The Day

Cam Newton knows he has plenty to prove as he begins his second season as a quarterbac­k with the New England Patriots.

- By KYLE HIGHTOWER

Foxborough, Mass. — Call it a mantra. Call it a simple reminder. But Cam Newton has a note he has been reminding himself of every day since last season.

“Pre-snap comfort will help postsnap results for me,” Newton said of what he repeats to himself daily.

That's because for Newton, back with the Patriots on a one-year deal, the coming season is all about him wholeheart­edly embracing a second chance to make the impression he feels he was never fully equipped to make in 2020.

Newton didn't reach terms on his original one-year deal with New England until late June last year, missing much of an offseason program that was truncated even more because of COVID-19 and teams having limited access to their facilities.

The result was a disappoint­ing season in which Newton went just 7-8 as the starting quarterbac­k with the unenviable task of succeeding Tom Brady following his departure to Tampa Bay.

Along the way he missed time after a COVID-19 diagnosis and dealt with mechanical problems and consistenc­y in the passing game as he struggled at times to lead an offense he was still mostly learning on the fly.

He said he feels “grateful” to get another crack at perfecting it.

“(Offensive coordinato­r Josh McDaniels') system was something that has worked for decades and decades. So, for me, it was up to me to kind of learn it as much as possible,” Newton said. “In the latter part of the season, it just caught up to me. I was thinking too much, I was trying to be something, when it just wasn't enough hours in the day, you know what I'm saying?”

This time around, Newton is vowing to do his part to ensure that time won't be the impediment to improvemen­t.

He organized workouts with members of the returning receiving corps as well as free agent additions Jonnu Smith, Hunter Henry, Nelson Agholor and Kendrick Bourne. Newton attended all but three of New England's recent voluntary offseason workouts. The exceptions were the three he missed because of a hand injury, from which he has since recovered.

“It's just awesome to be around a guy that kind matches energy like me. Whenever I get down or something, he's there to pick me up. He's that kind of guy,” Bourne said. “And when I do good he's there too to push me and motivate me at the same time. So he's just all-around a great teammate.”

Coach Bill Belichick said before the draft that Newton was the Patriots' starting quarterbac­k. He has reiterated that point even after the team drafted Mac Jones in the first round in April.

“Cam's way ahead of where he was last year at this time, there's no question about that,” Belichick said. “As you would expect, he has a good year of experience under his belt, he's able to start the process at the beginning and not be in a catch-up mode like he was last year.”

Newton said he had no problem with Jones' selection, saying “you still have to do what's right for the organizati­on, for the long haul.”

He instead is focusing his energy on finding new benefits from having a full offseason.

“It's still helping me,” he said. “It's just about learning as much as possible and not only just doing the things that you're asked to do but also going it a step further to try to master what is being taught.”

Will he be playing with any extra incentive this season?

“Double duh,” he said with a laugh. “It's only 32 guys in the world that can say they are a starting quarterbac­k in this league.”

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