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Patriots vs. Dolphins Friday injury report: Keion White, Christian Gonzalez out for Week 2

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The New England Patriots will visit the Miami Dolphins without the top arrivals from the 2023 draft class.

Keion White and Christian Gonzalez have been ruled out for the AFC East opener. While the defensive end remained a non-participant for three consecutive practices due to an illness, the cornerback has yet to return since sustaining a hamstring injury in July.

Head coach Mike Vrabel confirmed both game designations during his final press conference of the work week.

Here’s the early, final injury report ahead of Sunday’s 1 p.m. ET kickoff at Hard Rock Stadium.

OUT​

Patriots​

  • DE Keion White (illness)
  • CB Christian Gonzalez (hamstring)

Dolphins​

  • TBA

White played 29 snaps off the defensive edges in Week 1 and had a hand in a pair of tackles. The former No. 46 overall pick is now set to miss his first game since his rookie year. That could lead to veteran outside linebacker Anfernee Jennings having a Sunday role after beginning 2025 as a healthy inactive. As for Gonzalez in the secondary, he is now set to miss his second in a row. The former No. 17 overall pick and reigning second-team All-Pro has been a non-participant since his hamstring injury arose during first padded practice of training camp.

QUESTIONABLE​

Patriots​

  • OT Morgan Moses (foot)
  • LB Marte Mapu (neck)

Dolphins​

  • TBA

Moses logged all 71 snaps for the offensive line last weekend against the Las Vegas Raiders. He returned for back-to-back practices after missing Wednesday’s work in Foxborough with a foot injury. Rookie seventh-rounder Marcus Bryant would be next up at right tackle in the event the 34-year-old is unable to go, per Vrabel, with 2024 starter Vederian Lowe providing a backup option. And at the off-ball linebacker level, Mapu also stands as questionable after being a partial participant in recent days because of a neck issue. The Sacramento State product handled 68.9 percent of the workload on special teams to begin September.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ury-report-keion-white-christian-gonzalez-out
 
Zak Kuhr to serve as Patriots’ defensive play caller vs. Dolphins

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The New England Patriots will indeed be without their defensive coordinator this week. As head coach Mike Vrabel confirmed on Friday, Terrell Williams will be out for the team’s upcoming matchup with the Miami Dolphins due to the undisclosed medical situation he is currently dealing with.

In Williams’ place, inside linebackers coach Zak Kuhr will serve as defensive play caller.

“Zak Kuhr will call the game defensively,” Vrabel said during a press conference at Gillette Stadium.

“I’ll help him like I always do, but I’m excited for that. I think we’ve been prepared all week for that, for the preparation, for the game planning. All the phases of first and second down, what this team wants to try to do and how we want to try to defend them, and the keys and the plan on third down or short yardage in the red zone. It was a good week of preparation.”

For Kuhr, replacing Williams is nothing new. The 37-year-old already served as a stand-in defensive coordinator in the spring, after a medical scare forced Williams to work remotely from his home in Detroit.

Kuhr originally joined the Patriots alongside Vrabel earlier this offseason. Before their reunion in New England, they already crossed paths at Ohio State and with the Tennessee Titans. Most recently, he served as a defensive assistant with the New York Giants.

Overall, as Vrabel noted on Friday, Kuhr’s experience as a coach is quite diverse.

“Going back to just having been an offensive coach, and I watched him work at Ohio State, and when we were able to get him to Tennessee, how quickly he translated that knowledge to defense, how quickly he learned defense and what an asset he was defensively for us, especially coming from some of the college game and as some of those trends started to make their way to the National Football League, some of the spread, the RPO or things like that, he really became an asset for us defensively.” Vrabel said.

“He did our red zone stuff for us in Tennessee, and then continued to grow, continued to understand what we were doing. Then, watching him work in the spring, work in front of the guys and prepare them in the spring, and through training camp until Terrell was back, that’s what I saw: I saw a lot of maturity, a lot of growth, but also a lot of knowledge.”

The Patriots’ game against the Dolphins will kick off at 1 p.m. ET on Sunday, Sept. 14, at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...fensive-play-caller-terrell-williams-dolphins
 
‘Always organized’ Harold Landry setting the tone for Patriots’ pass rush

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Few players in recent memory had a more impressive New England Patriots debut than Harold Landry.

