Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Patriots face new reality as Bill Belichick searches for miracle turnaround

New England have missed the post-season for the first time in 12 years, with the potential for a first losing record in 20 years

Tony Evans
Thursday 24 December 2020 08:15 GMT
Comments
Madden NFL 21 trailer
Leer en Español

Bill Belichick achieved the impossible. The head coach of the New England Patriots has overseen two decades of success in the NFL. In the United States they call it a dynasty.

That is the wrong word. Dynasties require some sort of succession. New England’s domination of American football – a record six Super Bowl wins since 2001 and three losing appearances in the big game – was built around two men: Belichick and Tom Brady, the quarterback. This was a reign; a duopoly rather than a dynastic endeavour. There was plenty of change at Foxborough during this magnificent era but it was around the edges. Courtiers came and went but the two kings remained in charge.

Belichick’s chance to establish a dynasty came this season, after his former quarterback decamped to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the franchise owned by the Glazer family. The 68-year-old’s first post-Brady season removed any illusion that a third decade of dominance was inevitable. Sunday’s 22-12 loss to the Miami Dolphins confirmed that the Patriots will miss out on next month’s play-offs. The last time this happened was 12 years ago. Their 6-8 record with two games left means there is a chance that the team will experience a season with more defeats than victories for the first time since 2000.

Brady will most likely reach the play-offs with his new club but it is possible that New England would have missed out on the post-season even if the 43-year-old had remained in the north east. The Pats lost three significant contributors who declined to play because of the pandemic, have salary cap problems and have performed badly in the draft over the past half decade.

The lack of a viable replacement for the talismanic quarterback is the biggest factor in the decline, though. Cam Newton, who was signed on a one-year contract in July, admitted this week on Instagram that the season has been “unacceptable” and that he has not lived up to the standards that are expected in New England. It is unlikely that the 31-year-old will be back at Foxborough next season.

Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots looks on from the side line (Getty)

The only real NFL dynasty of the Super Bowl age was the San Francisco 49ers, who won the Vince Lombardi trophy five times between 1981 and 1995. The 49ers started that era with Bill Walsh and Joe Montana as head coach and quarterback and ended it with George Seifert calling plays and Steve Young taking snaps. Great coaches still need great quarterbacks. Belichick was left with a Hall of Fame sized hole to fill when Brady walked.

READ MORE: Symbiotic relationship between coach and quarterback can create NFL legacy to outshine any individual

The problem had been rumbling for years. The head coach believed that Jimmy Garoppolo was Brady’s heir apparent but was forced to trade the back-up to the 49ers three years ago by Robert Kraft, the owner, in part to pacify the three-time Super Bowl Most Valuable Player. Brady had a complex relationship with the organisation. Asked the following year whether he was appreciated by his bosses, the quarterback said “I plead the fifth,” referring to the amendment to the Constitution that guarantees those accused of crime do not have to incriminate themselves when questioned under oath. The split – and the tussle for legacy – was looming long before the Bucs came calling.

Will Belichick have the appetite for a ground-up rebuild at his advanced age? The Pats are astute manipulators of the salary cap and have fared well in the free agent market so a quick fix is possible, though perhaps unlikely.

The Buffalo Bills, who have claimed the AFC East title for the first time since 1995, are equipped to dominate a division that New England won 16 times in the past 17 seasons. Belichick’s supremacy seems to have come to an end.

Tampa Bay’s only Super Bowl victory came a year after Brady’s first. If the quarterback – who has another year on his deal and plans to play beyond that contract – can get the Florida team anywhere near the big game, he will have a huge claim to be the primary reason for New England’s hegemony.

READ MORE: The evolution of the NFL quarterback and what comes next

The poor showing by the Patriots has deepened the gloom in Boston, which is 30 miles from Foxborough. The city has been America’s self-style ‘Titletown’ for the past two decades. Aside from New England’s six Super Bowls, the Boston Red Sox have won baseball’s World Series on four occasions.

Tom Brady and Bill Belichick embrace after capturing the Super Bowl (Getty)

The Sox finished bottom of their division in their Covid-shortened season and, if the Pats fail to win another game, it will be the first time since 1993 that both teams have ended a year with a losing record. The mood is grim in the region’s biggest metropolis.

A new era is dawning in New England. The golden age is over for the Patriots. It really will be a miracle if Belichick turns things around.

This weekend get a £10 free bet with Betfair, when you bet £10 on a Same Game Multi on the Premier League. Terms: Min £10 Same Game Multi bet on any EPL match this Fri - Sun. Free bet valid for 72 hours, awarded at bet settlement. Excludes cashed out bets. T&Cs apply.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in