The Norwalk Hour

Pats looking up at Dolphins in standings for a change

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Even five time zones away in Hawaii, where Tua Tagovailoa grew up following football and dreaming of an NFL career, the New England Patriots left an impression he can describe with just one word.

“Dominant,” Tagovailoa said.

No more. Mediocre is more like it in 2020, the first year of New England’s post-Tom Brady era.

The Patriots (6-7) head into Sunday’s game against the Dolphins and Tagovailoa with their NFL-record run of 11 consecutiv­e playoff appearance­s in dire jeopardy, and their reign atop the AFC East at an end.

For a change, the Patriots are looking up in the December standings at the Dolphins (8-5), who need a win to bolster their chances to reach the playoffs for the first time since 2016.

“At this point in time, this is our most important game,” Tagovailoa said.

The rookie quarterbac­k, 4-2 as a starter, will face the Patriots for the first time.

PLAYOFF RACE

Miami and New England head into their 111th meeting with both teams trailing AFC East leader Buffalo (10-3). The Patriots will finish with fewer victories than a division rival for the first time since Bill Belichick’s first season in New England in 2000, and a loss Sunday would eliminate them from playoff contention.

“All I know is if we go out there and we win the rest of our games, we give ourselves a chance,” Patriots running back James White said. “And then whatever else happens, it’s not really in our control.”

One more loss ensures that for the first time since 2000 — the year the Patriots drafted Brady — they won’t finish above .500.

TAKEAWAY STREAKS

Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore was the NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 2019, and Dolphins cornerback Xavien Howard is making a strong bid to succeed him.

Howard leads the NFL with nine intercepti­ons, the most in a season since 2012, and is tied for first in the league with 17 passes defended. Teams continue to throw his way: Howard has an intercepti­on in each of the past five games.

“You would think people would learn,” teammate Christian Wilkins said.

Miami’s defense is much improved since Week 1, when it allowed 217 yards rushing in a loss at New England. The Dolphins rank second in the NFL in points allowed, and are tied for the league lead with 25 takeaways. Their streak of at least one takeaway in 19 consecutiv­e games is the longest in the NFL.

“They’ve been very opportunis­tic,” Belichick said. “They’ve forced offenses into some bad plays and capitalize­d on them.”

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