The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Questions linger as Patriots’ offense falls short again

- By Kyle Hightower

FOXBOROUGH, MASS. >> Quarterbac­k Mac Jones was adamant his expletive-laced tirade on the sideline during the Patriots 24-10 loss to Buffalo was about motivating himself and not an emotional plea about the play calling or anything directed at his coaches.

Only he knows for certain. What does seem apparent is his vocal outburst had an undertone: He wants the training wheels to be removed from the offense.

“What I said was about throwing it deeper in the short game. I got to execute that part better,” Jones said. “But it’s the short game we kept going to, which is working. But I felt like we needed chunk plays. I shouted that out to kind of get everyone going. That’s emotional. That’s football. I’m passionate about this game.”

At 6-6 and back in last place in the AFC East following its loss to the Bills, New England’s season is now officially on the brink with five games to play.

And the much-talked about offense has yet to find consistenc­y under the primary direction of Matt Patricia, a seasoned defensive coach who is making the deepest foray into offensive football of his career.

It’s been costly to the developmen­t of the Patriots’ second-year quarterbac­k and remains the most baffling thing about a team that seems to be content to ride out the status quo on offense despite diminishin­g returns.

Jones is just 4-5 as New England’s starter this season, with seven touchdowns and seven intercepti­ons. For the season, his passer rating is down to 87.0 — 24th in the NFL.

If there are any major changes coming to help correct the issues, coach Bill Belichick isn’t giving any hints what they could be.

“The bottom line is, we need to just keep working to improve it every week,” he said. “We need to continue to work to do things better on our end. Then as it relates to our specific opponent, then match them up and doing well against that opponent. So that’s really the process.”

WHAT’S WORKING

The Patriots’ offensive issues meant they were punting a lot on Thursday. Michael Palardy was again solid in his second game handling the duties with Jake Bailey on injured reserve with a back injury. Palardy averaged 41.8 yards for the night, dropping two inside the 20yard line.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

Situationa­l football was again a glaring shortcomin­g. The most notable example was during the offense’s management of the two-minute drill in the second quarter.

Trailing 17-7, the Patriots took over with 1:20 left and drove to the Buffalo 35 with 50 seconds remaining.

From there they let 11 seconds elapse following a Rhamondre Stevenson second-and-1 run for no gain, forcing them to use their second timeout. Jones got the first down via a sneak on third down, then burned his team’s final timeout instead of spiking the ball or running another play.

Two incompleti­ons and a short pass to Hunter Henry later, New England was left to line up for a 48-yard field goal attempt by Nick Folk that was no good after hitting the crossbar.

STOCK UP

Marcus Jones. His surprise usage on offense and subsequent 48-yard touchdown reception was the Patriots’ biggest highlight. According to Elias Sports Bureau, Jones is the first player in Patriots history to log both a receiving touchdown and a punt return touchdown in his rookie year.

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