FOXBORO - Last season, a
string of questionable hits by Vince Wilfork
[stats] and accompanying fines by the league led
to a reputation the Patriots [team stats]
defensive lineman wanted no part of and staunchly
defended himself against.
Dirty player?
First, there was the low tackle on Bills quarterback
J.P. Losman. Then the late hit on Cowboys tight end
Jason Witten. That was followed by the finger-poke
inside the facemask of Giants running back Brandon
Jacobs during the regular-season finale. And, finally,
a grab to Michael Turner’s facemask in the AFC
Championship Game also cost him.
In all, Wilfork was rung up for nearly $40,000, before
the $12,500 fine for the Losman hit was reduced to
$2,500.
Moving forward, it will be interesting to see if there
is any kind of carryover this season with the Patriots
Pro Bowl nose tackle.
Will officials watch him more closely based on
reputation? Do players consider him “dirty”
based on the one-season pile-up of events, and will any
of what happened last year alter Wilfork’s game
in 2008?
With regard to the latter, let’s just say the
6-foot-2, 325-pound Wilfork, who led the defense with
seven tackles in Friday night’s 27-17 preseason
loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, isn’t about to
budge.
If he’s a marked man, so be it.
“That was last year. If (the refs are looking out
for me) that’s what they’re going to do.
It’s not going to stop the way I play and
prepare,” Wilfork said last week.
“I’d never alter my game just because of
something like that. That was in the past. I really
don’t care about it. I’m going to do what I
got to do to get myself ready for the season.”
Of the four infractions, Wilfork did admit to being
“stupid” on the Jacobs incident. He
won’t, however, apologize for playing with
emotion, intensity and aggression. Still, he has tried
to work out differences with the players he may have
wronged.
“I think everything played itself out last year.
People I’ve met, people I’ve talked with,
they know me as a person. The thing I did worry about
last year was my reputation,” Wilfork said.
“But I think, at the end of the day, I was fine
with it. I was fine with everything from a
player’s standpoint. The guys I play against
understand the level of play that I play at. It’s
in the past.”
Former Patriots linebacker Steve Nelson did not believe
there would be any repercussions for Wilfork this
season based on what happened last season. For
starters, it’s really hard for officials to go
out of their way to keep an eye on what’s
happening with a player in the trenches.
“Nose guards work in such close space,”
Nelson said. “By the nature of his position,
being in the trenches, I think you can get away with a
lot of stuff down there because you’re in close
combat with the opposition. So I don’t think
there’s going to be any aftereffects from last
year.
“Officials are pretty good. They don’t let
reputations get involved in the process, or their
decision-making. And I don’t think it’s
going to affect the way he plays. He’s lined up a
few inches from the ball. He’s got combination
blocks on him. So he doesn’t have time to think
about it.”
Besides, Wilfork’s reputation isn’t exactly
one that’s been built up over time. Teammate
Rodney Harrison [stats] has had the so-called
“dirty” player label for quite a while and
can’t shake it, even if more players have been
fined for questionable hits of late.cw0
“You have the Conrad Doblers, the Jack Tatums . .
. those reputations take years and years to build
up,” Nelson said. “It’s not a
one-game thing or one season. It’s years of
questionable hits. So I think Vince is a totally
different ballgame.”
(bostonherald.com)