News Patriots Team Notes

Are you concerned about Patriots rookie Kyle Williams?

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From Will Campbell, Jared Wilson and TreVeyon Henderson, to Craig Woodson and Andy Borregales, several rookie players have had a big impact on the New England Patriots’ season so far. The same cannot be said about Kyle Williams.

The 69th overall pick in this year’s draft and third player taken by the Patriots after Campbell and Henderson, Williams’ first NFL season so far has been quiet. Yes, he scored a big 72-yard touchdown against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 10, but other than that has struggled to produce at a consistent level: of his 10 other targets, he caught only two for 20 yards.

Last Thursday’s game against the New York Jets was a low point in that regard. Serving as a top three wide receiver with Kayshon Boutte out due to injury, Williams was targeted on three occasions but seemingly was not on the same page as quarterback Drake Maye on any of them. The result was all three passes falling incomplete.

So, is it time to worry about Williams? That is precisely the question we are asking in this week’s SB Nation Reacts survey. Make sure to participate in our poll, and to head down to the comment section to share and discuss your answers. As always, the results will be posted later this week.

Please sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl.../concerned-kyle-williams-wide-receiver-rookie
 
Patriots links 11/20/25: Shootout in store for Sunday?

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TEAM TALK


LOCAL LINKS

  • Andrew Callahan reveals the boring secret behind the Patriots’ 9-2 start: The Pats are not just among the healthiest teams top to bottom. They’re especially healthy at the top.
  • Michael Hurley considers whether ‘desperation’ might lead the Bengals to start Joe Burrow vs. Pats
  • Mike D’Abate says the Patriots could face a bigger challenge if Joe Burrow is the Bengals’ QB.
  • Jake Seymour points out that even without star Ja’Marr Chase, Mike Vrabel said the Bengals’ receiving corps is capable of inflicting damage.
  • Mark Daniels tells us Stefon Diggs casually mentioned he’s been dealing with a broken finger this season.
  • Alex Barth posts the updates on Kayshon Boutte, Rhamondre Stevenson, and the rest of the injured players as the Patriots begin practice for Week 12.
  • Chris Mason highlights Stefon Diggs on how the ‘F it mindset’ and Mike Vrabel’s ‘words to live by’ are keys to the Pats’ perfect road record.
  • Chris Mason hears from Stefon Diggs on how he was drawn to sign with the Patriots despite other offers because of the ‘conglomerate’ here: Mike Vrabel, Josh McDaniels and Todd (Downing) and Drake Maye.
  • Tom Curran explains why he would take Drake Maye over Bengals QB Joe Burrow “in a heartbeat” if given the choice of starting a franchise with one of the two.
  • Bob George makes the case that the Patriots should avoid playing at Denver at all costs.
  • Alex Barth‘s Patriots Mailbag: What’s next out of the mini-bye week?
  • Phil Perry‘s Patriots Mailbag: Henderson’s workload, playoff expectations, Can rookie Bradyn Swinson capitalize on a new opportunity? More
  • Kristen Wong relays Stefon Diggs and Cardi B sharing a sweet photo of their newborn baby wrapped in Patriots gear.

NATIONAL NEWS

  • Mike Kadlick (SI) Joe Burrow injury update: Bengals coach won’t say if QB will play Sunday vs. Patriots.
  • Michael David Smith (ProFootballTalk) Drake Maye ignores Cam Newton’s skepticism: I don’t even know what show he’s on.
  • Albert Breer (WI) Week 12 Mailbag: Multiple paths the Dolphins could take in 2026; Plus, answers to your questions on Sam Darnold, Robert Saleh, Mac Jones and whether the Bears are for real.
  • Frank Schwab (Yahoo! Sports) Thursday Night Football preview: Josh Allen tries to carry the Bills over the Texans in a game of ‘who needs it more’?
  • Kevin Patra (NFL.com) NFL Pro Bowl sleepers: Ten overlooked players quietly having standout 2025 seasons. OLB K’Lavon Chaisson included.
  • Matt Verderame (SI) Ranked NFL rookies through Week 11: Pass catchers dominate top 10. TreVeyon Henderson 10th.
  • Tom Pelissero (NFL.com) 2026 NFL head coach hiring cycle: 24 young candidates to know. Patriots passing game coordinator/TE coach Thomas Brown included.
  • Pete Prisco (CBS Sports) Week 12 NFL picks. Patriots win in a shootout 35-30.
  • Tyler Sullivan (CBS Sports) NFL Week 12 picks. Patriots win 30-20. “I don’t see how Cincinnati keeps up.”
  • Drew Lerner (Awful Announcing) NFL international slate earns record viewership on NFL Network.
  • Mike Florio (ProFootballTalk) Hearing officers are far from “independent.” /No kidding?

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...s-links-11-20-25-shootout-in-store-for-sunday
 
Patriots fan rooting guide for NFL Week 12: Thursday edition

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The New England Patriots have secured their first winning season in four years, now it’s about locking up a playoff spot and the best possible seed in the AFC. In order to achieve those goals, a win over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday is a must.

However, the other 13 games to be played this weekend also are worth keeping an eye on. So, here is who you should be rooting for in the non-Patriots matchups between on Thursday, Sunday and Monday.

Thursday​

8:15 p.m. ET​


Buffalo Bills (7-3) at Houston Texans (5-5): Go Texans! The Patriots have a 1.5-game advantage over the Bills in the AFC East, but a Buffalo loss on Thursday night would give them more wiggle room in the race for the division crown. | Amazon

Sunday​

1 p.m. ET​


New York Jets (2-8) at Baltimore Ravens (5-5): Go Jets! Both teams are on the Patriots’ schedule, but a Jets win is still the preferred outcome. Not only would it allow New England to keep a distance to an AFC playoff challenger, it also would be a safe play in regards to the strength of victory tiebreaker — Who knows what will happen against Baltimore in Week 16? — and further remove New York from the competition for the No. 1 overall pick in next year’s draft. | CBS

Pittsburgh Steelers (6-4) at Chicago Bears (7-3): Go Bears! The classic AFC vs. NFC matchup, with a Chicago win giving New England more breathing room in the competition for the top seeds in the conference. | CBS

New York Giants (2-9) at Detroit Lions (6-4): Go Giants! This is all about the potential strength of victory tiebreaker: the Patriots will play the Giants in Week 13. | FOX

Minnesota Vikings (4-6) at Green Bay Packers (6-3-1): Go good game! The impact this game has on the Patriots’ playoff outlook is rather limited, unless you care deeply about the Chargers’ or Ravens’ strength of victory (in that case, the Packers would be the team to root for). | FOX

Indianapolis Colts (8-2) at Kansas City Chiefs (5-5): Go Chiefs! As much fun as it would be to see Kansas City drop below .500 and further away from playoff contention — which in turn could have a positive effect on two Patriots draft picks in 2026 — this pick is with AFC playoff seeding in mind. A Colts loss would be good news for New England’s quest to finish as the top seed in the conference. | CBS

Seattle Seahawks (7-3) at Tennessee Titans (1-9): Go Titans! Tennessee lost to all the current top teams in the AFC, but the Patriots would still benefit from them upsetting the Seahawks and thus improving New England’s strength of victory. If push comes to shove, after all, that would be the fifth tiebreaker between the Patriots and Bills for the division title. | FOX

4:05 p.m. ET​


Jacksonville Jaguars (6-4) at Arizona Cardinals (3-7): Go Cardinals! Better to be save than sorry, which is why the NFC team gets our vote here. | CBS

Cleveland Browns (2-8) at Las Vegas Raiders (2-8): Go Browns! Three words: strength of victory. With neither the Colts nor Broncos having the Browns on the schedule, a Cleveland win would help New England in that regard. | CBS

4:25 p.m. ET​


Philadelphia Eagles (8-2) at Dallas Cowboys (4-5-1): Go good game! It really does not matter too much from a Patriots perspective who wins this particular all-NFC East battle. | FOX

Atlanta Falcons (3-7) at New Orleans Saints (2-8): Go Falcons! Both teams lost to the Patriots, but only one of them lost to the Bills. With that and the strength of victory tiebreaker in mind, let’s root for an Atlanta team that beat Buffalo 24-14 in Week 6. | FOX

8:20 p.m. ET​


Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-4) at Los Angeles Rams (8-2): Go Bucs! With neither the Broncos nor Colts on the Buccaneers’ schedule, a win by the visitors on Sunday night would help the Patriots via the strength of victory and schedule tiebreakers. | NBC

Monday​

8:15 p.m. ET​


Carolina Panthers (6-5) at San Francisco 49ers (7-4): Go Panthers! Once again, strength of victory is the deciding factor in our rooting interest for this game. The Patriots beat Carolina in Week 4, while the other top AFC teams — the Broncos and Colts — do not have the team on their respective schedules. | ESPN



This article also serves as an open thread for this week’s non-Patriots games. Please head down to the comment section to discuss and share your thoughts on the games as they unfold.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...guide-nfl-week-12-primetime-how-to-watch-live
 
Remembering the Buttfumble: A Patriots Thanksgiving tradition

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There are a whole slew of historical reasons why 13 is considered an unlucky number. There were 13 people at the table during The Last Supper, and the 13th man was Judas Iscariot. The Norse trickster god Loki was said to be the 13th guest at the feast in Valhalla, and his presence led to the death of Baldur. A year with 13 full moons instead of 12 caused all kinds of disruptions for early time and calendar management. When the 13th day of the month falls on a Friday, bullied child zombies from a long-closed summer camp don hockey masks and go ham on randy teenagers. It’s a number to be avoided in most circles.

