Season in Review

Patriots 2025 Season in Review

2025 NFL Season · Saturday, May 16

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The Rundown

Drake Maye finished the season as the most accurate quarterback in football against expectation — plus 9.1 percent over what he was supposed to complete. Number one in the league. Here's how a second-year quarterback turned into the most efficient passer in football, how a two-headed backfield ran for over two thousand yards, and the one defensive number that explains why the Super Bowl slipped away. Fourteen and three. AFC East champs. Two seed in the AFC. Three playoff wins to get to Glendale — and then a twenty-nine to thirteen loss to Seattle in the Super Bowl. The Patriots smashed all year. They just got muffed on the biggest stage.

Let's set the table. The offense posted plus one hundred sixty point nine total expected points added — how much every snap pushed New England's scoring chances above league average — number one in football. The defense came in at minus forty five point five expected points added allowed, and remember, big negative on defense is good — that ranked eleventh. They converted forty three point six percent of their third downs, sixth in the league, and finished drives: sixty seven point five percent of their scoring drives ended in touchdowns, not field goals. And the variance read was steady. Outside of the Week One stumble against the Raiders and the Week Three loss to Pittsburgh, this team won twelve in a row, scored at least twenty four points in fifteen of seventeen games, and lost just one regular season game after October. Not a boom-or-bust roster. A floor team that kept raising its ceiling.

Now let's talk about the passing offense — the number one passing attack in the league. Plus one hundred fifty eight point three expected points added through the air on five hundred fifty one attempts, plus zero point two nine per dropback. Maye threw for forty three hundred ninety four yards and thirty one touchdowns against eight interceptions, completing seventy two percent of his throws against an expected completion percentage of sixty two point eight. Said simply — he was completing nine percent more passes than he was supposed to, every single week. Stefon Diggs was the lead target with eighty five catches for ten thirteen and four scores, the kind of veteran possession threat that lets a young quarterback play on schedule. The one wart: forty eight sacks allowed at a seven point eight percent sack rate. Protection was a soft spot — but Maye's processing covered for it most weeks. The defining throw came in Week Ten in Tampa, third quarter, Patriots fourteen Bucs seven — Maye dropped one in the bucket short right to Kyle Williams, who took it seventy two yards for the touchdown, a plus five point seven three expected points play. That's the offense in miniature: accuracy and explosive finish.

Now let's dig into the rushing offense. Twenty one hundred ninety five rushing yards, one hundred twenty nine point one a game, four point four a carry, sixth in the league. But the expected points number tells the truth — minus fourteen point four on the ground for the season, nineteenth in football. Translation: a lot of yards, not always in the right spots. The two-back rotation carried it. TreVeyon Henderson took the bigger workload — one hundred eighty carries for nine hundred eleven yards, nine touchdowns, five point one a clip, and plus one hundred forty nine rushing yards over expected on the season. Boom-or-bust on the ground: eighty five explosive plays on offense, but stretches where the run game was just collecting four-yard gains on first down.

Next up, the pass defense — and this is where the season gets quietly impressive. The Patriots allowed minus thirty two point one expected points added through the air and gave up just two hundred six point six passing yards a game — sixty ninth percentile against the pass. But here's the catch: they only got home for thirty five sacks all season, twenty sixth in the league. The pass rush did not consistently win one-on-ones. What saved the unit was opportunism — nineteen total takeaways including ten interceptions, and the secondary made big plays in big spots. The one that mattered most came in Week Five in Buffalo, third quarter, Bills down three at the Patriots' own nineteen — Josh Allen tried to fit one to Khalil Shakir over the middle and Marcus Jones jumped it in the red zone, a minus three point seven two expected points swing that flipped the game. Patriots won twenty three to twenty. That's the pass defense's identity: you'll move the ball, but they'll take it from you when it matters.

And the run defense — tighter story here. They allowed one hundred two point one rushing yards a game and posted minus thirteen point five expected points added against the run, slightly better than league average, fifty sixth percentile. They gave up just eleven rushing touchdowns all season — the number that matters most. When offenses got to the red zone, the Patriots made them throw it. The front held its ground week to week with very little variance. Steady floor, low ceiling — and combined with the takeaway-heavy secondary, enough to win fourteen regular season games.

The Bottom Line

A

14-3 regular season

Season MVP is Drake Maye, and it's not close — three hundred fifty four for four hundred ninety two, forty three hundred ninety four yards, thirty one touchdowns to eight picks, plus nine point one completion percentage over expected, the number one passer in football by adjusted net yards per attempt. The one thing this team has to fix is the pass rush. Thirty five sacks for the season — twenty sixth in the league, twenty second percentile — and a young quarterback covering for forty eight sacks taken on the other side. The takeaways masked it in the regular season. Against Seattle in the Super Bowl, it didn't.

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