Patriots elevate wide receiver, linebacker for Sunday night matchup with Dolphins
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - SEPTEMBER 19: Jalen Reagor #5 of the Minnesota Vikings runs for a first down during the second quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on September 19, 2022 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)
After using just one practice squad elevation spot in their season opener last week, the New England Patriots are elevating the maximum of two players for Sunday night’s game against the Miami Dolphins. On Saturday afternoon, the team announced it will be elevating wide receiver Jalen Reagor and linebacker Calvin Munson for the game.
Reagor’s elevation comes less than three weeks after he joined the Patriots, having signed with the practice squad following final roster cuts. The 2020 first-round pick spent the summer with the Minnesota Vikings before being waived following the final preseason game.
READ MORE:
—Final Patriots injury report of Week 2
—Final questions ahead of Patriots Dolphins
—Patriots Week 2 Mailbag
The Patriots dressing Reagor for gameday could be a sign that the Patriots’ top ‘X’ wide receiver options will be anywhere from limited to unavailable. DeVante Parker was out last week with a knee injury, then was limited at practice all week this week and is listed as questionable. Rookie Kayshon Boutte filled in for him last week, but was limited part of the week this week with a hamstring injury (although he was removed from the injury report on Friday).
With those two banged up, JuJu Smith-Schuster also seemingly limited, and Tyquan Thornton still on IR, the Patriots don’t have even a hybrid ‘X’ receiver on their roster. Reagor, with his speed, could fill that role either by spelling Parker and/or Boutte, or outright if they’re unavailable.
As for Munson, this is the second week in a row he’s being elevated. Against the Eagles last week he didn’t play any defensive snaps, but played 48 percent of the team’s snaps on special teams.
Each player on the practice squad can be elevated up to three times over the course of a season. That means the Patriots can still elevate Reagor twice, but Munson only has one elevation left. After that, if they want him available on gameday they’d have to add him to the 53-man roster.
Just as notable as the Patriots’ elevations is the fact that they didn’t elevate any offensive linemen. That could be an encouraging sign for a team that had five offensive linemen on the injury report for most of the week. Tackle Trent Brown and rookie guard Sidy Sow missed practice all week with concussions, but are listed as questionable. Guards Cole Strange and Mike Onwenu were both limited all week after being inactive in Week 1, and center David Andrews was limited the first two days of the week before being removed from the injury report on Friday.
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Slowing down the NFL's fastest offense: Patriots vs. Dolphins What To Watch For
Look, there really isn’t such a thing as a ‘must-win’ game in Week 2 of any NFL season. But for the New England Patriots this week, they enter the week on the verge of ending up in a very tough spot.
After dropping their season opener 25-20 to the Philadelphia Eagles last week, the Patriots welcome the Miami Dolphins to Gillette Stadium this Sunday night. In what will be their first matchup against an AFC East team – and AFC Wild Card contender – this season, the Patriots are trying to avoid falling into the often-discussed, always-dreaded 0-2 hole.
READ MORE:
—Patriots Week 2 Mailbag
— The Patriots have a new practice squad quarterback
— The Patriots’ Week 2 injury report keeps growing
When it comes to making the playoffs, an 0-2 start is often viewed as a line of demarcation. Last year, the Cincinnati Bengals became the first NFL team in five years to make the playoffs after dropping their first two games – a team with a tremendous margin of error given their outstanding natural talent. The other four 0-2 teams from last year (Falcons, Panthers, Raiders, Titans) finished with an average of 6.75, with that average dropping down to 5.6 wins when included the Texas and Colts who both started winless at 0-1-1.
In order to avoid that dubious 0-2 record the Patriots will need to do something they’ve never done before – beat Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. The Patriots are 0-4 facing Tagovailoa since the Dolphins drafted him fifth overall in 2020. Many have pointed to Tagovailoa as being the difference-maker between the Patriots and Dolphins in recent years – after all, the Patriots are 2-0 against Miami since 2020 when he doesn’t play. But it goes a little deeper than that.
It’s not like Tagovailoa has been lighting up the box score against Bill Belichick’s defenses. In those four games, Tagovailoa has completed 68.5 percent of his passes, while averaging 181.5 yards per game. He’s thrown three total touchdowns in those matchups (while adding three more on the ground), with two interceptions. The Dolphins’ point total in those four games have been 22, 17, 33, and 20 (chronologically).
Obviously, things changed last year when the Dolphins added All-Pro wide receiver Tyreek Hill to the picture. Yet with Tagovailoa throwing to both Hill and Jaylen Waddle in his lone matchup against the Patriots in last year’s season opener (he was hurt for the late-season matchup in Foxborough), the Dolphins scored just 20 points – with seven of those coming as a result of a scoop-and-score defensive touchdown.
Instead, it’s been the Patriots’ offense that has struggled most in the matchups against the Tagovailoa-led Dolphins. The Patriots’ scoring totals in those same four games have been 12, 16, 24, and 7. That came facing mostly defenses led by former Patriots assistant coach Brian Flores, who was the head coach of the Dolphins from 2019-2021. Last year Flores was replaced by current Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel, although McDaniel retained another former Patriots assistant – Josh Boyer – as his defensive coordinator.
This offseason the Dolphins fired Boyer, and replaced him with veteran defensive guru Vic Fangio. That means that this will be the first time in the Dolphins’ Tua era that the Patriots aren’t facing one of their own former coaches designing Miami’s defense.
Can the Patriots finally crack a Miami defense under new leadership this year? If they do, can the defense continue to play at the level it has against the Dolphins with Tagovailoa under center? Let’s start there with this week’s What To Watch For…
Alex Barth is a digital content producer and on-air host for 98.5 The Sports Hub. Barth grew up in the Boston area and began covering both the New England Patriots, Boston Celtics, and Boston Red Sox in 2017 before joining the Hub in 2020. He now covers all things Boston Sports for 985TheSportsHub.com as well as appearing on air. Alex writes about all New England sports, as well as college football. You can follow him across all social media platforms at @RealAlexBarth.