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The News
Wilfork: Season starts now PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 12 November 2005 00:00
Heading home to Florida with the 4-4 Patriots, the New England nose tackle sets his mind to getting his team back on the winning track.

BY KEVIN McNAMARA | Journal Sports Writer

FOXBORO -- Mr. Miami is going home this weekend but socializing isn't high on his list.

As he stood in the Patriots' locker room yesterday, Vince Wilfork made it clear he enjoys going home to play football. He'll have 20 family and friends in the crowd tomorrow at Dolphins Stadium and can't wait to enjoy South Florida's 80-degree temperatures. But the second-year pro also knows time is ticking on his team's season.

"It's fun. I've got about 20 people coming to the game but I'm going on a business trip," he said. "I'm not there to meet and greet with the fans. My family is my family but it's going to feel good to play in front of a good crowd and hopefully come out with a win."

Wilfork says that the stakes couldn't be higher this week. Not only do the Pats need to shake off the embarrassment of Monday's 40-21 loss to the Colts, but first place is on the line when New England (4-4) matches up with Miami (3-5).

"We're fighting for first place in our division," he said. "Our focus is the Miami Dolphins and to win. If everybody takes that mindset on the field and plays a 60 minute ballgame, I think we're capable of doing it. There's been too many times this year we haven't been doing that. It's a great time this week to take a step forward."

Wilfork, 24, was destined to be playing football on Sundays. As a powerhouse high school star in Lantana, Fla., about a half-hour north of Dolphins Stadium, Wilfork was one of the most highly recruited players in the country and a USA Today second-team All-American. He stayed home to play for Larry Coker at Miami and won the national title as a freshman in 2001, became a star as a sophomore and a first-team All-American as a junior in 2003.

The defenders he played with were talented. In the 2004 draft, the Patriots chose Wilfork with the 19th overall pick, yet he was only the fourth Hurricane defender selected and one of six Miami players to go in the first round.

As a rookie last season, Wilfork started six games and split time with Keith Traylor at nose tackle. This year, he's the man in the middle of the team's defensive line and playing better than ever. He's second on the team in tackles (to Mike Vrabel) and is getting ready for one of the season's biggest challenges.

If the Dolphins hope to knock off the Pats and force a tie atop the AFC East, they'll likely have to run through Wilfork. The strength of Miami's offense is the two-headed running back tandem of Ricky Williams and impressive rookie Ronnie Brown of Auburn. While they've combined for only five touchdowns, the Patriots see Williams and Brown as a dangerous duo. Coach Bill Belichick says that Williams "looks like the old Ricky," and adds that the only new running back to come into the league he's liked as much as Brown was San Diego's LaDanian Tomlinson.

"They attack the entire field if you don't defend it," the coach said. "If you put guys outside, then they'll run with power up inside and that's where a lot of plays are designed to go for them. They are a good north-south running team, but if the defense over-pursues and collapses, they can balance it out."

Wilfork understands the challenge of stopping "that two-headed monster," as well. The Patriots' defensive problems are mainly infested the secondary but the Dolphins hope to do plenty of damage running the ball, too.

"Both of them have power and both of them have speed," Wilfork said. "Ricky can get out on the edges a lot but they primarily want to run downhill. They're not made to run sideways. They're dangerous when they create holes and run through a defense. We all have to deal with those guys."

Wilfork says the tattered New England defense has re-dedicated itself this week and insists everyone can improve, from the line to the safeties.

"We're 4-4 but our season starts now," he said. "We need to get the Dolphins. We're better than 4-4 and we know that. That's the most frustrating thing. We need to raise our level of play."
 
