i want us to remember great Super Bowl record tying night for Wes. here's some articles about it!
* article 1, NJ.com
PHOENIX -- Wes Welker didn't want to be a receiver. Not in pick-up games as a kid when his friends just figured the fastest kid out there should be catching passes rather than running with the ball. And not in college, when he arrived with dreams of being like his idol, Barry Sanders, but kept getting shuffled out to work with the receivers.
Eventually, Texas Tech coach Mike Leach decided to try Welker at slot receiver.
He never saw the backfield again.
"My first year, I don't think they had any idea where they wanted to put me," Welker said this week. "I think they wanted to put me at running back, but we had a need at that receiver position. ... It kind of became my position from that point on."
It has become a position no one plays any better than Welker. He makes up for being 5-9 by using his quickness, good hands and football smarts. And in his first season with the Patriots, he tied for the league lead with 112 receptions for nearly 1,200 yards.
"I think my strengths are used really well here," he said. "I always thought I'd be a returner in this game. I would never rule anything else out, but at the same time, have I established myself as a slot receiver? I think so."
In an offense of many stars, Welker has become just as important as Tom Brady and Randy Moss for opposing coaches to stop. Tonight, when the Patriots play the Giants in Super Bowl XLII, Welker is the not-so-secret weapon.
For nearly a decade, the Patriots had a good slot receiver in the form of Troy Brown. But even Brown thinks Welker is the best.
"I don't think I've ever seen anybody as quick as he is with as much speed as he has," Brown said. "If you want to know what makes a good slot receiver, watch Wes Welker do it."
DAVIS SEES PERFECT FIT
Mouse Davis has watched Welker work this season with a particular sense of joy. You can hear it in his voice, one that sounds like he has chewed gravel for a better part of his 74 years.
Davis has been a football coach since 1955 and seen nearly every aspect of the game -- including the rise of the slot receiver.
"When we first starting running four- and five-wide receiver sets, people said, 'You can't do this, it's really unsound,'" said Davis, now the offensive coordinator at Portland State. "And now, everyone's running it, with guys like Welker who are having great success."
Davis' run-and-shoot offense, which he has used in college, the USFL and the NFL, thrived with slippery slot receivers -- players who could catch the ball but were too small to line up on the outside of a formation as a wide receiver. Davis moved them inside, offset from the tackles, and let them work against linebackers while the outside receivers occupied the cornerbacks.
Although it was a pass-happy offense, it also became a way for teams to control the clock.
"Back in the old days, we used to hold onto the ball forever," said Giants offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride, who learned under Davis. "Once all the deep stuff went away, the ball went underneath and all of a sudden, we're holding the ball 40 minutes a game."
Davis' and Gilbride's offenses succeeded, but they had a hard time finding players who solely wanted to play in the slot. There is a correlation, Davis said, between being a good punt returner -- like Welker was previously with the Miami Dolphins -- and being a good slot receiver.
"That's the kind of kids they are -- quick, make you miss and -- bam! -- they're by you," Davis said. "They may not all be burners, but the kids that are athletes are the kids you're looking for."
CAN'T BEAT HIM, GET HIM
In playing against us, he killed us every time we played them," Belichick said. "The only way we could handle him was to double-cover him."
Last off-season, Belichick and the Patriots did the only thing they could do to stop Welker: They traded for him. New England gave up a second- and a seventh-round pick in last year's draft. While Welker had 112 catches, 1,175 yards and eight touchdowns, Miami's leading receiver's numbers were half that.
He has fit flawlessly into the Patriots' offense, consistently getting the short-yard passes and turning 65 of his catches into first downs.
"I think with a lot of that underneath stuff that I run, trying to create some separation and get those first downs and move the chains, it's kind of been my forte all year," Welker said.
Moss has garnered all of the attention with his record 23 touchdown catches, but opponents have felt all along that Welker is the more dangerous receiver because he is such a difficult matchup.
"When I first saw him, we were working out and I saw his quickness," Moss said. "But I didn't pay much attention to what he could do in the slot. Once I saw him, I felt it could be something big because we can definitely play off one another."
With Miami, Welker was largely under-utilized as a receiver. He never caught more than 700 yards and had only one receiving touchdown. But Bill Belichick had bigger plans.
Said Davis: "It was a perfect move for him. He was one of those guys who was in a perfect spot because they used all of his skills. Did he have all that before? Yeah. Did they use it? Not quite."
Not even Welker, though, envisioned that he would have this much success in his first year as a true slot receiver. He figured that with Brady throwing him passes, he would increase his stats, but nothing like this.
"I knew I'd catch quite a few balls," Welker said. "But not to the point of 112."
