Thu, Nov 26 2009

Published: January 30, 2008 09:40 am    PrintThis  

Light's always got Brady's back; Patriots left tackle Matt Light is stabilizing force in protecting QB great

On Pro Football , Bill Burt
Gloucester Daily Times

GLENDALE, Ariz. - Tom Brady's ankle has gotten more than its fair share of the media spotlight the last 10 days.

Getting detailed information on that part of Brady's anatomy lately, however, has been akin to getting CIA Cold War secrets during the Ronald Reagan administration.

But there is another part of Brady's body we can discuss, a part that has been pretty much as protected as much the diagnosis about his ankle - his back.

Among the people to thank for that, Patriots left tackle Matt Light tops the list.

Light was drafted in the second round of 2001 and by his third game he was the starter. Other than missing 13 games in 2005 with torn tendons in his ankle, he hasn't missed a game.

Mind you, left tackle isn't just another position on the NFL offensive line; it is the cornerstone.

The fact that Brady hasn't missed one start over his entire career and, well, you can pretty much figure out the correlation there.

"I don't know about that," says Light. "Tommy is a great player. I don't think I have anything do with that."

Modesty will get Light nowhere here.

Light, who will start for the AFC in the Pro Bowl a week from this Sunday in Hawaii, is among many unsung Patriots. He's tough. He makes less to play here. And he wouldn't dare say a flattering word about himself publicly, like a few Giants have done the past few days.

"I try not to say anything. You just open yourself up to criticism," says Light. "For some, they can say whatever they want as long as they go out there and play well and prove what they're saying is true, (and) they look great. I don't want to say something and not go out and deliver and look like a fool."

When you regularly face the best defensive player on the other team - lineups that include Colts end Dwight Freeney, Dolphins end Jason Taylor or Giants end Osi Umenyiora - one or, God forbid, two Brady sacks and you'll be eating so much crow that there would be no room for Bill Belichick's humble pie.

Speaking of Umenyiora - one of the Giants who can't seem to stop talking - the defensive end has gone out of his way recently declaring that Light is a dirty player. It wasn't so much Light going after his knees, just the fact he felt the Patriots lineman did a lot of "stuff" after the whistle.



"I've heard the comment on that," he says. "I finally watched that. I don't think anybody that's watched the film with me would say that."

...

Left tackle is not the position is used to be. Three yards and a cloud of dust has been traded in for slot receivers and 60 percent completion ratings (50 percent was considered passable through the 1970s and part of the 1980s). Fake grass and the emphasis on speed have made passing the first option for most teams rather than the second.

The left tackle protects the "blind" side of the right-handed quarterback. In New England, that means protecting an icon.

"I don't look at it that way," says Light. "I have a job to do each game. I know what I'm up against each game. I just try to do my job. That's all I can do."

Light is a big man at 6-foot-4 and 300 pounds. But as a left tackle, a position which some football experts call the second most important on the team, his weight is below average. His peer on the Giants is 6-foot-5, 319-pound David Diehl.

Size, though, wasn't what caught the eye of Patriots general manager Scott Pioli, who recalled being at a Purdue practice when Light was a junior in 1999.

"I saw this guy getting in people's faces," recalls Pioli. "It was a practice, but he was treating it like it was very important. It caught my eye."

It could be argued that Light is not among the best left tackles in the game. But after seven years of winning more than 75 percent of the games he has played, the recognition has arrived. He, left guard Logan Mankins and center Dan Koppen make up three of the five starting Pro Bowl lineman for the AFC next weekend.

It's a far cry from the duct-tape offensive line coach Dante Scarnecchia has seemingly had to use to keep this offense chugging along during the "dynasty."

"(The chemistry has) been huge," says Light. "If you look at it over the last few years, we've been very fortunate and we've really had the same cast of characters in there. ... We've got a lot of guys in our O-line room who really understand what to do."

...

Among the Patriots offensive group, Light's role fits his name. He keeps everything light.

"Everything out of his mouth is a one-liner," says Koppen. "He's always got something funny to say. That's who he is. ... He's also good. He's very good. He's tough. He fights. He's got great hands. He moves his feet well... ."



Sounds like a great athlete.

"No, I didn't say that," says Koppen. "You'd realize that if you saw him play basketball. He's awful."

But that's for the Patriots Charitable Foundation basketball team to worry about. Brady and several million fans don't care if he can chew bubble gum and dribble a basketball at the same time.

They want Brady's back covered. And they wouldn't mind a few first downs on third-and-2 over the left tackle either.

"Matt Light is awesome," says Brady, offering the ultimate compliment. "It's amazing what he does considering the guys he's up against every week. Amazing. I'm glad he's on my side."

Brady, of course, means his back side.

E-mail Bill Burt at bburt@eagletribune.com. Also check out his blog, "Burt Talks Sports," at www.eagletribune.com.
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