Patriots

Tom Brady breaks Peyton Manning's NFL record for career passing yards

Tom Brady breaks Peyton Manning's NFL record for career passing yards

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady's assault on the NFL record books continued Sunday when he toppled old rival Peyton Manning's record for most career passing yards (regular season and playoffs combined).

Brady entered Sunday's Week 12 game against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium needing just 147 yards to beat Manning, and he got the record-setting yardage with a throw to Sony Michel in the second quarter. 

He finished the game with 20 completions in 31 attempts for 283 yards and two touchdowns, and now has 79,416 career yards. (He also reached the 3,000-yard plateau in season yardage for the 16th time, tying Manning and Drew Brees for second place behind all-time leader Brett Favre, who passed for 3,000 or more yards 18 times.)

Brady now has a little more than 69,000 yards passing in the regular season, which ranks fourth all time. He still trails Brett Favre (71,838), Peyton Manning (71,940) and Drew Brees (73,580). 

The Patriots quarterback has a healthy lead on the all-time playoff passing yards leaderboard. His 10,226 postseason passing yards are nearly 3,000 more than Manning in second place. The closest active player to Brady in career playoff passing yardage is Ben Roethlisberger at 5,256 and counting. 

Brady's newest record is further proof he's the greatest quarterback in league history. 

Follow our Patriots vs. Jets live blog

Click here to download the new MyTeams App by NBC Sports! Receive comprehensive coverage of your teams and stream the Celtics easily on your device.

NBC SPORTS BOSTON SCHEDULE

The Patriots aren't what they used to be, but continue to find ways to win

The Patriots aren't what they used to be, but continue to find ways to win

The Patriots are 8-3 and – thanks to the Steelers’ gag job in Denver – are the second seed in the AFC right now.

With the head-to-head win over Kansas City in their back pocket, all they have to do to get home field in the AFC is take care of their business and wait for the Chiefs to stub their toe.

And you have to expect toe-stubbage is coming for KC with games against the Ravens, Chargers and at Seattle in the next four weeks.

But the “take care of their business” part for New England isn’t assured as it’s been in years past. The 2018 season has not been business as usual on the way to 8-3.

Nothing’s coming easily for a team that’s made it look easy so long we all forgot how hard it can be.

HARD TRUTHS

Since their blowouts of the Dolphins and Colts in Weeks 4 and 5, the Patriots were within a foot of being tied at the buzzer by Chicago, didn’t get separation from the Bills and Derek Anderson until the fourth quarter, broke loose from a 17-17 tie with the Packers with two fourth-quarter touchdowns, got manhandled by Tennessee and – on Sunday – eventually took care of the Jets with two late touchdowns.

But neither the inevitability of the win nor the invincibility of the Patriots were much in evidence.

The fourth-quarter drive that salted it away was a case study in how narrow the margin is this season, even against a team like the Jets.

Forget the “they always play ‘em tough down there” tripe. The Jets are playing under a soon-to-be-canned head coach with an old quarterback who was just OK when he was young. They got undressed by the Bills, 41-10 and had gone 8-for-52 on third downs in their previous four games.

When the Patriots took over at their 20, leading 20-13 it was early in the fourth quarter and the Jets had just been forced to punt after their would-be, game-tying drive was stalled by a penalty.

What followed from there was, depending how you look at it, a triumph of resourcefulness or a little reminder of just how slim their margins are this year. Maybe it was both.

The first play of the drive was a 33-yard burst by Sony Michel following a path opened by Shaq Mason, David Andrews and James Develin. Michel – who missed a chunk of time earlier this season with a knee injury and a chunk of time Sunday after being bent back Medievally at the end of a run.

That he returned from that injury was remarkable. It’s also remarkable that a rookie running back is the Jenga piece that could make the whole offensive tower fall down if he’s not around.

On the next snap, Brady tried to throw it 60 yards downfield to would-be wide receiver Cordarelle Patterson. His pass went 54 yards and would have been picked if it hadn’t been so underthrown. Patterson had one catch for 7 yards in his previous four games. In his best game as a wideout this season, he had three catches for 54 yards, including a 55-yard touchdown. That’s right, he lost yards on his other two catches. And on his only catch Sunday, he lost a yard.

Second down brought a hurried flip in the flat to James White that fell incomplete.

Then, facing third-and-10 Brady dropped, stepped up to buy time and 25 yards to the right sideline where Josh Gordon picked the ball neatly off the turf to extend the drive. Good throw, great catch by the team’s lone outside threat, a guy who exceeds expectations every additional week he’s on the field.

After Jets safety Jamal Adams hysterically knocked a teammate offsides to make it first-and-5, Patterson got nothing on a handoff before Michel picked up the first down with terrific interior running.

