Pats go from Brady to back up to Brissett, keep on winning
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The more assets the Patriots lose this season, the better they seem to play.
New England entered Week 3 of Tom Brady’s four-game “Deflategate” suspension down to just one healthy full-time quarterback following backup Jimmy Garoppolo’s shoulder injury last week against Miami.
But not even one of the NFL’s top-ranked defences could slow down a Patriots train that has barely missed a beat while getting off to a 3-0 start.
The latest exhibition was a 27-0 dismantling of the Houston Texans (2-1), a team that suddenly looked very pedestrian.
“We really asked a lot out of the team this week — they responded,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “Just really proud of the way our guys competed.”
Belichick rolled the dice by not adding another quarterback to the roster during the short week, and the trust he had in rookie Jacoby Brissett proved to be spot on.
Brissett began the season as the third-string quarterback behind Brady and Garoppolo. He trotted out on the field Thursday as the first rookie to start for the Patriots since Drew Bledsoe in 1993.
He didn’t have a stats-rich game, but he was composed and made plays when it counted. He finished the night 11 of 19 for 103 yards, and ran eight times for 48 yards and a touchdown.
“You just always want to be ready and we have a great team, so players just welcome you no matter who is in the huddle,” Brissett said. “At any moment in the game no one wavered, no one flinched, and the results proved themselves with what our team did tonight.”
Under Belichick, quarterbacks are 6-0 in their first career start.
The Patriots have 10 days to recuperate, with only a game against Buffalo (0-2) on Oct. 2 remaining before Brady could return to a 4-0 team.
That team should again include Rob Gronkowski, who finally made his 2016 debut Thursday after sitting out the first two weeks of the season nursing a sore hamstring. He wasn’t his normal self by any means. He played 14 snaps and was targeted just one time. It was the first time he appeared in a regular-season game and went without a catch.
“I got to get my feet wet,” he said. “It felt great just to get out there. I blocked the whole time, but it feels great just playing football again.”
With the win, Belichick tied Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame coach Curly Lambeau for fourth on the NFL’s all-time list with 226 regular-season victories.
“You know how much respect I have for Curly Lambeau and what he accomplished in his great career, but really today’s not about me,” Belichick said. “This is about our team ... I wouldn’t really want anything to deflect the credit that they deserve for what they accomplished.”
Up next is Tom Landry (270), with George Halas (324) and Don Shula (347) atop the list.