And so it’s not without some degree of irony that during the year of the 13th anniversary of the single worst play in NFL history, one of its main participants finds his head somewhere significantly worse than his offensive lineman’s behind.

From my family to yours, a very happy Buttfumble-versary to you all.

The official anniversary isn’t until tomorrow, but seeing as how it’s the Friday before Thanksgiving, and next week will consist of two days of slacking off at work followed by a horrendous afternoon of travel as we all head off to celebrate the best day of the year with our friends and families, I thought I’d kick things off a little early by honoring Mark Sanchez, Vince Wilfork, Brandon Moore, and Steve Gregory on the play that will live on forever in football infamy.

Thanksgiving Night, 2012. A Pats-Jets showdown in primetime. The 4-6 Jets hosting the 8-2 Patriots in a time slot that Woody Johnson heavily petitioned the NFL to give his team in order to give them more national exposure.

As Aesop so famously said, be careful what you wish for.

That 49-19 drubbing had so many highlights — at least from a Patriots perspective. Tommy B threw for 323 yards and three touchdowns. The Patriots rushed for 152 yards on the ground. New England scored offensive, defensive, and Special Teams touchdowns. 21 points scored in the span of 52 seconds. Completely humiliating a division rival on the biggest football day of the year. That Pats-Jets game will remain one for the record books for decades to come.

And because all of the above, if I were to be completely objective about everything (note: I definitely am not), I would have to say that the most infamous play of that whole game, the one we all come back to time and time again whenever we need a good laugh, wasn’t even the best moment of the night. There’s the Shane Vereen 83-yard run or the 56-yard TD bomb to Edelman or the McCourty hit on McKnight to knock the ball right into Edelman’s hands for the score, which all represented better play. But…

(Or should I say, butt…)

The play that Patriots fans remember most, the play that everybody remembers most, was Mark Sanchez plowing face-first into Brandon Moore’s patoot, dropping the ball, and Steve Gregory scooping it up for the easy score to put the Pats up 27-0. Nobody remembers that it was a busted play and Sanchez was just trying to salvage whatever yards he could. Nobody remembers that Vince Wilfork pushed Moore straight back and blocked up the narrow running lane that Sanchez had. All anyone remembers is a facemask, a derriere, a fumble, and a touchdown en route to an historic beatdown.

“I’ve never seen this before in my life.” 😂😂😂

Happy anniversary to the #buttfumble! @Mark_Sanchez @Patriots

pic.twitter.com/ZxfH2X8nCL

— Sara Marshall (@smarshxo) November 22, 2019

That it happened on Thanksgiving, of all nights, just makes it that much crazier. I can’t help but feel like even the most casual of football fans will have the games on at Thanksgiving, and adding a third night game to the slate was brand new at that point, so there were even more eyes on these two teams. As a result, the Buttfumble has been cemented into Americana almost as staunchly as Mark Sanchez’s facemask was cemented into Brandon Moore’s cheeks. It has become as synonymous with Thanksgiving as cranberry sauce, tryptophan, and heated political dialogue with drunken relatives.

So allow me to again wish you all a happy Buttfumble-versary. May your day be merry and bright.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...remembering-buttfumble-thanksgiving-tradition
 
Patriots vs. Bengals Friday injury report: Rhamondre Stevenson, Harold Landry III questionable

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The New England Patriots will visit the Cincinnati Bengals down one.

But running back Rhamondre Stevenson and outside linebacker Harold Landry III move forward as questionable for the matchup at Paycor Stadium. While working through toe and knee injuries, respectively, both starters finished the week as full participants.

Here’s the rest of the game statuses heading into Sunday’s 1 p.m. ET kickoff.

OUT​

Patriots​

  • LB Jahlani Tavai (not injury related — personal)

Bengals​

  • DE Trey Hendrickson (hip, pelvis)
  • DE Cam Sample (oblique)
  • CB Cam Taylor-Britt (foot — placed on IR)

New England will go without one veteran in Cincinnati due to personal reasons. Tavai was listed as a limited participant on Wednesday before being upgraded to full participation on Thursday. Yet he did not practice on Friday. Standing with 101 snaps on defense and 125 snaps on special teams, the versatile linebacker has started four of his seven appearances since being activated from injured reserve in October.

“That’ll be non-injury related,” Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel said during his final press conference of the week. “That’s something personal and that’ll be all that I’ll talk about it at this time.”

DOUBTFUL​

Patriots​

  • No players listed

Bengals​

  • RB Samaje Perine (knee)
  • S Daijahn Anthony (hamstring — IR return)

In the offensive and defensive backfields, two Bengals carry doubtful designations. Anthony went in full on Friday while continuing to reside on injured reserve due to a hamstring injury. But Perine remained sidelined for the third practice of the week due to a knee injury.

QUESTIONABLE​

Patriots​

  • RB Rhamondre Stevenson (toe)
  • LB Harold Landry III (knee)

Bengals​

  • QB Joe Burrow (toe — IR return)

After being ruled out for three consecutive games, Stevenson practiced in a limited capacity for two sessions. An upgrade to full arrived on Friday. New England’s lead running back has turned 99 touches into 448 yards and three touchdowns from scrimmage in 2025.

“I would say that there wasn’t many restrictions and that he responded well to the practice,” Vrabel said. “I would say that as long there are not any setbacks here, he’d be in line to play.”

Landry, a captain off the edges, also stands as questionable for a Patriots roster that saw several recent inactives clear the final injury report. The March signing has started all 11 games on the way to posting 37 tackles, 5.5 sacks and a fumble recovery.

On the other side of the aisle, there’s a wait-and-see situation at quarterback and a short week upcoming. Cincinnati has until 4 p.m. ET Saturday to activate Burrow in time to face the AFC East leaders. The two-time NFL Comeback Player of the Year was a full participant for back-to-back practices before joining the partial group. He hasn’t started under center since the second game of September after a Grade 3 turf toe diagnosis required surgery.

“We are still talking to doctors and everything. He’s done everything he can,” Bengals head coach Zac Taylor told reporters. “Everything is moving in a great position. Now we just have to make a decision.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...on-harold-landry-iii-questionable-nfl-week-12
 
Patriots links 11/21/25: Pats-Bengals matchups, Keys to victory

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TEAM TALK


LOCAL LINKS

  • Thomas Murphy gives us his Monster Keys to victory over the Bungles: It’s not the size of the boat, it’s the motion of the ocean; More!
  • Steve Balestrieri‘s Patriots-Bengals Week 12, Keys to the game, Key matchups. Patriots RBs vs. Bengals front seven — Edge New England.
  • Phil Perry’s Patriots-Bengals Preview: Drake Maye a bigger factor than Joe Burrow.
  • Chad Finn‘s Unconventional Preview: The one piece of evidence the skeptics miss about the Patriots? They are unbeaten on the road.
  • Andrew Callahan‘s Friday Five: 1. 4th-down dominance. The Patriots are the best team in the NFL at one small, critical part of the game; More.
  • Alex Barth’s 5 Things Friday: Who steps up in Milton Williams’ place?
  • Andrew Callahan points out some good news at Thursday’s practice: The Pats appear to be in good health ahead of Sunday.
  • Doug Kyed highlights Josh McDaniels gushing about Stefon Diggs’ influence on the Patriots.
  • Matt Vautour reports the Patriots’ AFC East title path became easier after the Bills’ loss to the Texans.
  • Mike D’Abate finds that Drake Maye stays humble, determined to remain focused, despite MVP-level success.
  • Mark Daniels helps us get to know 29-year-old Patriots QB coach Ashton Grant, who is on a remarkable rise in the NFL.
  • Nick O’Malley mentions the NFL endorsed a ‘Chowdamosa’ for Patriots fans, and he drank it so we don’t have to. “It was an opaque, milky nightmare of lemon, clam juice and tart sparkling wine. It was a Lovecraftian show of brut force that takes you on a grimy roller coaster ride of salty, abrasive flavors all kept in check by a riptide of heavy cream.” /Thanks for nothing, NFL.
  • A Clare Perspective podcast: Clare welcomes Matt Smith, Executive Producer at Kraft Sports Productions, to talk Patriots-Bengals and more. (35 min.)

