I don’t think Rodgers is without pressure. And in New York, obviously it’s you know, the biggest media market in the league and everybody’s all in on the Jets. “The Jets have the team. they just need the quarterback!”. I’m not ignoring the pressure that Aaron Rodgers has. But if it doesn’t work, isn’t it pretty simple to say, he’s in his forties, it ends for everybody. And he didn’t have it. He didn’t have it anymore, had a great career, and here’s your Hall of Fame jacket in five years. That’s the pressure that Aaron Rodgers is under. If it doesn’t work, his career is probably done. The pressure for Mac Jones is his career could be done in his third year. That’s a lot more pressure to me than that. And I think Tua to a lesser extent has much more pressure than Aaron Rodgers.I do think Josh Allen has some pressure to get to in and win a Super Bowl and that’s a different kind of pressure then I think. That’s a pressure and it exists. But Mac Jones is under pressure to prove that he’s an NFL quarterback, that can be a top NFL quarterback and not just an also ran who happens to start for a team.
And that’s another thing about pressure for Mac Jones come from behind when the opponent scores more than 24 points. Can you win games like that? The Patriots can can get over 24 points, but can they win when the other team does too? Can they win 31-27? You know, can they win when they’re trailing by 11 heading into the 4th quarter? We haven’t seen these things yet. I think that’s a lot of pressure on Mac Jones.
Mike Gesicki made a small comment that reflected big changes in New England.
The former Dolphins tight end lacks the perspective of those who languished through the Patriots’ 2022 season, which landed them 26th in offensive touchdowns per game and dead-last in red zone touchdown rate (42.2 percent). But Gesicki’s comment, from day 3 of open practices at training camp, was telling for those who witnessed the Patriots’ mighty struggles under Matt Patricia and Joe Judge.
“Definitely been disciplined,” Gesicki said. “Hasn’t been a lot of guys jumping offsides, hasn’t been a lot of guys lined up in the wrong spots or making mental errors.”
Lining up right? No mental errors? It’s refreshing to know that the 2023 New England Patriots are back to being a real NFL offense again.
New England Patriots quarterback Mac Jones and offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Bill O’Brien head to the practice fields for 2023 training camp in Foxboro. (Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports)
“Real” is a nebulous term, so for the purpose of this story, let’s define “real” as competent. Worthy of fielding in the National Football League. The Patriots under Patricia and Judge seldom met the most basic requirements of a real NFL offense.
Under new offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien, back for his second stint in New England, the basics are back. There’s hope that the days of beating themselves are over. It was an extremely important step to take for a unit that was so bad, so ugly, that many have openly wondered whether any of the players belong in the league or whether Bill Belichick should be worried about his job security.
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The 2022 offense was also so bad that you really just have to throw the whole year out, for both the players and the coaches. The group feels reinvigorated. And finally, the conversation can center around not whether they have basic NFL competency, but how good they are.
In 2021, with quarterback Mac Jones starting all 18 games as a rookie, the Patriots committed 2.38 offensive penalties per game, 19th in the NFL. In 2022, the penalties jumped to 2.7 per game, ninth-most in the league (via NFLPenalties.com).
Tom Morgan is the executive producer of the award-winning Zolak & Bertrand show. He got his start in radio as the midday intern in 2010 before joining the show full-time in 2014. A graduate of Northeastern University, Tom has been a lifelong sports fan with a passion for Boston sports that continues to drive him to this day. A native of Cohasset, MA, he enjoys spending time with family, his three brothers and his nephews and nieces. He is a coffee enthusiast who is fluent in the language of Seinfeld quotes. Tom writes about all New England sports from Patriots football to Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins.