Damien Harris should challenge Rex Burkhead for offensive role

Harris should challenge Rex Burkhead for the second spot on the depth chart in 2020.

It is safe to say that the running back position is a very fruitful position for the New England Patriots. When you look at the position, there are many names available. Sony Michel, James White, Rex Burkhead and James Develin comprise the first unit. Damien Harris, Brandon Bolden, Dan Vitale and Jakob Johnson make up the second unit.

Harris, a 2019 third-round pick, did not see a ton of playing time last season. The Alabama product only carried the ball four times for 12 yards. As far as the top running back group goes, should Harris get a bigger role in 2020? And if so, will it come at Burkhead’s expense?

When healthy, Burkhead can produce. Just look at last year’s Saturday-night affair against the Buffalo Bills. He carried the ball five times for 20 yards and a touchdown, and caught four passes for 77 yards.

It’s also important to remember his contributions in the AFC Championship Game against Kansas City in 2019. He scored the game-winning touchdown, in what was perhaps the biggest moment of his New England career.

However, there is no doubt that injuries are a huge problem for him. Burkhead has been on the injury report often during his time with the Patriots. Most recently, he spent eight games on IR with a neck injury in 2018. That was following time when he missed part of training camp with a knee tear. His first real injury problems with New England were announced on September 17, 2017. He missed four games with a pulled muscle in his chest.

Due to his lack of durability, it makes him a bit more expendable than the other running backs. To be clear, his contributions are valued. However, his numbers — and absences — warrant at least a challenge for his role. It would be wise for the Patriots to use this year as a chance to see what Harris can bring to the table.

There is no doubt that Harris has talent. He showed it at Alabama, as he was a key cog in their rushing attack. During his time in Tuscaloosa, he rushed for over 3,000 yards, including 1,037 yards in 2016. He is a physical running back that would fit well into the offense.

At the very least, the competition for the second running back spot should be an open one in 2020. Burkhead has served as the Patriots well, but his injury history, combined with how many games he has missed over the past couple of seasons,  leaves the door open for competition.

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5 Patriots who could be cap casualties this offseason

These five players could be cut to give the Patriots more cap space this offseason.

It’s no secret that the Patriots aren’t in the best situation in terms of the salary cap. Patriots cap specialist Miguel Benzan currently has New England with just under $30 million in cap space.

This means Bill Belichick will be tasked with retaining his own free agents, signing new ones, and paying rookies with only $30 million. That’s going to be a tough ask, but luckily, there are some moves that they can make to create more space. Who are some players that may be at risk of becoming cap casualties?

1. RB Rex Burkhead

Burkhead is slated to have a cap hit of $4 million, and his release would save $2.4 million of that. The 29-year-old running back had the best season of his career last year in terms of overall production, totaling 581 yards and 3 touchdowns on offense.

New England has a solid stable of running backs right now that includes Sony Michel, James White, Damien Harris, and Brandon Bolden. None of those guys can do exactly what Burkhead can, but a combination of them can make up for his absence.

6 Patriots who need to step up for the playoffs

Tom Brady is among the Patriots who need to step up.

Here are six New England Patriots who need to step up for the playoffs, with the team set to face off against the Tennessee Titans in the wild-card round on Saturday at 8:15 p.m.

Tom Brady, QB: This season probably hasn’t been Brady’s worst. But it’s close to it. His statistics look a lot like his first few seasons in the NFL: 60.8 completion %, 4,057 passing yards, 24 touchdowns, eight interceptions. His 6.6 yards per attempt are his second worst (in seasons when he has started 12 games or more). The only consolation is that his interception % (1.3) is his fifth best. He knows he needs to posses the ball to win games — so he’s doing just that. The problem is that, at times, he’s only doing that. The Patriots offense needs to play better and with more consistency. That starts with Brady.

N’Keal Harry, WR: A part of Brady’s struggles have been married to his receivers’ issues. The rookie, Harry, has been among those with issues, particularly as the Patriots brought him along in his first few weeks. But the narrative has changed. Maybe he played too much in Week 10 against the Dallas Cowboys when he only had one catch. But at this point, it’s hard to imagine a scenario of him playing too much. He’s got the most upside with Mohamed Sanu apparently struggling to grasp the offense. Harry will need to be a reliable option for Brady in the playoffs.

Rex Burkhead, RB: His increased workload has me wondering whether the Patriots were saving him for the playoffs. Or, perhaps, New England coincidentally managed to get him healthy in time for the postseason push. Whatever the circumstances, Burkhead looks excellent and at a good time. The Patriots will need his contributions in the running and passing game. He has been a challenging man to tackle with the ball in his hands.

