Maroney was indeed carrying a lighter load, but he's going to be bearing a heavier burden once the 2007 season starts. After splitting the majority of carries with Dillon last season -- Maroney averaged 12.5 rushes per game, Dillon 12.4 -- the balance in the team's new running back mix figures to be skewed more heavily in Maroney's direction.
Will Maroney be physically ready to handle more?
After undergoing offseason shoulder surgery, he did not take part in the on-field portion of the team's minicamp in June, and continued to work his way back by participating in yesterday's practices wearing a red, non-contact jersey.
Still, he declared himself ready to go, saying he's at last season's playing weight (220 pounds) and is "right on schedule." He believes he could absorb contact but the Patriots are taking a cautious approach.
As for his thoughts on becoming the team's workhorse -- a 25-carries-per-game runner -- Maroney wouldn't go that far.
"Nobody said anything about me being a feature back," he said. "I'm just getting a little more carries than last year, that's all."
The Patriots, who will distribute carries to Sammy Morris and Kevin Faulk, hope that yields improvement from 2006, when the ground attack ranked 18th in rushing average (3.9 yards). Patriots coach Bill Belichick said his staff "looked a lot at last year's running game in the offseason and spent a lot of time analyzing it" -- and while it was productive at the goal line and in short-yardage situations, there were several negative running plays on early downs.
The Patriots ran the ball 220 times on first down during the regular season. Eighteen went for negative yardage, which put them in the middle of the NFL pack.
That created second-and-long situations, locking the Patriots into more passing plays. It's one thing to create a second-and-long situation because of a sack, but a running play should yield some positive ground.
As he showed last season, the 22-year-old Maroney has playmaking ability to gain positive ground in a hurry. He averaged 4.3 yards per carry, with his best day against the Bengals Oct. 1, when he totaled 125 yards on 15 carries (8.3 average) and delivered a few bruising stiff-arms.