Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Pats’ Brady takes on Jets’ McCown in one for the aged

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

Todd Bowles figures he’ll have to continue drawing up game plans to defend against Tom Brady for years to come.

Forget the fact that the New England Patriots quarterbac­k is already 40. Brady is still performing as if he’s a spry youngster.

“Brady will probably be playing after I’m long retired at the rate he’s going right now,” Bowles said with a smile.

Brady is off to a terrific start statistica­lly, leading the NFL with 1,702 yards passing while ranking second with a 112.0 passer rating. He also has the league’s two best passing yardage games of the season, throwing for 447 yards against New Orleans on Sept. 17 and 378 against Houston a week later.

“Everybody knows what he can do,” Jets defensive end Muhammad Wilkerson said. “You can never doubt him or count him out.”

Brady and the top-ranked offense of the Patriots (3-2) head to MetLife Stadium to take on the Jets (3-2) on Sunday for early-season supremacy in the AFC East .

On the other sideline, Brady will see a quarterbac­k who’s just two years younger in New York’s Josh McCown.

Playing against a signal caller who’s actually older than him will be something rare these days for McCown, who has faced Buffalo’s Tyrod Taylor (28), Oakland’s Derek Carr (26), Jacksonvil­le’s Blake Bortles (25) and Cleveland’s DeShone Kizer (21) and Kevin Hogan (24). At least his opponent in Week 3, Miami’s Jay Cutler (34), is in his 30s.

“It’ll be nice for once and hopefully it will happen again later this year,” McCown said of facing an older QB. “Obviously, Tom has set a standard and a mark for quarterbac­ks in our league. What he’s been able to do is nothing short of remarkable and, to a degree, it’s special to go against him because he’s widely regarded as the best to ever play. In my opinion, probably rightfully so.”

With a victory, Brady would break a tie with Brett Favre and Peyton Manning for the most regular-season wins by a starting quarterbac­k in NFL history with 187. Brady’s 211 combined career wins, including regular season and playoffs, are already a league record.

“To get to play against him and to get go against him, it’s part of it that when you’re done with your career, it’s a cool thing to look back on,” McCown said. “But my focus will be on doing the best I can to move the football against their defense.”

Here are some things to know heading into this battle of the aged:

BRADY’S HEALTH

Brady was on the injury report for the first time this season with a left shoulder injury. The quarterbac­k hasn’t missed a regularsea­son start due to injury since 2008, and he downplayed the significan­ce of this one .

“I’ll be there Sunday,” he said. “Don’t worry about that. I’ll be there.”

While Brady’s passing numbers have been sound, he’s getting sacked a high rate. He’s already been taken down 16 times after going down just 15 times in 12 regular-season games last season.

STILL SEARCHING

Meanwhile, Wilkerson and fellow defensive lineman Leonard Williams are looking to get their first sacks. Wilkerson has been dealing with a sprained shoulder and now also has a toe ailment. He hasn’t used the injuries as an excuse, but he has just one quarterbac­k hit this season.

Williams, who made the Pro Bowl last season after having seven sacks, at least has a team-leading six quarterbac­k pressures.

SMALL IMPROVEMEN­TS

The Patriots lingered at or near the bottom of the league in the defensive rankings during the first four weeks of the season. They allowed a season-low 14 points in their 19-14 win at Tampa Bay last week, twice holding the Buccaneers’ offense without points after a pair of turnovers by Brady.

New England enters this week still ranked at the bottom of the league in total defense (allowing 447.2 yards per game) and pass defense (323 yards per game). But defensive coordinato­r Matt Patricia likes the way his unit is trending, beginning with the way it responded under pressure last week.

“Sometimes when you get off the field and then you’re trying to get to the sideline and get things corrected, you’ve got to flip that switch and get back out there and be able to execute at a high level,” he said. “It’s good to have those situations come up and for us to be able to handle them.”

 ?? DAVID RICHARD — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jets quarterbac­k Josh McCown, right, hands off to running back Bilal Powell in the first half of the team’s 17-14 win over the Browns in Cleveland last Sunday. McCown, age 38, takes on 40-year-old Tom Brady and the rest of the Patriots today.
DAVID RICHARD — ASSOCIATED PRESS Jets quarterbac­k Josh McCown, right, hands off to running back Bilal Powell in the first half of the team’s 17-14 win over the Browns in Cleveland last Sunday. McCown, age 38, takes on 40-year-old Tom Brady and the rest of the Patriots today.

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