NATIONAL NEWS

  • Multiple Contributors (ESPN) NFL Week 12 picks, bold predictions, schedule, odds; More. NE-CIN: The Patriots pride themselves on an identity that begins with “effort and finish” and that sometimes requires an extra edge on the road. All three pick Pats to win.
  • Russell S. Baxter (NFL Spin Zone) Football food for thought in Week 12. “Drake Maye and company take aim at a Bengals’ team that has allowed 31-plus points in four straight games.” More.
  • Nick Shook (NFL.com) QB rankings, Week 12: Drake Maye (2nd) vaults Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen.
  • Courtney Cronin (ESPN) Top QBs in 2-minute drill. Drake Maye 3rd.
  • Cameron Filipe (Football Zebras) Week 12 referee assignments. Patriots at Bengals: Land Clark. /Clark and his crew are known for fewer penalties called overall, but flag roughing the passer and unnecessary roughness more often than average.
  • Ali Bhanpuri, et al (NFL.com) NFL Week 12 picks: Upset and score predictions, matchup breakdowns for every game. Five of five pick Pats to win. /Click for commentary.
  • MMQB Staff (SI) NFL Week 12 picks. Six of six pick Pats to win.
  • Anthony Dabbundo (The Ringer) The best NFL bets of Week 12. Patriots-Bengals included.
  • Bryan DeArdo (CBS Sports) NFL makes flex changes to Week 14 schedule: Bills vs. Bengals demoted to 1:00pm; Bears vs. Packers elevated to 4:25.
  • Jonathan Jones (CBS Sports) Rival coaches and execs see the same Chiefs — just an older, slower, thinner version of a former giant.
  • Jared Dubin (CBS Sports) Who has the most at stake in 2025 stretch run? Coaches, QBs and rising stars under pressure to deliver
  • Multiple Contributors (ESPN) 2026 NFL offseason: Early team needs for free agency, draft. Patriots biggest positional needs: Edge and Safety. Pending free agent to watch: K’Lavon Chaisson; More.
  • Greg Bishop (SI) How Turf Toe became the most misunderstood injury in sports.

VIEW FROM CINCINNATI

  • Dale Altman (Cincy Jungle) 3 key players to watch for Bengals vs. Patriots.
  • Mike Petraglia (CinsCincy) Bengals Beat: Are Bengals readying Joe Burrow for a return Sunday? Mitch Tinsley ‘true testament’ to hard work.
  • Russ Heitman (SI-Bengals) Former pro football team doctor David Chao already declared Joe Burrow will be on the field for Cincinnati this Sunday against the Patriots.
  • Geoff Hobson (Bengals) Quick Hits: Committee to replace Ja’Marr convenes for Bengals.
  • Chris Roling (Bengals Wire) Bengals trending toward all-time worst defense with no help in sight.
  • John Acree (Cincy Jungle) It’s time for Bengals to make mass changes on defense
  • Jason Garrison (Cincy Jungle) Shemar Stewart grades as worst 2025 NFL first-round pick. /Cincy drafted like the girl who thinks she can turn a troubled man around. “Sure he’s always late, mean to his mom and doesn’t respect me —but he’s so handsome (athletic freak) I can fix him.”
  • Geoff Hobson (Bengals) Quick Hits: Mike Gesicki returns to field, Joe Flacco bonds with mates, Myles Murphy keeps it fast and simple.
  • Chris Roling (Bengals Wire) Bengals make roster moves, get healthier before Week 12 vs. Patriots
  • Matthew Minich (Cincy Jungle) 5 general manager options for the Bengals: What if the Bengals decided to hire an actual GM?

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...s-11-21-25-pats-bengals-matchups-keys-victory
 
5 questions about the Patriots’ upcoming opponent, the Bengals

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The New England Patriots will be back in Cincinnati this week, trying to repeat last year’s upset win over the Bengals. The biggest difference this time around is that the club is anything but an underdog: at 9-2, they have enjoyed a significantly better season than their 3-7 opponent.

So, what has been going on with the Bengals? To find out more about the Patriots’ Week 12 opponent, we spoke with Anthony Cosenza of Pats Pulpit’s sister site Cincy Jungle, the SB Nation community for all things Bengals.

Here is what he told us about the upcoming game and opponent.

1.) How did the Bengals’ offense evolve without Joe Burrow? What are your expectations if he returns?

If we’re talking about the few games with Jake Browning, not much, and Browning didn’t step up to the challenge the same way he did at the end of 2024. When it comes to the handful of games wherein Joe Flacco was the starter, balance has been the key. With Flacco’s arm strength and more traditional pocket passer presence, Cincinnati has run more plays directly under center and the run game has improved, overall.

Are we talking about a return this week? If so, it’s possible, but I’d assume rust (even for a guy as great as Burrow) has to be prevalent–especially with Ja’Marr Chase out of the lineup. Burrow likes to run a bit of a different offense than that of Flacco, with spread and shotgun formations being much more prevalent. Scheme changes aside, we’re also talking about a guy who will have an apparatus in his shoe to protect that toe and game speed with that is not something that can be immediately emulated in practice.

Even if Burrow is playing catch-up, it’s all about the Bengals’ defense going forward. They’re on a historically-bad pace, but they need to simply prove competence going forward. They took baby steps last week, but nothing that was truly notable.

2.) How do the Bengals adjust to losing Ja’Marr Chase? How would you handle Tee Higgins?

They’ll adjust by looking at Tee Higgins, Andrei Iosivas and others, but it’s a major challenge. We don’t truly know who’s starting at quarterback this week, but if it is Flacco, he has heavily-relied on Chase in his starts thus far. Burrow, on the other hand, is a master at spreading the ball around and exploiting defensive mismatches, but then we’re going back to missed time on his end.

For Higgins, big, physical corners, particularly when he’s on the boundary give him trouble. He’s exploited mismatches across the middle and still wins many jump balls anywhere on the field, but his facing of bracketed coverage with physical play could give him fits.

3.) What’s behind the Bengals’ defensive struggles? Is there an area where they’ve been underrated?

I could write a whole story on this. In short though, they relied on defensive coaching changes, as well as rookies starting for a refresh and it hasn’t worked. Cincinnati used three of its first four 202 draft picks on defense, and it has yielded three of the worst-ranked Pro Football Focus-ranked players in a number of metrics to this point.

I also think the once-strong locker room Zac Taylor built has eroded with the allowance of free agency/trade deals. In the past two to three offseasons, the Bengals have seen Jessie Bates II, D.J. Reader, Mike Hilton, Logan Wilson and Germaine Pratt — all former locker room leaders — leave the team. While injuries, age and decline in play factored into those decisions, leadership has been lost, a supposed increase in performance after both personnel and coaching changes hasn’t happened, likely breeding distrust in the future vision.

4.) Who is the Bengals’ biggest defensive threat with Trey Hendrickson out?

That’s hard to say. Despite the Bengals’ defensive issues, cornerback DJ Turner is playing at a Pro Bowl level. Many would readily point to Joseph Ossai on the defensive line, but forgotten former first-round pick, Myles Murphy, had a solid game last week against the Steelers in extended action. I expect Murphy to continue to be disruptive down the stretch.

5.) What happened if the Bengals pull off the upset? What happened if the Patriots come out on top?

If the Bengals pull off the upset, they’ll need to play complementary football. If the defense gets the rare stop, take advantage. On offense, they’ll need to need to maintain balance, regardless of the quarterback, On defense, they’ll need to make 1-2 turnovers (something they haven’t mustered since the Thursday Night win against Pittsburgh in Week 7) turn the tide. Essentially, with so many stars being out this week (Chase, Burrow?, Trey Hendrickson, Cam Taylor-Britt), Cincinnati will need reserves to pick up the slack.

