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"Pat Patriot" logo used by the New England Patriots as their primary logo from 1960 (when the team was known as the Boston Patriots) through 1992.This logo is commonly referred to as "Pat The Patriot" and has been resurrected for the Patriots' white-helmeted throwback uniforms.
The new logo was decidedly rejected by the crowd in favor of Pat, and the concept was shelved. [102] In 1993, a new logo was unveiled involving the gray face of a minuteman wearing a red, white and royal blue hat that begins as a tricorne and transitions into a flowing banner-like design.
A version of the New England flag that aims to fit these new specifications seems to have also existed. In 1768 an illustration featuring a colonist holding a banner showed this design. The colonist, dressed in hunting clothes and wearing a phrygian cap , holds a flag which is an ensign of the Kingdom of Great Britain with a pine tree on a ...
New England Patriots; Usage on is.wikipedia.org New England Patriots; Usage on it.wikipedia.org New England Patriots 2014; New England Patriots 2013; New England Patriots 2015; New England Patriots 2016; New England Patriots 2017; New England Patriots 2018; New England Patriots 2019; New England Patriots 2020; New England Patriots 2021; New ...
The 2007 MLS Cup was a rematch from the previous year, though the result was the same as Houston defeated New England 2–1. [33] In the 2007 pre-season, New England sold Clint Dempsey to Fulham F.C. for a club, and league, record fee of $4m. [34] [35] Jose Cancela was lost in the 2006 MLS expansion draft to Toronto FC. [36]
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On November 16, 1959, Boston business executive Billy Sullivan was awarded the eighth and final franchise of the developing American Football League (AFL). [5] In addition to Billy and his brother Joe Sullivan, other initial investors in the team were John Ames, a lawyer, [6] Dean Boylan, president of Boston Sand & Gravel, George Sargent, an insurance executive, Dom DiMaggio, former Boston Red ...
The New England Whalers renamed themselves the Hartford Whalers in May 1979, [6] at the insistence of the Boston Bruins who objected to the team naming themselves for New England. [7] Connecticut-based graphic designer Peter Good (1942–2023) [8] was hired by the Jack Lardis Associates advertising agency to design a new logo for the team.