Brendan Prunty may be reached
at
bprunty@starledger.com
* article 2, the Sun Chronicle
WEB EXTRA: Welker's record-tying night not enough
BY MARK FARINELLA / SUN CHRONICLE STAFF
Monday, February 4, 2008 1:07 AM EST
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- He was money in the bank when the game was on the line, as he had been all season long.
Only this time, it wasn't enough -- and Wes Welker had a hard time believing it.
"We've been able to close out games like that," the Patriots' wide receiver said after their 17-14 loss to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII. "Unfortunately, this time, we weren't able to. Obviously, we came up short."
Welker caught 11 passes for 103 yards in the game, and three of those (for 28 yards) came as quarterback Tom Brady drove the Patriots 80 yards in 12 plays to take a 14-10 lead with 2:42 left to play. It looked as if the Patriots' fourth Super Bowl victory in seven years was almost assured.
"Tom is the best in the game," Welker said. "He's everything you want in a quarterback. There's no quarterback I'd rather play with. He showed great poise on that last drive.
"We just have to execute as an offense and move it along," he said. "However it happens, it happens. We should move the ball a lot more effectively than we did. We didn't do that all game, and we should have."
Indeed, the Patriots had several abortive drives where the offense moved confidently early, then sputtered under the heavy pressure brought against Brady by the Giants' pass rush. The result was a lack of consistency that kept the Giants within striking distance -- a classic strategy that the mentor of both head coaches, Bill Parcells, employed in both his tenures with the Giants and Patriots.
"They've got some good pass rushers, some guys that break on the ball well, and they do some good things out there," Welker said. "It makes it tough to get those throws downfield. They did a great job with their pass rush. They covered it short."
The Patriots had one last gasp, getting the ball back with 29 seconds left at their own 26. A long pass to Randy Moss was knocked down by Corey Webster at the Giants' 21, which, if caught, might have given the Patriots to tie the game on a field goal or possibly even win.
"We're just trying to move the ball downfield and get an opportunity to kick the field goal," Welker said. "We knew there was an opportunity there, and it's the Super Bowl. We weren't just going to give it away."
One thing that escaped Welker's notice was exactly how many passes he was pulling in. By game's end, he had 11 -- tying a Super Bowl record held by the late Dan Ross, the former Cincinnati tight end from Everett, Jerry Rice and former Patriot Deion Branch.
Welker still didn't know until the post-game interviews -- but by that time, and under those circumstances, it didn't matter much to him.
"It was tough," he said of the defeat. "Sometimes, the ball bounces your way. That's what happened to the Giants tonight ... I don't know if it's really set in or not. It is what it is, and there's really nothing you can do."
* article 3, projo.com
MVP award slips out of Welker's grasp
01:00 AM EST on Monday, February 4, 2008
BY JIM DONALDSON
Journal Sports Writer
New England wide receiver Wes Welker meets a Giants defender after a third-quarter reception last night.
The Providence Journal / Gretchen Ertl
GLENDALE, Ariz.  Wes Welker was on the brink of being not just a Super Bowl champion, but also the Super Bowl MVP.
With a record-tying 11 catches for 103 yards, Welker was the leader in the press box for Most Valuable Player honors if the Patriots had hung on to their 14-10 fourth-quarter lead.
He didn't let anything go through his hands throughout the game. Unfortunately, the Patriots let a history-making victory slip through their grasp in the final seconds, allowing the Giants to drive 83 yards for the game-winning touchdown.
"We've been able to close out games like that," Welker said. "Unfortunately, this time, we weren't able to. You have to give it up to [the Giants]. They played well. They out-executed us."
The Giants hurried and harried Patriots quarterback Tom Brady throughout the game, sacking him five times and pressuring him constantly.
That made it difficult for Brady to throw deep, because he simply didn't have the time.
"They've got some good pass rushers," Welker said, "some guys that break on the ball well. It makes it tough to get those throws downfield."
Consequently, Brady, as he has done so often  and so successfully  all season, looked for Welker on shorter routes.
"We just have to execute as an offense and move it along. However it happens, it happens. We should move the ball a lot more effectively than we did," said Welker. "We didn't do that all game, and we should have."
Although Brady wasn't at his best last night, Welker says there is no better quarterback in football.
"Tom is the best in the game," he said. "He's everything you want in a quarterback. There's no quarterback I'd rather play with. He showed great poise on that last drive."
Desperately trying to get into field-goal range after Eli Manning had led the Giants on their game-winning drive, Brady couldn't connect with Randy Moss.
"It was tough," Welker said. "Sometimes the ball bounces your way. That's what happened to the Giants tonight. I don't know if it's really set in or not. It is what it is."
jdonalds@projo.com
* article 4, WHDH-TV.com
Patriots' Welker ties Super Bowl record with 11 catches
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- Told he was too small to play in the NFL years ago, New England receiver Wes Welker had one of the biggest games in Super Bowl history.
The 5-foot-9, 185-pound speedster caught 11 passes for 103 yards, tying the receptions mark set by Cincinnati's Dan Ross in 1982, San Francisco's Jerry Rice in 1989 and New England's Deion Branch three years ago.
But it wasn't enough to bail out the Patriots in a 17-14 loss to the New York Giants.
"I don't know if it's really set in or not," Welker said.
Welker, acquired by New England in the offseason, tied for the NFL lead with 112 catches this season.
It only seemed as if he caught that many against the Giants, who couldn't find him most of the night. Six of Welker's catches gave the Patriots first downs.
Late in the third quarter, with the Patriots facing a second-and-15, Welker zig-zagged his way for a 16-yard gain. On first-and-10 on the same drive, Welker had a 19-yard catch over rookie Aaron Ross.
But there weren't enough plays like that from the rest of the potent Patriot offense, which set an NFL scoring record during the regular season.
"We just have to execute as an offense and move it along," Welker said. "However it happens, it happens. We should move the ball a lot more effectively than we did. We didn't do that all game, and we should have."
* article 5, Boston.com
Welker was one who couldn't be caught
Jim McCabe
Globe Staff / February 4, 2008
GLENDALE, Ariz. - There was a red welt on his forehead and knuckles on his left hand were bleeding. But for the real pain, you had to peer deep inside Wes Welker, and last night, in the heartbreaking moments following Super Bowl XLII, that was an impossible task.
"I don't know if it's set in yet," said the Patriots wide receiver, a blank stare on his face in the aftermath of New York's stunning 17-14 win. He paused, searched for words, but could only produce something his coach would have said.
"It is what it is. There's nothing you can do."
For 18 games, the Patriots had been able to do plenty, their vaunted offensive explosiveness at the heart of what was expected to be the most historic season in NFL history. But inside the dome in the desert, the Patriots could do very little on offense and Welker was asked why.
"You have to give it up to New York," he said. "They out-executed us."
No one had out-caught Welker. That was one of the few bright spots in a dismal night for New England, because Welker's 11 catches tied him with Dan Ross, Jerry Rice, and former Patriot Deion Branch for the most in a Super Bowl. But the mere mention of that record-tying effort was of little solace to the fourth-year player.
"No, I didn't," is all Welker said when asked if knew he had seized a piece of a Super Bowl record. He didn't care. He wasn't in the mood to search for answers, either.
"We should have moved the ball a lot more effectively than we did. We didn't do that all game and we should have."
On a night when quarterback Tom Brady was under siege, he needed to throw a security blanket over his team, and in Welker he found an outlet. Having been held to just two catches in the first half, Welker came alive in the second half and Brady was happy to go to him time and time again.
Welker had a 15-yard reception on the first play of the second half, snared a 7-yarder minutes later, and while that drive stalled, it seemingly established that he was - as he has been all season - the go-to guy for Brady. By now, it was apparent that New England wasn't going to be able to slow the Giants' pass rush, which meant a heralded aspect of the team's offense was gone.
"They've got some good pass rushers, some guys that break on the ball well, and they do some good things out there," said Welker. "It makes it tough to get those throws downfield. They did a great job with their pass rush."
Brady noticed, which is why he turned to Welker on the team's second drive of the second half for two more completions, then again late in the fourth quarter with the game on the line. Welker had had a 13-reception game earlier in the season, and twice he had snared 11, including the regular-season finale at the Meadowlands - a 38-35 win over the Giants. So hardly was it a surprise that with 7:54 left and the Patriots trailing, 10-7, Brady took his team to the line of scrimmage and called Welker's number for 5 yards. Three plays later, he found Welker again, then after a completion to Kevin Faulk, Brady zoomed in for Welker for 10 yards to get the ball to the Giants' 29.
It was vintage crunch time and Welker was thrilled to be part of it, especially with the man in control.
"Tom is the best in the game," said Welker. "He's everything you want in a quarterback. There's no quarterback I'd rather play with. He showed great poise on that drive."
It went for 12 plays over 80 yards, took 5:12, and ended with Brady's touchdown pass to Randy Moss for a 14-10 lead. Welker and his mates on offense moved to the sidelines with just 2:39 to play and while they were thrilled to be back on top, it was also a time for a sense of helplessness. The Giants started to move the ball and there was nothing Welker and teammates could do. Nothing was as shocking as the third-and-5 completion off a wild scramble that Eli Manning made to David Tyree, a near-miraculous grab that covered 32 yards and pushed the Giants to the Patriots' 24.
