Steve Grogan can tell Drake Maye all about a scrambling quarterback, and other thoughtsI think Grogan could've played a few more years with the new rules. I remember he used to get the crap kicked out of him every other scrambling run. Here's hoping Drake Maye's a bit more judicious with his running and sliding.
Picked-up pieces while laughing at reports that the Red Sox “have interest” in Juan Soto . . .
▪ Before Tom Brady was born, Steve Grogan was the Patriots’ franchise quarterback. And he ran with the football. A lot.
Tough guy Grogan gave the Patriots 16 hard-nosed seasons, running amok, throwing his body on the line, and living to play another week. When he retired in 1991, Grogan was the Patriots’ all-time passing leader, and his 35 rushing touchdowns still rank fourth in team history.
Like Drake Maye, Grogan was not a fan of giving himself up at the end of a run. There was no “slide rule” to protect quarterbacks in the first decade of Grogan’s career, and when the rule was introduced in 1985, Grogan didn’t like it.
“I only slid once in my career,” Grogan said from his Missouri home this past week. “It was in Pittsburgh. I got hit under the chin and got a concussion and woke up in the shower. I don’t think they even threw a flag on that play. That was the last time I slid.
Saturday, November 16, 2024
DHL Dan CCXXX - Grogan's Heroes
Shank takes a look back at the last New England Patriots quarterback who ran a lot:
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I watched Grogan during the latter half of his career when he had essentially taken the back-up role to guys like Tony Eason and Doug Flutie. I do remember him being "hard-nosed" and tough as nails. It helped that he was a big guy (6'-4", 210 lbs).
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