A free agency pickup in March, Landry registered 2.5 sacks in the season opener against the Las Vegas Raiders. The Patriots ultimately ended up losing that game, but the outside linebacker’s performance was still impressive and put him atop the NFL leaderboard in sacks after Week 1.

For his position coach, however, none of that came as too much of a surprise. Speaking to reporters at Gillette Stadium earlier this week, Mike Smith said that Landry’s performance against the Raiders was merely a continuation of training camp.

“He’s got explosive get-off. He was mixing in his power, making these guys set him normally, and just how aggressive he plays,” Smith said. “He’s a smart guy, he knows how to rush, he knows how to set them up. He’s a student of the game. He studies. We talk about it all week, what the game plan is. He executed what Harold does and I just loved how he mixed up some things and just keeps those tackles honest.”

A second-round draft pick out of Boston College in 2018, Landry started his career in Tennessee under then-Titans head coach Mike Vrabel. In his seven seasons in the AFC South, including one missed entirely due to a torn ACL, he registered 55 sacks in a combined 103 regular season and playoff games.

Even though he had only one Pro Bowl nomination to show for, Landry was a reliable member of Vrabel’s defense both on and off the field. Now a member of the Patriots via the three-year, $43.5 million offseason deal he signed with the club, he continues to display the same traits.

This has allowed him to set the tone for the New England pass rush as a starter on the edge and a team captain.

“We go over pass rush and we go over tackles and the offensive line, and we all get together and ask him, ‘How do you see who we’re playing this week?’ He reads off his report, and he’s detailed,” explained Smith.

“He’s a smart kid. You can tell he puts the time in. As a coach, you can tell the guys that don’t put the time in, and that’s how we build our plan. Let’s get on board. Let’s all get on the same page. There’s a lot to it. There are protections, there are chips, there are thumps — there are going to be a lot of different things that go with that. But he’s having that plan. He’s just always organized. He hit me last night at 10 o’clock about something; about this move, about that move. That’s why guys like him have some success.”

In Week 1, Landry’s success was one of the few positives to take away from New England’s 20-13 defeat. It also was something to build off of moving forward, and to serve as a blueprint for the rest of the defense.

Landry, after all, is a veteran in the Vrabel system and as such uniquely familiar with what it asks of the players. This, in turn, allows the 29-year-old to lead by example, something he does day in and day out, according to his position coach.

“He might not be the most vocal guy, but the way he works and the way he prepares, he’s always full-go in practice” Smith said. “He’s always doing the right thing, all that type of stuff. He might not be the vocal leader, but that’s OK. He’s going to do it by the way he plays.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ld-landry-setting-the-tone-patriots-pass-rush
 
Sunday Patriots Notes: Drake Maye needs to relax (and so do we)

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A short memory will be crucial for the New England Patriots this week.

Having lost its season opener 20-13 to the visiting Las Vegas Raiders in rather uninspiring fashion, the team of head coach Mike Vrabel will travel to Miami to take on a Dolphins squad that also started the season with an L. With both teams under some pressure already at this early stage in the season, any lingering issues from Week 1 could become a problem; as Vrabel himself said, this is a true test for the culture he is trying to build.

Naturally, our focus this week was on both of those games. For anything else not covered previously, let’s clean out the notebook. Welcome to this week’s edition of our Sunday Patriots Notes.

Drake Maye needs to relax​


Last week’s game against the Raiders was not Drake Maye’s finest hour as a quarterback. He did pass for a career-high 287 yards and a touchdown, but he also tossed an interception, had a fumble, and struggled with ball placement and poise in the pocket.

In short, he was far from perfect. In the NFL, however, perfection can be a fluid concept; you can play what effectively amounts to a perfect game as a quarterback but still miss throws or make bad reads. Being spot-on on every play is a noble goal, but as Mike Vrabel pointed out, it is nothing that is realistic.

For Maye, that is something he needs to realize as well.

“I think that he wants to be, at times, perfect, and I need to get past that. We all have to get past that,” said Vrabel. “You need to be precise and not perfect. If you make a mistake, it’s the reaction that you have to the mistake that everybody sees, and then they’re like, ‘Oh, wow, that was a mistake.’ We have to clean our reactions up. Our responses have to be much better. Then getting into the flow because you see really good timing and precision and accuracy. Then we see some other misses. But I don’t ever concern myself with that.

