Felger & Mazz: Reaction to the Patriots’ Week 7 win over the Bills
The New England Patriots pulled off a 29-25 upset over the Buffalo Bills on Sunday afternoon at Gillette Stadium. On Monday’s Felger and Mazz, the guys gave their thoughts on the victory for the Patriots and what it could mean for the team going forward.
Thoughts on the win…
Mazz: So, look, I thought it was a wildly entertaining game and they did a lot of things right. They played a near-perfect game given the standard that they currently exist at. They played well all around and there was really only one big mistake in the game and that was the fumble by Bourne. Other than that, I thought they were good in all three phases of the game. All the stuff that Bill said. The end was dramatic. It was good stuff. It was one game, but it was good stuff.
Jim Murray: Yeah, for one day it was awesome and good for people because, you know, I’ve been down there for some of these pregames and it’s felt like a bit of a funeral even before kickoff. People are there, they love pregaming and tailgating and all that and who can blame them. You go in there and like, ‘Oh, what the hell are we going to get today?’ Are we going to be shut out by the New Orleans Saints?
So there was some trepidation I think on behalf of Patriot fans going in there yesterday because it’s the “mighty” Buffalo Bills and they pulled off the upset. Good for them. And the Mac Jones thing at the end, look, I didn’t think he had that in him, and taking the “Huggies” off, to use the old Bill Parcells thing he said about the kicker 20 some odd years ago, I didn’t think he had it in him. He’s got a real non-asterisk fourth-quarter comeback win against a good opponent, and he was awesome on that last drive.
Mazz: What if, and I’m not telling I believe this, what if this was sort of a hurdle for Jones? What if now that Michael Onwenu is at right tackle and they can block at least a little, he can actually stay in the pocket for a half beat longer and make throws? What if that all happens?
Felger: So look, you know how I feel…yesterday was a great day for you. And if you want the other thing, shame on you. It’s so much more valuable to you, and I think to your franchise and your team, that you try to win games, you win games, you remind yourselves of who you are, you remind everyone else of who you are, and with a death grip you hang on to that rope, and if you lose, you lose.
But if you become a place where losing is OK, or you want to lose, sometimes you get there and it never comes back. It takes decades or generations and you can’t get it back.