Bernie & Phyl's Furniture Be A Champion for a Child Program PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 09 September 2005 00:00

A 325-Pound Defensive Lineman, A Furniture Company, the WBCN Patriots Rock Radio Network and a Non-Profit--What's this team doing?
New England's World Champion Nose Tackle Vince Wilfork has teamed up with Mass Mentoring Partnership, the state's umbrella organization for youth mentoring, corporate sponsor Bernie & Phyl's Furniture, and WBCN Patriots Rock Radio Network to see that more of our young people are connected to caring adult mentors who will listen to them, stand by them and guide them. Currently, for every two kids matched with an adult, one remains on a mentoring program's wait list. It is imperative that more adults volunteer to mentor a child.

Where in the world is Vince Wilfork?
Catch Vince Wilfork all season on WBCN Patriots Rock Radio Network as he educates and informs Patriots' fans about the importance of mentoring. His messages will encourage radio listeners to bring new hope to young lives through the power of becoming a mentor.

Bernie, Phyl and Vince at a location near you
Meet Vince Wilfork this season for two special events especially designed for mentor recruitment and a celebration of successful mentor and mentee pairs. Don't wait. Find out about mentoring opportunities in your area and register to mentor today or call 866-MASS-MENTOR.


Drum Roll Please?Vince's Match of the Game
Each home game of the season, one successful mentor and mentee match will be Vince's match of the game. The winning duo will enjoy a game day experience and be highlighted during the Patriots broadcast.

Bernie & Phyl's proud to sponsor Be A Champion For A Child
Bernie & Phyl's Furniture, is the largest privately owned furniture retailer in Massachusetts. As a successful business, Bernie & Phyl's believes it is their obligation to give back and is actively engaged in community service. In 2005, Bernie and Phyl won the first annual Champions of Mentoring Award.

Look for More Exciting Developments on the Program Here
Radio spots from Bernie and Vince... Stories on Vince's Match of the Game... and news on upcoming special events.

Presenting Organizations?Be A Champion for a Child Program
Mass Mentoring, Vince, Bernie & Phyl's and WBCN Patriots Rock Radio Network believe all young people have the potential to succeed in life and contribute to society. This will only happen with positive guidance through mentoring. They are challenging you to Be A Champion for a Child. Please don't hesitate?find out about mentoring programs and register to mentor today or call 866-MASS-MENTOR.

Mentoring.com

 
Wilfork rides the wave PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 27 June 2005 00:00
The seats aren't really empty but simply filled by new faces. His heart isn't empty either even though it may have felt that way for a time. The wave is still a constant, but there is an addition to the pregame routine and no one can take this one from him.

Vince Wilfork is parentless, this we have known since the Patriots made him the 21st pick in the 2004 draft. We know the story about how he lost his mother and father within six months back in 2002. We know it changed his life dramatically and forever.

Almost three years have passed since Wilfork got the phone calls we all dread. He essentially said good-bye to his dad, 48, after leaving the hospital one afternoon where his father was suffering from kidney disease after a battle with diabetes. His mother's death came as more of a shock, complications from a stroke taking her life at 46.

That left Vince and his brother David Jr., two years Vince's senior, on their own. But the Wilfork boys were well raised in their Boynton Beach, Fla., neighborhood; they were taught about hard work and decision making, and their parents' spirit kept them on the right path.

Vince's path was paved by football, a sport his dad coached for years at the Pop Warner level even though Vince was usually too heavy to play in a league with weight requirements. He was an emerging star defensive lineman at the University of Miami when tragedy struck his family not once, but twice. With a support system of teammates in place, Wilfork internalized it all. Rather than talk to others, he simply talked to his late parents, something he still does every single day.

It is those conversations that have taken the place of the pregame wave he gave his mom and dad before every high school and college game until their death. He always knew where they sat and motioned to them when he came out for warm-ups. Now he directs that gesture at his wife, Bianca, and their two children, D'Aundre and Destiny.

"I miss that," he said of the wave to his parents. "But I talk to them now so I don't need to wave. But I don't like to talk to others. I keep my emotions inside. I grew up like that. [My dad] was like that."

If there was and is someone Wilfork could talk to, it's his football coach at Santaluces High School in Lantana, Fla., Ray Berger.

