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1. New England Patriots

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It seemed too good to be true. Pete Carroll, the Jets' 42-year-old defensive coordinator, was going to be promoted to head coach for the 1994 season. The players couldn't believe their good luck; good old Pete was smart, energetic, the guy who made practice less tedious, just one hell of a nice guy. Why, it would be like one of their own was coaching them.

A few of us were a bit skeptical, though. One day in practice it was mentioned
to veteran center Jim Sweeney that players have a habit of taking it easy when
a coach isn't tough enough on them. "Won't happen here," Sweeney said. "The veterans won't let anyone quit on Pete."

You know the rest. The Jets were 6-5 and a playoff contender that year, and then Miami's Dan Marino suckered them with that fake-spike touchdown pass and things started falling apart. The team went south on Carroll, losing five straight, and 12 days after the season, owner Leon Hess fired Carroll and hired Rich Kotite.

Now Carroll is 45, some gray hair is starting to show, and he doesn't smile as much. And after two years of running the 49ers' defense he's gotten a second chance, as coach of the AFC champion Patriots. He's replacing a whip-cracker, Bill Parcells, who takes over the Jets.

"I'm not going to change my personality," Carroll says. "I'll always be me. Guys may start wondering why someone isn't yelling at them, but I'm different. I've coached a lot of defenses that have kicked the hell out of people, and I didn't scream at them. That's not the way I do it."

New England players' comments on the change were for the most part upbeat, but in some cases they bore an eerie resemblance to '94: "I like Pete," says quarterback Drew Bledsoe, who never hit it off with Parcells. "There's give-and-take. Before, there was just take."

"Bill's yelling and screaming had worn itself out," tight end Ben Coates says. "I don't think his leaving will affect us. Once we're on the field, things will be the same, just quieter."

One thing that will be the same is that the Patriots will get superior defensive coaching. It was defense that carried them to the Super Bowl last year; they ranked 27th in the league after 11 games, but during their 4-1 stretch drive only three teams allowed fewer yards. Add the first two playoff games, and New England allowed five touchdowns in seven games, none in the postseason—until the Super Bowl.

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Carroll will build on that, adding his own concepts, which include less zone and more man coverage behind a heavy attack on the quarterback. It's a risky way to travel, but the guy who could make it work is end Willie McGinest, who played like a demon in the postseason last year. He'll man what the 49ers call the elephant position, always lined up away from the tight end. On the other side will be another gifted rusher, linebacker Chris Slade. The new faces include cornerback Steve Israel, who played in Carroll's nickel packages in San Francisco ("the fastest defensive back I've ever seen," Carroll says), and tackle Henry Thomas, a speed and stunt rusher.

The only noteworthy offensive pickup is mammoth drive-blocking tackle Zefross Moss, who takes over for Max Lane. Green Bay's Reggie White beat Lane for three sacks in the Super Bowl, thereby changing Lane's job description to guard, the home of failed tackles in the NFL. If those changes work out, then this should be one of the league's more explosive attacks, featuring Bledsoe, Coates, wideout Terry Glenn and the gifted runner Curtis Martin, following the equally gifted blocking fullback Sam Gash.

There's enough talent here for a Super Bowl repeat, only this time it'll be quieter.      
—Paul Zimmerman


SCHEDULE SKINNY

Yes, Bill Parcells returns with the Jets on Sept. 14, but watch out for the game preceding it: at Indianapolis. The Pats could be ripe for an upset if they look ahead. There's also a potentially troublesome stretch following the late September bye week: at Denver, home against Buffalo; at the Jets, home against Green Bay; and then road games at Minnesota and Buffalo.

STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE

NFL rank: 9 (tie)
Opponents' 1996 winning percentage: .512
Games against playoff teams: 9

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