Mike Vrabel avoided the kind of offseason nightmare no Patriots coach wants, because Rhamondre Stevenson’s scary Matt Rife collision could have been much worse.
The moment came during Drake Maye’s first MayeDay Softball Classic at Polar Park in Worcester. The event supported the MayeDay Family Foundation and brought Patriots players, coaches and celebrities together for a good cause.
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That is why the play felt so strange. A light charity softball game briefly turned into a real injury scare involving one of New England’s most important offensive players.
The video shared by Dov Kleiman shows Rife sliding headfirst during a rundown before crashing into Stevenson near second base.
The contact hit Stevenson around the hip area and forced his leg into an awkward position. Multiple players reacted quickly because it looked like the kind of freak moment that can ruin a season before training camp even begins.
Stevenson getting up right away was the relief. This was not football contact, but that almost made it more unsettling because nobody expects a Patriots running back to face real danger in a charity softball game.
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For Vrabel, the connection is obvious. He is the Patriots head coach, Stevenson is part of his offensive plan, and losing a key veteran in a celebrity game would have been brutal.
The MayeDay event was built around community, not controversy. Drake Maye and his wife, Ann Michael, launched the foundation to help children and families facing hardship.
There was a home run derby, a softball game and a strong Patriots presence. Vrabel, Maye, Stevenson, Christian Gonzalez and other familiar names were part of the scene.
That made the collision feel even more bizarre. Rife was there as a celebrity guest, not a defender trying to make a play on Stevenson.
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Still, the slide turned a fun night into a tense few seconds. Rife later joked about the play online, but Patriots fans had every reason to flinch first.
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