Welland Tribune e-edition

Pats’ offensive line poised to keep pressure off of Jones

Rookie quarterback was constantly harassed by Dolphins in opener

KYLE HIGHTOWER

“We just gotta be better. We put it on ourselves. Obviously, it’s us blocking. It just pushes us to be better and do better.” MIKE ONWENU

PATRIOTS LEFT GUARD

FOXBOROUGH, MASS. — Mac Jones is going to be tested by opposing defences this season. That’s just the way life goes for rookie quarterbacks in the National Football League.

It’s a reality not lost on members of the Patriots’ offensive line.

“As a rookie, obviously you have a lot on your plate,” left guard Mike Onwenu said. “Everybody is going to try to take a stab at a rookie.”

It didn’t take long for Jones to find that out in New England’s season-opening loss to the Miami Dolphins.

The Dolphins’ defence tried its best to push him into poor decisions all game, forcing him to fumble on the game’s opening drive and blitzing him 21 times.

Only Dallas’s Dak Prescott was blitzed more often (33), and only Tennessee’s Ryan Tannehill (12) and the Jets’ Zach Wilson (10) took more than the nine hits Jones did last week.

It’s put the Patriots’ offensive line in the spotlight as it prepares to visit a New York Jets team expected to be just as aggressive under new coach Robert Saleh.

Seeing Jones hit so much in the opener didn’t sit well with the Patriots’ O-line.

“We just gotta be better. We put it on ourselves. Obviously, it’s us blocking,” Onwenu said. “It just pushes us to be better and do better.”

The Jets came up short in a 19-14 loss to Carolina in their opener, but their defence also tried its best to make things difficult for Carolina quarterback Sam Darnold.

For the game, the Jets pressured their former quarterback on 33 per cent of his drop backs, tallied 12 pressures and hit him seven times.

Patriots coach Bill Belichick said he sees some similarities between the Jets’ defensive scheme and the one Saleh ran as defensive co-ordinator of the San Francisco 49ers. Key members of Saleh’s coaching staff have San Francisco ties.

“(Saleh) has done a good job with the teams that he’s had,” Belichick said, “making adjustments and adding his own wrinkles to what they do based on the players that he has and the teams that he faces.”

New England will be preparing for New York possibly without starting right tackle Trent Brown, who left the opener with a right calf injury. He was replaced by Justin Herron, who played 46 snaps over the next three quarters. Yasir Durant later came on in place of Herron, taking 23 snaps.

If Brown can’t go this week, another option could be to put Onwenu there. He started all 16 games at right tackle last season before moving over to left guard this campaign following Joe Thuney’s departure in free agency.

Onwenu said he hasn’t taken any snaps at right tackle in his second year, but added he is prepared to play where he’s needed. “I think you do whatever you can to prepare any position,” he said. “Just like I know I can be at right guard. Just taking the steps and having the mindset of knowing everything or every position.”

Belichick hasn’t ruled out the possibility of shifting Onwenu to his old position.

“We always talk about all of our options and, ultimately, we try to do what’s best for the team. I don’t think that’ll change,” Belichick said.

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2021-09-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-09-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://wellandtribune.pressreader.com/article/281968905820020

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