The Morning After: Don’t let late-game effort overshadow root issues

An impressive rally from the Patriots shouldn’t overshadow the multiple holes that need addressing on the team.

Christmas almost came early this year.

The New England Patriots almost completed a 22-point comeback against one of the more prolific offenses in the entire NFL, as the defense pitched a shut out in the second half and forced a few turnovers.

As the game rolled to the final minutes, it looked like the Patriots could just run the ball, drain the clock out and punch it in to seal off a victory.

But the Cincinnati Bengals punched the ball out of Rhamondre Stevenson’s hands, ending the game there and cutting the Patriots’ playoff hopes off in the moment.

Let’s not get too optimistic, as the Patriots still have numerous issues that are mostly stemmed from offensive coaching. Watching this game should tell people that this is not quarterback Mac Jones’ fault.

There is a clear need to get help all around him. Offensive tackles, receivers, tight ends, coaches—you name it. Virtually, everything on the offense has struggled to amount to much.

Let’s get into the leftover notes from this Christmas Eve matchup.

3 big takeaways from Patriots’ 22-18 loss vs Bengals

Here are three big takeaways from New England’s close loss to Cincinnati.

A week after their last-second choke-away loss against the Las Vegas Raiders, the New England Patriots took on the Cincinnati Bengals at home on Christmas Eve.

A miserable first half left New England desperate for any kind of positive momentum later in the game. They found it in the second half, fighting their way back and nearly coming away victorious against a tough Bengal defensive front.

Unfortunately, a late-game fumble by running back Rhamondre Stevenson was recovered by Cincinnati, and the Patriots were not able to capitalize on their final offensive drive, ultimately falling to their opponent 22-18.

Here are three takeaways from the game.

Winners and losers in Patriots’ 22-18 loss to Bengals

Here are the winners and losers in the Patriots’ 22-18 loss to the Bengals.

Sadly, Saturday’s ending felt fitting for this year’s New England Patriots team.

They’ve seemingly done everything possible to get in their own way in completely winnable games this season, and the Week 16 matchup with the Cincinnati Bengals was no different.

After nearly overcoming a 22-point halftime deficit, running back Rhamondre Stevenson coughed up the game-ending fumble that ultimately put an end to New England’s 18-point run. An improbable comeback was followed by a seemingly impossible mistake to seal the Patriots’ fate as a 7-8 team on the season.

It would be easy to simply point the finger at Stevenson, but there’s plenty of blame to go around for this loss. Here are the winners and losers of the game.

Bill Belichick pushes back on Kendrick Bourne’s postgame comments

Bill Belichick responded to Kendrick Bourne’s calls for better scheming.

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick did not have much to say in regards to wide receiver Kendrick Bourne’s comments, following Thursday’s loss to the Buffalo Bills.

The wide receiver called out the team’s playcalling on third downs and suggested the team needed to “scheme better” in games. It’s no surprise considering the Patriots went 3-for-12 on third downs, as the offense struggled to get into a rhythm. Bourne  had one catch for 15 yards in Thursday’s game.

He has had an up-and-down 2022 season, one that has been riddled with a lack of playing time. He has 19 catches for 226 yards, far from the production he had last season. He had 55 catches for 800 yards and five touchdowns in 2021.

When asked about Bourne’s comments, Belichick pushed back on the notion that scheming wasn’t at the forefront of the coaching agenda in New England, during an appearance on “The Greg Hill Show” on Monday, via Dakota Randall of NESN.com.

“We work through the schemes every week depending on who we play and so forth,” said Belichick. “We run our schemes every week. I’m not really sure about that.”

The Patriots need to get a spark on offense, as they face a crucial stretch of games that will determine their playoff fate. For better or worse, it appears Belichick is sticking to his guns.

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Patriots WR Kendrick Bourne calls out third-down offensive execution

Kendrick Bourne wants the offensive scheming to improve on third down.

New England Patriots wide receiver Kendrick Bourne had some critiques for the offense following the team’s 24-10 loss to the Buffalo Bills on Thursday night.

The New England passing attack managed just 195 passing yards, while the ground game was limited to 60 yards in the game. Bourne caught one pass for 15 yards on two targets on a night when the Patriots failed to spread the ball down the field.

Quarterback Mac Jones was upset with the Patriots’ passing attack as well, and he echoed those sentiments on the sideline. New England’s leading receiver was rookie cornerback Marcus Jones, which says a lot about the unit’s struggles.

There were especially issues for the team converting on third down, as Bourne alluded to the media after the game.

“We just need to scheme up better,” said Bourne, via NESN’s Zach Cox. “We need to know what they’re doing. We need to know what they want to do on third down, you know what I mean? We’re kind of sporadic. They call this and we call that and it falls into what they want. We need to have it where they’re falling into what we want. That’s not my job. It’s my job to just run the call.

“But as we all could see, they had, what, 30 first downs? And we only had eight. So something they were doing against us was working, and something we were doing against them wasn’t working. It’s just about figuring it out each week. We’ve still got life, but we need to hurry up and figure it out.”

