I want to be clear, I don't think we're doooooomed and losing 4 games wouldn't bother me much.
What IS concerning is the collapses on the road and the failure of the tea to keep their wits about them for the entire game. That will be costly in the playoff's. It could be costly on Sunday.
I don't side with those who believe we lack the talent to be dominant. We simply lack the experience and scheming to be dominant.
I didn't take your post specifically as such. My response was more a generalized response to comments I've been seeing. With New York, the game was early in the season and offense was poor. In Denver, the defense played fairly well and the offense lagged (I won't say poor because nobody had put more than 14 points on Denver at that time and the offense rang up 17 in the first half). In New Orleans and Indy, it was likely the opposite. If the offense puts up 30 points, regardless of whether those points come in the first or second half, that unit does its job. If the defense keeps the opposing team to under 14 (let's say 24 with teams like Indy or NO), it does its job.
While the Patriots are a team, I suspect other than when players have a role on both units (and even Vrabel seemed to take little joy in offensive success when he caught TDs), offense, defense and special teams are taught to "do their job" and take care of their side of the ball. These "collapses" tend to be on one phase of the game, and not always the same one. That means if both offense and defense took care of their respective ends, the team would be 10-1 (but as Parcells always says, you are only as good as your record so I am only talking potential here).
On the road question, the Pats have played 4 road games, one of which was against a head coach who spent years with the Pats and likely knew the personnel and units as well as anybody could. Two other losses were against two 11-0 teams. If the road games are truly an issue, and not just the level of competition and the proportionally smaller margin of error to win such games, the rest of the season should spell that out. I take some heart in the 3 quarters in Indy and the fact both offense and defense took the Colts to task in a loud and hostile environment. My suspicion at this point would be "home" and "away" is a red herring, and the deficiencies are more related to the specific opponents and matchups presented at the time.