"He basically took the job as a father for me right now," Wilfork said. "We had our ups and downs in high school, but he was always there for me in high school and college. He made sure I stayed up on my grades. He always checked on me and made sure I was doing the right things. He's like a brother to me, a father to me and a friend to me. I really enjoy having someone close to me like that."

That relationship stems from Berger's relationship with Wilfork's parents, David Sr. and Barbara, who were both huge boosters of the Santaluces football program and, consequently, grew close to Berger.

"They were great people," Berger said. "They did a lot for me as far as the booster stuff and organizing the concession stand. They really went out of their way to do anything and everything that they could to help me and the kids on the team.

"They were so unselfish just like Vince is. A lot of people get involved with a booster club to keep an eye on their kid. They think, ?We're doing this or that for the team so our kid will be the starting quarterback.' His parents knew their kids were blessed with athletic ability. They took care of all the other kids ? the kids that didn't have the money to get food during two-a-days. His dad would go out and get Gatorade and soda and sandwiches. At nighttime, the kids without dads would go over to Vince's and have barbecues and hang around."

Now Vince is one of those kids except he's not a kid anymore. He grew up fast between 2002 and now, probably faster than he cared to.

"It was tough for him," Berger said. "Vince gets quiet and doesn't feel like burdening anyone with his problems so he internalized everything and kept it inside. Luckily, he always had football. He was at Miami and had all those guys around him ? Jonathan Vilma, D.J. Williams, Santonio Thomas. It was a family."

Football always his outlet

If Wilfork didn't have football, coping with his parents' loss might have been even tougher than it was. He always took his aggression out on the field, rarely if ever off of it, and the gridiron was the perfect place for him to let loose doing something he loved.

Wilfork fell in love with football from the first time he played on a team at 4 years old. Because Vince was a big kid, his dad tried to get him onto a peewee team that had a 6-year-old age requirement. Denied that opportunity, he played flag football for, ironically, the Hurricanes, who donned the same green and orange Wilfork would wear years later at Miami.

"I tore that up," he said proudly, fondly recalling the start of his career. "They went back to check my birth certificate. That was my only Pop Warner experience. But my father always coached and I was always doing the drills with him. I grew up with it. I used to tell him, ?When I get to high school, I'm going to show you.' He'd say, ?We'll see.' My dad always challenged me."

So did Berger. But those challenges were often two-way as Berger tried to rein in Wilfork's explosive temper, all the while knowing that his on-field demeanor separated him.

"You have a lot of big kids that are athletic, but they are just nice kids and they don't have the tenacity or meanness," Berger explained. "So many big kids I've coached are good guys but they aren't going out there to tear somebody's head off. With Vince, you could push his button and he would explode. We had a lot of sit downs and talks."

Wilfork calmed down some by his senior year, but Berger still had trouble keeping a leash on his dominant defensive lineman.

"His senior year, we were having a scrimmage and we had a sophomore quarterback named Ricky Bethel and we told everybody not to hit the quarterback. Sure enough, Vince comes through, because nobody could really block him, and just kills the quarterback. I jumped all over him. But he goes back and kills him again. I said, ?Vince, I'm telling you to cut it out. Don't do it again.' So he did it again and we were ready to come to blows. I was just hoping the other coaches would make it look good and hold me back."

Wilfork has his own version of the events. "I'm always competitive," he said laughing as he recalled that day's practice. "Berger didn't tell you that [Bethel] was talking smack. And it was his first year as our quarterback so I was just making sure he was going to be ready.

"Even now we have to stay away from the quarterback, but I won't hesitate to let a quarterback know how I feel about him. I hate quarterbacks. I like Tom Brady because he's our quarterback, but it's my job to hate quarterbacks."

Asked if he would ever pull such a stunt in New England, he quickly answered, "No, no, no. I won't even get near Tom because at this point, anything can happen. He could follow through on a ball and break his hand or finger and I could be gone. I just like to make my presence known."

