Tuesday, May 21, 2013
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) -- The New England Patriots have one major mission before their bye week. Go to London and bring back a win.

New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez (81) can not hang onto the ball as he trys to catch a pass while riding a stationary bike during practice at the NFL football team's facility in Foxborough, Mass., Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)
AP
WEEK 8
Patriots at Rams
When: 1 p.m. Sunday
Where: London
TV: CBS
That would be a fine souvenir of the first half of the season and, they hope, a momentum booster for a team that has been inconsistent on offense and generous on defense.
"It would feel really good for that two-week stretch," quarterback Tom Brady said Wednesday.
The Patriots leave on a red-eye flight Thursday night for Sunday's game with the St. Louis Rams after squeaking by the New York Jets 29-26 in overtime after losing to the Seattle Seahawks 24-23 when they squandered a 23-10 lead in the fourth quarter.
A win would give the Patriots a 5-3 record and undisputed possession of first place in the AFC East, the same record they had midway through last season when they finished at 13-3 and lost the Super Bowl 21-17 on a last-minute touchdown by the New York Giants.
The Patriots historically have improved over the second half of the season, especially the last two seasons when they went 16-0. That should give them confidence once they return from the bye.
"It does," wide receiver Deion Branch said. "We wish we'd have played a lot better the first half. We don't want to go out and go 4-4 and then try to win the last eight games."
Brady would love to see the Patriots string some wins together. Their only winning streak this season lasted just two games.
"Part of the mental toughness is putting what happened (behind) and moving forward to next week without wasting any time or energy spent thinking about last week," he said. "That's how you string wins together. That's why you don't win one, lose one, win one, lose one, because at the end of the day, you're mediocre and you're watching all the good teams play.
"The good teams win, win, win, win, win and if you lose you (still have to) win, win, win, win. That's just how it is."
In Bill Belichick's previous 12 years as coach of the Patriots, they were 8-4 in the week preceding their bye, although Brady has won his last five. They're 9-3 in their first game back, though they lost two straight games after the bye last year.
A loss to the Rams (3-4) could prompt Belichick to give the team a bit more work in their two weeks before returning on Nov. 11 for a home game against the Buffalo Bills.
"It's never good going in with a loss, especially with the coach we have," tight end Aaron Hernandez said, "but I'm sure we'll be fine. And as long as we follow the game plan, work hard and play Patriot football, we should be fine."
Part of Patriot football is piling up yardage. Last Sunday, they tied the NFL record of 16 consecutive regular-season games with at least 350 yards, set by the Rams in 1999-2000.
"You don't call plays that aren't designed to gain significant yards," Brady said. "If you execute them the right way, they're productive and there aren't a lot of negative plays. I think last week we had 80 plays. There were only two negative plays out of 80, which is pretty good. So, if you're not going backwards and killing yourself with penalties and turnovers and really not beating yourself, you can usually put yourself in a good position to win the game.
"Gaining yards is certainly important, but scoring points is more important."
The Patriots gained 387 yards against the Arizona Cardinals, 396 against the Baltimore Ravens and 475 against the Seattle Seahawks -- and lost to all of them. They lead the NFL with 436.1 yards per game after finishing second with 428 last year.
(Continued on page 2)
Tweet
Further Discussion
Here at KJonline.com we value our readers and are committed to growing our community by encouraging you to add to the discussion. To ensure conscientious dialogue we have implemented a strict no-bullying policy. To participate, you must follow our Terms of Use.Questions about the article? Add them below and we’ll try to answer them or do a follow-up post as soon as we can. Technical problems? Email them to us with an exact description of the problem. Make sure to include: