“Sometimes it’s good to have a reset button during a season,” Bruschi acknowledged of the loss. The 34-20 defeat to Pittsburgh was a wakeup call for New England. It’s a delicate little balance, but the expectation was to win every game because we knew we could.” Belichick and the concept of “suppressing success”Īfter winning 21 games in a row between the end of the 2003 season and the start in 2004, the Patriots were finally beaten in October of that season by the Steelers. I mean nobody can beat us and having that attitude. “But then, within ourselves and the way we play on the field, it’s about domination. “Okay, in front of the media, this is what Belichick wants,” Bruschi explained.
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“We knew how to balance ‘One game at a time, blah, blah, blah,’ along with, ‘We’re the best that there is.’ Being able to have those two types of mentalities, and still know when to bring them out. “We felt like we had it figured out,” he recalled. One of the pillars of the Patriots’ mentality during the Bill Belichick era has been about not giving too much “bulletin-board material” to the opposition, and to avoid saying anything controversial in public.īruschi offered an unusually candid assessment of how this worked from the team’s perspective in 2004. “Your quarterback’s not quite as innocent as we all believe,” Vrabel added.
“He’s the one that probably gave Tom the most s*** talking trash,” Bruschi said of Vrabel. We tried to keep a good feel for when to make jokes and when not to.” “Did you give him s***?” Vrabel was asked in one scene. In highlighting that era of Patriots teams’ competitiveness, the documentary goes into detail about the trash-talking that took place. Here are a few notable things from “The Edge,” which was released on Tuesday morning: Brady did his fair share of trash-talking.