Shaq Mason, G: Mason has regressed in 2019 after a handful of Pro Bowl-caliber seasons. It’s hard imagine that he’s incapable of playing better. Certainly, his poor play is tethered to the equally rough work from Marcus Cannon. Together, they have to step up their play in the postseason. Brady and Sony Michel will depend upon it.

Jon Jones, CB: Opposing quarterbacks have bullied the slot cornerback in recent weeks. And he’s been battling a groin injury, which may be influencing his quality of coverage. The secondary, as a whole, had an atrocious Week 17. But the unit will likely see improvements from peripheral cornerbacks Stephon Gilmore and J.C. Jackson. The big question will be whether Jones can return to form as a solid slot cornerback.

Patrick Chung, S: He has had a tough few weeks in coverage, with tight ends Dawson Knox and Mike Gesicki each managing touchdowns. In Week 16, Knox got open on three different post routes, with quarterback Josh Allen delivering just one accurate pass despite having a very open tight end. And then Gesicki was open for the Dolphins’ game-winning touchdown in Week 17. Chung is typically a strong defender in coverage against tight ends — he’ll need to find his way back to that level of play.

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Rex Burkhead says Patriots offense needs to ‘get that juice back’ for playoffs

“The confidence is never going to go away.”

Rex Burkhead said his confidence has not wavered after the New England Patriots shocking, 27-24 defeat to the Miami Dolphins at Gillette Stadium on Sunday. Burkhead said he knows what the group still has to offer, even though the Patriots offense got back to its inconsistent ways on Sunday and even though quarterback Tom Brady managed to complete just 16 passes.

“The confidence is never going to go away,” Burkhead said. “We know what we have, we know the talent — and talent can only take you so far— but we know what we have and we know what we’re capable of.

He added: “The guys on this team, a lot of them have been through it before. So, we just got to get that juice back and hopefully we have a good week of preparation this week.”

From an individual standpoint, Burkhead has been among the Patriots best offensive weapons in the previous two weeks. Following a career-high performance in receiving yards against the Bills, Burkhead ran for 48 yards on just six carries (6.0 yards per rush).

But it wasn’t enough to make up for the inconsistencies. The Patriots had merely one first down in the first quarter as they were outgunned 110-25 in total yardage.

“Execution,” Burkhead said. “We just have to execute better. A lot of little detail things that we can definitely clean up. (I’ll) start with myself, improve on things I can improve upon and if we can keep getting better and keep doing those things better every single day, we can put ourselves in better position.”

The Patriots finish the season 12-4 and will play in the AFC Wild Card game for the first time since 2009.

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What we learned from Bills’ Week 16 loss to Patriots

What we learned, Buffalo Bills vs. New England Patriots, NFL Week 16

The Buffalo Bills have climbed a long way in just a year from the depths of the NFL to the league’s summit, as they have earned a trip to the postseason and have proven themselves enough to be mentioned among the best teams in the league. However, they have still been unable to knock off the king from the top of the hill.

The Bills’ woes against the New England Patriots continued on Saturday night as the Patriots outlasted a very good Bills’ team, 24-17, to clinch the AFC East for the 11th straight season.

There was no shame in losing this game for Buffalo as the Bills shook off a sluggish start to tie the game at 10 in a thrilling sequence before halftime that saw quarterback Josh Allen hit a deep ball to tight end Dawson Knox and throw a touchdown pass to offensive lineman Dion Dawkins.

They moved out to a 17-13 lead in the third quarter on a 53-yard Allen to receiver John Brown pass, the Bills’ longest play from scrimmage all season. The Bills held onto the lead well into the fourth quarter and found themselves just minutes away from a monumental victory. But as has happened so many times before in this rivalry, Tom Brady and the Patriots put together a drive to get into the end zone and take the lead for good.

With a chance to answer, Allen led a gutsy last-minute drive inside the New England 10, but the drive fizzled and Allen found himself chucking a desperation pass up for grabs into the end zone on 4th and goal from the 15 that was knocked away by J.C. Jackson.

The loss now makes the playoff picture clear for the Bills. They are locked into the No. 5 seed while New England takes the division. The Bills can now turn their attention to wild card weekend and their Week 17 matchup against the Jets is meaningless, which likely means plenty of backups in the Buffalo lineup.

Here are four things we learned as Buffalo fell to 10-5 and New England claimed another AFC East title:

Rex Burkhead’s increased usage proves crucial in Patriots’ win

He fumbled in the first quarter. And then he spent the rest of the game playing like he was making up for it.

New England Patriots running back Rex Burkhead fumbled in the first quarter in a 24-17 win over the Buffalo Bills in Week 16. Then he spent the rest of the game playing like he was making up for it.