“I just want the better performance, more consistent, and continue to grow as a leader and make sure that there is a command to what we’re doing, that ‘This is the situation, this is the play.’ Those are the things that I’m focused on.”

The third overall selection in last year’s draft, Maye was thrown into the fire early in his rookie season. He did spend the first five weeks of 2024 as a backup to Jacoby Brissett, but then-head coach Jerod Mayo and his staff eventually decided to make the switch to the youngster.

Since then, Maye has been New England’s undisputed QB1. He also has had the weight of a franchise and an entire fan base’s hopes on his shoulders ever since.

It is clear that the 23-year-old wants to live up to the expectations. Doing so, however, will require him to learn to deal with the pressure and readjust his stance toward perfection.

“He is a guy that is super hard on himself,” said wide receiver Stefon Diggs. “We are pulling for him, we just got to continue that positive reinforcement and that positive encouragement. Quarterback is a very hard job so letting him know that you got his back and going to be available for him is going to be key in our success.”

“There are things that are going to happen in every game — especially at that position — that aren’t going to be perfect,” added offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels. “It’s really hard to play a perfect game at any spot, let alone that spot.”

One of the most experienced coaches on Vrabel’s staff, McDaniels has been part of six Super Bowl-winning teams and worked closely with the greatest quarterback of all time for almost two decades. He knows what he is talking about.

Now it is on Maye to heed those words of wisdom.

We need to relax​


The NFL is a results-based business, and now more than ever before the narratives surrounding those results are magnified and multiplied. Whether it is social media, sports talk radio, podcasts or even our little community here, fans and media members alike have massive forums to voice their opinions and set expectations.

There is nothing inherently wrong with that, but when it comes to Drake Maye in particular, a readjustment of sorts might be necessary. Yes, he was a first-round draft pick. Yes, he is playing the most important position on the field. Yes, the fate of the franchise is very much in his hands on every offensive play.

While all of that is true, so are the facts that Maye is still only the seventh-youngest player on the Patriots’ roster, the second-youngest starting quarterback in the NFL, and has not yet started a full season’s worth of football in the league. Today’s game against the Dolphins will be his 14th career start, and only his second in the offense coordinated by Josh McDaniels.

“We have to understand it’s his first game in our system,” the Patriots’ OC said earlier this week.

It is easy to look at the results as a measurement for Maye’s development, and there is indeed some value to it as well. However, the Patriots drafted Maye with a long-term plan in mind: they did not expect him to be an all-word QB right out of the gate, but rather to develop into a capable starter and viable face of the franchise further down the line.

When or if that will happen remains to be seen. In the meantime, however, we as fans, writers, podcasters and the like all might be wise to need to add a measure of patience to our assessment of the young passer.

Same play, different results​


The Patriots trading wide receiver Ja’Lynn Polk to the New Orleans Saints closed the book on what was ultimately a disappointing tenure for the former second-round draft pick. Early on, however, the Washington product did show quite a bit of promise: Polk ran with the starters for much of his rookie training camp, and over the first quarter of the season was given a big role in the offense.

Then came a play that seemingly was a turning point for his time in New England.

Late during the Patriots’ Week 5 game against the Dolphins, he appeared to catch what would have been a go-ahead touchdown. However, a review of the play showed that he had not gotten both of his feet down in bounds and the play was overturned and ruled an incomplete pass. New England lost 15-10.

Polk’s trajectory after that play stands in contrast to another Patriots WR, Kayshon Boutte. Then a sixth-round rookie, Boutte had two potential catches wiped out in his 2023 debut versus the Philadelphia Eagles because he could not get both feet down in bounds; the second of those plays came on a crucial fourth down that sealed New England’s 25-20 loss.

Boutte, however, recovered from those miscues. It did take him a while to do so, but he eventually entered the starting lineup as a sophomore and has not looked back since. In terms of playing time, catches and receiving yards, he is New England’s current WR1.

Polk, on the other hand, has not shown much of a bounceback before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury in the preseason opener. As a consequence, he is now a Saint just 17 months after getting drafted.

Christian Barmore’s impact​


As noted above, the NFL is all about results. The easiest way to measure those is through the use of statistics — from passes completed, to touchdowns scored, to tackles and sacks, to field goals made. Those get the job done to a large degree, but they are far from the be-all and end-all of player evaluation.