New England struggled to get things going consistently on offense Thursday night. They went 3-for-12 on third down, and the offense did not show stability until the later stages of the game.

In the meantime, Buffalo put on a clinic offensively. Josh Allen went 22-of-33 passing for 223 yards, and wide receiver Stefon Diggs caught seven passes for 92 yards.

The Patriots, on the other hand, have continued to sputter offensively, and they are quickly running out of time to fix it.

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The Morning After: Mac Jones is not the issue, the structure is

What to make of the Patriots’ brutal letdown performance against the Bills.

A very disappointing home blowout loss to the Buffalo Bills ended with the New England Patriots falling to 6-6 on Thursday night.

There was nothing pretty about this matchup, like the previous two head-to-head meetings with the Bills. The story has been the same as it has all season long: The offense is just plain terrible.

Many want to blame Mac Jones, but he is far from the issue. I firmly believe that any QB outside of maybe the top-three would be struggling in this offense due to how poor the play-calling has been under Matt Patricia.

Here are my leftover notes after having some time to sleep on the game.

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Podcast: Why were the Patriots quiet amid a chaotic trade deadline?

Was doing nothing the right move for the Patriots? Ryan O’Leary and Jordy McElroy weigh in on this week’s Patriots Wire Podcast.

It was sugar and rainbows for the New England Patriots in Week 8, following their 22-17 road win over the New York Jets. Not only did they beat a tough division rival, but they managed to do so with no quarterback controversy.

However, for some, the rumbles of thunder and jolts of lightning crept back into the picture after seeing coach Bill Belichick do absolutely nothing at the trade deadline.

The likelihood of the Patriots being buyers was always going to be low, but they weren’t even sellers, despite reportedly receiving calls on the availability of Isaiah Wynn, Nelson Agholor, Kendrick Bourne and Damien Harris.

In this week’s episode of the Patriots Wire Podcast, Ryan O’Leary and I recap the win over the Jets, the upcoming game against the Colts and coach Bill Belichick standing pat at the trade deadline.

Check out the latest episode and subscribe on Apple, Spotify and Google Podcasts.

Don’t forget to let us know your thoughts on these topics in the comments section.

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Kendrick Bourne gushes congratulations for Bill Belichick’s milestone victory

Kendrick Bourne gave the ultimate compliment to coach Bill Belichick

New England Patriots wide receiver Kendrick Bourne was complimentary of coach Bill Belichick, as the latter made history on Sunday.

Belichick passed legendary Chicago Bears coach George Halas with his 325th career win, which now puts him second behind Don Shula’s 347 wins. Nevertheless, players and coaches celebrated alike, as Belichick gets one step closer to all-time greatness.

Bourne has had a roller coaster season in New England with 11 catches for 156 yards on the year. He didn’t record a catch on Sunday, but he was still complimentary of his coach, per the Boston Herald’s Andrew Callahan.

“In Bill I trust, in Bill we trust. With Bill, we’ve always got a shot every single week. And I just love being a part of something like that,” said Bourne.

Belichick will look to increase his win total in Week 9 against the visiting  Indianapolis Colts. Kickoff time is set for 1:00 p.m. ET.

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Potential wide receiver targets for Chargers following Mike Williams’ injury

Highlighting how the Los Angeles Chargers could address the wide receiver position during the bye week.

With Mike Williams set to miss multiple weeks with a sprained ankle, the Chargers have now sustained injuries to four of their top five receivers.

Keenan Allen returned for the first time since Week 1 against the Seahawks after a hamstring injury, Joshua Palmer missed the Seattle game with a concussion and has suffered multiple lower-body injuries, Jalen Guyton tore his ACL, and now Williams has an ankle injury.

While Allen and Palmer should be back for the Falcons game after the bye week, Los Angeles should still consider adding another gameday-ready piece to this room. I specify “gameday ready” because Odell Beckham Jr. is not on this list after recent reports that he will not be back from his ACL rehab until December.

Will Fuller (free agent)

Let’s start with the free agent pool, where the 28-year-old Fuller is still hanging out despite preseason reports that he was likely to sign sometime in August. Fuller was allowed to walk by Miami after last season, in which he missed Week 1 due to a PED suspension and broke his thumb in his second game. Injuries have been the story of Fuller’s career since joining the league in 2016, but it’s hard to argue with the prospect of 4.3 speed in an offense that currently has no defined deep threat (and hasn’t since Guyton went down). If Los Angeles wants to get splashy and feels they need to give someone new to the system extra time to get acclimated, this would be the time to pick up the phone.

John Ross (free agent)

Ross is another burner whose free agent market was rumored to be active enough that he would catch on by Week 1, only to remain available for the entire season to date. Ross did work out with the Cardinals last week but left the facility unsigned. Much like Fuller, the story of Ross’ career has been marred with injuries, namely recurrent shoulder and knee injuries during his time in Cincinnati. The workout with Arizona confirms that Ross is ready to go, making him another potential flier candidate if the Chargers are looking for a speedster. Ross also has kick return experience, which could prove useful considering DeAndre Carter’s ineffectiveness in that role and growing offensive snap count.

