Patriots lose to Bills, 35-31
Published in Football
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots were bound to lose eventually, but Sunday’s 35-31 loss to the Buffalo Bills stings a little extra.
The Patriots took a commanding 21-0 lead in the first half and appeared that they were going to run away with the game easily until their defense turned into a sieve and surrendered touchdowns on five straight possessions to the Bills.
Offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels got away from what worked so well in the first half, and the Patriots’ offense scored just one touchdown in the final two quarters.
They had one final chance to put together a game-winning drive but the offense managed just 5 yards, and quarterback Drake Maye’s fourth-down passing attempt to tight end Hunter Henry was batted by defensive end Joey Bosa. The Bills picked up a first down after the turnover on downs then kneeled on the ball to win.
With a win, the Patriots would have clinched the AFC East. Now, they’re 11-3 on the season with the Bills halting their 10-game winning streak. The Bills’ AFC East title dreams are not dashed just yet.
The Patriots’ offense came out firing coming off of their bye week, with Maye orchestrating an 8-play, 73-yard scoring drive. He delivered a perfect 30-yard pass to Kayshon Boutte midway through the drive on third-and-7 to move the chains. He finished it off with an 8-yard touchdown run. Rhamondre Stevenson also contributed in a big way with 30 yards on four touches.
Ray Davis gave the Bills great field position with a 45-yard kick return, but they couldn’t do anything with it. Bills wide receiver Brandin Cooks — a former Patriot — beat cornerback Christian Gonzalez deep on first down but bobbled the ball before getting two feet down. The Patriots’ then forced a three-and-out and punt.
The Patriots managed one first down on their next drive but threw incomplete on third-and-1 rather than trying to pick up a yard on the ground. That led to a punt.
The Bills went three-and-out again after linebacker Jack Gibbens, filling in for Robert Spillane, sacked Bills quarterback Josh Allen on third down. The Patriots were assisted by a false start on Bills wide receiver Joshua Palmer on third down.
Maye kept getting it done with his legs as the Patriots went on another scoring drive to go ahead 14-0. He picked up 17 yards on the ground on the first play of the series, evading pressure. He scored on his second rushing touchdown of the game, untouched for 7 yards.
The Patriots forced the Bills to punt for the third time, this time getting pinned back on their own 6-yard line. Outside linebacker Harold Landry made a key play with a coverage sack, pushing the Bills back to third-and-15.
Rookie running back TreVeyon Henderson showed off his game-breaking speed, extending the Patriots’ lead to 21-0, with a 52-yard touchdown run. That was the final snap of an impressive eight-play, 94-yard drive.
The Bills weren’t about to completely give up. Helped by a facemask penalty on Patriots special-teams captain Brenden Schooler on the kickoff, the Bills scored after a seven-play, 42-yard drive on a 5-yard touchdown catch by running back James Cook to make the score 21-7.
The refs had some trouble managing the clock at the end of the half, but the Patriots put three more points on the scoreboard, extending their lead to 24-7, on a 36-yard field goal from rookie kicker Andy Borregales.
The Bills, playing with a short field again after a 58-yard kick return from Ray Davis, cut the Patriots’ lead to 24-14 on their first drive of the second half. Allen tossed a 4-yard pass to tight end Dawson Knox for the touchdown.
The Patriots followed that up with their first three-and-out of the game, punting away to the Bills.
The Bills scored a touchdown on their third straight possession, cutting the Patriots’ lead to 24-21 on a 3-yard touchdown run up the middle by Cook.
Penalties pushed the Patriots back to third-and-25 before Maye threw an arm punt and was picked off by Bills cornerback Tre’Davious White. The Bills got the ball at their own 9-yard line.
They drove 91 yards down the field for their fourth touchdown in four possessions to take a 28-24 lead. Allen hit Knox again, this time on a 14-yard touchdown over linebacker Jack Gibbens.
Henderson turned a broken play into a 65-yard touchdown by simply reversing field and sprinting for a score with Maye outrunning him as his lead blocker.
It didn’t take long for the Bills to re-take the lead on an 11-yard touchdown run from Cook after a seven-play, 65-yard drive. Cornerback Carlton Davis was penalized for pass interference on a late flag with some pretty minimal contact.
The two teams then traded three-and-outs with strong defensive stands from both units.
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