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DE Mike Vrabel (All B1G, All American, Pro Bowl, All Pro, Super Bowl Champion)

Dispatch

4/21/06

Vrabel donates


Former OSU football player Mike Vrabel and his wife Jen, a former Buckeyes volleyball player, have donated $75,000 to the Woody Hayes Athletic Center renovation project.

"You can’t give back to the past, but you can certainly build to the future and show you’re grateful for what was provided for you when you were here," Tressel said. "Mike is that kind of guy and Jen was an athlete here, as well, and they feel strongly about Ohio State athletics."
Vrabel is a linebacker with the New England Patriots. The family lives in Powell with sons Tyler and Carter.
 
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vrabels08012006.jpg


Vrabel looks like a man on move to outside
By Albert Breer/ MetroWest Daily News
Tuesday, August 1, 2006 - Updated: 08:15 AM EST
FOXBORO -

To Mike Vrabel, it really doesn’t matter.

Inside. Outside. Whatever.

And that’s what Patriots coach Bill Belichick likes best about him.

“He’s a very smart player,” Belichick said. “He’s a well-conditioned athlete. He’s instinctive. He has a really good temperament and a good understanding of the game. He is a versatile guy. He does a lot of different things.”

And that point will be driven home with Vrabel on the move - again. It appears he’s moving back outside after playing inside the final 11 games last season.

The 10th-year pro won’t likely be playing at his accustomed outside spot to the right, which often means playing in space.

Rather, he’ll be taking Willie McGinest’s old spot on the left.

Vrabel agreed such movement isn’t easy.

“It’s important to try to get back and get comfortable there,” he said. “Work the drops from there, work the angles from there, rush from there. You’re talking about (a layoff) since the fifth game of last year, so there’s plenty of room for improvement on my part. I know that.”

The Patriots are hoping the transition will go as smoothly as his shift inside last season. The shift - it not only encompasses moving to the middle of the defense but also playing off the line - came in the team’s sixth game. Despite the Patriots losing to Denver, 28-20, that day, Vrabel recorded a career-high 15 tackles.

From there, things got better and better. Tedy Bruschi came back the next week and a team that sunk as low as 27th in the league in run defense rose all the way to fourth before the regular-season finale.

“I think I just got better at linebacker,” Vrabel said. “You watch guys, just watching Tedy for four years play that position, just in practice watching him . . . you learn a lot.”

Belichick said few players understand the game like Vrabel - including knowing the entire defense and understanding how each piece works together.

“I think it’s important for all four linebackers in the game to know all four positions,” Vrabel said. “Just as I could go over and play on the other side, the right side, just as any other inside linebacker could switch and play the other side, or I could go inside, it’s important to know all four.”

http://patriots.bostonherald.com/patriots/view.bg?articleid=150831
 
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Ready, willing, and Vrabel

Outside linebacker, inside linebacker, even tight end -- no matter what the Patriots need, he's ready and willing

By Jackie MacMullan, Globe Staff | September 3, 2006
FOXBOROUGH -- He forgets sometimes.