His presence was obvious from the day he stepped on the field as a freshman for Berger's Santaluces High team. Berger had heard the hype about his soon-to-be-freshman player when Wilfork was an eighth grader, but he didn't buy it despite already coaching Wilfork's older brother.

"I remember David saying, ?Wait until Vince comes up here. He's huge and he's unbelievable,'" Berger said. "You hear so many parents talk about their kids coming out of middle school. So I'm picturing this big, chubby kid. So one day his dad brought him up because I kept asking about him and I was like, ?Oh my God.' He was like a man-child.

"When I got him, you knew right away he could play. He was 250 or 260 pounds and so agile, quick, nimble and light on his feet. He was one of the top three athletes on the team. He could throw and punt. He was just a fabulous athlete."

In almost Troy Brown-like fashion, Wilfork did whatever he could to help Santaluces. He punted for a couple of games when needed and was the up man on the kickoff return team. He even grabbed a kickoff and almost took it 65 yards for a touchdown. It took more than half of the opposing coverage team to take Wilfork down. But as great as he was on the field in high school, he was better off of it, according to Berger.

"He's a great kid," Berger stressed. "He was always family oriented. He wasn't out screwing around with other kids. It was school, football, home to eat and bed. His parents kept tabs on those kids. We all know that what a kid is and what he's going to be is how he was raised during his developmental years. His parents made sure he was doing the right thing, that he was staying clean, that he was humble and respected everyone. He never got in fights at school and never disrespected a teacher.

"He was always smiling and goofing around. He didn't care about hanging out with all the stud athletes. My offensive coordinator used to say that the team fed off Vince, not his play, but his attitude. If Vince came out to practice smiling, it was a great practice. If something was bothering him and he was quiet, the whole practice was quiet. He was always a leader. Those kids who got in trouble were followers. Vince was his own man."

Berger helped him become that, not as much as Wilfork's parents obviously, but in a coach-player way and later through a friendship strengthened by Wilfork's loss.

"I think being around my parents for so long and then around me, when I lost my parents, he felt he had to step in and carry that role," Wilfork said of his surrogate dad. "He calls to check up on me. He comes up here."

Here is New England where Wilfork has taken his career to the NFL. Sadly, his parents never were able to see him realize his dream, but Berger recalls the last time he saw Wilfork's dad.

"His father always kept in contact with me even when Vince was at Miami," Berger explained. "The last time I saw him, he came over to a spring practice with one of those mock drafts. It was Vince's sophomore year at Miami and it was a projection that had Vince going 17th if he came out. But his father stayed with me and didn't want to leave. He hung around, talked for a while. He passed away a few weeks later.

"We always had a bond. I believe in being close to my players, but it changed for me because I was close to his parents. His dad used to tell me ?When we're not at school, you're Vince's father. You do what you gotta do.'"

On to Foxborough

Vince doesn't need as much guidance in New England. His maturation process was hastened by the death of his parents and the birth of his own children. But his crutch remains football. While Wilfork doesn't talk about his situation with teammates, he has opened up to one, the one that experienced a devastating loss of his own recently.

Richard Seymour's father committed suicide the weekend Wilfork became a Patriot. "I probably have teammates that don't even know I lost my parents," he said. "I don't think a lot of people realize my situation. One dude who can is Richard."

Seymour's father was allegedly involved in a domestic dispute the day he died. Wilfork offered himself as a sounding board to Seymour.

"We talked and I told him that whenever he needed to talk to come to me because I'm 23 and I've been through a lot. But I don't let it affect me. You have to go through trials and tribulations to succeed in life."

Vince actually recalled a much less important tribulation from his youth that made last year's world championship even sweeter.

It was back when he was 4 and starring in flag football. Wilfork, the team's quarterback, threw an interception that cost the Hurricanes the championship game. He was crying when his dad consoled him.

