AFC East: Dolphins-Patriots 110809

Fins among worst in allowing quick TDs

November, 12, 2009
11/12/09
11:30
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The Miami Dolphins work incredibly hard to gain yards, to consume time off the clock, to get ahead of their opponents.

They know how to grind.

Then their defense gives up a quick, crippling score.

Summary strikes have been an all-too common occurrence for the Dolphins' defense this season. They're tied for fifth in allowing touchdown drives of six plays or fewer. They have surrendered 13 of them.

In Sunday's game against the New England Patriots, the Dolphins opened the second half with a 16-play touchdown drive to take a one-point lead. Three plays later, Randy Moss stiff-armed Vontae Davis and sprinted off for a 71-yard touchdown that won the game.

In Week 2, the Dolphins held the ball for more than 45 minutes against the Indianapolis Colts. The Dolphins took two fourth-quarter leads on drives of 13 plays and 10 plays. The Colts, who started the game with a touchdown on their first play from scrimmage, responded with touchdowns on six plays and four plays.

Only once have the Dolphins not yielded a touchdown in six plays or fewer, in a Week 4 blowout of the Buffalo Bills. The Dolphins gave up three apiece to the Colts and the New York Jets in Week 7.

To get an idea of where the Dolphins stand, ESPN Stats & Information investigator Matt Lyon ran the data. Here are the worst 10 teams in allowing touchdowns so quickly:
Not a lot of playoff teams in that bunch.

On the flip side, only two teams have given up fewer of these touchdown drives than the Jets and Patriots -- four each. The Colts and Denver Broncos are best with one apiece.

The Bills are tied for 15th with eight touchdowns allowed in six or fewer plays.

How I See It: AFC East Stock Watch

November, 10, 2009
11/10/09
11:00
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Falling

1. Dolphins' Wildcat offense: Through six games, the Wildcat looked like it might stay a step ahead of defenses desperate to stop it. Ronnie Brown was averaging 7.2 yards per Wildcat play. Ricky Williams was averaging 6.2 yards per play.

Since then, the Wildcat has been smothered. The Dolphins have gained 40 yards on 31 tries. In each of their past two games, against the New York Jets and New England Patriots, the Dolphins averaged less than a yard per attempt.

2. Patriots' red zone offense: Tom Brady went into the weekend ranked 14th in red-zone passer rating. Then the Patriots converted only one of their four trips inside the Miami Dolphins' 20-yard line.

Brady and Randy Moss did connect on a two-point conversion, which was a positive sign. They'll need to build off that because field goals probably won't beat the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday night.
Porter
3. Joey Porter, Dolphins outside linebacker: Last year's AFC sacks leader roared before Sunday's game but was muffled on the Gillette Stadium field. He finished with zero tackles, zero assists, zero passes defensed, zero forced fumbles and zero postgame comments.

Porter's season has been mostly unmemorable so far. He has 2.5 sacks, but only 10 solo tackles (12 total), one pass defensed and one forced fumble in seven games. Fourteen Dolphins have more tackles than Porter does.

Rising
Maroney
1. Laurence Maroney, Patriots running back: With Fred Taylor and Sammy Morris still sidelined, Maroney turned in another strong effort in Sunday's victory over the Dolphins. He ran 20 times for 82 yards and a touchdown, giving him one in three straight games. Maroney has rushed for 248 yards in that span.

"Laurence has run the ball pretty well all year," Patriots coach Bill Belichick said Monday. "I think when he's had space he's been able to make yards, and when he hasn't, he's run hard and gotten what's there, and he's taken care of the ball pretty well. When he's had opportunities, he's made good yardage."
Banta-Cain
2. Tully Banta-Cain, Patriots outside linebacker: Banta-Cain's reunion with the Patriots has been rewarding so far. He was a bit player during his first stint, starting five games in the three seasons after they drafted him in the seventh round in '07. He spent a couple of years with the San Francisco 49ers but came back to a team ready to give him a bigger role.

