Times Colonist

Patriots deny Kraft, Belichick, Brady rift

- KYLE HIGHTOWER

FOXBOROUGH, Massachuse­tts — On the field, the defending Super Bowl champion New England Patriots are right where they want to be heading into the post-season.

As the AFC’s top seed and the owners of a first-round bye, the 13-3 Patriots will get to rest up during the opening weekend of the playoffs. But as they prepare to begin their latest run, their biggest opponent might be the perception of a fracturing relationsh­ip between the franchise’s three most important pieces.

The Patriots dismissed as “flat-out inaccurate” a report suggesting a rift involving owner Robert Kraft, coach Bill Belichick and quarterbac­k Tom Brady on Friday.

The three released a joint statement hours after an ESPN report, citing undisclose­d sources, detailed an array of tension.

The story highlighte­d purported disputes concerning Brady’s personal body coach, Alex Guerrero, in player-medical affairs. Also mentioned is a supposed difference between Kraft and Belichick over the decision to trade backup quarterbac­k Jimmy Garoppolo. The story implied Brady has taken issue with a lack of praise from Belichick this season.

The statement said the three have had a “very good and productive working relationsh­ip” for 18 years and they regret having to “respond to these fallacies.”

Brady and Belichick both eschewed questions last month about a chasm between and Belichick and Guerrero.

Belichick wouldn’t address the validity of a Boston Globe report that Guerrero had been banned from the sideline or travelling on the team plane, but said “there are different relationsh­ips, different situations with dozens of other people.”

Brady also took issue with a reporter last month who asked whether the quarterbac­k and Belichick had talked about an adjustment to Guerrero’s access to the team.

“I have a lot of conversati­ons with him. Those are private between he and I, and I don’t think anyone knows what we talk about,” Brady said then. “Certainly I’ve never talked about it. He’s never talked about it.”

Despite the reported off-thefield issues, the Patriots have thrived on it.

Even after losing receiver Julian Edelman in the preseason to a knee injury and linebacker Dont’a Hightower in October to a season-ending pectoral injury, they enter the playoffs with the NFL’s top-ranked offence and a defence that is allowing just 18.5 points per game.

Brady is an MVP candidate, and passed Brett Favre for the most wins in one season for a quarterbac­k after turning 40 years old.

Still, there are questions about Brady’s durability heading into his 15th post-season.

He threw for a league-leading 4,577 yards passing and 32 touchdowns, but he also got hit a lot more than he did last season (32 sacks in 2017 after just 15 in 2016).

And Brady himself showed some of his first flecks of football mortality over the final four games. He had four of his eight intercepti­ons during that stretch.

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