Christian Barmore is a perfect example of that. On the stat sheet, the veteran defensive tackle had five tackles in the Patriots’ Week 1 loss to Las Vegas and was credited with one quarterback hurry.

However, his impact went far beyond what the numbers suggest. Barmore did all that despite being double-teamed or chipped on more than 90 percent of his snaps, the third highest-such rate in the NFL for interior linemen.

Lmao Barmore is ridiculous pic.twitter.com/jRnAqv2cya

— Brett (@Brett_Pats) September 13, 2025

Having a player who occupies two offensive players on nine out of ten plays cannot be underestimated. The trickle-down effect is obvious: it creates one-on-ones elsewhere. With players such as Milton Williams or Harold Landry also in the lineup, this leads to a “pick your poison” scenario for an offense.

For the Raiders, that poison was Barmore. Williams and Landry, meanwhile, were able to wreak havoc against the offensive line for much of the day — something Miami also might be looking at on Sunday, particularly given that the team will be fielding an entirely-new right side of the line.

Challenges of playing left-handed QBs​


The right side of their offensive line is a particular concern for the Dolphins because their quarterback, Tua Tagovailoa, is left-handed. His right is therefore his blindside. Having a lefty QB does not just change things for the offense, though, but the defense as well.

“You train all these boots most of the time where they’re going to go, and you start matching the hand, trying to match the hand of a right-handed quarterback, and then all of a sudden, you come out, he throws the first one with his left hand, you put your right hand up and it whizzes over you,” said Mike Vrabel. “It’s like the time I came through into college to try to block a punt, and I roughed the punter because I realized I didn’t know he was left-footed. Came up the middle, probably gave him a hit pointer, but it was a 15-yard penalty.

“It’s just a good reminder of how it’s hard to train it, and we can train it in pre-practice with the coaches and things like that, just making sure that the ball will come out quick. He has had some passes tipped. I wouldn’t say that he’s the leader in the clubhouse, but he’s certainly not adverse to having some of those, and we just have to be able to try to do that, try to catch one of them, or affect some of these passes in the best way that we can.”

Players only​


The Patriots’ opening day loss to the Raiders was a disappointment, but it was a far-cry from Miami’s Week 1 performance. The team of head coach Mike McDaniel stood no chance against the Indianapolis Colts, losing 33-8 in a game that was not as close as the final score suggests.

The Dolphins turned the ball over three times, all courtesy of their quarterback, while also giving up points on all seven of their defensive series. From start to finish, this game was a true blowout — one that prompted the team to take an unorthodox measure given how early in the season it is: the Dolphins held a players-only meeting earlier this week.

“Just staying locked in. Losing the way we did Week 1, it can be discouraging,” said linebacker Jordyn Brooks. “Just kind of making sure that everybody’s together.”

Accountability between the lines​


The Patriots did not resort to drastic measures like these after their Week 1 defeat, but their leadership was still in the spotlight. For wide receiver Mack Hollins, that is exactly how it should be.

“That’s one of the biggest jumps teams make when players start holding each other accountable,” he said at his Gillette Staddium locker this week. “It’s a players game, no matter how you want to construe it. There are only players inside the line, and if players aren’t going to hold each other accountable, then nobody will. It just comes from a different spot when you’re a player that’s injured or on the sideline or a coach, whatever it may be. If you’re not in the lines, you’re not holding guys accountable, it’s tough.”

Anfernee Jennings, next man up​


A starter on the defensive edge the last two seasons, Anfernee Jennings opened 2025 as a healthy scratch: he was one of the seven players made inactive for the Patriots’ season opener versus Las Vegas. With Keion White out for Week 2 due to an illness, however, the sixth-year man is set to make his debut.

“Anfernee is very ready,” said Mike Vrabel. “I had to make a tough decision last week, we could only have so many guys active, and so I’m excited to see Anfernee play. He’s always been prepared and taken advantage of his opportunities. He’ll continue, I would imagine, to do that on Sunday: play hard, play physical and be ready to go.”

Moments of silence​


The killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk at an event at Utah Valley University dominated the news cycle this week. The horrific nature of the event and the issue of gun and political violence in the United States has been well-documented and in a forum such as this needs no additional discussion right now.

What should be debated, however, is the NFL’s reaction.

