Bangkok Post

Brady makes mixed pre-season debut

First time since 2001 that QB has started on bench as Patriots secure narrow win over Panthers

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>> CHARLOTTE: Tom Brady appeared unsure. Antsy, even.

For the longtime New England Patriots starting quarterbac­k, this was unfamiliar. Coming off the bench, that is.

For just the second time since Week Two of the 2001 season, Brady entered a game as a backup when healthy. In Friday night’s third pre-season game, a 19-17 Patriots victory against the Carolina Panthers, coach Bill Belichick opted to start backup Jimmy Garoppolo, who will replace Brady in the first four weeks of the regular season while Brady serves his Deflategat­e suspension.

So Brady paced. He fidgeted. He looked like a man who didn’t know what to do.

But when he did make it onto the field, with 1:56 left to play in the first quarter, there was some good... and some bad.

Brady completed three of his nine passes for 76 yards, one touchdown and no intercepti­ons. Brady’s four possession­s yielded a field goal, touchdown, missed field goal and punt.

The Patriots did not make Brady available to comment to reporters.

The highlight of his night was a perfectly-thrown ball that receiver Chris Hogan caught in stride over Panthers cornerback Bené Benwikere for a 33-yard score. Brady altered the play at the line of scrimmage after seeing a matchup advantage.

“Carolina doesn’t play a lot of single-high coverage,” Belichick said. “They do it a few times a game. They play a little bit of quarters coverage, so when you get those opportunit­ies, we talk about trying to go up on them and we did a couple of times. That’s one we hit. It was good to see us take advantage and convert that.”

The Patriots attempted a twopoint conversion, but Brady’s pass intended for Aaron Dobson was too high. Earlier in the game, Brady also zipped another pass too high, this one intended for tight end Martellus Bennett in the end zone.

To end the uneven performanc­e, Brady fired a throw that should have been intercepte­d and was then sacked. Garoppolo returned to the field with 2:07 left to play in the second quarter.

“We thought that was the best way to play it,” Belichick said of the quarterbac­k rotation. “It was different,” Garoppolo said. Garoppolo completed nine of his 15 passes for only 57 yards, and New England’s offence sputtered when he played, a performanc­e he said was filled with “ups and downs.”

The only other time Brady came off the bench when healthy since 2001 was in Week Four of the 2014 preseason, when he participat­ed in one play, serving as the holder on a point after touchdown.

When Garoppolo and the Patriots came off the field to meet with offensive coordinato­r Josh McDaniels, Brady appeared to purposeful­ly keep his distance.

Instead, he ambled from position group to position group. He stretched. He even ventured down toward the defence. He tried to stay warm and flung passes to third-string quarterbac­k Jacoby Brissett.

“I wouldn’t say I try to stay away from him,” Garoppolo said. “We’re always interactin­g, all the quarterbac­ks. We’re talking on the sidelines, stuff like that. ‘What did you see? What did I see?’ type of thing. It’s a healthy relationsh­ip that we have. Obviously, he’s not going to be here once the regular season comes. You just have to go about your business as you usually would. To start thinking about all that other stuff is just going cloud your head and get you all confused.”

When Garoppolo and the rest of the offence returned to the field for the second drive of the game, Brady walked over and sat alone on the metal bench that had just cleared. Strength coach Moses Cabrera came by, slapped his shoulder pads and said a few quick words. Cabrera then left Brady alone.

 ??  ?? New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady throws a pass against the Carolina Panthers.
New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady throws a pass against the Carolina Panthers.

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