ESPNBoston.com's Mike Reiss noted Banta-Cain was one of only three Patriots to play every defensive snap Sunday. Banta-Cain was credited with nine tackles, one for a loss, and a game-high three quarterback hits. His three sacks this year rank second on the team, and his seven quarterback hits are tops.

3. Jets' playoff pulse: The Jets aren't racing toward the postseason at 4-4, but a Dolphins victory on Sunday would've been a vicious blow and completely neutralized that 3-0 start that had the Jets flying high. The Dolphins also would've been .500, but they would have been ahead because they hold the first tiebreaker. They've already swept the Jets.

But the Patriots fended off the Dolphins, leaving the Jets alone in second place -- for now. The Jets have a difficult schedule ahead, including a rematch with the Patriots, whom they defeated in Week 2.

Homeless man finds a friend in vagabond Parcells

November, 10, 2009
11/10/09
8:37
AM ET
They're probably more alike than you'd think, a couple of drifters from New Jersey.

The main difference is that Bill Parcells has had many homes. He merely chooses to leave them before he gets too comfortable.

John Schoen is flat-out homeless.

Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy wrote a piece on Parcells that ran Sunday, the day Parcells' current team (the Miami Dolphins) played one of his old ones (the New England Patriots).

Shaughnessy's column revealed Parcells befriended a vagrant in Fort Lauderdale. Parcells brings the man the newspaper in the morning and they talk football.

Palm Beach Post reporter Carlos Frias found the homeless man and shared his tale.

Schoen, 57, is a former carnival worker who moved to Florida for construction work after Hurricane Andrew, but wound up selling newspapers near the 17th Street Causeway. Schoen told Frias that's how he met Parcells, and they hit it off.
"He treated me like a human being, like I actually mattered," Schoen said.

Shortly after Schoen disclosed he was a Philadelphia Eagles fan, Parcells came by with some Eagles paraphernalia sent by head coach Andy Reid. Parcells also has given the panhandler choice tickets to Dolphins games.
"The only thing we don't talk about is politics and religion," Schoen said. "You want an argument, that's the place you go to."

Probably should stay away from the topic of Gibril Wilson's tackling, too.

Brady: Porter's words provoked Patriots

November, 9, 2009
11/09/09
1:31
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In the couple days after Miami Dolphins linebacker Joey Porter called out the New England Patriots as cheaters and quarterback Tom Brady as a darling, the response from Foxborough, Mass., was a collective shrug.

NBC Sports analyst and former Patriots safety Rodney Harrison piped up Sunday night to say Porter was "pretty stupid or crazy to make a comment like that. If you go into that locker room, you best believe, behind those closed doors, those guys are saying 'We're going to take Joey Porter away.' The last thing these guys need is added motivation."

Monday morning, Brady confirmed that was precisely the case.

On his weekly visit with "Dennis & Callahan" on Boston radio station WEEI, Brady said Porter's remarks got the Patriots even more jacked up for the Dolphins.

"It's really motivating for our team throughout the course of the week and into the game when you hear that kind of stuff," Brady said. "I think the guys take it to heart, and the coaches take it to heart."

The Patriots won 27-17 in Gillette Stadium. Porter was invisible, finishing with zero tackles or sacks. Rookie tackle Sebastian Vollmer, filling in for two-time Pro Bowler Matt Light, handled Porter for most of the afternoon.

"He's a great player. He's been a great player for a long time," Brady said. "But it's always great when you come out of the game and you understand that you kept one of their best players from [having] an impact on the game.

"We have to see him again in four weeks. So I'm sure he'll be juiced up for that game. Hopefully, we can go out there and perform the same way."

Your captioning for the speaking impaired

November, 9, 2009
11/09/09
10:06
AM ET
AP Photo/Stephan Savoia
We want you to write the caption for this photo of Joey Porter from Sunday’s game.
Miami Dolphins outside linebacker Joey Porter didn't have anything to say after Sunday's 27-17 defeat to the New England Patriots in Gillette Stadium.

Porter offered plenty of comments before the game, asserting the Patriots should have asterisks affixed to their championships and accusing the NFL of mollycoddling Tom Brady.

