are busts, when they are upwards of 80 and 90 percent of the "prime" players selected each year the league can't help but reflect that. The ones drafted high get the bonus money and the big contracts and they're the ones who are going to get opportunity after opportunity to develop, though of course even highly drafted White players often have a short leash.

As far as the o-lines, it's going to bemore difficultfor the successful teams like the Patriots, Packers and Colts to keep it predominantly White as more and more teams join the sumo trend. I think that's abig reason those same organizations (whether consciously or unconsciously) keep their defenses in line with the league norm of overwhelmingly black starters and backups, to defuse potential criticism as they're aware that being successful isn't an "excuse" in the eyes of the Cultural Marxist establishment -- the Houston Astros, Minnesota Twins and L.A. Angels all took flakfor being "too White" even when their teams went to the World Series.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Sad to see the NFL getting even darker, but you are right, Don. It is inevitable with the trends we currently see. If things continue, the new "standard" of maximum acceptable Whiteness of an NFL roster will move from just under 1/2 White (26/53) to around 1/3 White (17/53). Sadly, most teams are already well under that.
 

whiteathlete33

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Colonel_Reb said:
Sad to see the NFL getting even darker, but you are right, Don. It is inevitable with the trends we currently see. If things continue, the new "standard" of maximum acceptable Whiteness of an NFL roster will move from just under 1/2 White (26/53) to around 1/3 White (17/53). Sadly, most teams are already well under that.

Just wait till Jaxvid previews Washington. I count 11 whites on the roster including the kicker and longsnapper! That's only about 20%.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Great news!
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Colonel_Reb

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I was going to post that other than New England (now 21) and Green Bay (24), Atlanta (21) and Houston (20) have the Whitest rosters.
Edited by: Colonel_Reb
 

Colonel_Reb

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Don Wassall

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Colonel_Reb said:
I was going to post that other than New England (now 21) and Green Bay (24), Atlanta (21) and Houston (20) have the Whitest rosters.



What's important is that they are all good teams, or should be this year, while all the coal black outfits look like stinkers with the possible exception of the Eagles.

Great news about Woodhead! New England is one of the few teams that might give him a genuine opportunity to show off his skills.
 

Colonel_Reb

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Agreed Don. I hope we get to see a fair amount of Danny this season.
 

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Will they dare to groom him to be Kevin Faulk's replacement? Faulk has been a key and under-rated part of the Patriots' offense for years but is long in the tooth.
 

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The fact that Danny comes fromone of New England'sdivision rivals, and one with an obnoxious loudmouth coach predicting a Super Bowl win,is also working in his favor. Belichick enjoyed showing the Dolphins that Wes Welker was more than a marginal "overachiever."
 

backrow

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even rotoworld seem semi positive about this match (but then obviously follow it with he won't likely stick):

Patriots signed RB/WR Danny Woodhead.

The former Jet takes the roster spot of Laurence Maroney, and is a perfect fit for the Patriots playing style, though chances are he won't stick with the Pats. The two teams square off Sunday in what should be a great game. Woodhead becomes the latest player involved in a long history of roster plucking.
 

Don Wassall

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Kevin Faulk was indeed a heady player. It's unlikely one of the team's black RBs can replace him. Hopefully Edelman and Woodhead will be allowed to. I'd much rather see Woodhead as he has all the same tools as Faulk but is faster and shiftier.

Patriots Notes: Team may reinvent offense in Faulk's absence



By KEVIN McNAMARA

Journal Sports Writer






FOXBORO â€" Almost as soon as Kevin Faulk was carted off the field with what turned out to be a season-ending knee injury, Bill Belichick and his coaching staff started planning for life without the team's valued third-down running back.


The Pats lost Faulk early in the fourth quarter and quickly had veteran Sammy Morris in the game and catching passes in crunch time. Over the next few days, they were studying all sorts of options on how to replace a back who knows the offense cold, owns outstanding hands, picks up blitzing linebackers and does all the little things that win games.


Belichick doesn't have another Faulk on his roster, so patching together a game plan for the Bills with new wrinkles for third-down situations has been a priority this week.


"We know what we're going to do,"Â said Belichick. "Maybe it's more of one, maybe it's more of another. Maybe it's a combination of a couple different things. Those are your options. We'll decide which one's best for us. But it's really no different with Kevin, as good of a player as he was and all that, it's no different with him than somebody else."Â


While Morris, Fred Taylor and BenJarvus Green-Ellis all remain in place to do the bulk of the rushing, the Pats' best option for a receiver out of the backfield is probably Julian Edelman. He was limited with a foot injury against the Jets but has improved this week and could be asked to carry a larger load. There is also a groundswell for recent Jets castoff Danny Woodhead to get his chance in Faulk's role, but it remains to be seen if Belichick trusts him enough to play him after only one week of practice.


"I'd rather have Kevin Faulk," Belichick said with a smile. "The challenge that we have offensively is, can we do what we've done and have another player or person do what he did or are we a little different now? Do we find a little different way to do things? That's the decision you have to make. How much do you want to stay the same? How much can the person, whoever it is, do what you've been used to doing? Or would it be more beneficial to push things â€"â€" not change your whole offense â€"â€" but push things in a little different direction and do it that way."Â
full article: http://www.projo.com/patriots/content/patriots_replacing_kevin_faulk_09-25-10_TTK2A_v2.147308f.html
 

Don Wassall

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Weenieworld pronounces its usual kneejerk harsh judgment on a White player, this time on Rob Ninkovich after just his second start:

Patriots LB Rob Ninkovich had two interceptions and a sack in the team's 41-14 victory over the Dolphins. The picks led to two field goals, but more importantly put an end to two Miami drives. The veteran had the game of his life, but is not an IDP option.

Game of his life? Considering it was his second start, yes, but not in the dismissing sense Weenieworld meant it.Not an IDP option? Fantasy football players aren't as easily deceived as they used tobe as it's statistically undeniable thatmost White defensive players are very productive. Ninkovich will be a prime commodity on the waiver wire in many leagues this week. He won't be as valuable in fantasy asmany middle LBs are, but another Patriots OLB,Mike Vrabel, helped a lot of fantasy teams over the years playing outside before tailing off some.

Weenieworld also instantly dismisses Danny Woodhead: Danny Woodhead rushed eight times for 36 yards and added one catch for 11 yards and a touchdown against the Dolphins in Week 4. The Patriots head into a bye for Week 5, and Fred Taylor should be back for Week 6. Woodhead is not a fantasy option. Edited by: Don Wassall
 
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