If New England comes up with the predictable win, that is because they continue to play solid, three-phase football. From the outside looking in, the Patriots are a bit of a no-name 9-2 team, and that often plays well into the “chip-on-their-shoulder” mentality for teams. Really, it’s just about the Patriots keeping their heads down to avoid a “trap game”, do what they’ve done most of the year and continue their march towards a division title.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...pert-questions-nfl-week-12-cincinnati-bengals
 
Patriots vs. Bengals: Live updates, score, news, game details, open thread

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Back from their mini-bye, the 9-2 New England Patriots head out to Cincinnati for a matchup against the 3-7 Bengals. In the midst of nine straight victories, New England will look to make it 10 in a row to match their longest winning streak since 2015.

The Patriots offense will have reinforcements in order to do so, as Kayshon Boutte and Rhamondre Stevenson return from injury to help Drake Maye against a historically bad Bengals defense. Cincinnati, meanwhile, will be without star wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase while quarterback Joe Burrow was not activated off injured reserve despite practicing this week.

Follow along down below throughout Sunday’s contest.

Live score: Patriots 0 : 0 Bengals​


Sunday, Nov. 23, 1:00 p.m. ET | Paycor Stadium, Cincinnati, OH | Broadcast information | Inactives | Game day roster

First Quarter


Updates to come.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...2-bengals-final-score-live-updates-news-recap
 
AFC playoff picture: How win over Bengals impacts Patriots’ outlook

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The New England Patriots’ 26-20 win over the Cincinnati on Sunday may not have been the prettiest, but they all count the same. As a result, the team of head coach Mike Vrabel is now the first in the NFL this season to reach 10 victories on the year — a feat that also allowed them to take over the No. 1 spot in the AFC playoff picture.

The Patriots improving to 10-2 came on the same day as the Denver Broncos being on their bye and the Indianapolis Colts losing an overtime game 23-20 to the Kansas City Chiefs. This means that the team of head coach Mike Vrabel now has a leg up on both their rivals: they are leading the Colts by 1.5 games and enjoy a half-game lead over the Broncos.

With only the primetime games on Sunday and Monday left to be played, here is a look at the current AFC playoff picture:

  1. New England Patriots (10-2)
  2. Denver Broncos (9-2)
  3. Indianapolis Colts (8-3)
  4. Baltimore Ravens (6-5)
  5. Los Angeles Chargers (7-4)
  6. Jacksonville Jaguars (7-4)
  7. Buffalo Bills (7-4)

On the bubble: 8. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-5), 9. Houston Texans (6-5), 10. Kansas City Chiefs (6-5)

Not technically eliminated but let’s be real here: 11. Miami Dolphins (4-7), 12. Cincinnati Bengals (3-8), 13. Cleveland Browns (3-8), 14. Las Vegas Raiders (2-9), 15. New York Jets (2-9), 16. Tennessee Titans (1-10)


The Patriots moving into the top spot was not the only change to the AFC playoff picture on Sunday. The Ravens overtook the Steelers in the AFC North and are the new No. 4 seed, while the Bills dropped to No. 7 due to their loss on Thursday combined with the Jaguars outlasting the Cardinals in overtime.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...15030/afc-playoff-picture-nfl-week-12-bengals
 
The good, the bad, and the s—t that gets you beat from Patriots’ win over Bengals

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Ahead of this year’s training camp, New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel explained that he was looking at his team’s performances in three distinct categories. There is the good, the bad, and, as he called it, the s—t that gets you beat.

Sunday’s 26-20 win over the Cincinnati Bengals saw plenty of all three. So, if the coach wants to look at the Patriots through the three categories he established, who are we to disagree? So, let’s break down the Week 12 game in exactly that manner.

The good: Battling adversity​


The Patriots did face their fair share of challenges during their current win streak, but for the most part did not have to overcome any major obstacles. That was not the case on Sunday.

Not only did they fall into a 10-0 hole behind another slow defensive start and a sloppy offensive performance that included Drake Maye’s first career pick-six, they also suffered multiple injuries along the way. The entire left side of the offensive line — rookies Will Campbell and Jared Wilson — was unable to finish the contest, as was special teamer Brenden Schooler.

And yet, the Patriots were able to overcome all of it. While the end result may not have been particularly pretty and the Bengals came within 26 yards of scoring a potential game-winning touchdown, New England showed the mental toughnesses required to fight through its own insufficiencies on offense and defense as well as multiple injury worries to celebrate a ninth victory in a row.

“These are long games, and they are decided by a few plays,” said Mike Vrabel during his postgame presser. “In the end, we made a couple more than they did.”

The bad: Run game​


With Rhamondre Stevenson returning from the toe injury that had sidelined him the previous three games, the Patriots had all available hands on deck again at the running back position. And yet, they had a hard time getting the veteran or indeed any of their backs going versus the 31st-ranked run defense in the NFL.

Not counting three Drake Maye scrambles and a kneel-down for 22 combined yards, the Patriots managed to gain just 85 total yards on 27 carries — an average of 3.1 yards per run. New England finished with an EPA of -0.35 per run as well as a success rate of just 36% on the ground.

Stevenson’s output was particularly bad, with his six rushing attempts resulting in only 5 yards. For comparison, TreVeyon Henderson finished with 66 on 18 carries and a 3.7-yard average.

New England was not much better on the other side of the ball. With Milton Williams on injured reserve and Khyiris Tonga in and out of the lineup, as well as Jahlani Tavai missing the game for personal reasons, the team’s defense had a hard time consistently slowing down the Bengals’ ground game.

When all was said and done, Cincinnati had gained 120 yards on 23 carries for 5.2 yards per run. Compared to the Patriots, the Bengals performed significantly better and more efficient in the ground game, posting a 0.03 EPA per play with a 54% success rate.

The s—t that gets you beat: Goal line offense​


The final stat line — 0-for-2 — does not quite capture the Patriots’ inability to play successful goal line offense against the Bengals. Their first opportunity came midway through the third quarter, following a pass interference penalty drawn by wide receiver Kayshon Boutte.

The call set the Patriots up at the 5-yard line, and we’ll just let the official NFL game book take it from here:

1-5-CIN 5 (11:16) (Shotgun) D.Maye pass incomplete short left.
2-5-CIN 5 (11:11) D.Maye pass short left to T.Henderson to CIN 1 for 4 yards (B.Carter).
Timeout #1 by NE at 10:23.
3-1-CIN 1 (10:23) (Shotgun) V.Lowe reported in as eligible. D.Maye pass incomplete short middle to H.Henry (J.Giles-Harris).
4-1-CIN 1 (10:18) D.Maye pass incomplete short left to K.Boutte.
PENALTY on CIN-D.Hill, Defensive Pass Interference, 0 yards, enforced at CIN 1 – No Play. X12
1-1-CIN 1 (10:15) V.Lowe reported in as eligible. T.Jennings left guard to CIN 1 for no gain (B.Carter; D.Knight).
2-1-CIN 1 (9:29) D.Maye pass short left to H.Henry for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN NULLIFIED by Penalty.
PENALTY on NE-M.Hollins, Offensive Pass Interference, 10 yards, enforced at CIN 1 – No Play.
2-11-CIN 11 (9:25) (Shotgun) D.Maye pass short middle to H.Henry to CIN 1 for 10 yards (B.Carter; D.Knight).
Timeout #2 by NE at 08:40.
3-1-CIN 1 (8:40) R.Stevenson right guard to CIN 1 for no gain (G.Stone; J.Battle).
4-1-CIN 1 (7:54) (Shotgun) R.Stevenson left guard to CIN 1 for no gain (M.Murphy; J.Ossai).

Those are nine snaps in a goal-to-go setting, including six from the 1-yard line, that saw the Patriots fail to reach the end zone in a legal fashion while also burning a pair of timeouts. They eventually turned the ball over on downs to end what was a pivotal sequence in the game: a touchdown would have put New England up 24-13 instead of keeping the game in the one-score category.

In the fourth quarter, the Patriots found themselves in a similar situation with a slightly different but still not overly satisfying result:

1-4-CIN 4 (7:32) D.Maye pass incomplete short right to A.Hooper.
2-4-CIN 4 (7:29) (Shotgun) T.Henderson left guard to CIN 1 for 3 yards (D.Hill; G.Stone).
3-1-CIN 1 (6:49) D.Maye up the middle to CIN 1 for no gain (B.Carter).
4-1-CIN 1 (5:58) A.Borregales 19 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-J.Ashby, Holder-B.Baringer.

“You have to score, whoever you call,” said Mike Vrabel during his postgame presser, hinting at the team’s injury situation causing problems for the unit. “It’ll be a good learning opportunity for us in a lot of phases. It shows just how important and how critical the week of practice is and being ready to go because you never know when your opportunity is going to come. You need to make sure that everybody’s on the same page. And there were a lot of moving parts today.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-england-patriots-opinion/115062/nfl-week-12-good-bad-ugly-bengals
 
Jeremiah Pharms Jr. reverts to Patriots’ practice squad following Week 12

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Jeremiah Pharms Jr. reverted to the New England Patriots’ practice squad on Monday after serving as a standard elevation against the Cincinnati Bengals.