Happened just last week. Mike Vrabel broke from the huddle and positioned himself at inside linebacker, but when Tom Brady dropped back to pass, Vrabel instinctively reverted to the coverage responsibilities of the outside linebacker position, where he has established his reputation as an agitator and intimidator.
``I was in the wrong coverage," Vrabel confessed. ``I had to stop for a second and look at myself. Then I said, `Oh well,' and moved on."
He has been Patriots coach Bill Belichick's Everyman for five seasons now, willing and able to handle special teams assignments, rotating linebacker positions, and some occasional trickery at tight end. He is no decoy during his intermittent offensive forays, but a bona fide receiver specializing in touchdowns (8 receptions, 8 scores ). He is everything Belichick loves in a football player: smart, fearless, strong, well-conditioned, and versatile.
Yet sometimes you wonder whether his versatility betrays him. No one was happier than Vrabel in 2003 when he was flying in from the outside, recording a career- and team-high 9.5 sacks. They were the most sacks recorded by a Patriot in the Belichick era, and the most in team history since Willie McGinest recorded 9.5 in 1996. Vrabel's quickness and ability to read offenses made him a natural for the position.
But last season, when Ted Johnson abruptly retired, Roman Phifer did not return, and Tedy Bruschi began his long road back from a stroke, Vrabel began preparing for the inevitable. He played the final 11 games of the regular season and playoffs at inside linebacker, and wound up leading the team in tackles with 114.
This season, Vrabel was supposed to return to his customary outside position, but with Bruschi recovering from a broken wrist, Vrabel has found himself on the inside again.
``I'm having fun, because it's different," Vrabel said. ``It's a challenge. I look at it as a compliment the coaching staff believes they can move me inside and not have our defense fall off. But it could change."
When Bruschi returns, Vrabel will likely replace Tully Banta-Cain as a starting outside linebacker (along with Rosevelt Colvin), leaving Bruschi and newly signed veteran Junior Seau to handle the primary inside chores.
Simple enough? It isn't. Juggling various responsibilities for a complicated defensive scheme is harder than Vrabel makes it seem.
``It gets overlooked, what he's doing for us," said safety Rodney Harrison. ``He has 10 sacks one year, and no Pro Bowl consideration. Then we ask him to come inside because we have injuries. He goes back outside, but then he's got to come back in again, and he never lets it affect his psyche.
``It would be easy to get discouraged. Another guy would be saying, `If I'm inside, there's no way I'm getting 9 or 10 sacks. I had 10 sacks in '03, so this is going to make me look like I'm losing it. This is bad for my career.

``Do you think for a second Mike Vrabel is going to say anything like that? Not a chance. He's thinking, `I'm inside. Cool. Let's do some damage in here.' "
Making an impression
It's easy to identify Vrabel now as one of the cornerstones of the Patriots defense, a veteran with the experience and credentials to be a locker room leader. It's almost as easy to forget that he came to New England in 2001 as a relatively anonymous special teams player from the Steelers, a free agent on the fringe. ``He took the scenic route to the NFL," observed Seau. ``He wasn't some first-round pick that was catered to. He was one of those fourth-and-1 guys whose career was always in the balance, who had to worry about being cut, about finding a way onto the field, about getting noticed.
``Guys like that don't take anything for granted, even after they've made it. But I'll tell you this much: After watching Mike up close these past few weeks, you wonder how this guy ever slipped through the cracks."
Vrabel can recall walking into the Patriots locker room the first day and encountering the towering presence of McGinest, who challenged anyone and everyone to outwork him in the weight room. Nor has he forgotten how badly he wanted to fit in -- at any position.
``I felt like I was trying to do too much when I first got here," he said. ``Kind of an eager beaver. It was really my first chance at playing, and I didn't want to lose out. Tedy told me, `Just be you. Be smart. Be consistent. You don't have to impress anybody.' "
He did anyway, because he was such a quick study. Vrabel, who wants to be a coach someday, caught the attention of the veterans by mastering schemes, asking questions, even suggesting changes to the game plan.
``He's the smartest football player I've ever been on the field with," Harrison declared. ``Like one of the coaches."
Because of that, teammates maintain, Vrabel is able to take certain liberties with the staff, including Belichick himself.
``The guy should have been a comedian," offered defensive end Jarvis Green. ``We'll be sitting in meetings, and he'll come out with something that the rest of us might be thinking but would never say out loud.
``The other day, the coaches were laying out all the stuff they wanted us to do, and all of a sudden Mike is yelling, `What do you think we are? Your whipping boys?' I mean, I was thinking that, but saying it? I'll leave that to Mike."
He has become adept at knowing when to ease the tension with a wisecrack, or spice up the drudgery with a dig.


