The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Saints, Pats meet in 1st Brees-Brady-less matchup since ‘05

- Sunday, 1 p.m. (FOX)

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — So long, Brady and Brees. Hello Mac and Jameis.

In three games between the Saints and Patriots from 2009 to 2017, Drew Brees and Tom Brady were the focal points whenever the teams shared the field.

Including Brees’ time with the Chargers, the matchup between the future Hall of Fame quarterbac­ks had eight chapters. Brees won five, Brady three. It ended last season when a 43-year-old Brady sent his 42-year-old counterpar­t into retirement after Brady’s Buccaneers eliminated the Saints from the playoffs.

When New Orleans and New England face off Sunday, it will mark the first time the teams have met since 2005 that Brees and Brady won’t be the opposing quarterbac­ks.

It hasn’t tamped down the intrigue, with Patriots rookie Mac Jones drawing all kinds of Brady comparison­s and the Saints’ Jameis Winston on a mission to prove he can still be a dependable starter after some rocky years in Tampa Bay.

This week is also big for other reasons. Coming off their first win last week against the Jets, the Patriots want to keep that momentum going ahead of the highly anticipate­d return of Brady in Week 4. The Saints are hoping to bounce back after an ugly 26-7 loss at Carolina.

“The biggest thing, is building on the positives and avoiding the same mistakes, not having the same mistake show up, not having that same action show up,” Winston said.

So far, Winston has looked a bit like the mercurial quarterbac­k he was for much of his first five NFL

seasons with Tampa Bay. In Week 1, he passed for five TDs without an intercepti­on. In Week 2, he threw two intercepti­ons without a TD pass.

Jones, who followed up his 281-yard, one touchdown passing performanc­e in Week 1 against the Dolphins with a 186-yard effort in last week’s win over the Jets, said he’s learned a

lot in his short time as an NFL starter.

“I think we’ve definitely improved, and we just have to continue to do that, so we will,” he said. “It just goes back to practice and fixing what we can fix, and then keeping everything that we know and that we’re good at in our back pocket, and when it comes up, we know how to do it.”

BALL HAWK

One thing that is helping ease Jones’ transition into his first NFL season is the strong play of New England’s defense.

Led by cornerback J.C. Jackson’s two intercepti­ons, the Patriots had four picks in their win over the Jets and have a plus-3 turnover differenti­al — tied for second in the league. Veteran safety Devin McCourty points to the comfort level Jackson has found in his fourth season.

“He’s starting to understand more football,” McCourty said. “To understand what more offenses are doing. … Last year into this year he’s really been a full-time starter out there playing more plays and I think that’s when you have to start to grow.”

LINE ITEMS

The Saints have been contrite this week about their blocking failures at Carolina in Week 2. They had just six first downs and 128 net yards while Winston had a career-low passer rating of 26.9 after completing 11 of 22 passes for 111 yards and no TDs against two intercepti­ons. Winston was often trying to throw under duress and was sacked three times.

This week, the Saints have been focused on better pre-snap communicat­ion at the line of scrimmage.

“I’m confident in me being able to handle that (communicat­ion) process with those guys effectivel­y so we can get the protection­s where they need to be,” Winston said.

PROMISING DEBUT

After being deactivate­d in Week 1, Saints firstround draft choice Payton Turner finally made his NFL debut in Week 2. The 6-foot-6, 269-pound defensive end out of Houston was one of the few bright spots in a lopsided loss to the Panthers. He had his first sack and made five tackles, including three for losses.

 ?? Adam Hunger / Associated Press ?? New England Patriots running back Damien Harris (37) celebrates a touchdown with quarterbac­k Mac Jones against the New York Jets last Sunday.
Adam Hunger / Associated Press New England Patriots running back Damien Harris (37) celebrates a touchdown with quarterbac­k Mac Jones against the New York Jets last Sunday.

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