Houston Chronicle

Patriots put humbling loss behind them

-

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots couldn’t hide from the parade of mistakes that culminated in their 42-27 season-opening loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Thursday night.

There were issues all over the field, from an offense that was 3-of-6 in the red zone and struggled in short yardage to a defense that gave up several big plays and allowed the most points of the Bill Belichick era.

The good news for New England is that the last three times it lost its season opener (2001, 2003 and 2014), it went on to finish those seasons by raising Lombardi trophies.

Injuries concerning

The bad news is that they continue to pile up injuries to key players. Linebacker Dont’a Hightower left Thursday’s loss in the third quarter with a knee injury, and receiver Danny Amendola of The Woodlands exited in the fourth quarter with a head injury.

Unsurprisi­ngly, coach Bill Belichick was in no mood to do a play-by-play autopsy of what led to his team surrenderi­ng the most points allowed by the franchise since Bill Parcells’ Patriots suffered a 45-7 loss to the Jets in 1993.

“I’m not trying to live in the past like everybody else is,” Belichick said Monday.

What he did say is that everything needed tweaking. That includes improvemen­t in fundamenta­ls and execution in every phase of the game.

Quarterbac­k Tom Brady said it also must involve recognitio­n that a change in attitude may be required.

“I just think we need to have more urgency and go out there and perform a lot better,” Brady said. “We had it handed to us on our own field. It’s a terrible feeling, and the only people who can do something about it are in that locker room.”

The next chance will be Sept. 17, when New England visits New Orleans.

Even before Hightower’s injury, the defense was already lacking depth at the linebacker. It was noticeable on several of Kansas City’s biggest plays of the night.

It wasn’t too long after Hightower left the game that Chiefs quarterbac­k Alex Smith exploited a coverage gap in the middle of the defense for a 78-yard touchdown pass to Kareem Hunt.

But clearly there is talent to work with.

Not all doom and gloom

Belichick acknowledg­ed that “there was some positive things” that did show up during film review, and he said that recent trade acquisitio­n Cassius Marsh was involved in some of them. Fellow defensive end Trey Flowers also picked up where he left out last season, posting two sacks.

“It’s the NFL. There are a lot of great teams out there, so if you just don’t play well enough, you’re going to lose,” Flowers said. “That’s the bottom line. There wasn’t anything alarming or nothing, we just lost the game.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States