The 26-20 win at Paycor Stadium marked the first appearance of the fall for the well-traveled defensive tackle.

Pharms, 29, played a rotational part for a front line that lost key starter Milton Williams to injured reserve the weekend prior. He saw 20 snaps on defense to go with eight snaps in the kicking game by Sunday’s end. A tackle on running back Chase Brown and a hit on quarterback Joe Flacco were recorded during the road trip.

The 6-foot-2, 300-pound Pharms signed a two-year extension last February and made New England’s initial 53-man roster out of training camp in August. He was waived on the eve of the September opener, however, and retained on the practice squad after going unclaimed.

By way of Sacramento City College, San Joaquin Delta College and Friends University, Pharms has appeared in 29 games during his Patriots tenure and started a handful. Arriving in Foxborough during the summer of 2022, he spent the duration of his first year on the practice squad. A total of 567 snaps on defense and 121 snaps on special teams have been amassed since then.

Pharms stands with 43 tackles, two sacks, six quarterback hits and one fumble recovery over that span. Undrafted in 2020, the former linebacker made stops with the Champions Indoor Football League’s Wichita Force and USFL’s Pittsburgh Maulers before working his way into the NFL ranks.

Two standard call-ups remain this regular season for Pharms before a move back to the active roster would be required to take the field.

Head coach Mike Vrabel’s 10-2 team will host the New York Giants next Monday night at Gillette Stadium.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...s-patriots-practice-squad-nfl-week-12-bengals
 
Patriots links 11/25/25: Surviving an off day is a super power

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TEAM TALK


LOCAL LINKS

  • Andrew Callahan‘s Patriots film review: How Drake Maye, Mike Vrabel escaped Cincinnati with a ninth straight victory.
  • Michael Hurley serves up some still-warm leftover Patriots thoughts: Don’t discount another road victory. The Patriots won ugly in Cincinnati. That’s worlds better than losing.
  • Jerry Thornton‘s knee-jerk reactions to Pats-Bengals. The biggest takeaway from this one is the Patriots are good. Very good. They’re the 1-seed for one very simple reason, …they’ve earned it. Winners of nine straight.… They’re just not good enough for any of us to take an opponent like Cincinnati lightly; More.
  • Chad Finn‘s Unconventional Review: Patriots win ninth straight, but red-zone struggles are a major concern if they want playoff success.
  • Phil Perry tells us what we learned in Pats-Bengals: McDaniels in focus after Campbell’s injury; Patriots might have to get creative to keep Drake Maye protected.
  • Conor Ryan offers 8 takeaways from Sunday’s road win. 1. A Pyrrhic victory. A win’s a win — but there’s more work to be done on both sides of the ball.
  • Doug Kyed looks at the Best and Worst to see what we learned from the Pats win over the Bengals. Drake Maye on the naughty list, Marcus Jones, Carlton Davis, Hunter Henry, Andy Borregales on the nice list.
  • Jake Seymour takes a look at the Week 12 snap counts: The Pats had multiple offensive linemen step into large roles due to injuries, while skill position players received new reps.
  • Karen Guregian spotlights what was wrong with Drake Maye in Cincinnati.
  • Chad Finn points out how Drake Maye continues to play beyond his years in the Patriots’ ongoing streak, even in imperfect win over Bengals.
  • Mike D’Abate identifies seven Patriots who need to step up amid OL injury troubles, from Vederian Lowe to Andrew Rupcich.
  • Andrew Callahan wonders how much damage did the Patriots’ Super Bowl hopes just take.
  • Doug Kyed‘s Patriots extra points: Players wanted to win for Jahlani Tavai.
  • Hayden Bird relays Mike Vrabel joking about Drake Maye’s nickname, the state of ESPN and more. “I couldn’t even figure out 6-7, and now it’s Drake ‘Drake Maye’ Maye-Maye, I don’t know.”
  • Alex Barth notes the initial report provides an optimistic timeline for Jared Wilson’s return.
  • Pats Procrastination podcast: Clare and Chudders recap wrap the Pats’ week 12 win against the Bengals, and take a quick look ahead to the Monday Night game against the Giants. (37 min.)
  • A Clare Perspective podcast: Clare welcomes Dan Roche to discuss the Week 12 expensive trip to Cincy and what’s ahead for the Pats. (26 min.)
  • Pats Postgame Show: Greg Bedard joins John Zannis, Taylor Kyles & Mike Kadlick to break down & react to the Pats’ 26-20 win over the Bengals. (80 min.)

NATIONAL NEWS

  • Henry McKenna (FOX Sports) Sound Smart: 7 observations from NFL Sunday in Week 12. 5. What everyone else is afraid to say: Josh McDaniels is once again the NFL’s best offensive coordinator.
  • Mike Kadlick (SI) Will Campbell injury update: Pats receive good news on LT Will Campbell, pending MRI
  • Tyler Sullivan (CBS Sports) Cover 32: Is Mike Tomlin’s seat starting to heat up? Plus games balls, biggest gaffes from NFL Week 12
  • Nate Davis (USA Today) 32 things we learned in Week 12: Giants the first team officially eliminated from playoff contention; The Patriots moved their record to a league-best 10-2, which also allowed them to assume first place in the AFC over the idle Broncos; New England’s win came at the expense of the snakebit Bengals… credit to the Stripes for nearly salvaging a win before succumbing 26-20. /Credit to who? Wut?
  • Tyler Sullivan (CBS Sports) Cover 32: Is Mike Tomlin’s seat starting to heat up? Plus games balls, biggest gaffes from NFL Week 12. Game ball: Hunter Henry.
  • Gilberto Manzano (SI) Week 12 Notes: Saquon Barkley, not A.J. Brown, is the one holding the Eagles’ offense back; Plus, the AFC North has no seven-win teams but plenty of intrigue after a lively Week 12.
  • Zachary Pereles (CBS Sports) 5 things we liked and didn’t like from Week 12: Unlikely stories, Gibbs shines, Chiefs survive and parity ahead of Thanksgiving.
  • Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz (USA Today) Week 12 winners and losers. Winner: Marcus Jones. Loser: Drake Maye.
  • Steven Ruiz (The Ringer) The winners and losers of NFL Week 12.
  • Cody Benjamin (CBS Sports) 2025 NFL playoff picture: Who’s in, who’s out and who’s in the hunt.
  • Ryan Wilson (CBS Sports) 2024 NFL Draft regrade: Who’s already a star, who’s stalled and what’s changed 18 months later. “Drake Maye would be the No. 1 overall pick and it wouldn’t even be close.”
  • Albert Breer (SI) Dismiss this flawed edition of the Chiefs’ dynasty at your own risk.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...inks-11-25-25-surviving-off-day-a-super-power
 
6 former Patriots reach Pro Football Hall of Fame semifinal round

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The Pro Football Hall of Fame announced its final group of semifinalists for the 2026 class on Tuesday. Among the 26 modern-era players to garner enough support among voters are six with ties to the New England Patriots.

The group is headed by franchise legends Rodney Harrison, Vince Wilfork and Adam Vinatieri and also includes short-time Patriots Fred Taylor, Torry Holt and Reggie Wayne.

Logan Mankins, James Harrison and Asante Samuel, on the other hand, did not make the cut.

Harrison saw action in a combined 199 regular season and playoff games over the course of his 15-year career in the NFL, including 72 as a member of the Patriots. A cornerstone of two Super Bowl-winning defenses, he is a three-time All-Pro and two-time Pro-Bowler who is one of only two NFL players — the other being Ray Lewis — to register 30 interceptions and 30 sacks over the course of their careers. Since his retirement in 2009, he has been enshrined into both the Patriots’ and the Chargers’ Halls of Fame.

Wilfork started his career as a first-round draft pick by the Patriots in 2004 and during his 13 seasons in the NFL played a total of 213 games. A majority of those — 179 — came during his 11 years in New England, where he won a pair of Super Bowls and earned five All-Pro and Pro Bowl designations each. After his retirement following the 2016 season, he was voted into the Patriots Hall of Fame.

Vinatieri spent the first 10 of his 24 NFL seasons in New England, where he was integral to establishing the team’s dynasty. He kicked game-winning field goals in the team’s first two Super Bowls and later added two more rings to his collection, one as a Patriot and one as a member of the Colts. He retired in 2021 after having appeared in 397 games and as the NFL’s all-time leading scorer as well as a member of three All-Pro teams, three Pro Bowls, the NFL’s All-Decade Team of the 2000s, and the NFL’s 100th Anniversary Team.

