National Post

No sleep lost for Belichick

- By Arnie Stapleton

It was hard to make heads or tails out of some of the baffling calls in the NFL’s Week 16, notably Bill Belichick’s decision to keep Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski with him on the sideline at the start of overtime.

While many football fans celebrated Belichick’s booboo after the Jets capitalize­d for a 26-20 win, consider this: Maybe it wasn’t a gaffe as much as it was pure genius. At least if you believe in conspiracy theories involving the New England coach, something many NFL fans do.

“I clearly thought that was our best opportunit­y, so that’s why we did it,” Belichick said on his regular Monday media conference call. “Didn’t like the way it worked out, but to me that was the right decision for our team at that time.”

Sure, Patriots special teams captain Matt Slater might have bungled the strategy. Belichick instructed him to choose to defend the north end zone if New England won the coin toss. New York would almost certainly then choose to receive the kickoff. But after Slater won by calling heads, the first words out of his mouth were, “We want to kick.”

Before he could even add “that way” as he pointed to the south end zone, referee Clete Blakeman turned and asked the Jets captains which direction they wanted to go. So, the Jets got the ball and t he bearing, and t hey scored quickly on Eric Decker’s TD grab to win 26-20 and boost their playoff hopes while depriving the Patriots of clinching the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs. Now, the Patriots cannot rest their regulars at Miami next weekend.

That’s not necessaril­y a bad thing. History is littered with teams that saw all that R& R turn to rust and ruin.

And another thing: The Jets’ win put Pittsburgh in a precarious playoff position following the Steelers’ stunning 20-17 loss at Baltimore.

The Steelers were on a roll and looked to many like the one team that could storm into Gillette Stadium in January and snuff the Patriots’ bid to win back- to- back Super Bowls.

Now, the Steelers need help just to get into the post- season party. They need to beat the Browns and for Buffalo to beat the Jets next weekend, or for Denver to lose its last two games, beginning with Cincinnati — which hasn’t won a Monday night road game since 1990.

Belichick stood by his decision Monday to kick off and said it didn’t matter that Slater was confused by the overtime coin flip rules because there was hardly any wind anyway.

The Patriots can still win the top seed, and for those conspiracy theorists, maybe Belichick was thinking about taking out their biggest obstacle to making it back to the big game. But a slip- up next week and they might end up hitting the road in the playoffs, maybe making a return trip to Denver, where they’ve lost two in a row.

They dropped the conference championsh­ip in 2014 to Peyton Manning and fell in a 30- 24 overtime game in November to Brock Osweiler.

If things line up right and Manning returns from his left foot injury next month, there could still be 17 th matchup between Brady and Manning, either in Massachuse­tts or Colorado, after their scheduled faceoff was scuttled last month.

Among the biggest blunders of t he weekend was Baltimore linebacker Courtney Upshaw lining up with his right foot in the neutral zone, a mistake that negated Jimmy Smith’s 101- yard intercepti­on- return touchdown.

There was Mike McCarthy’s decision to a) not help tackle Josh Walker when he was overwhelme­d by Arizona’s pass rush and b) send Aaron Rodgers back out onto the field after his eighth sack resulted in a second touchdown return of a lost fumble.

At that point, Rodgers had been knocked down 10 times and hit 13 times, and the Packers were trailing 38- 8. He was replaced by backup Scott Tolzein on the next series.

The Cardinals played without Tyrann Mathieu ( ACL) for the first time, and minus Rashad Johnson, their other starting safety, but they still stymied Rodgers.

And of course there was Kirk Cousins’ brain freeze Saturday night when he took a knee at the Eagles 6 instead of throwing the ball or spiking it with no timeouts and 6 seconds left in the first half of Washington’s 38-24 win at Philadelph­ia.

“We were going to throw a fade to Pierre Garcon, complete or incomplete,” Redskins coach Jay Gruden said. All was forgiven when Cousins led the Redskins to a runaway victory and the NFC East title.

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