The Dolphins barely managed to touch Brady, much less get under his skin. Porter did register a quarterback hit, but he finished with zero tackles, zero sacks, zero forced fumbles, zero words.

When the visitor's locker room was opened to reporters, Porter ducked out and headed straight for the charter bus.

That means it's time for you to do the talking for him.

Take a look at above photo of Porter watching the final seconds of Sunday's game and provide your best caption in the comments section below.

Keep it clean and, more importantly, be funny.

Video: Patriots put hammerlock on AFC East

November, 9, 2009
11/09/09
9:32
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ESPN's Michael Smith says the New England Patriots now control their own destiny in the AFC East, and their next objective is to work on procuring a first-round bye in the playoffs.

Patriots stiff-arm Dolphins, pull away in AFC East

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
9:04
PM ET
AP Photo/Charles Krupa
New England wide receiver Randy Moss stiffed armed Dolphins’ cornerback Vontae Davis and the rest of the AFC East on Sunday.

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Randy Moss, running from right to left, broke a step ahead of Miami Dolphins rookie cornerback Vontae Davis on a crossing route and caught a spiral at the New England Patriots' 39-yard line.
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One, two, three, four strides later, Moss jacked his right hand onto the side of Davis' face and shoved him off. One, two, three, four strides more, Davis desperately dove for Moss' ankles. The pesky defender clipped Moss, forcing him to stumble but didn't take him down.

Moss pulled away for good on a 71-yard touchdown that would be the difference in a 27-17 triumph Sunday afternoon in Gillette Stadium.

"He just sprinted across," Davis said. "I was chasing. I was behind. He made the catch, turned upfield and held me off."

Moss' sprint into the distance was more than decisive, it was metaphorical to the AFC East standings. The Patriots stiff-armed the Dolphins and, rather than let the also-rans catch up, established separation from them.

Halfway through the schedule, the Patriots are 6-2 and two games ahead of the New York Jets, the AFC's only second-place team without a winning record. The Dolphins and Buffalo Bills are three games back at 3-5.

"The division games are something that we want," Patriots cornerback Leigh Bodden said. "This is one game. It does put us in the driver's seat right now, but we have to build on that."

It's silly to see the Dolphins and Bills with identical records. The Dolphins have shown several times this year they deserve to be on the field with the NFL's elite clubs, but have failed to finish them. To paraphrase Dolphins football operations boss Bill Parcells, a team's record -- regardless of ability -- reflects reality. Truth is, the Dolphins are almost out of the running.

Had the Dolphins prevailed, they would have pulled into a tie with the Jets at 4-4 and closed the Patriots' gap to one game. The Dolphins would have won four of their past five games, been 4-0 in the division and held tiebreakers galore.

"It was a big game for a lot of reasons," Dolphins outside linebacker Jason Taylor said. "We were undefeated in the division up to this point. This game could've put us back to .500, would have put us in a good spot in the division and got us on a little bit of a roll."

Sunday was one-16th of each team's season, but it was more significant than that.

The Patriots held off a dangerous team that went into the game in third place but might have presented a more disconcerting threat than the second-place Jets. The Dolphins were on the make.

The Jets are the Patriots' biggest menace again. The Jets have dropped four of their past five games, but they're closest in the standings and beat the Patriots in Week 2.

The Dolphins, meanwhile, are backed into a corner. They have a soft second-half schedule, but they can afford to lose only one more game and maintain reasonable hope for the playoffs because 9-7 might not cut it this year.

"You win this game today, it's a different story," Dolphins guard Justin Smiley said. "Now, there's no room for error. Plus, we're going to have to have some help, too, even if we win out.

"I just know it puts us behind the 8-ball. We've got to start winning some football games and, obviously, some things have to happen [in other games]."

The Patriots have a nasty schedule ahead. Their next four games include the Indianapolis Colts and New Orleans Saints on the road and rematches with the Jets and Dolphins. But the Patriots have put themselves in an enviable position. If they go .500 the rest of the way, they will finish with double-digits wins.

