What a weird game!
It took me a long time to re-watch it and I'm still not sure I could get my head around it. How could the Pats have kept it so close -- close enough to have won the game if not for the turnovers -- while getting beaten at the LOS on both offense and defense?
The short answer is: Drake Maye. The Bills were coming from behind the line and pouring through on Maye (some of their starts were very, very quick, to say the least, but there we are) but he kept his head even when he had defenders right in his face. You hear a lot of stories about promising young quarterbacks who were ruined by having to play behind terrible offensive lines. This one seems to be able to handle it.
And compliments too to the pass catchers, especially Henry, Boutte and Hooper. For the first time in the season, we saw an offense that was in sync, in the first half at least.
Another thing in the Pats' favour was that, for once, the penalties didn't go against them. On the contrary, the Bills got caught with false starts and alignment penalties. I couldn't figure out why the fumble recovery against Shakir wasn't given and surely there was a foul in the endzone on the interception, but, compared with some games this season (*cough* Ron Torbert *cough*) the Pats were given a fair shake.
On the other hand, watching the defense against the run was painful. I couldn't get every jersey number but there were bad missed tackles by Godchaux, Jennings, Ellis, Dugger and Mapu and a general failure to shed blocks. Mapu, at least, played with energy, in contrast with Tavai who seemed to be just hanging back and not getting involved. I remember the early 2000s and the ferocity the team would play with on short yardage and the goal line. How I long for those days again.
Otherwise, I noticed that Maye's swing passes to the back all seemed not to go forward. I'd seen that in previous weeks and wondered if that was deliberate (planning a throw by Stevenson). An accident waiting to happen -- and then it happened.
I switched off thinking that the team isn't hopeless, but that it needs to be coached with a lot more demandingness and attention to detail, and that it needs improvement pretty well everywhere on the O-line and in the defensive front 7.
@KCSVEN
You mentioned that Buffalo were playing man towards the end and relying on the Pats' pass-catchers not being able to get open. I didn't see who was on the field for the Patriots then. All I noticed was that Maye's accuracy seemed to have fallen off. Whom did you have in mind?