USA TODAY US Edition

Patriots seek answers for Steelers

- Lorenzo Reyes

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. – Tom Brady sat on the bench, hunched over a tablet he held inches from his face. He looked like a man searching for answers.

Fifty-seven seconds remained in the New England Patriots’ stunning 27-20 loss to the Miami Dolphins on Monday night. As Brady swiped through images of everything that had gone wrong, one question quickly emerged: Just how could the Patriots, just a week before the biggest game of their season, play this poorly?

“I didn’t see it as a trap game,” veteran safety Devin McCourty said. “We knew — we’ve got a championsh­ip on the line — that’s not a trap game. We didn’t execute as well as we needed to against another team that’s fighting for their playoff berth, too. So it’s just that point in the season where if you don’t play at your highest level, you’ll lose.”

If the Patriots (10-3) don’t elevate their game Sunday, in what is expected to be the most important game of the entire NFL regular season, the AFC’s path to the Super Bowl will almost certainly wind back through Heinz Field in Pittsburgh next month. But beat the Steelers (11-2), and New England controls its fate in the bid for home-field advantage.

With the stakes so high against Pittsburgh, Patriots coach Bill Belichick was asked Monday if he thought his team had looked past the Dolphins. Belichick stared down the reporter for about 10 seconds, repeatedly shaking his head.

“No,” he said in apparent disgust. “Gimme a break.”

But the Patriots couldn’t buy a break as their eight-game winning streak ended.

Brady didn’t complete any of his four passes in the first quarter — unless you consider his first intercepti­on to cornerback Xavien Howard.

Overall, the Dolphins dominated the Patriots in first downs (21 to 14), time of possession (36:09 to 23:51) and total yards (362 to 248). The Patriots did not convert any of their 11 third-down attempts. According to ESPN Stats, the last time that happened to New England was in 1991 ... when Belichick was coaching the Cleveland Browns.

Brady uncharacte­ristically served up two intercepti­ons, both to Howard.

“We lacked energy,” safety Duron Harmon lamented. “It seemed like they wanted it more than us.”

As ineffectiv­e as the Patriots looked, though, they might have one thing working in their favor. One mark of Belichick’s teams is hyperfocus­ed attention that rarely feeds an actual losing streak. Since 2001, when Brady became the starting quarterbac­k, New England’s record after defeats is 40-11.

The real key for the Patriots, though, might be a player who wasn’t on the field Monday. Allpro tight end Rob Gronkowski was suspended for a dirty hit in Week 13 against Buffalo Bills cornerback Tre’Davious White. The Dolphins used a lot of single-safety looks and tried to disguise their pass rush.

Even though Gronkowski will be back, the Steelers historical­ly play a lot of zone and might try to mimic Miami’s strategy. But Pittsburgh’s margin for error will also likely be razor thin, given Chris Boswell has needed to drill a game-winning field goal inside the final minute in each of the last three weeks. And the defense has not recalibrat­ed after the crushing loss of linebacker Ryan Shazier.

Still, the Steelers are riding an eight-game winning streak. Given the Patriots will surely be challenged in what is expected to be a playoff-like atmosphere, racing out to a strong start may be necessary for New England.

“That’s always important in the NFL,” Brady said. “When you play from ahead, you don’t turn the ball over. You can get a lead and play on your terms. A lot of things go your way.”

 ??  ?? Bill Belichick’s Patriots could earn home-field edge. USA TODAY
Bill Belichick’s Patriots could earn home-field edge. USA TODAY

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