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| Moss Says no Changes here may be some bad news for simon and other pats fan Randy Moss says he wont change anything so that may mean that it will be the same slacking off Rancy Moss or he may improve work ethic but never shut up neither is good
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| Re: Moss Says no Changes Quote:
Don't like him. |
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| Re: Moss Says no Changes What do you want the guy to say? "I'll change...but only for the Pats..."...of course the guy will say he's doing nothing to change the past...he only knows how to play the game one way. Still, that way is better than all but maybe 2-3 other wideouts in the game. |
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| Re: Moss Says no Changes well i didnt see the interview so its hard for me to comment on this ..... but from all i have seen and heard he is doing all the right things in camp right now the rest of the NFL needs to fear Moss in a Patriots jersey
__________________ Hello, my name is Juan Pablo Montoya. You wrecked my racecar, prepare to die. how about a frosty can of Shut The Hell Up |
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| Re: Moss Says no Changes Moss’ growth minimal: First camp looks like slow-motion replay FOXBORO - If you want to get excited about Randy Moss and what he’ll bring to the Patriots in 2007, here’s a bit of advice: Don’t watch him practice. That was the impression made during the four days of non-contact workouts the media was allowed to watch last week at Gillette Stadium. Perhaps Moss will ramp it up when training camp opens July 27, but if minicamp was any indication, fans probably shouldn’t expect any fireworks. Nearly every regional and national media outlet was there to record Moss’ Patriots introduction, and most reports focused on the promise he brings to Tom Brady and the offense. Many dispatches also made sure to point out the three or four nice catches he made during those four days. In addition, Moss spoke to the media for about nine minutes Wednesday, which might have distracted the fourth estate from reporting what Moss actually did on the practice field. Which, in short, wasn’t much. While newcomers Wes Welker, Donte’ Stallworth and Kyle Brady hustled through their first days on the job, and veterans such as Tom Brady, Rodney Harrisonand Tedy Bruschicontinued to exemplify the Patriots Way, Moss moved at his own pace. He rarely dug in. More often than not, he glided. On balance, the most talented receiver of this generation was just another guy. You’d have thought Moss would have taken the opportunity to make an early statement, maybe run from drill to drill across the field, lead the sprints at the end of practice, blow by the slower and smaller players trying to cover him, whatever. Show a little hustle. Little things. But it pretty much was the opposite. Moss was content to remain in the pack. He never was first in line. He certainly didn’t make defensive backs look foolish. Aside from climbing the ladder once or twice on high throws, he didn’t give any hints of his prodigious physical gifts. It’s true the entire proceedings were run at about three-quarters speed, but that didn’t stop Brady, Welker and Harrison from giving full effort. Moss’speedometer seemed stuck at around 60 percent. On Day 1, Moss stretched by himself while the rest of the team was in formation. On Day 4, coach Bill Belichick put his veterans through an extended session of field-length sprints (gassers). Moss was the last player in his position group to cross the end line on just about every one. Based on his performance, it was as if Moss was saying, “I don’t care how I’m viewed. I don’t care about my reputation. I’m going about business the same way.” In fact, that pretty much is what he said. “To be honest with you,” Moss said, “I don’t plan on changing.” In one regard, the statement showed some pride. Moss is no robot, and he clearly felt no need to put on a dog-and-pony show just because people expected him to. Perhaps he feels giving in like that diminishes what he’s done to this point of his Hall of Fame career. Moss’ growth minimal: First camp looks like slow-motion replay - N.E. Patriots - BostonHerald.com |
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| Re: Moss Says no Changes The problem I see with Randy Moss being a Patriot is that the Pats passing game has Brady spreading the ball around to everyone, including 2 tight ends. I can't see Moss being "the man" because no Pats reciever during the Brady run had 1,,400 yds recieving and 13 TDs. Keeping that in mind we all know that Moss doesn't play when passes aren't thrown to him so perhaps we could have a similair scenario when Terrell Owens was on the Eagles...maybe. |
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