"He said, ?One day you'll have bigger and better things. There will be a lot more at stake and you'll come out on top.'"

So he knew his dad and mom were watching with pride when he celebrated football's ultimate prize last year in Jacksonville.

"It's a blessing," Wilfork said. "The first thing I thought of after we won the Super Bowl was what my dad told me when I was 4. He told me I'd be on top someday. It came true."

Those little memories keep Wilfork going. Rather than justifiably wallow in his incredible misfortune, Wilfork chooses to simply live off his fond memories, of which there are plenty.

"I'm doing good," he said recently. "My parents are with me 24/7."

Berger is no longer his coach, but simply his friend. Now he is coached by future Hall of Famer Bill Belichick, who likes to say that not everybody can lead, not everybody can be in the parade. Some people have to wave as it marches by. Wilfork is in the parade in every sense.

He doesn't need to wave. He can talk to his mom and dad anytime he wants. His waves are now reserved for Bianca and the kids.
 
Wilfork eager to tackle second season PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 27 May 2005 00:00
By Jerome Solomon, Globe Staff

FOXBOROUGH -- Just because it's called a ''passing camp" doesn't mean the big uglies can't get involved.

Patriots nose tackle Vince Wilfork said despite the name, the team's offseason practice sessions, one of which concluded with yesterday morning's workout, are just as important to linemen as to skill position players.

''A lot of people hear passing camp and think it's just for the receivers and defensive backs, but the whole team is out there," Wilfork said. ''We don't have to catch a ball for us to be at passing camp."

According to Wilfork, the latest four-day camp consisted mostly of drills to improve technique and even involved working on reads, philosophies, and blocking schemes.

Getting in shape isn't part of the program. In the modern NFL, players are expected to be in shape year-round.

Wilfork, who played at about 325 pounds his rookie season, tips the scale at 330, and vows to be a bit lighter when the season begins in September.

''I want to play somewhere around 315, 320 this year, and it's going to happen," Wilfork said. ''I think being that light, I'll be more effective. Weight is not an issue. That's irrelevant. When somebody talks about weight, I look at them and laugh."

Accordingly, Wilfork spends more time looking at film than scales. After sharing time last season on the nose of the Patriots' 3-4 defense with recently released Keith Traylor, Wilfork expects more responsibility in what he hopes will be a breakout second year.

''My main thing is I have to get better from the last time I stepped on the field," Wilfork said. ''Looking at film, there are a lot of things I could have done a lot better. I know I'll be better this year because I know [the defense] in and out. I'm starting to understand the whole defense, not just my position.

''It's tough, but it's starting to come. I think through training camp and two-a-days I'll have it down pat."

An important positive is defensive coordinator Eric Mangini can ask Wilfork about the positioning of ends and linebackers on particular defensive plays and he is able to answer. He couldn't do that a year ago.

Wilfork, who started six games in 2004, even surprised himself by how much he retained from the end of the season. He feels far more comfortable in his second year in the Patriots' offseason program than he did in a whirlwind spring and summer after being a first-round draft pick.

''I thought I'd be a lot rustier, have a lot of kinks to work out, but I really don't," he said. ''I picked up right where I left off and I can't do anything but add on from that.

''It's not like I'm blindfolded, where I'm a rookie coming in and basically I don't know what I'm doing. I've been in this system for a year now, so I know exactly the things I need to work on."
 
Adjustments haven't changed rookie PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 05 February 2005 00:00
By Nick Cafardo, Globe Staff | February 5, 2005

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- If Vince Wilfork had one wish, it would be that his parents were here.

Where he plays and when he plays may change from game to game, but what doesn't change is the pendant he wears around his neck to honor two people he will never forget.