The following night, on the 24th anniversary of 9/11, the league opted to hold a moment of silence in honor of Kirk at the Packers-Commanders Thursday night game. It furthermore has allowed teams to decide themselves whether or not to follow suit ahead of the games on Sunday and Monday. The league is trying to walk a fine line, but decisions such as these invite criticism and deserve to be scrutinized.

There is no denying Kirk was an influential figure who helped shape political discourse in the U.S., but he was but neither an elected official nor in any way had close ties to the NFL. Honoring him is therefore quite unusual, and that is before adding his inflammatory rhetoric to the conversation. We are not going to amplify his statements — you can read into some of them here — but let’s just say that a league that is around 60 percent black and displaying “End Racism” slogans on its fields and helmets holding a moment of silence for Kirk is nothing short of bizarre.

Week ahead​


The Patriots will fly back from Miami later on Sunday, and then return to their typical in-season rhythm:

  • Monday, Sept. 15: Mike Vrabel media availability, player media availability
  • Tuesday, Sept. 16: Day off
  • Wednesday, Sept. 17: Practice, Mike Vrabel media availability, player media availability, injury report
  • Thursday, Sept. 18: Practice, player media availability, injury report
  • Friday, Sept. 19: Practice, player media availability, injury report
  • Saturday, Sept. 20: Pre-game walkthrough, practice squad elevations
  • Sunday, Sept. 21: Game day vs. Pittsburgh Steelers at Gillette Stadium (1 p.m. ET)

Outside of those set dates, we also expect some more roster movement. The Patriots, after all, currently have one spot open on their 53-man team. Linebacker/special teamer Mark Robinson seems like a prime candidate for promotion after being a game-day elevation from the practice squad each of the first two weeks of the season.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ts-notes-drake-maye-needs-to-relax-nfl-week-2
 
Rhamondre Stevenson has late father on his mind after standout outing against Dolphins

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For Rhamondre Stevenson, Sunday’s game against the Miami Dolphins was more than just a return to form or the first victory of the season. It was a performance that his late father, Robert, would have been proud of.

Speaking to reporters after the New England Patriots’ 33-27 win at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium, the veteran running back had his dad on his mind.

“It feels great,” Stevenson said. “It’s been tough on me for the last couple of months, but just putting my best foot forward and just knowing what my Pops would want me to do.”

Stevenson’s father passed away in March at the age of 54, prompting him and the team alike to adapt to a new normal. He was granted a flexible schedule during offseason workouts to mourn his dad’s death, and received consistent support from head coach Mike Vrabel and running backs coach Tony Dews.

Last Sunday against his hometown Las Vegas Raiders, he played his first game without his father watching. A week later against the Dolphins, he looked like the back of old again — and then some: the 27-year-old had a crucial role in the Patriots’ win, gaining 54 yards on 11 carries and adding both a career-best 88 receiving yards on five catches and a two-point conversion.

His 142 scrimmage yards rank fourth among his 59 career games, and are the most he has had in a single game since his 2022 sophomore season.

“He probably would have loved this game,” Stevenson said about his father. “Just remembering that and just remembering the things he would say and just keep going. Yeah, I think he’ll be proud of today.”

After the game, Stevenson was among the six Patriots awarded game balls from head coach Mike Vrabel. However, as he made sure to point out, the bigger picture was more important than his individual success.

“It just shows our toughness. It shows we can do it for four quarters,” Stevenson said. “Don’t be a front runner. Don’t only be good when things are going good. Adversity is going to happen, so just fighting back against that and becoming victorious, that’s huge.”

Stevenson knows what he is talking about.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...nson-late-father-patriots-dolphins-nfl-week-2
 
Patriots position grades from their win over the Dolphins: D-line gets the job done

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The first win of the New England Patriots’ Mike Vrabel era was a thriller. Taking on the Dolphins in Miami, the first-year head coach and his team emerged with a 33-27 victory from what was a back-and-forth division battle.

The Week 2 shootout saw several noteworthy performances, for better or worse, and an improved Patriots team across the board. A look at our weekly grading chart, however, shows that not every part of the team played an equal part in New England breaking its five-year losing streak in Miami.

