Quarterback Tom Brady wants his New England Patriots teammates to prepare harder to keep a playoff berth from slipping away from them. On Wednesday, wide receiver Randy Moss and three key defensive players didn't even make it to practice.
Coach Bill Belichick declined to elaborate on the players' absence from the first practice since the Patriots' AFC East lead dropped to one game. Moss and linebackers Adalius Thomas, Gary Guyton and Derrick Burgess were sent home after showing up late for an 8 a.m. team meeting, a league source told NFL Network's Jason La Canfora.
It's a boy for Brady
Patriots QB Tom Brady announced Wednesday that his wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, have given birth to a baby boy. It's the second child for Brady, who also has a 2-year-old son with actress Bridget Moynahan. **More ...**
"That's coach's decision," said Brady, who made it to work despite a moderate snowfall that caused traffic snarls. "I've got to do my job. I've got plenty of things to do. Like I said, I've got to show up every day and bring whatever I have -- the energy and the leadership that I have -- to this team, because that's what all those guys (do). That's what our job is."
Brady went to work the day after his wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, gave birth to their son. He said they hadn't chosen a name and she and the baby were doing well.
"I didn't get much sleep," he said.
Brady didn't practice either. He was listed by the team, as he has been all season, with a right shoulder injury on the practice report. The Patriots also listed a right finger injury, which, Brady said, "is hanging in there."
The finger didn't stop Brady from throwing a 58-yard touchdown pass to Moss on the first series of last Sunday's 22-21 road loss to the Miami Dolphins. The Patriots fell to 7-5 and suffered their third loss in a four-game span for the first time in seven seasons.
"We didn't change much (because of the injury)," Belichick said.
Belichick declined to discuss the players' absence.
"Anything that happens with discipline on the team stays between me and the players on the team," the coach said.
After the latest loss, Brady said the Patriots don't always show enough fight.
"It's not about playing hard on Sundays. I mean, we do that," he said Wednesday. "That's three hours a week that you have to show up and really commit yourself to. I don't think that's too much to ask of anybody, and guys do that. It's not like we think we're not fighting out there in the game.
"I think what Coach tells us and what I was alluding to was probably more of just the other six days of the week. We've got to make the commitment to each other. ... I think at times we all feel a little bit sorry for ourselves, and you're beat up and you're tired and you're sore, and it's the end of the year, and you go, 'Why is (Belichick) doing this?' But, in the end, you're either gaining ground on a team or you're losing ground, and I always prefer to be gaining ground."
Brady's comments carry weight with other players because he is a team leader, but he was saying what some of them already knew.
"It's dead-on," running back Sammy Morris said. "We need to respond to adversity better. I think we all either know it or felt it, and I think him just saying it kind of just put a little more emphasis on it."
"I'm not likening players to children," he said, "(but) everybody has roles and jobs and needs to be held accountable and needs to be dependable people. As a head coach, that's what you have to do. Sometimes, it's not easy."
New England players who did practice Wednesday deflected questions about how Belichick handled the situation regarding Moss and the three linebackers.
"That's why he's the coach and I'm the player," running back Kevin Faulk said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.