Who was Bill Belichick referring to when answering this question about Mac Jones?
On Monday morning, Patriots head coach Bill Belichick took football-related questions from the media about the New England Patriots’ Week 2 preseason game against the Green Bay Packers for the first time (due to the circumstances surrounding the ending of the game and Isaiah Bolden’s injury, Belichick’s postgame comments that night were not about the team’s on-field performance). That included an evaluation of starting quarterback Mac Jones, who made his preseason debut after sitting out the opener last week.
“I though Mac did a solid job,” Belichick said. Statistically, Jones finished the game 6-for-9 with 52 yards passing in three drives. He also took two sacks, one of which resulted in a fumble.
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As Belichick continued his answer, he shifted into discussing how other players on the field can impact the quarterback’s evaluation. “When you’re out there with 10 other guys, no matter what position you play, there’s an element of the team operation, so quarterbacks, receivers, offensive line, protection, running backs, blocking, etc., it all goes together,” he added.
“The biggest part of growth for our team is just everybody working together, and improving our timing, not necessarily communication in terms of what to do but just seeing things the same way so that we can react to them the same way. That just comes through repetitions and a lot of snaps and some experience doing it,” Belichick continued. “Mac’s done a good job in his role on that, but there’s other things that he can’t control. There’s other people that he’s out there with that have to get used to him, he has to get used to them. We’ve worked some of these things together, but there’s some new things we’re doing, and a couple of new players, obviously, that just take a little bit of time to break in and get that timing and, I would say, seeing it the same way down.”
Reading that a certain way, it certainly comes across like Belichick acknowledging the team’s current offensive line issues. For one thing, he mentions “offensive line,” “protection,” and “blocking” all separately when talking about “elements of team operation” in the first part of his answer. He also references “things he [Jones] can’t control” such as “other people that he’s out there with that have to get used to him,” as well as “some new things we’re doing, and a couple of new players, obviously, that just take a little bit of time to break in.”
While the Patriots do have some new skill position players like wide receivers JuJu Smith-Schuster and rookies Kayshon Boutte and Demario Douglas, those players seemed in-sync with the offense on Saturday night. And most of the skill position groups feature players that were on the team last year. Instead, that description Belichick gives fits very closely with the current state of the Patriots’ offensive line.
Of the five starters on Saturday night, three (left guard Atonio Mafi, right guard Riley Reiff, and right tackle Sidy Sow) are all in their first year with the team, while two (Mafi and Sow) are rookies. It became four ‘new’ players after Jones’ first drive, when second-year tackle Andrew Stueber – who spent his entire rookie year in IR – replaced Trent Brown at left tackle.
In that context, it seems like Belichick may have been acknowledging his starting quarterback had the deck stacked against him to an extent when he took the field Saturday night. He made similar acknowledgement regarding backup Bailey Zappe, who finished 10-of-22 for 117 yards and a touchdown.
As the Patriots continue to work through their offensive line issues in the final week of camp, there’s both a ‘glass half full’ and ‘glass half empty’ reaction to what we’ve seen from the unit so far this summer. On one hand, the Week 1 starting offensive line shouldn’t resemble the group that played Saturday night in Green Bay. That unit included only two or three starters, depending on what happens with Reiff and the right tackle battle. Cole Strange, who has been out since injuring his knee in the first week of camp, and Mike Onwenu, who has been on PUP after undergoing offseason ankle surgery will be back.
But the question is, when? The regular season is fast approaching. What kind of condition will those two players be in if/when they take the field for the regular season opener? Will Onwenu be at right guard or right tackle? Who ends up at the position that he isn’t playing?
Then, there’s the question of sustained health. A starting five (from left to right) of Brown, Strange, Andrews, and Owneu with a fifth ‘to be decided’ right guard or right tackle plugged in should, in theory, be a solid group. But Onwenu and Strange are already dealing with injuries, and Brown has had durability issues in the past. Some of the players that played and struggled Saturday night may not be slated to start in 2023, but they’re not that far away from seeing significant time, either.
Coming into training camp, the Patriots’ offensive line was undoubtably the biggest question facing the team. With Week 1 right around the corner, it looks like the same will be true for the regular season.
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