"It was tough [to watch]," said Welker. "Sometimes the ball bounces your way. That's what happened to the Giants tonight."
Four plays later, it was even tougher to watch, for Manning's lob into the left corner of the end zone nestled into Plaxico Burress's hands to put the Giants back in front, 17-14.
There were 35 seconds left to possibly record the first 19-0 season in NFL history, but there would be no miracle finish for Brady, Welker, and the Patriots. The unthinkable had happened. The improbable had taken place. But the pain had not yet sunk in.
"We knew there was an opportunity there," said Welker of the final, desperation drive that ended with three incompletions and a sack, "and it's the Super Bowl. We weren't just going to give it away."
No, they weren't.
But the Giants were more than willing to take it away.
Jim McCabe can be reached at
jmccabe@globe.com.
* article 6, NY Post
WELKER SHINES IN LOSS
By MARK CANNIZZARO
February 4, 2008 -- GLENDALE, Ariz. - When the Most Valuable Player voting for Super Bowl XLII was tabulated, Patriots receiver Wes Welker was second to Eli ManningEli Manning .
It was a distant second, because the Patriots lost 17-14 to the GiantsNew York Giants , ending their bid at perfection. But had the Patriots won, Welker may well have won the award after catching 11 passes for 103 yards - both game highs for both teams.
With the Patriots running game stifled by the Giants defense and Randy Moss bottled up by the secondary, Welker - as he has all year - became Tom Brady's best outlet.
Welker, who led the NFL with 112 receptions this season (a New England franchise record), tied a Super Bowl record for most catches in a game.
Despite his terrific performance, Welker could not have cared less about the statistics or anything else other than winning the game.
"We've been able to win games like this," he said. "Unfortunately this time we weren't able to. Obviously, we came up short."
Welker said he was impressed with Brady's toughness after he was battered around by the Giants defense.
"Tom is the best in the game," he said. "He's everything you want in a quarterback. There is no quarterback I'd rather play with. He showed great poise in that last drive."
Brady began to go to Welker often in the second half after Welker had two catches for 17 yards in the first half.
Welker had nine of his catches for 86 yards in the second half, and he looked like someone the Giants couldn't handle. That was of little solace to Welker.
"We should move the ball a lot more effectively than we did," he said.
Asked about losing the final game after going 18-0, Welker said, "There's really nothing you can do."
mark.cannizzaro@nypost.com
* article 7, USA Today
Welker's 100-yard game goes for naught
Enlarge By Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY
Patriots receiver Wes Welker eludes Giants cornerback Aaron Ross in the fourth quarter. Welker led New England in receiving with 11 catches for 103 yards.
By Gary Mihoces, USA TODAY
GLENDALE, Ariz.  New England Patriots wide receiver Wes Welker finished Super Bowl XLII with the kind of statistics that might have made him the game's MVP, if the Patriots' season had indeed had a perfect ending.
The 5-9, 185-pounder had had 11 receptions for 103 yards and made multiple big plays on the 80-yard touchdown drive that gave the Patriots a 14-10 lead with 2:42 left to play.
But the New York Giants and Eli Manning pulled out a 17-14 victory.
"I don't know if it has really set in. But it is what it is, and there's really nothing you can do," Welker said after the Patriots finished their season a not-quite-perfect 18-1.
Quarterback Tom Brady and a New England offense that set an NFL record for points scored during the regular season weren't racking up the points as usual Sunday night.
But Welker kept getting open, and he was a key contributor on the fourth-quarter touchdown drive that put New England ahead.
On second-and-1 from the Patriots' 44-yard line, Brady and Welker combined on a 13-yard play for a first down.
On second-and-6 from the Giants' 39, Brady found Welker again for 10 yards.
"We should have moved the ball a lot more offensively than we did," Welker said. "And we didn't do that all game and we should have."
Welker saluted Brady for leading that go-ahead drive.
"Tom is the best in the game," Welker said. "He's tough. He's smart. He's everything you want in a quarterback. He showed great poise ... on that drive, and he got us down there, and he got us into the end zone."
After the Giants took the lead with a clutch drive on their own, New England got the ball back at its own 26-yard line with 29 seconds left.
All the Patriots could produce were three incomplete passes and a sack of Brady. With 1 second left, they turned the ball over on downs. Game over, perfect season down the drain.
"I think it definitely gives us something to shoot for," Welker said. "Obviously, we came up short. We can come back and try to get to this point again."