Patriots position grades for Week 2​


Quarterback: Drake Maye has 14 starts under his belt now, and Sunday’s might have been his best one so far. The sophomore looked significantly more comfortable and decisive with his reads, cut down on the unforced errors that plagued him in Week 1, and showed the dual-threat talent that made him a first-round pick last spring. Both of his touchdown passes were impressive as was his scoring run, while his third down conversion to Rhamondre Stevenson saw him combine poise, pocket movement and touch. There were plenty of positives to build on. | Grade: A

Running back: After last week’s pass-heavy game script, the Patriots made an effort to get their running backs more involved. They did, and the group delivered. The star of the show was Rhamondre Stevenson, who looked like the player of old as a runner while also setting a new career mark with 88 receiving yards. The only blemish might have been rookie TreVeyon Henderson struggling in pass protection and finding limited success on the ground. | Grade: B

Wide receiver: Mack Hollins and Kayshon Boutte both found the end zone, while Stefon Diggs was again actively involve in the mix. Overall, however, the group had a quiet day against a Dolphins secondary that fielded several “break glass in case of emergency” options at cornerback. Supposed go-to receiver DeMario Douglas in particular continues to be quiet, catching just one 8-yard pass all day. | Grade: C

Tight end: The tight end group saw a similar level of involvement as the wide receivers, meaning that there were positive moments but the contributions were far from consistent. It was encouraging to see Austin Hooper finish with three catches for 38 yards, but Hunter Henry was quiet outside of one catch and an illegal shift penalty. The run blocking was also a bit mid. | Grade: C-

Offensive line: Going against a talented defensive front, the Patriots’ new-look offensive line did its job. Drake Maye was pressured on 22.5 percent of his dropbacks, a clear improvement from last week’s 39.2, and despite being sacked on three occasions generally had enough time and space to make proper reads without a sped-up process. The run blocking also was solid for the most part, allowing New England to gain an average of 4.1 yards per scripted run. One area to clean up, though: penalties. The group was flagged five times, including three Morgan Moses false starts. | Grade: B

Defensive line: Even though they did not overwhelm the Dolphins’ makeshift offensive line, the Patriots defensive line played a pretty good game overall. The pass rush can best be described as quality over quantity: Tua Tagovailoa was taken down five times, with all of those sacks coming on either third or fourth down, including Milton Williams’ game-clincher with less than a minute to go in the fourth quarter. New England also was solid against a potent Miami run game, with one 18-yarder by wide receiver Malik Washington as the only big play given up on the ground. | Grade: A-

Linebacker: It might be too early to ring the alarm bell on free agency pickup Robert Spillane, but the team captain another rough outing against Miami. His pass defense was suspect, as was his tackling: Spillane missed five of eight tackle attempts. He was in good company in that regard, with Christian Elliss also missing three. Not all was bad for the group, though. Marte Mapu had an interception, while both Spillane and Elliss looked good playing downhill versus the run. | Grade: D+

Cornerback: Going up against a talented wide receiver group headlined by Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle, the Patriots’ cornerbacks had to operate without Christian Gonzalez for a second straight week. Needless to say, having the All-Pro in the lineup would have helped. With him absent, however, the group had its fair share of issues. Gonzalez’s nominal replacement, Alex Austin, found himself on the wrong end of the stick particularly often: he surrendered a team-worst 98 yards and a touchdown on seven targets before seeing his responsibilities change in favor of Marcus Jones. | Grade: C-

Safety: Even though New England managed to reduce the number of “X-plays” given up, they were still a problem overall. That was in part because of the safeties, and in particular rookie Craig Woodson, being late to diagnose and react to certain reads and route combinations. More experience will help with that, but there were definitive issues on Sunday. | Grade: C-

Special teams: The Patriots’ special teams operation continues to run hot and cold. On the one hand, the group surrendered a punt return touchdown, had four penalties and missed a pair of missed extra points. On the other hand, rookie kicker Andy Borregales finished strong, Bryce Baringer averaged 68 yards on his two punts, and Antonio Gibson took a kickoff back 90 yards for a touchdown. | Grade: C

Overall, the Patriots can feel good about their performance in Miami. There is plenty to clean up, and some individual performances deserve scrutiny, but the game was step in the right direction after a disappointing season opener. Now, it’s all about making the necessary adjustments and keeping momentum alive against the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 3.