``I don't mind joking with Bill, and he doesn't mind telling me to shut the [expletive] up," Vrabel explained. ``I do it because it breaks up the monotony, whether it's with Bill or someone else."
A leading man
With McGinest gone this year and Harrison missing most of last season, it was only logical that Vrabel would step up and assume some veteran leadership responsibilities. Richard Seymour, Bruschi, Harrison, and Vrabel are the defensive core the younger players look to for advice. According to Green, Vrabel entertains a steady stream of questions from rookies and young prospects throughout the preseason. ``They choose him," Green said, ``because he treats them the way he'd like to be treated himself."
``I don't know how I got here [to a position of leadership]," Vrabel said with a shrug. ``I don't look at myself like that."
He has grown accustomed to a roster in flux, and that means adding new faces and subtracting old friends.
``Larry [Izzo] and I were saying the other day we're the only ones from the 2001 free agent class who are left," Vrabel said. ``We're always changing here. The young guys have so many questions, but I tell them, `Hey, it took me time to learn myself.'
``We all have our ways. The way Junior does things might be completely different than Tedy or myself. And right now, our roles haven't even really been defined."
This is nothing new for a linebacker who will go inside or outside, will score a touchdown or prevent one. Asked about Vrabel, Belichick smiled, then said, ``I think Mike falls into that exceptionally versatile category."
The coach, not known for hyperbole, then rattled off Vrabel's strengths: smart, instinctive, runs well, good size, strong, powerful.
``The guy does a lot of things and he doesn't take long to get assignments down," Belichick continued. ``He's able to do the techniques that need to be done for the position -- and he'll be happy to tell you that, too."
That is true. Mike Vrabel is proud to be the Everyman.
Sure beats the fringe free agent taking the scenic route.
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Patriots | Vrabel will likely start Week 1
Mon, 4 Sep 2006 17:00:25 -0700

Michael Parente, of the Woonsocket Call, reports New England Patriots LB Mike Vrabel is expected to start Week 1, but his position for the game is uncertain. Vrabel would likely start at inside linebacker if LB Tedy Bruschi (wrist) can not play, but could start at outside linebacker if Bruschi is in the lineup.


Patriots | Vrabel will likely start Week 1
Mon, 4 Sep 2006 17:00:25 -0700

Michael Parente, of the Woonsocket Call, reports New England Patriots LB Mike Vrabel is expected to start Week 1, but his position for the game is uncertain. Vrabel would likely start at inside linebacker if LB Tedy Bruschi (wrist) can not play, but could start at outside linebacker if Bruschi is in the lineup.
 
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Hawk grateful to Vrabel
By Albert Breer/ Metrowest Daily News
Friday, November 17, 2006 - Updated: 02:27 AM EST

FOXBORO - If you see Packers rookie linebacker A.J. Hawk bust through the line for a sack, tip a pass or just wrestle a Patriot to the turf on Sunday, you should know what to do.

Blame Mike Vrabel.

Over the last four offseasons, Vrabel has returned to Ohio State and helped Hawk become a two-time All-American, the fifth pick in the draft and a front-runner for defensive rookie of the year honors.

And now, Hawk, who?s sporting the same No. 50 in Green Bay that Vrabel wears in Foxboro, has a chance to show his mentor just how good a job he did.



?I?ve always been a big fan of Vrabel,? said Hawk in an e-mail exchange. ?And I?m glad to be wearing the same number as him.?

OSU linebackers coach Luke Fickell, one of Vrabel?s best friends and a college teammate, first brought the two together.

Since Vrabel lives in Columbus during the offseason, it seemed natural to have him help out the Buckeyes? linebackers. Vrabel obliged, whether it was in working out with Hawk and teammates Bobby Carpenter (now with the Cowboys) and Anthony Schlegel (Jets), or simply setting the right example.

?Vrabel?s been a proven, great pass rusher in this league for a while,? said Hawk. ?I tried to watch what he does and take a little bit of what he does when he rushes the passer and see if I can pick up a few things.?

That?s just the start of what Hawk has received.

?He?s always been there to support not just me, but all the other players at Ohio State,? said Hawk, who has recorded four sacks and 90 tackles this season. ?He gives us advice on everything, from how to choose an agent, what to do when you get to your team, how to blend in with everybody and interact with other people.?