Dede Westbrook (free agent)

Westbrook worked out for a team as recently as the 25th in Miami, but the Dolphins ultimately decided to sign rookie Calvin Jackson from the tryout instead. The 28-year-old is familiar with Ryan Ficken, having served as Minnesota’s primary punt returner last season while Ficken was special teams coordinator. Many of the Chargers’ injuries have come on special teams this season: Joshua Kelley and Chris Rumph have been knocked out for multiple games and Drue Tranquill missed part of the Seahawks game with a minor injury on the punt team. That could create motivation to move Carter out of a full-time special teams role if he’s being asked to carry a bigger load on offense after the bye. Westbrook is a natural fit for those special team snaps and ran a 4.39 40 coming out of Oklahoma, making him a good candidate for the deep-threat role.

Marquez Callaway (Saints)

Brandon Staley and his staff preach continuity, a big reason why the Chargers haven’t made any moves that affect anything but the end of the roster since the season started. If that’s the case, perhaps Los Angeles targets a receiver familiar with Joe Lombardi’s system, like Callaway, who played his rookie season in New Orleans while Lombardi was QB coach. Callaway is cheap (a new team would owe him less than $500,000 for this season) and falling down the Saints’ depth chart with the emergence of rookies Chris Olave and Rashid Shaheed. Flipping their WR5 or 6 for a late-round pick could be enticing for the Saints, especially with Callaway set to hit restricted free agency this offseason.

KJ Hamler (Broncos)

Hamler and teammate Jerry Jeudy have been the subject of trade rumors for a while now because of their declining usage in the Russell Wilson offense, which has only targeted Courtland Sutton and tight ends this season. I don’t think Jeudy is necessarily a realistic option for the Chargers; he’s more of an intermediate route runner, who is due a fifth-year option in 2024 that would inflate the Chargers’ WR bill to unprecedented heights. Hamler, however, could be an intriguing addition as a deep-threat piece still on a rookie contract. Denver is rumored to have at least listened to offers on Hamler, and I doubt it would cost more than a Day 3 pick unless the Broncos crank up the intradivisional tax.

Kendrick Bourne/Nelson Agholor (Patriots)

Both Bourne and Agholor seem expendable with the way Jakobi Meyers, DeVante Parker, and rookie Tyquan Thornton have been playing for New England. Both are relatively cheap for veterans: a new team would owe Agholor the remainder of his $9.8 million salary (roughly $5.4 million) and would owe Bourne the remainder of his $5 million salary (about $2.8 million). Both are deep threats: Agholor averages 12.7 yards per catch in his career, Bourne 13.4. If I had to pick one, I’d personally lean toward Bourne, the cheaper option with more reliable hands, but either Patriot receiver would add a new dimension to this Chargers offense.

Chase Claypool (Steelers)

This one is extremely unlikely, but so was trading for Khalil Mack until it happened. Claypool and the Steelers seem philosophically opposed: the offense isn’t vertical enough to utilize his skill set correctly and Pittsburgh has two other stud receivers in Diontae Johnson and George Pickens. Yet Ian Rapoport of NFL Network has reported that Pittsburgh is unlikely to move 2020 second-rounder unless they’re blown away by an offer; compensation similar to the Christian McCaffrey trade has been rumored by other sources to be the asking price. I doubt Los Angeles is that desperate, but Claypool would come with a year and a half of team control and 4.4 speed at 6’4”. That’s a rare player build, and he’d work wonders in Los Angeles.

Quickly on two other targets with trade rumors swirling: trading for DJ Moore is simply not feasible. L.A. would owe their wide receiver room $65.7 million in 2023 if they traded for Moore. That’s more than 29% of the projected 2023 salary cap. Yes, wide receivers coach Chris Beatty coached Moore at Maryland. But getting him in powder blue is a pipe dream.

Similarly, Elijah Moore looks like his wish to be traded will go unfulfilled, with multiple sources reporting that the Jets have zero plans to trade their 2021 second-round pick. Moore is frustrated with his usage, a squabble that’s become public enough that the Jets sat him last week. Even so, expect Moore to remain in New Jersey for the time being.

Key Patriots receiving weapon expected to miss Monday’s game vs Bears

Patriots expected to be down one of their key receiving weapons on Monday night

The New England Patriots are expecting to have starting quarterback, Mac Jones, back under center on Monday, but they could be without speedy wideout Kendrick Bourne for their upcoming primetime game against the Chicago Bears, per NFL Network’s Mike Giardi.

Bourne went down with a turf toe injury in the Patriots’ Week 6 victory over the Cleveland Browns. It’s a tough break for the veteran wideout, who has been the subject of trade rumors amid a struggling 2022 season.

Jones being back under center could signal hope for Bourne at some point considering the chemistry the two built together on the field. Bourne was second only to Jakobi Meyers with 800 receiving yards last season.

Despite the sluggish start, the Patriots will have to think long and hard before any trade considerations, especially when Bourne still has a year left on his contract at a bargain price.

This minor injury setback might be nothing more than a mere bump in the road in his time in New England.

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