"I've worn it ever since 2002; my parents both passed in 2002." Wilfork said. "It goes everywhere I go. Every time you see me, you'll see it. It's either around my neck or in my pocket. It's on me somewhere. I can't take it into games because I'll get popped. I have a chance of losing it. So I take it to the stadium with me, and it's the first thing I put on after a game. It's for remembering them. I'll wear it for the rest of my life."

His father, David, died of kidney disease and his mother, Barbara, died of a stroke about six months apart. He's moved on, now a husband and father of two. Wilfork is mature beyond his 23 years, and defies the flamboyant image of former University of Miami players.

"I'm not a talker," Wilfork said. "A lot of people think University of Miami players are party animals or something. It's not like that. Of course you have a Warren Sapp or a Ray Lewis, but they're one-of-a-kind guys. They've been in the league for a long time; they've been in the Pro Bowl for a long time. They're going to do what they want to do.

"Not all UM people are like that. I wasn't brought up that way. You'll never see me jawing at offensive linemen. You'll never see me dancing and all that stuff in a game."

When you're a prominent player at Miami, you're a movie star. You get a lot of media attention, play in front of big crowds, and play with and against the best players in the country.

It may help ease the transition to the NFL, but Wilfork, the Patriots' rookie nose tackle, says this week has been beyond anything he could have imagined.

"I think everybody has tried to prepare me for it, from Keith Traylor to Richard [Seymour], to the coaches." he said. "I think it's going pretty well. It's definitely amazing to watch all the hype and the media and all that, but I think our coaches and the veteran players have done a good job trying to make sure the younger players stay focused and I think I am."

When Ted Washington signed with the Raiders last offseason, nobody knew how the Patriots were going to replace such a prominent run stuffer. The Patriots had worked out Wilfork, but never expected him to be available when it came time for the 21st overall pick. He was, and they are grateful.

"I was not intimidated," recalled Wilfork when asked about being drafted by the Super Bowl champions. "When I first got drafted, it was a privilege to be part of a championship team. Everybody was glued to the TV when the Patriots drafted me. I felt they respected my game and my style of play, and that showed me the confidence they had in me. A Super Bowl champion is not going to draft just anybody. It was a blessing. I saw the same thing here that I saw at Miami. I felt like I was at home. Guys like to have fun, but they go to work every day. I never felt out of place."

Wilfork faced a big transition switching from a one-gap defense to a two-gap system. However, he had solid mentors in Seymour and even second-year player Ty Warren.

"They put me into the fire early," Wilfork said. "I knew I could do this. I dreamed of playing in the NFL as a kid. I didn't know I was going to come in and play as much as I did. The 3-4 was new to me; nose tackle was new to me. There was a short period of time I had to learn that. It was a totally different game."

Instead of letting it overwhelm him, Wilfork worked harder.

"I grinded for a long time," he said. "I didn't have a clue how to play nose tackle at first. The hardest part was being frustrated every day. All the big plays I made [in college], I'm not making them anymore. All the sacks I made, I'm not making them anymore. The coaches had to sit down with me and tell me this was my job. I had to be a patient player.

"Everything I had to do was backside. Until I understood that, I was going home mad every day because I wasn't making plays. Sometimes I'd come out [of a game] with no tackles, and that was real frustrating to me coming from the background I did.

"I'd go through practice and I would think I'm messing up, and I'd get in the film room and the coaches would tell me I was doing a great job. I didn't feel good about it, but it was an adjustment I had to make. I was a first-rounder; they expected me to play."

That he did. He tied up blockers, clearing the way for the linebackers. Before long, he didn't need advice from the veterans.

"I just love playing around this group of people," he said. "[Tedy] Bruschi got named to the Pro Bowl, so I'm proud of that. He [played] behind me [at linebacker] in my first year as a rookie and I was able to contribute to the team and help him make the Pro Bowl. That says a lot about this defense."

Wilfork will likely get a little misty before tomorrow's game. He'll wear his pendant until it's time to take the field. But even then he won't forget the two people that made this all possible.

? Copyright 2005 Globe Newspaper Company.
 
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