How would you grade the Patriots’ performance in Week 2, though? Do you agree with our assessment? Please head down to the comment section to discuss.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl.../patriots-position-grades-dolphins-nfl-week-2
 
Ex-Patriot Ja’Whaun Bentley signs with Steelers ahead of Week 3 bout

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Six months after getting released, former New England Patriots captain Ja’Whaun Bentley has found a new team. It’s the one the Patriots are going to host at Gillette Stadium in five days.

As first reported by Adam Schefter of ESPN, Bentley is joining the Pittsburgh Steelers’ practice squad.

Bentley, 29, originally entered the NFL as a fifth-round draft selection by the Patriots in 2018. After ending his rookie season on injured reserve (but still earning a Super Bowl ring), the Purdue product developed into a core member of New England’s linebacker group and defense as a whole.

Over his seven seasons in New England, Bentley appeared in 83 regular season games and a pair of playoff contests with 69 total starts. A four-time captain for the organization, he registered 515 combined tackles to go with 10.5 sacks, four forced fumbles, a pair of interceptions, and a fumble recovery.

Despite his experience as well as role as a starter and defensive signal caller, Bentley was let go by the Patriots shortly after they hired Mike Vrabel as their new head coach. Officially released in late March with a failed physical designation stemming from the season-ending pectoral tear he had sustained in Week 2 of the previous season, he remained without a team throughout the summer and into the 2025 regular season.

Now, New England’s Week 3 opponent has pulled him from the open market. Bentley will be joining another former Patriots captain, Jabrill Peppers, in the Steel City.

The Patriots’ upcoming game against the Steelers is scheduled for a 1 p.m. ET kickoff on Sunday, Sept. 21.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/around-the-nfl/109350/patriots-steelers-sign-jawhaun-bentley-nfl-week-3
 
The stats we are using at Pats Pulpit, explained

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In order to help you get a better understanding of the New England Patriots and their opponents, we use plenty of statistics. However, without proper explanation, those are merely numbers on a screen and nothing that has any real meaning.

So, here are a few of the stats we are using explained for better understanding. The basis of those statistics is work done by outlets such as rbsdm.com, ESPN Analytics, Pro Football Focus and FTN, among others.

Points/Game: How many points a team scores or surrendered on a per-game basis. The number does include special teams scores.

Yards/Game: How many yards a team either gains or surrenders on a per-game basis.

EPA: Short for Expected Points Added, it measures how a play impacts the team’s chances of scoring based on situational expectation. A positive number means that a team or player performs above that expectation in a given situation and is more likely to get points as a result, a negative that they fail to do so and are less likely to consequently score.

DVOA: Whereas EPA ultimately looks at the immediate impact a play has on a team’s chances of scoring, DVOA — Defense-adjusted Value Over Average — assesses performance relative to league average in the same situation. The higher the number, the better a play was and vice versa.

Success rate: A measure of how successful a play was relative to down and distance. There are different definitions out there, but we are going with the one used by rbsdm.com: success rate is the percentage of plays earning a positive EPA.

Scoring %: The percentage of drives ending in a score.

Giveaways/Takeaways: The count of possessions changing via either interception or fumble.

Turnover %: The percentage of drives ending in either giveaways or takeaways.

Net yards/Attempt: Passing yards minus sack yards divided by dropbacks.

CPOE: Completion percentage above expectation. It essentially measures completion percentage while factoring in the difficulty of a throw based on factors such as receiver separation, air yards and situation.

Adjusted sack rate: It measures sacks per pass attempt adjusted for down, distance, and opponent. The lower the number, the better.

Pass block win rate/Pass rush win rate: Those two meassures evaluate the rate at which offensive linemen can sustain their blocks. Blocking 2.5 seconds or longer is considered a win for the O-lineman, anything below that number is considered a win for the pass rusher.

Run block win rate/Run stop win rate: Several factors imapct those numbers. A run stop is considered successful if a) a defender beats his blocker, b) disrupts the pocket or running lane by pushing his blocker backward, c) contains a runner in a way that forces him to adjust his running lane, or d) records a tackle within 3 yards of the line of scrimmage. A successful run stop is a loss for the blocker and vice versa.

Adjusted line yards: In its essence, this is the same as yards per carry but for the offensisve line. Depending on a play’s outcome, responsibility is assigned either to the line or the ball carrier. Factors such as down, distance, situation and opponent are considered and the numbers normalized.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ysis/109366/patriots-statistics-explained-nfl
 
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