"This is when good football teams are going to be playing at their best, this time of year," Patriots guard Logan Mankins said. "If you look at our schedule, we got a lot of good teams coming up. A lot of tough games. We've got to play good football."

Nothing we've seen from the Patriots over the past month would defy the notion they're coming together. A bad second half at Mile High Stadium in Week 5 has kept them from engineering a six-game win streak.

On Sunday, they put away a desperate team that bellowed smoke and flashed mirrors.

The Patriots mostly contained the Dolphins' cunning Wildcat offense, adjusted to rookie quarterback Pat White's option skills after being knocked on their heels and neutralized the Dolphins' pass rush three days after Joey Porter denigrated the Patriots' championships and accused the NFL of pampering Tom Brady.

The Dolphins scored both of their touchdowns in unorthodox ways. White flipped an option to Ricky Williams for a 15-yard score. Running back Ronnie Brown threw a 2-yard pass to tight end Joey Haynos for the other touchdown, but only after the Patriots, facing first-and-goal from their own 2, stuffed two Wildcat runs.

Although the Patriots kicked more field goals than they would have preferred, Brady was in control behind a banged up offensive line.

Once Moss' quick strike and a two-point conversion put the Patriots ahead, Brady took command of time and space, running down the clock and maintaining field position.

Brady completed 25 of 37 passes for 332 yards, one touchdown and one interception, a great catch by Davis on a deep ball to snuff the Patriots' opening possession.

"That's why these guys got a lot of banners out there," Dolphins coach Tony Sparano said of the Patriots. "They figure out how to win these close games."

Wildcat looking endangered

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
8:25
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. --Somebody call the World Wildlife Fund and propose some protections to save the Wildcat.

For the third straight week, the Miami Dolphins failed to conjure much magic with their specialized offense.

The Dolphins had to employ different tactics to compete with the New England Patriots yet still couldn't generate enough offense Sunday in a 27-17 loss.

Although the Dolphins managed to squeeze out a 1-yard touchdown pass from Ronnie Brown to tight end Joey Haynos, they gained just 7 yards on their 10 Wildcat tries.

That's consecutive games averaging less than 1 yard per play. They ran seven Wildcat plays for 6 yards against the New York Jets in Week 8. Over their past three games, the Dolphins have gained 40 yards on 31 Wildcat plays.

But the Dolphins managed to give future opponents something else to worry about.

Rookie quarterback Pat White finally made some positive contributions by running the option, an offense he thrived on at West Virginia.

On an 80-yard touchdown drive in which the Dolphins didn't complete a pass in the second quarter, White kept the ball for runs of 33 and 4 yards and shoved the ball to Ricky Williams for the final 15 yards.

The Dolphins averaged 13 yards on his four plays in the first half, but the Patriots cut the damage considerably in the second half. White averaged only 2 yards on his four plays in the second half.

White went into the game with four rushes for 2 yards and one failed pass attempt for the season.

No noise from Porter during or after game

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
5:34
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham
Porter

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Joey Porter was mouthy during the week, but the New England Patriots didn't hear a peep from him Sunday afternoon in Gillette Stadium.

In beating the Miami Dolphins 27-17, the Patriots silenced Porter in the box score and on the field.

"Yeah, you don't hear anything when he's not going," Patriots guard Logan Mankins said.

In the waning moments of the game, the Gillette Stadium video scoreboard showed a shot of Porter slumped on the bench. A message noted he had zero tackles. Porter finished with not even an assist. He had no sacks, no passes defensed, no forced fumbles or recoveries.

"That means he wasn't doing anything that he likes to do, which is harass the quarterback," Mankins said. "That's the main thing he wants to do is get sacks. And in the run game he's all right, I guess, but his main thing is pass rushing. Today the tackles did a good job of shutting him down."

Porter did register one of Miami's seven quarterback hits, but that's a trivial performance from someone who declared the Patriots' championships deserve asterisks and alleged quarterback Tom Brady gets preferential treatment from officials.

Porter was quiet after the game, too, heading straight for the charter bus when the visitors' locker room was opened to reporters.

