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Replay: Best of Patriots.com Radio Thu Apr 25 - 02:00 PM | Fri Apr 26 - 01:55 PM

Patriots.com News Blitz - 5/31/2006

In today's news blitz... USA Today's "Inside Slant" takes a look at how tight end's David Thomas and Garrett Mills may be utilized in the Patriots offense.

USA Today's "Inside Slant" takes a look at 2006 draft picks David Thomas and Garrett Mills. New England's frequent employment of multiple tight end sets combined with the free agent departure of veteran Christian Fauria and pending 2007 free agency of Daniel Graham made adding another potential contributor to the depth chart a near necessity. New England used it's third-round pick in April's draft on Texas tight end David Thomas. What may have surprised Patriots fans a bit was when the team then also added Tulsa tight end Garrett Mills to the mix with its first pick on the second day of the draft. The duo was used extensively in passing drills in the rookie mini-camp, which is not surprising since the pair combined for 137 catches for 1,848 yards and 14 touchdowns last season. Thomas showed outstanding hands and grabbed everything thrown in his direction throughout the camp's practices.

Michael Felger of the *Boston Herald * reports that Patriots vice chairman and president Jonathan Kraft traveled to Orlando, Fla. on Saturday where he received the 2006 Warner Award, the Pop Warner organization's highest honor. In giving Kraft the award, Pop Warner cited his work as a coach, fund-raiser and his role last year opposing the move of several suburban programs to separate from Pop Warner.

Mason Neely of the MetroWest Daily News reports that the New England Patriots organization last week submitted a report to state officials detailing 265 acres of commercial development to be built around Gillette Stadium. Filed to the state Executive Office of Environmental Affairs by the Robert Kraft organization, the company that owns the team, the report reveals plan for a network of hotels, restaurants, retail shops, day care and spa facilities, broadcast studios, even a Patriots museum, all housed within a roughly 1.2-million-square-foot complex on Rte. 1.

Mike Reiss of the Boston Globe offers his daily sports blog with Patriots notes. Reiss also offers his latest Patriots mailbag.

Previously in the blitz...

The Boston Globe reports that Tony Sardisco, the first captain of the Boston Patriots, died Sunday of a massive heart attack at his home in Shreveport, La. He was 73. Sardisco, a middle linebacker for the Pats in their inaugural year of 1960, was considered the leader of coach Lou Saban's defense. Sardisco later played guard for the team before retiring in 1962.

Mike Reiss of the Boston Globe offers a story on middle linebacker Monty Beisel. Reiss writes that playing linebacker in the Patriots' defense for the first time was challenging enough for Beisel, but to do it under the circumstances that unfolded through the season's first five games -- where he was suited up alongside fellow newcomer Chad Brown -- was almost over the top. "It was difficult," said Beisel, after a recent workout at Gillette Stadium. "Chad and I were both in the middle, we were new to the system, new to what we were trying to get done. Then we lose [Rodney] Harrison, then Richard [Seymour], and we have all our corners gone. The communication was tough." By the time some of the injured players returned, and the defense included more wrinkles, Beisel had lost his starting job and perhaps the faith of some of the team's followers. His current work is aimed at earning it back.

Michael Felger of the Boston Herald writes that there is nothing new to report on Deion Branch and his contract negotiations with the Patriots, but the time is approaching when it might become a front-burner issue. The Patriots mandatory camp this year comes June 12-14, and there is curiosity in Patriot circles over whether Branch will choose to miss the camp in a gesture similar to what Richard Seymour did last year.

Tom Curran of the Providence Journal breaks down what four months of offseason work in the AFC East's front offices has yielded.

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