Taylor, Holt and Wayne, meanwhile, all joined New England toward the tail end of their legendary careers. Among them, Taylor is the only one to actually make it out of training camp and appear in a game as a Patriot. He saw action in 13 contests and a playoff game between 2009 and 2010, and finished his career with the club with a combined 108 carries for 425 yards and four touchdowns — a fraction of his total career rushing production of 12,308 rushing yards and 69 TDs on 2,663 carries.

Harrison, Wilfork, Vinatieri, Taylor, Holt and Wayne are among 11 total ex-Patriots making it to the semifinal round for induction into the Hall of Fame in 2026. Joining them are longtime New England head coach Bill Belichick as well as former executive Francis “Bucko” Kilroy and team owner Robert Kraft and senior candidates Stanley Morgan and Henry Ellard.

In a subsequent step, the remaining candidates will be trimmed down to a group of finalists in early December. In February, between four and eight of those finalists will be chosen for induction into the Hall of Fame.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ists-2026-class-rodney-harrison-vince-wilfork
 
Examining the roster ties between Patriots, Giants ahead of Week 13

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Mike Kafka once joined the quarterback room in Foxborough on a futures contract. But the connections between the New England Patriots and New York Giants extend beyond the interim head coach. Beyond the staffs featuring Carmen Bricillo, James Ferentz, Troy Brown, Bryan Cox, Cam Achord, Zak Kuhr, Ben McAdoo and Tom Quinn, too.

From the active rosters to the practice squads to the reserve lists, 10 current players in the fold for Monday night have been a member of both locker rooms.

Here’s a glance through that list of former Patriots and former Giants heading into the 8:15 p.m. ET kickoff at Gillette Stadium.

NEW YORK​


Gunner Olszewski, wide receiver — The Giants re-signed the 28-year-old Olszewski as training camp opened. He has since appeared in every game, catching his first touchdown since his Patriots days and adding another as a passer. Olszewski, who spent last year on injured reserve, has made 22 appearances in all for New York dating back to 2023. The former Division II defensive back out of Bemidji State entered the NFL as an undrafted tryout with New England in 2019. He outlasted the 53-man deadline and went on to check into 37 games from there. Olszewski turned nine catches into 127 yards and a touchdown on offense. And on special teams, where first-team All-Pro honors arrived, he returned 36 kickoffs for 834 yards to go with 66 punts for 834 yards and another touchdown. Olszewski was not tendered as a restricted free agent in 2022.

Jermaine Eluemunor, offensive tackle — Two years after being chosen by the Baltimore Ravens in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL draft, the former PFWA All-Rookie selection from Lackawanna College and Texas A&M landed in the AFC East. Eluemunor did so through a 2019 trade involving capital in the fourth and sixth rounds. He went on to make 22 appearances along New England’s offensive line, starting eight, before spending time with the Miami Dolphins, Jacksonville Jaguars and Las Vegas Raiders. The 30-year-old moved on to the NFC East in 2024 and has since started all 26 of his games at right tackle. This campaign, Eluemunor stands with 93 percent of the offensive workload.

Bryan Hudson, center — The 24-year-old Hudson closed out 2024 on the practice squad of the Giants and was retained with a futures pact. He signed back to the practice squad after clearing waivers in August. The undrafted offensive lineman out of Virginia Tech and Louisville originally entered the league with the Detroit Lions last year. But a spot on the initial practice squad soon followed at Gillette Stadium. Hudson was active yet did not play as a standard elevation last fall before being released by the Patriots.

Chris Board, linebacker — New York placed Board on injured reserve due to a chest injury midway through September. The 30-year-old appeared in every game for the 2023 Patriots before being released that subsequent offseason. He recorded 10 tackles and tied for the lead on special teams with 407 snaps during his lone season with New England. A three-time national champion out of North Dakota State, Board first entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with Baltimore in 2018 and circled back in 2024. A veteran of 116 games, 158 tackles, 3.5 sacks, three forced fumbles, one fumble recovery as well as four starts, the core linebacker signed with the Giants in March.

Younghoe Koo, kicker — While known for his tenure with the Atlanta Falcons, which featured a Pro Bowl nod in 2020 as he co-led the NFL in scoring, Koo spent two weeks on the practice squad in Foxborough the year prior. He was signed as kicking insurance after longtime incumbent Stephen Gostkowski was placed on injured reserve. The 2017 undrafted free agent out of Georgia Southern has also been a member of the Los Angeles Chargers and Atlanta Legends and stands 185-of-215 on field goals and 182-of-190 on extra points through 96 NFL games. The 31-year-old Koo headed to the Giants in September and was promoted from the practice squad to the 53-man roster in November.

NEW ENGLAND​


Tommy DeVito, quarterback — The Patriots sat No. 4 in the waiver priority following the NFL’s 53-man reduction. That would be put to use on a quarterback who went 17-of-20 passing for 198 yards and three touchdowns during the August matchup in the Meadowlands. DeVito has dressed as the third emergency option since then behind veteran backup Joshua Dobbs and starter Drake Maye. The 27-year-old New Jersey native signed with his hometown team as a rookie free agent via Syracuse and Illinois in 2023. He went on to start eight of his dozen NFL appearances as a Giant, completing 65.3 percent of his passes for 1,358 yards with eight touchdowns and three interceptions. He also rushed for 227 yards with an additional trip to the end zone.

Rushawn Baker, running back — The Patriots added Baker to the practice squad shortly before the calendar turned to November. The rookie running back originally entered the NFL with the Giants as part of the organization’s undrafted class in May. He was waived and reverted to New York’s injured reserve during training camp before reaching an injury settlement. A former transfer from Bucknell, Ward finished his collegiate journey at Elon in 2024. The 22-year-old rushed for team-high 859 rushing yards and nine touchdowns over the course of 183 carries with the Phoenix, adding 48 receiving yards.

Jashaun Corbin, running back — The 25-year-old Corbin was signed by the Patriots following a workout in early October. He now resides on the practice squad’s injured reserve. Undrafted in 2022, the former Texas A&M and Florida State running back signed his first NFL contract with the Giants. He went on to spend his rookie season on the practice squad and was elevated for the playoffs. A year later, Corbin was signed back from the Carolina Panthers as a member of the 53-man roster. Handling three catches and one carry through six games, his NFL career includes 15 snaps on offense and 118 snaps on special teams. He earned a spot on the All-UFL team in the spring, too, after leading the San Antonio Brahmas and the league with 514 rushing yards.

John Jiles, wide receiver — The Patriots retained Jiles on a futures pact in January. And after clearing waivers following the 53-man roster deadline in August, he joined the practice squad at its formation. The 25-year-old wideout has remained on the show team through 12 games. New England had signed, released and re-signed Jiles to the practice squad during the 2024 season after visiting for a workout. Undrafted by way of Fort Scott Community College, Virginia Union and West Florida last year, Jiles spent his rookie training camp with the Giants and caught two passes for 41 yards in preseason action.

Cory Durden, defensive tackle — The Patriots signed Durden to the practice squad entering Labor Day weekend. The defensive tackle was promoted to the 53-man roster ahead of the September opener. He has since appeared in every game on the way to notching 15 tackles and a pair for loss. Pro Football Focus has Durden ranked fifth among NFL interior defensive linemen with an 82.7 pass-rush grade. The 26-year-old out of Florida State and North Carolina State entered the league as an undrafted rookie with Detroit in 2023. He made a subsequent stop with the Los Angeles Rams before being signed to the 53-man roster in East Rutherford late last campaign. And he was a Giant in the 2025 preseason finale against his current club. Durden had appeared in eight games prior to this fall, totaling 13 tackles through 128 snaps on defense and 37 snaps on special teams.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ots-falcons-examining-roster-ties-nfl-week-13
 
Patriots nominate captain Marcus Jones for 2025 Art Rooney Sportsmanship Award

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The 32 nominees for the 2025 Art Rooney Sportsmanship Award have been finalized.

New England Patriots cornerback Marcus Jones finds himself among them, the NFL announced Wednesday.

The 32 nominees for the 2025 Art Rooney Sportsmanship Award.

Each NFL team nominated a player for the award, which
recognizes individuals around the league who exemplify outstanding sportsmanship. pic.twitter.com/DlgJ5i7Yvp

— NFL (@NFL) November 26, 2025

The organization circled the all-purpose threat for the 12th annual honor, which was created in the name of the late founding owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Pro Football Hall of Famer.