The Patriots played without two-time Pro Bowl left tackle Matt Light and lost Pro Bowl center Dan Koppen for the second half because of a knee injury.

Randy Starks and Cameron Wake dropped Brady for the Dolphins' only sacks. The Dolphins played without nose tackle Jason Ferguson and inside linebacker Channing Crowder, but Porter probably knew the task at hand when he ripped the Patriots three days earlier on the NFL Network.

Mankins said the Patriots contained the AFC's reigning sack king heads up.

"They're good across the line," Mankins said of the Dolphins. "We had a lot of one-on-ones in the passing game, and everyone seemed to come through for the most part."

Rapid Reaction: Patriots 27, Dolphins 17

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
4:16
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The Miami Dolphins pulled out all the stops. They ran the option for a touchdown, had running back Ronnie Brown throw for a touchdown and went for it on fourth down on the opening drive of the second half.

It wasn't enough.

One week after Ted Ginn returned two kickoffs for touchdowns and Jason Taylor scored on a fumble recovery to compensate for an anemic offense, the Dolphins weren't able to find enough points Sunday in Gillette Stadium.

In a game that was closer on the scoreboard than many anticipated, the New England Patriots were obviously the better team in a 27-17 victory.

With the New York Jets and Buffalo Bills off this weekend, Sunday's lone AFC East game padded the Patriots' lead and put the Dolphins in a precarious position. The Patriots are 6-2, two games ahead of the Jets and three ahead of the Dolphins and Bills.

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was in command throughout the game. He threw a long interception while trying to go deep to Randy Moss on the Patriots opening possession.

Brady completed 25 of 37 throws for 332 yards, a chunk coming on Moss' 71-yard catch-and-run touchdown. Brady also connected with Moss for the two-point conversion and for a 36-yard strike to set up a Laurence Maroney touchdown from the 1-yard line a play later.

Dolphins quarterback Chad Henne went 2-0 in his first NFL starts but had his third straight ordinary Sunday. He was 19-of-34 for 219 yards, no touchdowns, no interceptions.

The Patriots mostly held the Wildcat in check, but rookie quarterback Pat White optioned them into the end zone -- two keepers for 37 yards and a pitch to Ricky Williams for a 15-yard score -- and Brown did throw to tight end Joey Haynos for a 2-yard touchdown.

Brown finished with 15 carries for 48 yards.

Halftime observations from Dolphins-Patriots

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
2:54
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The Miami Dolphins are keeping it close in Gillette Stadium, and desperation has been the catalyst once more.

The Dolphins entered Sunday's game against the New England Patriots banged up on defense and lost a couple more starters in the first quarter. The Patriots kicked a field goal to take a 10-3 lead in the second quarter.

The game was getting away from the Dolphins, and they can't afford to lose. They're 3-4, and if they don't beat the Patriots, then they can drop only one more game in their final eight and expect to make the playoffs. This year, 9-7 might not cut it.

So the Dolphins decided to get creative.

Similar to last year, when they went into Foxborough with a 0-2 record and set loose the Wildcat, the Dolphins went back in time for an unusual remedy: the option.

The ploy worked. Rookie quarterback Pat White kept it for runs of 33 and 4 yards and pitched it to Ricky Williams for a 15-yard game-tying touchdown. The Dolphins drove 80 yards without completing a pass.

Patriots kicker Stephen Gostkowski answered with his second and third field goals to give the Patriots a 16-10 lead, but the halftime chalk talk is going to be a little more animated than one would have assumed after a quarter and a half.

The Patriots hold a 268-156 edge in yards from scrimmage and have kept Ted Ginn from making up ground like he did last week at the Meadowlands. Ginn has one kickoff return for 37 yards, but Gostkowski has drilled two other kicks out of the end zone.

Wildcat trigger man Ronnie Brown has been irrelevant so far. He has seven carries for 14 yards. Dolphins quarterback Chad Henne is 6-of-13 for 88 yards and no interceptions.

Tom Brady has been mostly sharp for New England. He is 18-of-29 for 224 yards, but hasn't been able to turn matriculation into touchdowns. Laurence Maroney has nine carries for 38 yards and the Patriots' only touchdown, a 1-yard run after Brady connected with Randy Moss down the right sideline for 36 yards.