PATRIOTS 27, JETS 13

Play-action to Michel on the next play sucked up the Jets linebackers and opened an alley for Julian Edelman – who had his 32-year-old body bounced all over MetLife Stadium on Sunday – to put the Patriots at the Jets 2.

From there, Patterson – who’s obviously watched too many NFL Films highlights of Billy Sims – got labeled trying to vault into the end zone. Michel got stacked up six inches from the goal line. Now it was third down. Since the Patriots aren’t very effective this year throwing in tight spaces, they went to Michel again. This time, he barely got it to the front edge of the goal line for the score.

It was a two-touchdown lead at 27-13 and that’s where it would stay.

But, man, it was harder than you’re accustomed to seeing.

Consider this, after Halloween last year, the Patriots went 7-1 winning by 25, 25, 18, 20, 3 (on the road at Pittsburgh), 20 and 20.

Entering December, the Patriots are what the Patriots are. The likelihood that they are going to suddenly going to start overwhelming teams or having them crumble at the mere sight of Brady and Bill Belichick wandering around in the pregame is slim.

They’re vulnerable in a way they haven’t been in a long time, but they’re dangerous too because they do still have the smarts and resourcefulness to find a way, whether it’s against the Chiefs in a shootout or the Jets in a rock fight.

This week, as the Patriots get ready for a three-game run against the Vikings then at Miami and Pittsburgh, you may hear people say that we’re going to learn a lot about this Patriots team.

But really, you should know it by now. They’re nothing like they’ve been in past years in terms of being able to impose their will.

And it’s their will that will take them as far as they get.  

Click here to download the new MyTeams App by NBC Sports! Receive comprehensive coverage of your teams and stream the Celtics easily on your device.

NBC SPORTS BOSTON SCHEDULE

Patriots defense gets merely a passing grade in win over Jets

Patriots defense gets merely a passing grade in win over Jets

In the end, the Patriots did what they should do to a team with a very bad offense. It kept it from scoring.

But death wasn’t swift. A defense that – when it’s at its best is more boa constrictor than, um, something that kills things really fast – let the Jets hang around, hang around, hang around before getting the submission.

In fact, it was the Patriots offense that deserves a lot of credit for making sure the Jets were left with a lot to make up and not much time to do it.

The Patriots held the ball for more than 34 minutes on Sunday. The Jets had just one third-quarter possession (a 12-play, 50-yard field goal drive) and even though they nearly made it into the fourth quarter in a 13-13 tie, they sputtered out.

There were plenty of things for the Patriots to hang their hats on offensively in this one. Defensively, it was shrug-worthy. The Jets were 8 for 52 on third down in their previous four games. They were 5 for 14 in this one and 3-for-7 in the first half.

HARD TRUTHS

Their lack of pressure on Josh McCown on the Jets lone touchdown to Jermaine Kearse put corner Jonathan Jones in a losing position. And a third-down roughing-the-passer penalty on Deatrich Wise extended that drive to put them in position to get that touchdown.

The Patriots can lament penalties that hurt them offensively, but so can the Jets.

They were driving on their first possession and had gotten to the New England 41 (thanks in part to a 17-yard completion to Jermaine Kearse on third-and-7) when a hold backed them out of that drive. And they were at the Patriots 42 on the last play of the third quarter when they had a holding penalty turn a first-and-10 into a first-and-20.

That drive stalled thanks to a Wise sack on third down.

It’s the early parts of games when the Patriots defense seems to breathe life into these otherwise wretched quarterbacks allowing them to play easy pitch-and-catch.
New York had eight plays of 16 yards or more in the first half – half of those coming on third down.

Tight ends continue to be a problem for the Patriots. Sunday, it was rookie fourth-rounder Chris Herndon who was targeted eight times and caught seven for 57 yards. He had 12 catches on 18 targets entering the game.

Tight ends have been an issue in the red zone for the Patriots much of the year, from the Titans Jonnu Smith to the Colts Eric Ebron and Eric Swope to the Packers Jimmy Graham and the Jaguars Austin Sefarian-Jenkins.

PATRIOTS 27, JETS 13

On the Jets’ lone touchdown drive (second possession of the game) Herndon got them started with a 19-yard catch. He later had a 21-yard catch late in the third when the Jets were trying to even the game at 20. That drive sputtered.

It was just a very blah performance against a not-very-talented offense.

And  the Jets – who’ve been really awful – can actually say with some honesty, “We beat ourselves out there…”

The Patriots have it in them defensively. The Packers game showed that. But New England’s going to see much, much better offensive talent next week against the Vikings and three weeks out against the Steelers. They need to be a little more ornery than they are currently showing.

Click here to download the new MyTeams App by NBC Sports! Receive comprehensive coverage of your teams and stream the Celtics easily on your device.

NBC SPORTS BOSTON SCHEDULE