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2002

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Regular
Season December
8, 2002 Bills 17
New England Patriots 27
Attendance: 68,436
RICK ANDERSON -- Bill Belichick didn't think twice about Drew Bledsoe
coming back and haunting him twice a year when he traded his quarterback
to the Buffalo Bills. He knew that he could devise schemes to keep him in
check and also knew that he had a way of getting into opposing
quarterbacks' heads. Belichick was the one who devised schemes to stop
Doug Flutie after he had taken the league by storm. Now he has put Bledsoe
in checkmate in two meetings this year between the Bills and the New
England Patriots.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Bills |
0 |
0 |
10 |
7 |
17 |
| New England
Patriots |
17 |
3 |
0 |
7 |
27 |
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First Quarter
NE FG, ADAM VINATIERI 39 YARD, 3:44.
NE TD, DAVID PATTEN 10 YARD
PASS FROM TOM BRADY (ADAM VINATIERI KICK), 11:25.
NE TD, DONALD HAYES 9 YARD PASS
FROM TOM BRADY (ADAM VINATIERI KICK), 11:46.
Second Quarter
NE FG, ADAM VINATIERI 46 YARD, 12:29.
Third Quarter
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 26 YARD, 7:14.
BUF TD, ERIC MOULDS 12 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 10:45.
Fourth Quarter
NE TD, ANTOWAIN SMITH 4 YARD RUN (ADAM VINATIERI KICK), 4:54.
BUF TD, ERIC MOULDS 4 YARD PASS
FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 13:55.
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The Patriots routed the Bills in
Bledsoe's Boston homecoming, 27-17. It could have been worse if the Pats
didn't have 3 touchdowns called back because of penalties. As it was,
Belichick once again was in Bledsoe's head as the Bills quarterback had a
miserable day despite his impressive 328 yards. The Pats picked off 4 of
Bledsoe's passes and ripped the ball from Bills receiver Peerless Price on
another occasion for a 5th turnover. The turnovers were the difference in
this game.
Tom Brady, the Pats quarterback who replaced Bledsoe last year and led
them to the Super Bowl, once again out-dueled his former mentor. Brady and
Bledsoe both threw for two scores, but Brady was perfect where turnovers
were concerned. Brady completed only 15 out of 27 passes for 183 yards.
Bledsoe Miserable Homecoming
Bledsoe went out with his former teammates the night before the contest.
His former comrades wined and dined Drew and Bledsoe's play was haphazard
the next day. Certainly it wasn't the result of the evening before, but
Bledsoe just couldn't find the desire for revenge from the first
embarrassing loss to the Pats in the first game. Instead, Bledsoe threw it
up 4 times for grabs and the Pats came up with it.
"Every game I've ever played I've taken personally, this one more
than most,'' admitted Bledsoe. "With the turnovers, it falls heavily
on my shoulders.''
The Pats attacked Bledsoe ferociously, coming at it from all sides. He was
sacked twice, but the constant pressure forced Bledsoe to rush some
passes. Four of them he wished he could have back.
"We figured we could put pressure in his face instead of around the
edges,'' said Patriots cornerback Otis Smith, who took away the ball from
Peerless Price on one crucial play.
Brady Bowl II
Brady had much better control of the game than Bledsoe. Like in the first
meeting of the two former teammates and competitors for the Pats QB job,
Brady was the calm and collected field general. On the very first play of
the game, he aired it out to Deion Branch for 41 yards. That set up a
39-yard Adam Vinatieri field goal.
Brady led the Pats down the field the next time they had the ball again.
His short passes along with runs by former Bill Antowain Smith led
the way to a 10-yard pass from Brady to David Patten, making it 10-0.
Then Bledsoe had his first pass picked off and the Pats were in business
again. Anthony Pleasant got his hands on a Bledsoe pass and Richard
Seymour picked it off returning it down to the Bills 9. Brady hit Donald
Hayes in the endzone and the Pats were up 17-0.
Brady's Patriots dominated the Bills defense so much that they scored on
all 4 of their first half drives. If it weren't for two penalties on
touchdown passes, the Pats would have had a 28-0 halftime lead.
Three Killer Plays
In a nutshell, three plays could have turned this game around. All three
were when the Bills had the ball. One interception, one fumble and one
field goal underlined the bad play-calling and the sloppy play of the
Bills.
Let's start in the second quarter with Bad call Number 1. The Bills are
down 17-0, but have a second and goal on the Patriot 1 yard line. Travis
Henry had fumbled the play before, but it was recovered by Mike Williams.
The Bills send in a play that calls for Bledsoe to roll out. Bad mistake.
Bledsoe is not an accurate passer while on the run. That should have been
obvious from previous games when he threw interceptions while avoiding
being sacked.
Bledsoe takes the snap and rolls right. He is chased backwards by the
blitzing Pats and quickly throws a dart into the endzone. With no Bills
receiver in sight, it went straight into the hands of the waiting Tebucky
Jones, who then went down for the touchback.
"That's the way we had it planned," put in Bledsoe about the
decision to roll out and pass, "and so that's what we did."
"It's a bootleg designed for me to get outside a little bit,"
continued Bledsoe. "Dave was covered, and Phil was covered in the
flat. At one point during practice, I'd throw that to Dave where he'd come
back (for the ball). I tried to make that play, but I was too deep and
didn't get enough on the ball. It ended up being a really ugly play. I
should have just thrown it out of the end zone."