As a result, Vrabel?s become more than just another alum in Columbus. He?s one of the football program?s favorite sons. And he?s an important piece to the puzzle for the many Buckeyes who wind up in the NFL.

?He?s a face of Ohio State,? said Hawk. ?He?s very involved in the community and the school. He donates money, shows up at a lot of events, and I think he?s someone that everyone at Ohio State knows of and has a lot of respect for.?

http://patriots.bostonherald.com/patriots/view.bg?articleid=167745
 
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Utilitarian Vrabel shows his worth
By Mike Reiss, Globe Staff | November 22, 2006

FOXBOROUGH -- The analogy fits Mike Vrabel well. Fellow linebacker Rosevelt Colvin calls him a Swiss Army knife on the football field.

Nicely said, on several fronts.

Few would deny that the 31-year-old Vrabel has a sharp edge to him. He's also durable. And just when you might forget how important he's been to the Patriots over the last five-plus seasons, he shows up in multiple ways to provide a reminder, such as Sunday, when he collected six tackles and 1 1/2 sacks in the 35-0 win over the Packers.

Now, Vrabel wants to see his Patriots teammates continue to sharpen their blades at a time when title contenders usually begin to make their runs. Since Vrabel joined the Patriots prior to the 2001 season, they are 33-6 (including playoffs) after Thanksgiving, the best mark in the league.

"It doesn't mean it will happen this year, but I think you can tell a lot about the future from the past," Vrabel said yesterday as the team began preparations to face the 9-1 Bears Sunday. "Teams that play well late in the season usually enjoy a lot of success in the postseason. So we understand that this is the time we have to play well."

Vrabel felt the team took an important step in Green Bay.

"There were a lot of things that were said or not said last week about us -- and it's tough when you don't lose two games [in a row] for a while," he said. "Bill [Belichick] got us back into practice mode and making those plays in practice and really concentrating on it. It carried over to the game."

Vrabel's play seemed to rise to a higher level against the Packers.

If ever there was a non-catch that left an indelible mark, it was his near-touchdown at the start of the second quarter. Then there was his strip sack near the end of the game, a simple power rush off the left edge, as he flicked aside running back Ahman Green -- who was helpless in that one-on-one blocking situation -- before knocking the ball away from quarterback Aaron Rodgers to officially seal the shutout.

Want some more variety?

On a second-quarter play, Vrabel jammed tight end David Martin within the 5-yard limit, then dropped into a zone, where he was in position to tackle fullback William Henderson on a 6-yard pass. At other points in the game, when the Packers attempted to run to the right side, Vrabel was locked up against right tackle Tony Moll and tight end Bubba Franks, securing that side of the field.

Add it all up and it was a Swiss Army knife type of performance.

"I think a lot of guys try to do that," Vrabel said when discussing his versatility. "You have to know all spots."

Because Vrabel knows them well, the Patriots have employed him in a variety of roles this season. He played inside linebacker in the 3-4 set in the season opener, as the team was without Tedy Bruschi (wrist injury). The next week, Vrabel was at outside linebacker in the 4-3 set, which required a completely different set of skills. When the team returned to its 3-4 in its next game, Vrabel lined up at outside linebacker.

In pure passing situations, Vrabel has more often than not found himself in coverage. It's a slight change from past years, such as 2003, when he totaled 9 1/2 sacks. Vrabel has 3 1/2 sacks this season and 43 1/2 (including playoffs) over his 10-year career.

"We have two guys who rush well -- Tully [Banta-Cain] and Rosie -- and I've been more or less a cover guy," Vrabel said. "When you get your chances to rush, you have to make them count. We mix it around, depending on the game plan. That's no issue."

Coaches have credited Vrabel with 64 tackles on the season, which ties for third on the team behind Bruschi (70) and Junior Seau (69).

Off the field, Vrabel showed a bit of his sharp edge yesterday when he hung his Ohio State No. 94 jersey at the edge of quarterback Tom Brady's locker. It was a not-so-subtle reminder that Vrabel's alma mater had beaten Brady's alma mater in the college football game of the year Saturday.

