Gasper: This is make or break week for Mac Jones, Belichick
Bill Belichick, Mac Jones and the rest of the New England Patriots got blown out last week by the Dallas Cowboys, 38-3. Looking ahead towards this Sunday’s New Orleans Saints vs. Patriots matchup, New England is in a “must win” spot.
On Friday’s Felger & Mazz program, Chris Gasper joined the show to give his thoughts on Belichick and Jones. He thinks this week will have major long-term ramifications for both coach and quarterback if they lose to New Orleans.
FULL CONVERSATION
Felger: What is your temperature on the Patriots? Do you feel this is a make-or-break week for Mac Jones and Bill Belichick?
Chris Gasper: I feel like it is a make-or-break week for both of them. I’m someone who has been pointing for a while to this part of the schedule, starting with the Saints. You have the Saints and Raiders back-to-back. I thought they could make some hay with this part of the schedule, starting with the Saints. Because they know they have to play Kansas City in December.
That doesn’t mean you win all those games. Obviously, Buffalo is on the schedule, Miami too. But if you don’t win this one, then you can’t do anything, at least the stuff I thought this team could do.
If you don’t win this game, I think it’s “look out below” in terms of the long-term ramifications. There could be speculation about the future of Mac Jones and Bill Belichick. It struck me this week when I was writing about what happened in Dallas, and obviously, there’s been a lot of discussion about that all week long by everybody. It was just so stark watching the Dallas game, them getting blown out.
What used to be the Patriots’ advantage was they had the best coach-quarterback combination in the league. And now you look at the team, and you’re not sure if they have the right guy in either job, especially moving forward.
Do they have the right coach to get them back to contention on a perennial basis? Do they have the right quarterback?
That just really struck me. That used to be the thing separating them from everybody else. It was the thing that allowed them to have a dynasty for two decades.
Now you look at the organization, and you’re not sure if either one of those roles—probably the two most important roles for an NFL team—have the proper person in place. Or if either of those guys will be in the same place next year.
SEGMENT AUDIO
Ryan Beaton is a producer for 985thesportshub.com. You can follow Ryan at @ry_beaton on Twitter.