The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

New England prepares for time without Brady

- By Kyle Hightower

FOXBOROUGH, MASS. >> In many ways, the New England Patriots enter their 2016 training camp as close as they’ve been in 19 months to ridding themselves of the cloud that has trailed them since the “Deflategat­e” saga began.

They got a respite last season after Tom Brady was allowed to play when his appeal of a four-game suspension handed down by the league for his involvemen­t in a scheme to underinfla­te footballs during the 2015 AFC championsh­ip game was overturned.

The NFL challenged that ruling, and the league’s punishment was reinstated by an appeals court in April. That same court denied Brady’s petition for a rehearing of its decision July 13, and Brady — who will turn 39 on Aug. 3 — finally decided to end his legal fight by announcing he would accept his suspension.

It means the Patriots will open camp July 27 knowing the cornerston­e of their franchise won’t be available for the first quarter of the season. But it will allow them to use the unfavorabl­e outcome to get a meaningful evaluation of Brady understudy Jimmy Garoppolo.

The 24-year-old has Brady’s 100-watt smile and similarly entered the NFL with an underrated college resume. But he has completed just 20 passes as a backup the past two years — hardly the sample size the Patriots need to know whether he can be Brady’s replacemen­t long term.

So what Garoppolo shows in camp, and during his upcoming four-game audition, will go a long way toward dictating that.

“Obviously experience always helps, but to be honest it really doesn’t change much for me,” Garoppolo said last month when asked if having gone through uncertainl­y last season surroundin­g Brady helped prepare him for this offseason. “Whether it happened last year or didn’t happen, I’m pretty much going about it the same way, so just enjoying the process right now.”

Toss in preseason questions about New England’s running game as starter Dion Lewis works his way back from knee surgery, the offensive line’s ability to bounce back following its own injury-plagued season, plus the addition of free agents like tight end Martellus Bennett, and it adds to the intrigue.

• ROOKIE WATCH: New England already has a solid core at cornerback in Logan Ryan and Malcolm Butler. But the addition of rookie and former Alabama standout Cyrus Jones is huge in two key areas. Jones proved he had the skillset of a cover cornerback during his final college season, but look for Bill Belichick to take a long look at him on special teams. Jones shined as a punt returner in 2015, returning four for touchdowns on just 42 attempts.

• GRONK GETS SOME COMPANY: New England has leaned on Rob Gronkowski over the past two years, and it’s at times taken its toll on the freewheeli­ng tight end. The Patriots got him some company by trading for eightyear veteran Martellus Bennett. Bennett said he’s adapting to New England, but hasn’t lost the big personalit­y he’s become known for in various NFL locker rooms. “Dr. Seuss said no one can be youer than you,” Bennett said. “So I can only be one person, so I just try to be who I am and don’t change there.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Patriots will be without quarterbac­k Tom Brady (12) for the first four games this season. Jimmy Garoppolo (10) is likely to see the bulk of the action in training camp.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The Patriots will be without quarterbac­k Tom Brady (12) for the first four games this season. Jimmy Garoppolo (10) is likely to see the bulk of the action in training camp.

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