Miami has historically been a house of horrors for the Patriots, and that trend continued in the team’s 34-15 loss to the Dolphins.
Penalties, poor defensive communication, and generally poor execution from all three units led to a 24-0 halftime deficit. New England showed impressive resilience in the 2nd half, outscoring the Dolphins 15-10, but it wasn’t enough to escape the gaping hole their slow start created.
This week, the coaching staff will receive warranted criticism for the team’s poor discipline and questionable defensive play-calling. But on-field inconsistency continues to plague the Patriots in a season that’s been tough to watch, even for a rebuilding franchise.
Here are my top takeaways from the embarrassing defeat.
OFFENSIVELY BAD LINE PLAY DOOMS OFFENSE
It’s no secret that the Patriots’ offensive line is a major weakness, but the unit compounded poor post-snap execution with multiple pre-snap infractions.
Vederian Lowe was flagged for three false starts, a hold, and allowed instant pressure on a strip sack.
Demontrey Jacobs was penalized for a false start and a hold and struggled mightily against Chop Robinson before being pulled for Sidy Sow late.
Mike Onwenu was also called for a hold, and Michael Jordan failed to pick up a twist on a sack of Drake Maye.
These issues put the Patriots’ offense behind the sticks throughout Sunday’s contest, which proved to be a death knell for the talent-deprived group.
KYLE DUGGER BURNED FOR MULTIPLE SCORES
Kyle Dugger has battled an ankle injury for most of this season. The ailment was on full display during Miami’s final touchdown when the safety struggled to redirect on a short throw to Jaylen Waddle.
Dugger can be forgiven for that error, but he also appeared to commit mental errors on each of Miami’s Red Zone scores. He failed to cover Jonnu Smith on a delayed release, missed a signal from Jaylinn Hawkins on a screen to De’Von Achane, and didn’t pick up Achane on another screen before halftime. The safety also had a potential pick-six opportunity in the end zone, but couldn’t make the catch.
Dugger was paid handsomely this offseason after receiving the transition tag, but he has yet to live up to the new deal. The defense needs better from its captain, particularly against the slew of high-powered offenses New England will face after its bye week.
DRAKE MAYE CONTINUES TO FLASH BUT COMMITS TWO MORE TURNOVERS
Maye’s mobility and big arm helped keep today’s game somewhat competitive, with his deep touchdown to Austin Hooper being a prime example. Unfortunately, the rookie’s turnover woes cost New England two possessions.
Maye’s interception was forgivable, as Tyrel Dodson peeled off his rush and made an incredible one-handed catch. However, the strip sack was an avoidable mistake where Maye tried swimming defensive tackle Zach Sieler after facing instant pressure.
The UNC product has a bright future, and growing pains are to be expected from any rookie. That said, repeat mistakes are tough to forgive, and the fumble was his fourth in six full starts.
MARCUS JONES BOUNCES BACK AFTER UGLY 1ST HALF
Jaylen Waddle had a career game against the Patriots, racking up 144 yards on eight catches. Much of that production came in the 1st half with Marcus Jones as the closest defender in coverage. While Waddle deserves credit for some impressive catches, Jones’ lack of size was glaring at times.
The third-year corner was much better in the 2nd half, recording three pass breakups and looking significantly more competitive in coverage. It’s been an up-and-down season for Jones, but his mental toughness in some tough matchups hasn’t gone unnoticed. Next step: consistency.