Bad call Number 2. In the third quarter, the Bills got into the redzone
again, but had a 4th and 1 at the Patriots 9. Being down 20-0, you go for
it, right? Wrong. Bills coach Gregg Williams has not had the guts to make
such a call recently. He went for the safe 3 points, when a touchdown
would have gotten the Bills within 2 strikes of taking the lead.
Blunder Number 3. The fumble occurred just after the fourth quarter began
with the Pats up 20-10 and the Bills looking like they might make a game
of it. Bledsoe made a nice pass to Price up the middle at the Buffalo 28.
As Price was going down, Otis Smith ripped the ball from Price's grasp and
the Pats had it deep in the Bills zone. A few plays later and the Pats
scored their final touchdown and the rest was history.
Bills Stage Mini Comeback
The Bills did stage a comeback in the second half when Bledsoe hit Eric
Moulds on a 12-yard touchdown pass, making it 20-10. But then Price had
his timely fumble and the Pats made it 27-10 before the Bills scored very
late in the game when Moulds made a sensational one-handed grab in the
corner of the endzone. It appeared as if Moulds gloves had velcro on them
as he leaped high and brought it down with one hand.
"We came out with some spirit and fire in the second half, but we
weren't able to make up for our mistakes,'' said Bills coach Gregg
Williams.
Once again the Bills fell right into the Belichick trap. On defense, Brady
and the Pats tore apart the Bills secondary in the first half when the
Pats went for the long ball instead of the swing passes like they had in
the first game. The Bills could not get any pressure on Brady, who was not
sacked once and he had all the time in the world to find his receivers.
Belichick defensed the Bills by having two defensive backs deep, dictating
a short aerial game for Bledsoe. Then they turned up the heat on Bledsoe
with the blitz and Belichick's plan worked as well as it did in game 1.
Buckley admitted that the Pats were running the same exact plays the Bills
ran in their mock practice of the Bills offense. Predicting what the Bills
will do has become a science that Belichick has mastered and employed on
Buffalo since January 1991.
Bills Talk
Bledsoe had circled the calendar with a bright red magic marker when he
found out the Bills schedule earlier this year. The two games with
the Patriots were his Number 1 priority in his football career. The
only thing was that Belichick circled the same dates and he circled the
wagons on Bledsoe, time and time again.
"Every game I've ever played I've taken personally, this one more
than most,'' admitted Bledsoe. "With the turnovers, it falls heavily
on my shoulders.''
Bledsoe got a big welcome back from the fans prior to the game. But he
would have preferred giving them some displeasure during the game.
"It's frustrating," said Bledsoe. "It's nice to be
appreciated back here, but certainly not the way I envisioned it. I wanted
to walk off that field victorious."
Bledsoe's teammates also were feeling crestfallen that they couldn't get
Drew at least one win against his former team.
"I feel sorry for Drew because it turned out like this, but we all
reaped the outcome," put in Bills offensive guard Marques Sullivan.
Bledsoe went to Larry Centers 5 times for 42 yards. It may have been wise
to employ both Centers and Henry more than they did.
"I'm a little surprised he struggled so much," suggested
Centers. "But we're not the Buffalo Bledsoes. It's not a one-man
show. Any time in any team sport, when one area is sagging the other areas
have to step it up. We didn't get it done as a team."
The Patriot who Bledsoe took all his snaps from for years found it strange
to see Bledsoe playing against him.
"It feels weird,'' said Pats center Damien Woody. "I think the
trade worked out well for both teams. It certainly worked out for us.''
Brady didn't want to gloat over beating his former teacher about beating
him twice this season.
"Once the game starts, I don't even think about it,'' articulated
Brady. "I am always enjoying when the team is picking the other
quarterback over.''
| Game
Breakdown |
|
BUF |
NE |
FIRST DOWNS
3RD-DOWN EFFICIENCY
TOTAL NET YARDS
Total Plays
Average gain
NET YARDS RUSHING
Rushes
Average Per Rush
NET YARDS PASSING
Pass Completion
Yards per pass
Times Sacked
Yards Lost To Sacks
Had Intercepted
PUNTS
Average Punt
PENALTIES
Penalty Yards
FUMBLES
Fumbles Lost
TIME OF POSSESSION |
24
10-14
390
71
5.5
78
18
4.3
312
32-51
5.9
2
16
4
3
43.3
4
29
2
1
30:38 |
14
4-11
275
53
5.2
92
26
3.5
183
15-27
6.8
0
0
0
4
36.3
9
65
1
0
29:22 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Buffalo Rushing
Travis Henry 15-60, Drew Bledsoe 2-11, Larry Centers 1-7.
New England Rushing
Antowain Smith 17-68, Troy Brown 1-21, Kevin Faulk 1-5, Marc Edwards
2-3, Tom Brady 5-(-5).
Buffalo Receiving
Peerless Price 9-105, Josh Reed 3-68, Eric Moulds 8-63, Larry Centers
5-42, Jay Riemersma 4-39, Charles Johnson 2-17, Ruben Brown 1-(-6).
New England Receiving
Deion Branch 1-41, Christian Fauria 1-33, David Givens 1-30, Troy
Brown 3-27, David Patten 2-14, Antowain Smith 2-9, Donald Hayes 1-9,
Daniel Graham 2-8, Marc Edwards 1-7, Kevin Faulk 1-5.
Buffalo Passing
Drew Bledsoe 32-51-328-2-4.
New England Passing
Tom Brady 15-27-183-2-0.
Missed Field Goals
Adam Vinatieri (1).
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