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Today In Patriots History Oct 15, 2017: Brady sets record for most wins; Pats 24, Jets 17

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Today in Patriots History
October 15, 2017: Brady sets record for most wins by a QB
Controversial fumble call in end zone wipes out Jete touchdown
Gronk scores twice in 24-17 victory at Exit 44W



Sunday October 15, 2017 at 1:00
Week 6, Game 6 at MetLife Stadium
New England Patriots 24, New York Jets 17
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Todd Bowles
QBs: Tom Brady, Josh McCown
Odds: New England favored by 9
TV: CBS; Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts; Evan Washburn
Patriots improve to 4-2, Jets drop to 3-3



The Patriots reeled off 24 unanswered points Sunday in the Meadowlands to avoid disaster, holding on for a wild 24-17 win over the Jets.

Lots to get to here, but we begin with a bizarre sequence midway through the fourth quarter. Trailing 24-14 with 8:31 remaining, the Jets appeared to score a touchdown on a Josh McCown throw to Austin Sefarian-Jenkins. The score would have brought the Jets within three points (pending the PAT).

The play was reviewed, though, and the referees determined that Sefarian-Jenkins lost control of the ball before he crossed the goal line and failed to regain possession. The play, incredibly, was ruled a touchback.


This was not without some drama. As the Jets trailed 24-17 in the final minute of the fourth quarter, backed up deep in their own territory, McCown kept the drive alive with a 32-yard completion to Jeremy Kerley on a 4th-and-long. The Jets also completed a 44-yard pass to Jermaine Kearse in the fourth quarter.

Dont'a Hightower and Kyle Van Noy both registered sacks on the final drive.


On offense, Brady threw an ugly interception and Mike Gillislee lost a fumble. The up-and-down play put the Patriots in an early hole. Going up against a Jets offense ranked 26th in the NFL, the Patriots allowed a touchdown on the first drive, which saw the Jets convert four times on third down. The last conversion was an Austin Seferian-Jenkins 1-yard touchdown pass from Luke McCown at 9:13 of the first quarter.

The Pats offense got moving after the Jets first score, but Gillislee’s fumble with 1:27 left in the opening quarter halted that momentum. The Jets took over at the 22-yard line and marched 78 yards. The drive culminated in a 31-yard touchdown pass from McCown to Jeremy Kerley at 9:08 of the second quarter. Kerley beat Malcolm Butler on the play and, after the PAT kick, the Jets had 14-0 lead.

The Patriots were able to get on the scoreboard after that with Dion Lewis scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run at 5:19 of the second quarter, cutting the Jets advantage in half.




Offensive momentum came to a halt — again — at 3:13 of the second quarter. After a defensive three-and-out, the Patriots couldn’t capitalize as Brady was intercepted by Buster Skrine after throwing to Phillip Dorsett, who was double covered. Things didn’t get any better on the next series as Stephen Gostkowski missed a 43-yard field goal, his first miss of the season.

That’s when the defense stepped up. With 39 seconds left in the first half, Butler made amends by interception Josh McCown. On the next series, Brady hit Gronkowski for the 2-yard touchdown with 9 seconds left in the first half.

The offense started with the ball in the second half and Gronkowski scored his second touchdown at 11:22 of the third quarter, and the Pats led, 21-14. On the ensuing series, Devin McCourty came up with an interception, on fourth-and-1, at 4:49 of the third. The Patriots turned that into points and went ahead, 24-14, as Gostkowski hit the 28-yard field goal at 14:10 of the fourth quarter.




Tom Brady’s record-setting victory was hardly smooth and easy. It also wasn’t the prettiest of his 187 regular-season wins.

Brady, who broke a tie with Peyton Manning and Brett Favre, had to rally the New England Patriots from a two-touchdown deficit in the first half before holding on for a 24-17 win over the New York Jets on Sunday to claim first place in the AFC East.

The Patriots (4-2) were playing their first game in 10 days after beating Tampa Bay 19-14 on Oct. 5, and appeared a bit rusty early as they fell behind 14-0 in the second quarter against the surprising Jets (3-3).


New York had a chance to tie the game after getting the ball back with 1:53 remaining, but the Patriots’ 32nd-ranked overall defense held on — forcing Josh McCown to throw incomplete on a desperation heave on fourth-and-16 from the Patriots 49, and ending the Jets’ three-game winning streak.

Brady, who already had the NFL mark for total victories, was visibly frustrated early, but got going in this one just before halftime as the Patriots tied it at 14 with 9 seconds left in the second quarter on a 2-yard TD catch by Rob Gronkowski .

Brady then marched the Patriots down the field on their opening drive of the second half, going eight plays and 75 yards to give New England its first lead at 21-14 with a 33-yard pass to Gronkowski. Brady finished 20 of 38 for 257 yards with two touchdowns to Gronkowski and an interception. Dion Lewis also had a 1-yard TD run.




After Stephen Gostkowski’s 28-yard field goal made it 24-14 50 seconds into the fourth quarter, New York appeared to make it a one-score game again on its next possession as Austin Seferian-Jenkins took a short pass from McCown and reached over the goal line for a 4-yard touchdown .