The Art Rooney Sportsmanship Award recognizes players around the league who exemplify outstanding sportsmanship on the field and best demonstrate the qualities of fair play, respect for the game and opponents and integrity in competition.

Jones, 27, stands as the last selection left in Foxborough from the 2022 NFL draft class. The former No. 85 overall pick was voted a team captain out of training camp. He was named AFC Special Teams Player of the Week at the end of September and AFC Defensive Player of the Month at the end of October.

In between, a three-year contract extension was reached at Gillette Stadium.

“He embodies everything that we’re looking for here in a player and a teammate on the field and in the community,” Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel said of the re-up earlier this fall. “Something we were excited about doing. Glad that he wanted to get that done and wanted to be with us moving forward.”

The former All-American and Paul Hornung Award winner’s tenure with New England spans 43 games and 20 starts.

As a rookie, Jones earned first-team All-Pro honors while leading the NFL in punt return yards. He has gone on to amass 151 tackles, 28 passes defensed, one sack, five fumble recoveries, six interceptions and two touchdown returns in the secondary. The 5-foot-8, 188-pound product of Troy and Houston also stands with one touchdown as a wide receiver and two touchdowns as a punt returner.

His career includes 1,569 snaps on defense, 24 snaps on offense and 278 snaps on special teams.

A panel of ex-players from the NFL Legends Community will select eight finalists — four from the AFC and four from the NFC. Those finalists will be listed on the Pro Bowl ballot under the NFL Sportsmanship Award category when active players cast their votes to reach a consensus in December.

The winner of the Art Rooney Sportsmanship Award, which will be announced as part of NFL Honors leading up to Super Bowl LX, will receive a $25,000 donation from the NFL Foundation to a charity of their choice.

Longtime Patriots special teams captain Matthew Slater took home the Art Rooney Sportsmanship Award in 2021.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...jones-nfl-2025-art-rooney-sportsmanship-award
 
Patriots fan rooting guide for NFL Week 13: Thanksgiving edition

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It’s Thanksgiving weekend in the NFL, and the New England Patriots will close out the festivities: they will host the New York Giants on Monday Night Football. Naturally, all of our attention is on that particular game.

It is not the only one worth keeping an eye on between Thursday, Friday, Sunday and Monday. In fact, 15 other games are being played in Week 13, with many of them having direct implications on the Patriots as well. So, here is who you should be rooting for in those particular contests.

Thursday​

1 p.m. ET​


Green Bay Packers (7-3-1) at Detroit Lions (7-4): Go good game! The first Thanksgiving game has no major impact on the Patriots and their playoff changes, so let’s just root for some good fun and even better food. | FOX

4:30 p.m. ET​


Kansas City Chiefs (6-5) at Dallas Cowboys (5-5-1): Go Cowboys! The Chiefs losing would further weaken their chances of making the playoffs, which might end up being good news for the fourth- and sixth-round draft picks New England owns via trade with Kansas City. | CBS

8:20 p.m. ET​


Cincinnati Bengals (3-8) at Baltimore Ravens (6-5): Go Bengals! New England’s strength of victory tiebreaker would benefit from a Cincinnati win given that there is no telling what will happen in Patriots vs. Ravens in Week 16. | NBC

Friday​

3 p.m. ET​


Chicago Bears (8-3) at Philadelphia Eagles (8-3): Go good game! A chill Black Friday for Patriots fans everywhere, at least when it comes to rooting interest. The game has no real impact on the team. | Amazon

Sunday​

1 p.m. ET​


Los Angeles Rams (9-2) at Carolina Panthers (6-6): Go Panthers! Five words: strength of victory and schedule. Both tiebreakers might become important in a competitive AFC playoff race. | FOX

San Francisco 49ers (8-4) at Cleveland Browns (3-8): Go Browns! Not only would the aforementioned tiebreakers improve with a Cleveland win, the Patriots would also benefit from San Francisco ending up outside the playoffs: the draft pick acquired via the Keion White would be better positioned in that case. | CBS

Houston Texans (6-5) at Indianapolis Colts (8-3): Go Texans! The Patriots already have a 1.5-game lead over the Colts in the race for the No. 1 seed, but the more distance the better. | CBS

New Orleans Saints (2-9) at Miami Dolphins (4-7): Go Saints! Neither the strength of victory nor the strength of schedule tiebreakers are impacted by this game, but it could help further bury Miami’s already slim playoff hopes. | FOX

Atlanta Falcons (4-7) at New York Jets (2-9): Go Jets! The Patriots beat both teams already this year, so this one comes down to another angle: draft position. The 2-9 Jets removing themselves further from the top draft picks next spring would be a welcome development. | FOX

Arizona Cardinals (3-8) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-5): Go Bucs! Strength of schedule. Strength of victory. Rinse. Repeat. | FOX

Jacksonville Jaguars (7-4) at Tennessee Titans (1-10): Go Titans! All of the top teams in the AFC already beat the Titans, so that game makes no difference from that perspective. So, how about keeping Jacksonville — the current sixth seed — at bay? Sounds good enough for us. | CBS

4:05 p.m. ET​


Minnesota Vikings (4-7) at Seattle Seahawks (8-3): Go good game! The Sam Darnold Bowl™ is of no real interest when it comes to the Patriots. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy. | FOX

4:25 p.m. ET​


Las Vegas Raiders (2-9) at Los Angeles Chargers (7-4): Go Chargers! This may seem counterintuitive, but if the race for the No. 1 seed comes down to strength of victory a win by the 7-4 Chargers would be the preferred outcome. Out of the Colts, Broncos and Patriots, New England is the only team not to beat the Raiders this season. | CBS

Buffalo Bills (7-4) at Pittsburgh Steelers (6-5): Go Steelers! A second straight Bills loss would go a long way toward the Patriots recapturing the AFC East title this year, even if it comes at the expense of their strength of victory. | CBS

8:20 p.m. ET​


Denver Broncos (9-2) at Washington Commanders (3-8): Go Commanders! The Patriots are the current No. 1 seed in the AFC, but a Broncos win on Sunday Night Football might change this. So, obviously, Washington is the team to root for in this game. | NBC

This article also serves as an open thread for this week’s non-Patriots games. Please head down to the comment section to discuss and share your thoughts on the games as they unfold.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...3-thanksgiving-black-friday-how-to-watch-live
 
Patriots vs. Giants Thursday injury report: Six project as non-participants

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The New England Patriots spent Thanksgiving away from the practice fields.

But based on Wednesday’s attendance, six members of the active roster would not have been available for Thursday’s New York Giants prep. Tight end C.J. Dippre, offensive linemen Morgan Moses and Jared Wilson, linebackers Harold Landry III and Jahlani Tavai, as well as core safety Brenden Schooler all projected as non-participants.

Here’s the first injury report ahead of Monday’s 8:15 p.m. ET kickoff at Gillette Stadium.

DID NOT PARTICIPATE​

Patriots​

  • TE C.J. Dippre (back)
  • OT Morgan Moses (illness)
  • G Jared Wilson (ankle)
  • LB Harold Landry III (knee)
  • LB Jahlani Tavai (not injury related — personal)
  • S Brenden Schooler (ankle)

Giants​

  • DT Dexter Lawrence (neck)
  • LB Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles (neck, knee)
  • LB Kayvon Thibodeaux (shoulder)

After placing defensive tackle Milton Williams, cornerback Alex Austin and then left tackle Will Campbell on injured reserve, the sidelined list remained lengthy for the Patriots. Head coach Mike Vrabel said Wednesday that he “can pretty much guarantee” Wilson will also not be back at left guard for Monday night in Foxborough. The No. 95 overall pick had been carted from the blue medical tent to the locker room on the first drive last weekend due to a high ankle sprain. Later on in what became a 26-20 win at Paycor Stadium, the starting line also briefly lost its veteran right tackle due to an illness. In the kicking game, meanwhile, captain Brenden Schooler went from questionable to out at halftime with an ankle injury of his own. The reigning Pro Bowler and first-team All-Pro has not missed a game since the finale of the 2022 season. He stands with a team-high 77.2 percent of the snaps on special teams this fall.

LIMITED PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • TE Hunter Henry (toe)
  • DT Christian Barmore (not injury related — other)
  • DT Khyiris Tonga (chest)
  • LB K’Lavon Chaisson (ankle)

Giants​

  • WR Wan’Dale Robinson (ankle)
  • WR Darius Slayton (hamstring)
  • DT D.J. Davidson (knee)
  • CB Paulson Adebo (knee)
  • CB Deonte Banks (hip)
  • CB Korey Black (bicep)
  • S Tyler Nubin (neck)

New England would have moved forward with four partial participants based on Wednesday’s work. Count Henry among them. The captain at tight end, who is dealing with a toe injury, caught seven passes for a career-high 115 yards and one touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals. And across the line of scrimmage, an offseason award winner is dealing with a chest injury. Tonga was held to a season-low 12 defensive snaps last weekend because of it.

