For ****s and giggles, here are the preseason records and the corresponding seasons (and reg season wins).
4-0: 2003 (14)
3-1: 2001 (11), 2002 (9), 2009 (10), 2013 (12), 2016 (14)
2-2: 2005 (10), 2006 (12), 2007 (16), 2010 (14), 2011 (13), 2014 (12), 2015 (12)
1-3: 2004 (14), 2012 (12)
I'll be impressed if anyone can parse distinct correlations from that. Also, if going 1-3 is somehow meaningful, does that mean that NE would be more likely to succeed this year if NY had missed the FG in game four?
Here's a crack at it:
3+: 2000 (*), 2001 (<>), 2002 (*), 2003 (<>), 2009 (w), 2013 (c), 2016 (<>)
2-2: 2005 (d), 2006 (c), 2007 (s), 2010 (d), 2011 (s), 2014 (<>), 2015 (c)
0 or 1: 2004 (14<>), 2008 (*) 2012 (c)
* = non-playoff berth season
w = wild card loss = 1
d = divisional loss = 2
c = conference loss = 3
s = Super Bowl loss = 4
<> = Super Bowl win = 5
Here's an equation, which is up for debate, that gives weight to the Patriots making
the playoffs and, in particular, winning a Super Bowl. I'm assigning 5 points for
a Super Bowl victory, 4 points for a Super Bowl berth and loss, 3 points for a
conference championship loss, 2 points for a divisional loss, and 1 point for a
wild card loss.
2000 onward, Belichick Era (17 seasons for sample):
3+: 0+5+0+5+1+3+5 / 7 = 2.71
2: 2+3+4+2+4+5+3 / 7 = 3.29
1-: 5+0+3 / 3 = 2.66
This weighted model privileges playoff success rather than overall record. The Patriots fare best in the playoffs when their preseason record is 2-2. 3+ wins in the preseason and 0/1 win are far less likely to result in success according to this model. This chart matches the 2-2, 3+, 1- model proposed in the USA Today article (
The NFL preseason matters a little more than you think). I think what we can take away from this is that teams that do okay in the preseason tend to get their starters some playing time but also aren't so desperate to establish a winning philosophy that they keep the starters in extra to go 3-1/4-0. The fact only 3 out of 17 Patriots clubs during the Belichick era had 1 win or less demonstrates that this year's team was a slight outlier. And the success of the 0/1 win group was the worst when it comes to playoff success. Also interesting: a 2-2 preseason Patriots squad under Belichick has always made the playoffs. While one game doesn't mean much on its own, let's just say the Patriots would have been playoff bound if the Giants had missed!
Long story short, I've got too much time on my hands and just wanted to see if my gut feeling held up to analysis. This formula can be tweaked more, but I think it gives a rough approximation of how preseason results can have a minor correlation to degrees of postseason success.