Felger: I Think The Patriots Are Going To Blow It All Up
On Thursday’s edition of Felger & Mazz, the guys recapped the past week of Patriots football. In Felger’s first show back since the team’s 40-7 blowout at the hands of the LA Chargers, Felger explained why he believes that the Patriots are going to completely start over with the team’s football operation, and fire Jerod Mayo along with Eliot Wolf.
“I Think They’re Going To Blow It Up.…”
Felger: I think Mayo’s done. I think they’re going to blow it up.
Jim Murray: You do?
Felger: I do.
Jim Murray: What’s told you this?
Felger: Nothing. My gut. This is the end. It’s the first time I’ve felt it all year, and it was really after the Chargers game. It’s too bad. It’s too dysfunctional and the opportunities too great. You have a franchise quarterback in-house on a rookie contract. You’ve got piles of cash, that if you’re just willing to spend it, you can spend it. You have the first overall pick, and control of the draft board. I know you don’t want to hear it right now, but you have good owners. You have good owners with a track record of success, making good decisions, and being a part of a winning operation. When you compare these owners to what else is out there, what’s available, like Woody Johnson, or the McCaskey’s in Chicago. There’s no comparison. I know you’re down on the Krafts. You should be down on the Krafts. They deserve a lot of criticism. Give it to them, continue to give it to them, but also be real about the thing. You stack the Krafts up against Mark Davis, or Shad Khan and his kid. It’s no comparison. This is by far the best job in the league. It’s by far the best job in the league, if not just because of ownership, but because of the opportunity.
Felger: Clean slate, money, draft position, and a franchise quarterback. This is the spot. So you’re going to have the best coaches available. Vrabel reportedly wants the job. If I’m Ben Johnson, this is where I want to go. I know he’s been linked to Chicago. You want to go with that? That quarterback scares the crap out of me. You wanna hitch your wagon to that? If I’m Ben Johnson, I want this job. Over any other by far. So what? Are you ever going to be in a position where you get to attract the very best candidates in the sport? This is the best job in football. I’m convinced of it.
Joe Murray: I think they’re going to keep Maye until they can find someone who wants to come here, and I think that’s going to be hard for them right now.
Felger: Right now? No it’s not.
Listen To The Full Segment Here!
5 takeaways as the Patriots regress again against the Chargers
How big will the fallout be from the New England Patriots loss to the Los Angeles Chargers on Saturday, and other game takeaways.
One step forward, three, four, five or more steps back. That’s been the case for the New England Patriots so many times this year on both a micro and macro level, and it was the case again for the team on Saturday.
Coming off last week’s game against the Buffalo Bills it felt like there might be some momentum. A strong showing on the road against a championship contender and division rival, heading into a standalone Saturday afternoon window against another playoff team. It felt like a chance for this team – and the coaching staff in particular – to build some much needed late-season momentum to set the stage for 2025.
That was the thought when the day began. However, it devolved to the point where there were brief albeit audible chants of “Fire Mayo” heard from the 200’s section below the press box by early in the fourth quarter in what ended up being a 40-7 loss.
Just about anything that could be pointed to as a sign of growth from last week wasn’t present in this one. The Patriots started slow, struggled to sustain anything offensively, and defensively didn’t put up any resistance and their opponent marched up and down the field.
“This is what I told the players – there’s really nothing good to take out of that game today. Just the lack of execution,” head coach Jerod Mayo said to open up his postgame press conference. “We just didn’t play well enough in any phase of the game. No complementary football, and that’s what you get.”
As Mayo’s comment suggests, it was a non-competitive effort for 60 minutes from the Patriots. They were outgained 428 yards to 181 in this game, with 51 of their yards coming on a final garbage-time drive.
The Patriots also failed to possess the ball for more than 20 minutes – their final time of possession was just 19:26. It’s their second sub-20 minute time of possession game this year, the first time they’ve had two such games in a season since at least 1984 (as far back as the data goes on Pro Football Reference). That’s as much a reflection of the defense – which couldn’t get off the field – as much as it is an offense that couldn’t stay on it.
This level of regression from the Buffalo game is jarring, but not out of character for a team that has struggled to put good performances together. “It’s very disappointing, and it comes back to consistency,” Mayo said postgame when asked about the juxtaposition of the two games. “That’s what it is, consistency.”
Over the past few weeks, leading up to Saturday morning before the game, reports indicated Mayo’s job was likely safe heading into 2025. “Barring some type of calamity over the final two games of the campaign, the expectation is Kraft gives Mayo another season to prove him right,” NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport wrote in his Saturday morning column.
In terms of on-field product, this game certainly could be viewed in the category of a ‘calamity.’ Saturday took the conversation around the Patriots from potentially trending the right way heading into 2025, to the loudest calls yet for organizational change. There’s still one week left before those decisions have to be made, but football is a ‘what have you done for me lately’ business, and with a game potentially against the Bills’ backups next week Saturday’s game could serve as the ‘latest’ example of the state of the Patriots’ operation.
Again, there’s still a week left in the season before the decisions – at all levels of the coaching staff – that will dictate the Patriots’ future will be made. In the meantime, here are a few other game-specific takeaways from Saturday, starting with more from the coaching staff…