"It's a lot better than a hat," Vrabel said with a smile. "I got the old throwback jersey from college, and that's part of the bet. It's better than me wearing a Brady jersey from Michigan, I can tell you that."

Mike Reiss can be reached at [email protected].

? Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.


http://www.boston.com/sports/footba...006/11/22/utilitarian_vrabel_shows_his_worth/
 
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Thursday, November 23, 2006
Vrabel versatile to the end
Great hands let LB help on offense
By Rich Garven TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
[email protected]

FOXBORO? The Patriots could use help at a number of positions, but they don?t lack for depth or talent at tight end.

They have two proven veterans in Benjamin Watson and Daniel Graham and a pair of promising rookies in David Thomas and Garrett Mills. They?re so deep, Mills had been a healthy scratch for six games before landing on the season-ending injury list last week.

That still left three tight ends, so the Patriots, uneasy about only carrying two quarterbacks, filled the open roster spot with veteran Vinny Testaverde. Four days later, Thomas sat out against the Packers due to injury.

Linebacker Mike Vrabel capably stepped into the void, getting in for a handful of goal-line plays when the Patriots went to their three-tight-end set. It was the latest ? and likely not the last ? time he?ll answer the call in that regard.

?It?s about trying to help us out,? Vrabel said. ?I try to get open and do my job. Usually when you get open, you get the football.?

Vrabel is proficient at plugging gaps on defense and he has consistently displayed a knack for finding open space on offense. Over the last four years, he?s caught eight passes. Each was good for a touchdown.

And we?re not talking garbage time here.

Vrabel gave the Patriots leads of 7-0 and 14-7 with a pair of receptions against the Jets last December. He recorded a TD in Super Bowl victories over Carolina and Philadelphia, both times breaking a tie.

On Sunday, Vrabel didn?t have any official catches. It wasn?t for a lack of trying.

It was first and goal at the Green Bay 1 early in the second quarter when Vrabel slipped off the line virtually untouched and made his way to the back of the end zone. Tom Brady, who later said he was trying to throw the ball away, watched as Vrabel went up and snared the high pass with one hand.

Unfortunately, he only got one foot down inbounds on the reentry. But it was a terrific effort nonetheless and enhanced Vrabel?s reputation as a sure-handed receiver.

?He probably has the best hands on the team,? Rodney Harrison said last month. ?No question. I?ve never seen that guy drop a ball.?

Credit the discredited Drew Bledsoe for seeing the untapped potential in Vrabel, who enjoyed pulling in passes from the former Patriots quarterback during warm-ups. That apparently led to Bledsoe putting a bug in the ear of coach Bill Belichick.

?I think Drew might have said, ?Hey, this guy may be somebody to fill in,? ? Vrabel recalled.

The Patriot most often associated with position flexibility is receiver Troy Brown, who has repeatedly been drafted into service in the secondary the last few years. Vrabel, though, doesn?t even compare his situation to Brown?s.

Brown sits in on team meetings and practices with both the offense and the defense during the week. Vrabel?s focus is on defense. He keeps his catching skills sharp with the ball drills done by the linebackers.

?Troy has to go in there and really do a good job, usually against their best receiver in the slot,? said Vrabel, who typically finds out Friday if he?ll be in the offensive game plan for that Sunday?s game. ?Mine is situational, go in there for a couple of plays. His job is difficult. I?m just occasionally trying to get open in the end zone.?

Vrabel, an Ohio native and Ohio State grad, played some tight end in high school but otherwise has limited experience at that position. What he?s quite familiar with is playing a number of positions.

Drafted in the third round by the Steelers in 1997, Vrabel was used mainly as a pass-rushing defensive end during his four years in Pittsburgh. He has been a linebacker since arriving in New England in 2001, playing outside and, as was the case last year, inside in an effort to shore up that area in the wake of the failed Beisel-Brown experiment.

?It just worked out that way here for me,? Vrabel said. ?Bill has needed other positions filled. You can?t go out and just sign guys, you only have so many guys on your roster.?