But officials reviewed the score and said the video replay showed that Seferian-Jenkins slightly lost control of the ball when Malcolm Butler nudged it loose as the tight end was crossing the plane of the goal line. Seferian-Jenkins didn’t regain control until after he had stepped out of bounds, resulting in a touchback — despite the ball never hitting the ground. That gave the Patriots back the ball, with the Jets’ sideline irate.

After the Patriots went three-and-out, the Jets were able to cut it to a one-score game on Chandler Catanzaro’s 28-yard field goal with 3:40 left. But their last-minute comeback attempt fell short.


Replay gone wrong. About halfway through the fourth quarter, it appeared the Jets scored a touchdown to cut the Patriots lead to four with the extra point pending. Austin Seferian-Jenkins took a pass from Josh McCown and bullied his way through a few defenders, powering just across to goal line for what looked like his second score of the game. Under a replay review, however, officials determined that Seferian-Jenkins bobbled the ball as he was going into the end zone, and that he hit the pylon when he technically did not have control of it. That turned Seferian-Jenkins’s second touchdown into a fumble and touchback, despite the fact that the big tight end never actually lost the ball.


Led by Kyle Van Noy – who had a team-high seven tackles, two sacks, two tackles for loss and three quarterback hits – the Pats were in the Jets’ backfield regularly. As a team they wound up with four sacks, seven tackles for loss, and hit Josh McCown 10 times. Malcom Brown was a force in the middle, picking up a sack, and even the maligned Alan Branch made an impact pushing the pocket from the middle.




This was when Harvey Langi was involved in a serious auto accident:




Patriots.com columns:


Other local links:
Jeff Howe:

Karen Guregian:

Adam Kurkjian:

Mike Reiss:

Phil Perry:

Henry McKenna:


National viewpoints:


NY/NJ perspective:



9:31 Highlight Video
Patriots vs. Jets | NFL Week 6 Game Highlights





 
Today in Patriots History
October 15, 1978: Pats win 4th straight, 10-3 over Bengals
Grogan, Ivory, Cunningham combine for 4th quarter game winning drive
Tim Fox with two game saving picks in final minutes



Sunday October 15, 1978 at 1:00
Week 7, Game 7 at Riverfront Stadium
New England Patriots 10, Cincinnati Bengals 3
Head Coaches: Chuck Fairbanks, Homer Rice
QBs: Steve Grogan, Ken Anderson
Odds: New England favored by 9
TV: NBC; Sam Nover, Bob Trumpy
Patriots improve to 5-2, Bengals drop to 0-7



After being dormant all game, the Pats woke up in the fourth quarter to eek out a victory at Riverfront Stadium over the winless Bengals. The normally potent Patriot rushing game was limited to 19 yards on nine carries in the first half, and was aided by three Chris Bahr missed field goals.


The Patriots scored first when they were unable to score on a 3rd-and-goal at the two, settling for a 19-yard David Posey field goal. Ken Anderson was able to move Cincy down the field, but Chris Bahr missed on field goal attempts of 25 yards and 44 yards, before connecting from 52 as time expired in the first half to make the score 3-3.

On the first play of the fourth quarter Bahr attempted another 52 yard field goal, but it was no good and the Patriots took over at the 33. The Pats committed back to back penalties to start the drive, resulting in a 1st-and-30 from the 13.


After a Don Calhoun 8-yard run and Cincy offsides penalty, Grogan connected with Stanley Morgan for 18 yards and a clutch first down. Then Grogan rushed for 22 on a 3rd-and-10, and the Patriots had a first down at the Bengals 34.

Two runs each by Horace Ivory and Sam Cunningham moved the chains to the 21, but an Ivory gain of eight was negated by a clipping penalty. Grogan ran for five and completed an 8-yard pass to Russ Francis, setting up a 4th-and-one at the 15.

Rather than kick a field goal, Grogan got the first down on a keeper. On 3rd-and-13 Grogan was tackled four yards short of the first down, but the Patriots got a first down due to a Bengal personal foul. Sam Cunningham finished it off on the next play with a three-yard run for the touchdown, making the score 10-3.


The drive consisted of 20 snaps, including a combined five penalties, consuming 8:04 of elapsed time.


Cincinnati drove back down the field, but after a sack for a loss of eight they faced a 4th-and-6 from the Pats 26. The Patriots appeared to take over on downs after a stop, but a defensive holding penalty gave the Bengals new life and a fresh set of downs. On the very next play Tim Fox picked off an Anderson pass at the eight yard line.

The Patriots were able to pick up one first down, but were then forced to punt. The Bengals took over on their own 34 with 1:09 left to play. After gaining one first down Anderson threw deep, but with four seconds remaining Fox picked him off again to seal the victory.




1:00 Video Highlights
10/15/1978 New England Patriots at Cincinnati Bengals highlight, National Football League Week 7



20:23 All Week 7 Highlights
1978 NFL Week 7



22:08 1978 Patriots Yearbook
1978 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "How The East Was Won"





NFL Media 12-page game summary

 
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