He hasn’t seen huge usage in games this season, with five games of five touches or fewer. But over the last few weeks, he’s made the most of those carries and receptions. On Saturday, he led the team in receiving with 77 yards on four targets and four receptions. He also had five carries for 20 yards. One of Burkhead’s carries came on a 1-yard touchdown, when the running back endured what might have been the hardest hit of the game, a big blow from linebacker Lorenzo Alexander.

“I thought Rex’s touchdown was an outstanding run, showed great balance and made a nice catch on the play-action pass,” Belichick said during a postgame press conference at Gillette Stadium on Sunday. “He’s a good receiver, good runner, plays for us in the kicking game – I mean, he’s a solid four-down player.”

Running backs Sony Michel (21 carries, 96 yards) and James White (4 catches, 24 yards) also put together nice performances. And it would have been easy for the Patriots to go exclusively to them after Burkhead’s fumble. But New England must have intended to get the ball in his hands heading into the game. They didn’t abandon that game plan after one mistake.

“You got to put (the fumble) behind you and understand there is a lot more football to be played and understand you can really help the game out and turn the game into a positive,” Burkhead said at his locker after the game.

The Patriots are desperately searching for players to take the heat off Julian Edelman, who has carried the offense, sometimes single-handedly. Burkhead seems available to do just that, and perhaps he can contribute in the red zone, too, where he can serve as a multi-dimensional threat to aid with New England’s woes inside the 20-yard line.

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Tom Brady and the Patriots offense have reinvented themselves again

Though this time, the Patriots offense has a familiar identity.

Tom Brady, Josh McDaniels and the New England Patriots offense have spent much of the last six weeks toiling over what they’re good at.

In early December, McDaniels listed three things: “Protecting the quarterback and not going backwards in the running game and trying to stay out of long-yardage situations to improve your chances on third down.”

Thrilling.

That doesn’t sound like a Tom Brady offense. That doesn’t sound like a Super Bowl-worthy offense. But during the team’s Week 16 win over the Buffalo Bills, the Patriots put together an impressive product. It became clear what they were working toward but had been too inefficient to accomplish.

New England is putting together the offense Brady ran in the early 2000s and, to some degree, the one the Patriots ran during the postseason last year. They want to run the ball and they want Brady to slice away at the defense in eight-yards chunks. That has required a level of precision which Brady and his pass-catchers weren’t attaining — hence Brady’s frustration. But in Week 16, receiver Julian Edelman and running back Rex Burkhead proved dangerous. When Edelman was in single coverage, he said he was licking his chops. When McDaniels saw the Bills pass-rush overcommitting, he deferred to Burkhead and the screen game. All the while, the Patriots hammered the ball with running back Michel (21 carries, 96 yards).

The problem is that the Patriots don’t have a bail-out player like they’ve had in year’s past. There’s no Rob Gronkowski to provide the big play in the event of an emergency. (Think about how crucial each of Gronk’s catches were in the Patriots’ games against the Chiefs and their Super Bowl win over the Rams.) In turn, there’s no room for error. Against good teams, the Patriots probably won’t win if Brady is completing 50% of their passes — they won’t win if Michel is averaging 3.3 yards per carry. The offense isn’t built that way.

The degree of difficulty for Brady, 42, might be at an all-time high in 2019.

“I think we’ve all seen Tom play a lot of his best football in the most critical games of the year, in the most critical situations in those games,” Bill Belichick said Saturday night after the team’s 24-17 win. “Nobody prepares harder than Tom does, and he was ready to go, got a lot of help from the running game, the offensive line, the receivers. But, as you said, he was on the money, he was sharp. Again, that’s what we need from everybody this time of year.”

Belichick rarely praises Brady like this. The coach is better know for comparing Brady’s throws to those of the quarterback at Foxborough High School. Surely, Belichick knows he’s asking a lot of his quarterback.

To give Brady some help, McDaniels is drawing up trick plays — to serve as the bail-out option in lieu of Gronk. New England has also needed to get inventive to get the ball in the hands of rookie N’Keal Harry, a physically gifted receiver who doesn’t seem to grasp the team’s playbook yet. McDaniel’s creative work also drew Belichick’s praise.

“(McDaniels) does a great job of creating an advantage for us, whatever that is,” Belichick said. “There’s a number of ways to do it – formations is one thing, but there’s other things, as well. I think he does an excellent job of that.”

The Patritos’ stat sheet looked like a spray chart in Week 16. Brady completed passes to nine different players: four receivers, three running backs and two tight ends. Edelman is clearly the focal-point of the passing offense. Michel powers the rushing attack. But they won’t be enough to win games with consistency. Brady and McDaniels will need to feed the supporting cast, which had been underwhelming until this game — and, arguably, was still underwhelming in this game. Mohamed Sanu, who cost the Patriots a second-round pick at the trade deadline, had just three catches for 24 yards. He needs to take a bigger role. Harry got four touches for 49 yards, and drew two penalties, but he, too, needs to take a bigger role.