And what other Patriots defenders have the ability to make a contribution on offense?

Defensive lineman Richard Seymour played some fullback before a knee injury put an end to that idea. Willie Andrews is a cornerback who has also spent extensive time working out at receiver. Harrison believes cornerback Asante Samuel, who leads the team with three interceptions, could play receiver.

But when the Patriots are in a pinch at tight end, they turn to the versatile Vrabel to provide help.

http://www.telegram.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061123/NEWS/611230556/1009/SPORTS
 
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Hail to the Victor...Mike Vrabel. :slappy:

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To pay off a lost wager, Tom Brady had to wear Mike Vrabel's college jersey at practice because Brady's alma mater, Michigan, lost to Vrabel's, Ohio State, last Saturday. (Globe Staff Photo / Tom Herde)
 
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Inside friendship

LBs Bruschi, Vrabel have a special bond

By Amalie Benjamin, Globe Staff | December 10, 2006

FOXBOROUGH -- Three weeks into his Patriots career, Mike Vrabel was already a tattletale.

Tedy Bruschi had slipped in a drill in which he was supposed to drop into coverage, which wouldn't have been a problem, except the coaches thought Vrabel had erred. And Vrabel, the newcomer in a veteran linebacker group that also included Willie McGinest and Ted Johnson, made sure the coaches knew it wasn't him.

"He was steaming, like I had sold him out to the coaches or something for him slipping," Vrabel said, with a laugh. "We always kind of go back to that point. He won't let me live that down."

Said Bruschi, "He caught on pretty quick about how tight-knit we are here. His little baptism by fire."

Vrabel, who never started a game in his four years in Pittsburgh, arrived in Foxborough with little indication that he would blossom into a team captain and mainstay. Bruschi, meanwhile, already had found his place in the Patriots defense, starting every game for two seasons and working his way into the hearts of New Englanders.

Vrabel and his wife, Jen, had come to Boston unsure of what to expect. Jen hadn't been completely comfortable in Pittsburgh, feeling she and Mike were in a different place than many of the other families on the Steelers.

But the Patriots were different. The Bledsoes reached out to the Vrabels, as did a number of the other couples on the team.

But, among all of them, the Bruschis -- Tedy and Heidi -- stood out. Still do.

"I think everybody would consider a teammate a friend, but then I think that you have people that you know a lot better and really can rely on," Vrabel said. "You can't rely on 60 guys to say, 'Hey, I've got this going on,' or 'What would you do here?' Tedy is certainly at the top of the list of who I would go to."

Not that it's all sunshine and rainbows around the linebackers. The two, like any fast friends, still have the occasional kink to work out in a tight relationship that has them spending long hours with each other. Or, as Jen said, "A lot of their friendship I don't think Heidi and I get to see. They're together every day for hours and road trips. He's with Tedy more than he sees the kids or me."

That's usually good. But not always.

"The way he's able to keep things light around here, it's really something that makes it fun to come to work," Bruschi said, before adding, with a laugh, "Then, at the same time, sometimes he gets on my nerves.

"That's friendship. It's not going to be a lovefest the whole time. Sometimes I feel like punching him in the face. I don't know if he feels the same way about me sometimes, but that's the way it goes."

Family relationship

As lighthearted and laugh-filled as the relationship can be -- witness the podium Bruschi recalled pushing in front of Vrabel's locker after a 2003 game against the Browns in which Vrabel had a career-high three sacks -- their bond runs much deeper. When Bruschi suffered a stroke shortly after the Patriots won their third Super Bowl and wasn't sure he'd ever feel the camaraderie of a locker room again, he shared his feelings with few people. Vrabel was one of them.

"When I was coming back from my stroke, he was the guy that I would talk to, would confide in," Bruschi said. "One of my close friends. [He] would help me deal with a lot of things I had to deal with coming back.

"I would say it's unique because it isn't everyone on the team that you'd say post-football-world you'd still be in contact with. But definitely, Mike and Jen Vrabel are two people that my family will still be in contact with."

