Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
Mike Sielski, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Tom Brady and Bill Belichick ruin everything.
I say that with just the slightest wink. I’m kidding, but only so much. I admire them for their longevity, their excellence, their intelligence, their ruthlessness. More than that, though, I admire them for the destruction that each man’s respective greatness leaves in his wake.
Take this just-finished slate of NFL games, for instance. Amid snow, freezing rain, and wind gusts that surpassed 50 mph at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, the Patriots beat the Bills, 14-10, on Monday, and in time the night might come to represent the most Belichickian game that Belichick has ever coached.
He had his rookie quarterback, Mac Jones, attempt just three passes, the fewest in any NFL game since 1974, when Belichick was 22 and still an undergraduate at Wesleyan. He’s 69 now, and with first place in the AFC East in the balance, he decided that the best way to beat a team that went to the conference-championship game last season was to challenge its collective toughness. We’re going to run the ball at you again, and again, and again. We’re going to do it because we have to. We’re going to do it because we can. We’re going to do it because you can’t stop us. And you know what? The Bills couldn’t. New England racked up 222 rushing yards on 46 carries.
If there was any doubt that the Bills understood what Belichick and the Patriots had done to them, two of their players, safeties Jordan Poyer and Micah Hyde, erased it in their postgame interview session. Veteran Buffalo sportswriter Jerry Sullivan asked Poyer and Hyde a point-blank question: “It’s been over 40 years since a team has won a game [passing] that few times. Was that embarrassing?” They considered the question to be disrespectful, and as he left the stage, Hyde said, “We’ll remember that.” But Sullivan, obviously, had touched a nerve, and any NFL player, if he were being honest, would tell you that, while the Bills may not have felt embarrassed, they certainly felt emasculated. It wasn’t just that New England was now 9-4 and Buffalo was 7-5. It was that Belichick had managed to vanquish an opponent physically and psychologically. Not only had he and his team beaten up the Bills, but he had invaded their minds and souls, to boot.,
“Football is controlled violence and about physically imposing your will on another person. The run game taps into that instinct and mindset in a way the pass game doesn’t. … Being physically dominant (imposing your will, breaking their will, etc) is real and has an impact. It’s literally animalistic behavior at its core.”
The Patriots’ victory came one day after Brady threw four touchdown passes in the Buccaneers’ 30-17 victory over the Falcons, a franchise lost in a kind of psychosomatic fever ever since it squandered a 25-point lead to New England in Super Bowl LI. Brady is 44, and he leads the league this season in passing yards (3,771), touchdowns (34), and passing yards per game (314.3). Tampa Bay is 9-3 and could very well represent the NFC in the Super Bowl again, just as it did last season. Brady is already the oldest starting quarterback to win a Super Bowl, and Belichick would be the oldest coach to win one, and the prospect of their facing each other at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood on Feb. 13 would elevate the big game into The Biggest Game of the 21st Century, a true clash of football’s titans.,
Belichick just won a game against one of the league’s best teams with a strategy that is the diametric opposite of every trend and morsel of conventional wisdom in the NFL: that you have to score a lot to win, and the easiest and best way to score a lot is to throw the ball a lot. He has used that approach in the past, and he’ll likely use it again, and it’s sure to have every traditionalist who follows or still works in the league muttering the same thing: Gottaestablishtherun … Gottaestablishtherun … Gottaestablish…
Brady, meanwhile, was a sixth-round pick, which means that every relatively young, long-shot QB who shines for a game or even several — Mike White, Taylor Heinicke, even Nick Foles — gets compared to him. Fans want to see if their team has its hands on a winning lottery ticket, just like the Patriots did with Brady, and franchises can end up confronting the always-dreaded quarterback controversy or hedging in their plans for the sport’s most important position.
If you think I’m exaggerating, just consider the debate that has taken place around here since Sunday, when Gardner Minshew stepped in for Jalen Hurts and went full Pete “Maverick” Mitchell against the lowly Jets. Then, look up the 2019 draft, and notice what round the Jacksonville Jaguars drafted Minshew.
Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
Adrian Kraus
If the season ended now, the top seeds for the playoffs would be Arizona (10-2) in the NFC and New England (9-4) in the AFC.
Both the Cardinals and Patriots missed the playoffs last season, with Arizona finishing 8-8 and New England at 7-9. The last time both top seeds were coming off non-playoff seasons was in 1992, when San Francisco (14-2) took the spot in the NFC and Pittsburgh (11-5) in the AFC.
Neither the 49ers nor Steelers made the Super Bowl that season with San Francisco losing to Dallas in the NFC title game and Pittsburgh to Buffalo in the divisional round.
Adrian Kraus
If the season ended now, the top seeds for the playoffs would be Arizona (10-2) in the NFC and New England (9-4) in the AFC.
Both the Cardinals and Patriots missed the playoffs last season, with Arizona finishing 8-8 and New England at 7-9. The last time both top seeds were coming off non-playoff seasons was in 1992, when San Francisco (14-2) took the spot in the NFC and Pittsburgh (11-5) in the AFC.
Neither the 49ers nor Steelers made the Super Bowl that season with San Francisco losing to Dallas in the NFC title game and Pittsburgh to Buffalo in the divisional round.
Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
David Banks
The Cardinals have gotten into this position by being the NFL’s best road team.
Arizona’s 33-22 win at Chicago last week improved the Cardinals to 7-0 on the road with all the victories coming by at least 10 points. The last team to win its first seven road games by double digits was the 1968 Cowboys, who went 7-0 on the road that season. The road success ended in the playoffs when Dallas lost its first game 31-20 at Cleveland when the sites were predetermined by division.
The only other team to win seven straight road games by double digits in the same season was the 1984 Super Bowl champion 49ers, who went undefeated on the road but won the opener at Detroit by just three points.
David Banks
The Cardinals have gotten into this position by being the NFL’s best road team.
Arizona’s 33-22 win at Chicago last week improved the Cardinals to 7-0 on the road with all the victories coming by at least 10 points. The last team to win its first seven road games by double digits was the 1968 Cowboys, who went 7-0 on the road that season. The road success ended in the playoffs when Dallas lost its first game 31-20 at Cleveland when the sites were predetermined by division.
The only other team to win seven straight road games by double digits in the same season was the 1984 Super Bowl champion 49ers, who went undefeated on the road but won the opener at Detroit by just three points.
Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
Lynne Sladky
The Miami Dolphins have been on a quite a roller coaster this season.
After winning the season opener at New England, the Dolphins lost their next seven games. Since then, Miami is 5-0 to become the third team in NFL history to have a five-game winning streak and seven-game losing streak in the same season, according to Sportradar.
The others are the 2017 49ers, who lost their first nine games and won their final five, and the 1994 Giants, who started 3-0, lost seven straight and then won six in a row.
With a win next week against the Jets following a bye, the Dolphins will join the 1974 Jets as the only teams to go from 1-7 to 7-7 in a season.
Lynne Sladky
The Miami Dolphins have been on a quite a roller coaster this season.
After winning the season opener at New England, the Dolphins lost their next seven games. Since then, Miami is 5-0 to become the third team in NFL history to have a five-game winning streak and seven-game losing streak in the same season, according to Sportradar.
The others are the 2017 49ers, who lost their first nine games and won their final five, and the 1994 Giants, who started 3-0, lost seven straight and then won six in a row.
With a win next week against the Jets following a bye, the Dolphins will join the 1974 Jets as the only teams to go from 1-7 to 7-7 in a season.
Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
Curtis Compton
Tom Brady is doing things at age 44 that he has never done before.
Brady had his sixth game this season with at least four TD passes, surpassing the five he had in 2007 for the most in a season in his career.
This is the sixth time in NFL history a QB has thrown for at least four TD passes six times in a season with the other five all winning the MVP: Aaron Rodgers (seven in 2020), Patrick Mahomes (seven in 2018), Peyton Manning (nine in 2013), Manning (six in 2004) and Dan Marino (six in 1984).
Two of Brady’s TDs last week went to Rob Gronkowski, giving the pair 90 in the regular season in their careers. That surpassed Philip Rivers and Antonio Gates (89 TDs) for second-most in NFL history. Only Manning and Marvin Harrison (112) have more.
Curtis Compton
Tom Brady is doing things at age 44 that he has never done before.
Brady had his sixth game this season with at least four TD passes, surpassing the five he had in 2007 for the most in a season in his career.
This is the sixth time in NFL history a QB has thrown for at least four TD passes six times in a season with the other five all winning the MVP: Aaron Rodgers (seven in 2020), Patrick Mahomes (seven in 2018), Peyton Manning (nine in 2013), Manning (six in 2004) and Dan Marino (six in 1984).
Two of Brady’s TDs last week went to Rob Gronkowski, giving the pair 90 in the regular season in their careers. That surpassed Philip Rivers and Antonio Gates (89 TDs) for second-most in NFL history. Only Manning and Marvin Harrison (112) have more.
Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
Eric Christian Smith
Indianapolis’ Jonathan Taylor scored on a TD run for the 10th straight game last week against Houston.
Taylor is the fifth player ever to run for a TD in 10 straight games in the season and the first to do it since LaDainian Tomlinson did it in 12 straight games in 2004. The others are Priest Holmes (11 games in 2002), Emmitt Smith (11 in 1995) and John Riggins (12 in 1983).
Eric Christian Smith
Indianapolis’ Jonathan Taylor scored on a TD run for the 10th straight game last week against Houston.
Taylor is the fifth player ever to run for a TD in 10 straight games in the season and the first to do it since LaDainian Tomlinson did it in 12 straight games in 2004. The others are Priest Holmes (11 games in 2002), Emmitt Smith (11 in 1995) and John Riggins (12 in 1983).
Mike Sielski: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady keep driving the NFL mad. It’s kinda cool.
Kathryn Riley/Getty Images North America/TNS
New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick talks with quarterback Tom Brady (12) before a game against the Dallas Cowboys on Nov. 24, 2019, in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Kathryn Riley/Getty Images/TNS)
Kathryn Riley/Getty Images North America/TNS
New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick talks with quarterback Tom Brady (12) before a game against the Dallas Cowboys on Nov. 24, 2019, in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Kathryn Riley/Getty Images/TNS)