Patriots center Dan Koppen has a knee injury. His return has been announced in the press box as questionable. He was replaced by Dan Connolly.

Dolphins unleash the 'Wildpat'

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
2:22
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- During my weekly visit with ESPN Radio's Jon Stashower on Sunday morning, we discussed whether the Miami Dolphins' fascinating Wildcat offense could surprise the New England Patriots in Gillette Stadium a second straight year.
 White


I told Stashower that was unlikely given the New Orleans Saints and New York Jets had stifled the Wildcat in consecutive weeks, and Patriots coach Bill Belichick had an extra week to prepare for it. The Patriots are 7-2 after a bye under Belichick.

But I said there would be one way for the Dolphins to give the Patriots trouble: Unveil some new uses for rookie quarterback Pat White, who was drafted to complement the Wildcat package.

The Dolphins have done just that. Since it's technically not the Wildcat -- those plays are direct snaps to a running back -- let's call it the "Wildpat."

Down 10-3 in the second quarter, the Dolphins sent White into the game. White, known for running the option at West Virginia, reprised his collegiate role. On his first snap, he kept the ball and ran for 33 yards into Patriots territory. On the next play, he ran for 4.

From the 15-yard line, the Dolphins called another option play. This time, White flipped it to Ricky Williams, who ran it in for a game-tying touchdown.

The Dolphins went 80 yards on the drive and didn't complete a pass.

This gives the Patriots something to worry about.

Dolphins defense dinged up even more

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
2:00
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The Miami Dolphins' tattered defense has gotten a little more raggedy against the New England Patriots in Gillette Stadium.

Two Dolphins who replaced other injured players were hurt in the first quarter.

Rookie cornerback Vontae Davis -- in for Will Allen -- is out of the game with a right quadriceps injury suffered while denying Randy Moss a reception in the end zone.

Davis was replaced by Jason Allen. Davis' return has been announced in the press box as questionable. He has been riding a stationary bike on the sideline.

Nose tackle Paul Soliai -- in for Jason Ferguson -- has missed snaps because of an apparent leg injury. There has been no update provided on Soliai. Randy Starks has been lining up over Patriots center Dan Koppen with Soliai out.

Dolphins-Patriots inactives

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
12:00
PM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- No surprises on the inactive list for Sunday's game between the Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots in Gillette Stadium.

Miami Dolphins
New England Patriots

A peek behind the Bill Parcells curtain

November, 8, 2009
11/08/09
11:16
AM ET
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Graham

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Drivers in the Fort Lauderdale area should keep their eyes peeled for a homeless man in a Philadelphia Eagles hat. Rest assured, South Florida reporters will be on the prowl for him.

Bill Parcells supposedly talks football with this guy more than he has with the media in the two years he's been in charge of the Miami Dolphins.

Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy wrote a column about the "Man Behind The Curtain in Miami" and mentioned Parcells' dispossessed buddy. Parcells, on his drive to the Dolphins' facility in Davie, Fla., purportedly brings the guy the newspaper every morning on 17th Street near the causeway.

But the bulk of Shaughnessy's column is about Parcells' history of turning around downtrodden franchises. Compared to past rebuilding projects, Parcells hides in his spider hole and speaks to the media less often than Fidel Castro.
"I've spent limited time with him," Dolphins CEO Mike Dee told Shaughnessy. Dee is former CEO of the Boston Red Sox. "But in the time I have known him, I have found him to be everything you would expect -- smart, experienced, with great insight. An iconic figure. He's a very tall tree in a forest of tall trees.

"The Dolphins hold a high place in this community. In the last six or seven years, they had fallen on hard times. Them going 1-15 was the equivalent of the Red Sox going 70-92 and finishing 22 games behind the Yankees.

"Bill's arrival, and what he stands for, immediately gave optimism to the marketplace. Even with the 0-3 start this year, fans are not panicking. He brings a level of credibility that things are going to turn around. It goes way beyond the X's and O's."
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