While the families don't see each other as often as they used to -- even as often as last year -- they already have a dinner planned for this week. It's hard, Jen said, with kids and work and school and everything crashing down on them, easier to visit with friends in their neighborhood than make the drive from Easton to North Attleborough to see each other, especially after Vrabel and Bruschi have already spent hours together in meetings and practices.

That changes nothing, though.

"I know Mike and Tedy are inseparable," said Jen, who sits with Heidi at home games. "They're not so much alike. Mike's, I think, the goofball. I don't know if it's that they're different. I think Tedy holds back Mike from being too obnoxious at meetings. [Mike] just really respects him.

"I think they get a kick out of each other."

They seem to think so, too. And even though visits during the season have dwindled this year, Bruschi has found the time to travel to Ohio twice to visit Vrabel, and golf trips to Florida and a Tom Brady-sponsored Kentucky Derby trip last year are highlights from their list. When the pads are off, the bonding -- and the ribbing -- really begins.

"We play golf in April, so everybody's terrible," Vrabel said (though Bruschi said Vrabel's game is much better than his). "Everybody's ultracompetitive, but everybody is terrible because nobody has played. I don't play golf in Ohio leading up to April, and he doesn't play golf up here. We all get together and we're all very excited about playing golf in Florida, but everybody's terrible. We're all sunburnt and tired and miserable, but we're having a good time."

It's not just their golf trips or pranks, it's their talks; the ones that range from football to family -- Vrabel has two sons, Bruschi three, all around the same age -- to sports to plans past retirement. They lead to the pipe dream, the one with a hint of reality, in which the pair ponder the fun of being head coach and assistant together at one of their alma maters, though it would be mighty hard to pull the Vrabels to Tucson -- "too hot," Mike says -- or the Bruschis to Columbus.
They talk of the latest Christmas presents to the best ways to raise kids to be unaffected by the wealth of their fathers.
And, most important, it's their honesty with each other.

"He can joke with me about certain things that other people can't," Bruschi said. "That's the type of relationship we have. Certain things I'm real serious about and friends don't joke with me about. I give him leeway that I don't give to other people.

"I think that it's easier for me and for him to tell me if I was wrong on a certain play. Even when I'm right, he can tell me I was wrong and I'll accept that. I can do the same with him. We can be blunt with each other."

Totally in synch

Now in their sixth season together, the linebackers have grown to the point where their communication on the field mirrors their communication off it. "I think that relationship has become almost like an eye-contact thing," Vrabel said. "This year, moving back inside, we still got that same communication and that same kind of look. You've got the back, I've got the tight end, or however it's going to go. There's not a whole lot of conversation that needs to go on to get our point across."

Squarely in the middle of a group of veteran linebackers -- each of the current starters, Vrabel, Bruschi, Rosevelt Colvin, and Tully Banta-Cain, has been with the Patriots for at least four seasons -- the captains and friends don't need to slow down the game by spelling out their plans. Usually, that bit of eye contact or a subtle hand signal does the trick.

"You see it," linebacker Don Davis said. "You can tell when a couple of guys are really in synch. Those two have been around each other for a while. They talk some of the same languages."

From their seats in Gillette Stadium, Jen and Heidi see that when they notice a shot of their husbands on the JumboTron, talking and laughing. They know what Bruschi acknowledges -- that without someone to relate to at this stage of their career, football could become monotonous. But it hasn't.

The winning -- and the friendship -- have taken care of that.

And it's that part, the on-field accomplishments that have reached gaudy levels since Vrabel joined the team in 2001, that Bruschi cites as the most rewarding. Partly because it's hard to argue with winning three Super Bowls. Partly because it's hard to argue with winning three Super Bowls with one of your closest friends.

"You think of the time off the field, but especially it's just the success we've had as a tandem," Bruschi said. "Him and I have been somewhat of a constant back there in the linebacking crew. There have been some linebackers that have come and gone and who we'll always remember.

"But it seems like there's always No. 50 and there's always No. 54."
http://www.boston.com/sports/football/patriots/articles/2006/12/10/inside_friendship/
 
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