FULL PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • No players listed

Giants​

  • QB Jaxson Dart, Concussion

No Patriots working through ailments projected as full participants on the first injury report of the week. But Dart has graduated to that degree after remaining in the NFL’s concussion protocol for back-to-back starts. The Giants quarterback has completed 62.7 percent of his throws for 1,417 yards with 10 touchdowns and three interceptions. He’s added 317 yards and seven trips to the end zone as a rusher during his rookie campaign.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ilson-morgan-moses-brenden-schooler-sidelined
 
Patriots links 11/28/25: Drake Maye on the run

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TEAM TALK

  • Game Preview, Giants at Patriots: Memorable matchups; Tale of the tape; What to watch for; More!
  • Evan Lazar‘s Patriots Gameplan: 3 Keys to Victory vs. the Giants on Monday Night Football in Week 13. Offense Key: Attack the Giants run defense, adjust to changes under interim DC Charlie Bullen; Defense Key: Play Man Coverage with a Spy vs. Rookie QB Jaxson Dart? More!
  • Broadcast Info: How to watch/listen to Giants at Patriots.
  • Giants-Patriots Week 13 Injury Report.
  • Patriots announce kicker Andy Borregales was named AFC Special Teams Player of the Week.
  • Patriots Unfiltered on TV: Bengals recap, Giants preview, Carlton Davis III 1-on-1. (22 min. video)
  • Do Your Job: Family Services & Football Engagement Coordinator. (10 min. video)

LOCAL LINKS


NATIONAL NEWS

  • NFL Nation (ESPN) Week 13: Questions, takeaways from Thanksgiving games.
  • Tyler Sullivan (CBS Sports) NFL Thanksgiving overreactions: Lions playoff hopes dashed? Does Kansas City need to win out?
  • Cody Benjamin (CBS Sports) 2025 NFL playoff picture: Who’s in, who’s out and who’s in the hunt after Thanksgiving matchups.
  • Jared Dubin (CBS Sports) Super Bowl or bust: Biggest reason why these 11 contenders will miss out on hoisting the Lombardi Trophy. Patriots: Offensive line. /Click for commentary.
  • Anthony Gharib (ESPN) NFL Week 13 uniforms: New England rocking ‘Patriot Pat’ throwbacks.
  • Conor Orr (SI) One thing every NFL team should be thankful for on Thanksgiving 2025. Patriots: Mike Vrabel. /Click for commentary.
  • Multiple Contributors (ESPN) NFL Week 13 picks, predictions, schedule; More. Patriots: Bold prediction: Giants RB Tyrone Tracy Jr. will record at least four receptions. Giants: The [switch in defensive coordinators] may bring a more aggressive approach at the line of scrimmage…Giants see an opportunity to attack Patriots QB Drake Maye and their makeshift offensive line; More. Two of three pick Pats to win.
  • Ali Bhanpuri, et al (NFL.com) NFL Week 13 picks: Upset and score predictions, matchup breakdowns for every game. Five of five pick Pats to win.
  • MMQB Staff (SI) NFL Week 13 picks. All six pick Pats two win.
  • Aaron Schatz (ESPN) NFL trends through Week 12: Bengals, Giants, Patriots, Bears. The Patriots have the second-worst DVOA for a 10-2 team since 1978. /Click for more commentary.

VIEW FROM NEW YORK

  • Jordan Raanan (ESPN) Mike Kafka puts ‘a lot of faith’ in new DC Charlie Bullen.
  • Paul Schwartz (NY Post) Brian Burns fired up for interim Giants coordinator after Shane Bowen’s firing: ‘Brought out best in all of us.’
  • Paul Schwartz (NY Post) Jaxson Dart clears concussion protocol to set up Giants return.
  • John Fennelly (Giants Wire) Giants vs. Patriots: 5 storylines to watch in Week 13. 1. Giants defensive changes.
  • John Fennelly (Giants Wire) Giants-Patriots: 3 matchups to watch. Giants LB Abdul Carter vs. Pats backup LT; Giants run defense vs. TreVeyon Henderson; Giants TE Theo Johnson vs. Patriots’ safeties.
  • Tyler Henry (Giants Wire) New York Giants vs. Patriots: 3 reasons for optimism in Week 13: Extra rest, A change in defensive coordinator, Close games.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...patriots-links-11-28-25-drake-maye-on-the-run
 
Kyle Williams drawing positive reviews as Patriots’ new kick returner

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Since losing Antonio Gibson to a torn ACL in Week 5, the New England Patriots have shuffled through several kickoff returners. It seems they might have found a permanent one in rookie Kyle Williams.

A third-round draft pick earlier this year, Williams took his first snaps at the position last Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals. The results were promising, and included a 36-yard runback that was the Patriots’ longest since Gibson scored a 90-yard touchdown in Week 2 against the Miami Dolphins.

For special teams coordinator Jeremy Springer, the results themselves were not the only important takeaway from Williams’ performance.

“I love the way he played,” Springer said on Friday. “He’s a speed guy, right? And then on top of that, in this new dynamic kickoff, you can’t really have any fear back there. You got to go and run through the smoke. And I felt like he did that, especially on that last kickoff return where he almost broke it for a touchdown.”

In his first game action as the Patriots’ kick returner, Williams fielded three snaps and ran them back a combined 86 yards with a 28.7-yard average.

“He had a really good mentality throughout the game, was confident catching it — catching it, just getting forward, getting vertical, finding the vertical seam and hitting it. That’s what he did,” Springer said. “Hopefully, he’ll continue to do that with whoever we line up this week. We’re training all the guys throughout the year, right? Development guys, different guys. He was the next one to step up last week and he did so, and we’ll see what happens this week.”

Williams’ next test will come against a New York Giants special teams unit ranked sixth in the league in average yards per return given up (24). Whether the 69th overall selection in this year’s draft will be up for the challenge remains to be seen, but the Patriots seem willing to find out.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ositive-reviews-as-patriots-new-kick-returner
 
Patriots vs. Giants Saturday injury report: Jared Wilson, Brenden Schooler out for Week 13

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The New England Patriots will go without additional two against the New York Giants.

Starting left guard Jared Wilson and special teams captain Brenden Schooler have been ruled out for Monday night, head coach Mike Vrabel announced during his weekend press conference.

Here’s the rest of the game statuses leading up to the 8:15 p.m. ET kickoff at Gillette Stadium.

OUT​

Patriots​

  • G Jared Wilson (ankle)
  • S Brenden Schooler (ankle)

Giants​

  • LB Kayvon Thibodeaux (shoulder)

Ankle injuries quickly hit the Patriots last Sunday at Paycor Stadium. Wilson, an 11-game rookie starter along the offensive line, exited on the opening drive. Schooler, a reigning All-Pro standing with a team-high 77.2 percent of the snaps in the kicking game, then exited before halftime. Both were ruled out on the way to what became a 26-20 win. Both have since been non-participants for three consecutive practices in Foxborough. Earlier in primetime preparations, New England sent left tackle and No. 4 overall pick Will Campbell to injured reserve along with cornerback Alex Austin.

On the other side of the aisle, the Giants will be without Thibodeaux’s pass rush for a third game in a row due to a shoulder injury.

QUESTIONABLE​

Patriots​

  • DT Khyiris Tonga (chest)
  • LB Harold Landry III (knee)

Giants​

  • LB Victor Dimukeje (knee)
  • LB Swayze Bozeman (hip)
  • LB Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles (neck, knee)
  • CB Korie Black (biceps)

Saturday’s in-stadium practice saw a pair of March signings return for the Patriots. Questionable tags followed. Landry had been listed as sidelined on back-to-back injury reports due to a knee issue. The captain off the edge leads New England with 16 quarterback hits and is tied for the lead 6.5 sacks through a dozen starts. As for Tonga, the nose tackle, short-yardage fullback and offseason award winner suffered a chest injury last week. A season-low 12 defensive snaps were the result. He has since been a limited participant as well as a non-participant for an interior defensive line that lost standout Milton Williams to IR midway through November.

But tight end Hunter Henry, right tackle Morgan Moses as well as linebackers K’Lavon Chaisson and Jahlani Tavai are among those set to go without game designations.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...jared-wilson-brenden-schooler-out-nfl-week-13
 
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