There’s more work for New England to do. But at least they’ve found an offensive identity which works against an elite defense in Buffalo. To this point, they’d lost to every playoff-bound AFC team on their schedule (Baltimore Ravens, Houston Texans, Kansas City Chiefs).

“I think one game doesn’t always necessarily lead to the next,” Brady said after the game, “so I think you just have to keep building week-to-week on some things that maybe we did good that worked out, and the things that didn’t, you kind of move on from them.”

The fine-tuning will continue. As good as the defense has been, New England needs balance. It seems they’ll only get it if Brady looks like Brady. For the first time in weeks, he did just that.

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Julian Edelman shares epic ‘Star Wars’ themed Instagram post after win vs. Bills

Per usual, Julian Edelman shared an epic Instagram post after the win.

The New England Patriots clinched the AFC East title for the 11th consecutive season after defeating the Buffalo Bills, 24-17.

It was a hard-fought game that came down to the wire, but New England’s offense came through and made the necessary plays to win. Julian Edelman was a big part of that win, and his season has been more than impressive.

Per usual, he shared an epic Instagram post after the game. This one is ‘Star Wars’ themed and features Edelman, Bill Belichick, Tom Brady, Rex Burkhead, Kyle Van Noy, Chase Winovich, N’Keal Harry and Stephon Gilmore.

View this post on Instagram

The force is strong in my family…

A post shared by Julian Edelman (@edelman11) on

The Patriots are 12-3 and they’re looking to clinch a first-round bye next week against the Miami Dolphins.

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Winners and losers from Patriots’ gusty win over the Bills in Week 16

Tom Brady finally started to get some momentum in the passing game.

Here are the winners and losers from the New England Patriots’ 24-17 win over the Buffalo Bills in Week 16 at Gillette Stadium on Saturday.

The Patriots have clinched the AFC East, and will spend Week 17 attempting to hold off the Miami Dolphins, so that New England can retain their No. 2 seed and a first-round bye.

Winner: Tom Brady, QB

Brady led a 17-play, 81-yard drive, which spanned over 8 minutes and 58 seconds. The drive started on that 1-yard line. While the drive concluded with a field goal, it was representative of Brady’s best self in 2019. He spread the ball around, but favored Julian Edelman. The quarterback’s patience and accuracy were New England’s biggest asset. The offense was a flashback to what they did best in the early 2000s: death with a thousand incisions — which requires great precision.

That hasn’t come together in previous games — it did on Saturday night. Brady finished 26 of 33 for 271 yards and one touchdown.

Loser (until he proved a winner): Rex Burkhead, RB

His fumble on the Patriots’ opening drive felt like a significant swing in points. The Bills turned around and scored on a field goal. But New England was moving the ball well, and looked poised to score at least three points. The turnover was a momentum changer.

Then the script flipped completely on Burkhead.

He was reliable after that, with five carries for 20 yards and a touchdown with four catches for 77 yards on the game. He and the Patriots offensive line did well running screen passes, which helped him finish with the most receiving yards for New England. But Burkhead’s most impressive play of the game came on 1-yarder. Linebacker Lorenzo Alexander hammered Burkhead, who somehow stayed upright and managed to make his way into the end zone.

5 takeaways from the Bills’ 24-17 loss to the Patriots

Five takeaways from the Buffalo Bills’ 24-17 loss to the New England Patriots.

The Bills had their chance late once again.

This time, the cards didn’t fall the right way for Buffalo. In their Week 16 visit to Gillette Stadium against the New England Patriots, the Bills kept things interesting as usual this season, but fell in the end, 24-17.

Here are five takeaways from the Bills’ loss to the Patriots:

Jordan Poyer #21 of the Buffalo Bills. (Photo by Billie Weiss/Getty Images)

Patriots’ backs unstoppable

Throughout this one, the story was what came out of the Patriots’ backfield. No matter what it was, the Bills couldn’t stop it.

The lone bright spot for the Bills was an early turnover, but even then, the bad was set. On a dump-off pass from Tom Brady to Rex Burkhead, the back gained a lot of ground. Jordan Poyer helped the Bills escape damage by forcing a fumble which was recovered by Micah Hyde to end the Patriots’ opening drive, but that set the tone.

The oft-bad Sony Michel this season for the Patriots had 21 carries for 96 yards in this one. Burkhead led the patriots with plenty of work in the screen game, catching four ball for a team-high 77 yards receding. James White also had 24 receiving yards on another four catches.

The Bills have been inconsistent in this area through the season and the Patriots exploited it.