Mike Reiss: Jerod Mayo Needs to Have Action Behind His Words
On Tuesday’s edition of Zolak and Bertrand, Cleaning out the notebook from the Patriots’ 30-13 loss to the 49ers … and sharing some big-picture thoughts on the team. pic.twitter.com/lev6slydnZ Cleaning out the notebook from the Patriots’ 30-13 loss to the 49ers … and sharing some big-picture thoughts on the team. pic.twitter.com/lev6slydnZ
?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 1, 2024">Mike Reiss who covers the Patriots for ESPN, joined the show. Reiss explained that Patriots Head Coach Jerod Mayo needs to have actions behind his words when it comes to disciplining players who have been committing the same mistakes repeatedly in the past few games.Cleaning out the notebook from the Patriots’ 30-13 loss to the 49ers … and sharing some big-picture thoughts on the team. pic.twitter.com/lev6slydnZ
— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss)Cleaning out the notebook from the Patriots’ 30-13 loss to the 49ers … and sharing some big-picture thoughts on the team. pic.twitter.com/lev6slydnZ
— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss) October 1, 2024
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“You Need Your Words to Have Weight Behind Them…”
Mike Reiss: We talked about it last week Beetle, with Jerod Mayo and Rhamondre’s (Stevenson) fumbles and setting the edge. We had the same conversation. He (Jerod Mayo) said, they have to do it and they’re not doing it. So after the game I asked him, I said, “Jerod, if you’re telling them to set the edge and they’re not setting it, do you have to now remove those players from that situation so they no longer have the opportunity to do it? Because your words need to have meaning.” I think his answer hinted to me that he might be trending in that direction.
Zolak: Yeah, I would think so. You don’t really want to sit a guy because you need the guy and he’s a very, very big part of what you are offensively. He’s one of your lone stars really, is Rhamondre. But you also got to send a message to the team. This is part of the Pete Carroll thing. With a big time guy like Bill Parcells, you would fumble and you would sit. Pete comes in, you fumble and you play, then just say sorry.
Bertrand: I heard Andrew Callahan refer to it this morning in a pretty fun way. He said it’s like when your kid gets a ‘D’ on the test and he just comes home and says, “I’ll do better next time”. Then he just goes to his room and keeps playing video games or whatever. There’s no real punishment involved, right? It’s something along those lines. He took a series off and because he wants to not fumble the ball, then he went back in. I think it comes down to they don’t have great depth at the position. Right?
Mike Reiss: I look at it this way, Beetle. I think sometimes even if you’re giving your team a lesser chance to win the game, sometimes you need to make those decisions because it’s for the totality of the room. You need your words to have weight behind them.