Boston Herald

Short week to prep for Panthers

- BY RICH THOMPSON GETTY IMAGES Twitter: @richiet400

Between a pair of joint practices and consecutiv­e preseason road games at Detroit and Tennessee, the Patriots crammed plenty of competitiv­e training camp football into the past two weeks. But with Saturday night’s 22-17 win over the Titans now in the books, the team has a short window to rest up and prepare their first home preseason game against the Carolina Panthers on Thursday night (7:30) at Gillette Stadium.

“The first thing is to give the players an opportunit­y to rest and recover from the hard and good week we had in Tennessee,” coach Bill Belichick said yesterday morning.

“We played a lot of football down there in Wednesday and Thursday’s practices and last night in the game, kind of in spurts. Offensivel­y we ran a lot of plays in the second half (37) and defensivel­y we were on the field for a lot of plays (40) in the first half.

“I think those more intensive stretches challenged us in some physical ways and mentally in terms of communicat­ion and fundamenta­l execution when were a little fatigued.”

Belichick said the first order of business before the players return on Monday is to breakdown the Titans film, isolate the areas where breakdowns occurred and correct them before the Panthers hit town. Carolina is coming off a 27-14 loss to the Buffalo Bills on Friday night.

“We’ll make some correction­s and adjustment­s and clean up some things that happened and then move on to preparatio­ns in the short week we have for Carolina,” said Belichick.

The Patriots will face a similar situation in the regular season against two NFC East opponents. New England plays at Washington on Sunday, Oct. 6, and then hosts the New York Giants the following Thursday night.

“That Monday to Thursday window is the same one we will have later in the season,” said Belichick. “That will give us a good opportunit­y to kind of – players, coaches, everybody – work in a short week schedule and try to prioritize and get the things done that we need to do a couple of months from now.”

Wynn and now

Belichick seemed satisfied with the small sample work provided by offensive left tackle Isaiah Wynn with the first unit. Wynn worked three series protecting quarterbac­k Brian Hoyer’s blindside, primarily against Titans’ edge rusher Amani Bledsoe.

Wynn was the Patriots first pick (23rd overall) out of Georgia last year but he never played a regular season down his rookie season. Wynn suffered a torn Achilles tendon in the preseason and was placed on injured reserve.

“It was good to get Isaiah out there,” said Belichick. “He played around 15 plays, somewhere in that neighborho­od and we will build on that and see where we are next week with Carolina game.”

Munson steps up

With starters Dont’a Hightower and Kyle Van Noy off the grid in Tennessee, inside linebacker Calvin Munson made use of his opportunit­y to escape the Patriots’ practice squad, where he spent most of the 2018 season.

Munson started the game alongside Ja’Whaun Bentley and led the Patriots with five solo tackles and three assists. Munson joined the Giants as an undrafted.

“Calvin’s got some experience and he’s a smart player, instinctiv­e player and he had some production,” said Belichick . ...

The team announced yesterday that it released receiver Dontrelle Inman.

 ??  ?? BY THE BOOK: Bill Belichick tends to some paperwork during the Pats’ win Saturday.
BY THE BOOK: Bill Belichick tends to some paperwork during the Pats’ win Saturday.
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