


Let’s do this report card-style.
That tired, cliché analysis that cuts right to what you want to know.
What grade does Drake Maye deserve for his starting debut Sunday?
A solid A-minus.
There’s the obvious — three touchdowns and a season-high 21 points scored against a high-pressure Houston defense — plus, subtle context and a rookie curve.
Maye took a Swiss Army Knife into a gunfight against the Texans and not only survived, but thrived for stretches. Despite facing pressure on 40.4% of his dropbacks and working without a running game, he passed for more yards than any Patriots quarterback had in nearly a calendar year.
He beat the blitz. He extended plays. He lasered completions to beat tight man coverage.
Maye did commit a couple of killer mistakes, namely his overthrown interception in the first quarter (the second pick wasn’t his fault) and fumble while getting strip-sacked in the third. A closer look at his film also revealed familiar bugs in his game — missing a couple layup throws and inconsistent footwork — but Maye’s features are strong.
He’s strong-armed, mobile and creative, a modern prototype for the modern game. It took Maye less than 30 minutes to complete as many touchdown passes with 35-plus air yards as Mac Jones had as a Patriot. Thanks to his traits, and the mental toughness Maye displayed getting up from four sacks and four extra hits, it’s a whole new world in Foxboro.
The Patriots are not running a stink-and-dunk offense any longer. But what must they do to better support Maye, as Jerod Mayo pledged on Monday?
Here’s what else the film revealed about the Pats’ latest loss:
20-of-33 for 243 yards, 3 TDs, 2 INTs
Accurate throw percentage: 70%
Under pressure: 7-of-11 for 90 yards, 4 sacks, 12 rushing yards
Against the blitz: 6-of-12 for 113 yards, 2 TDs, INT, 11 rushing yards
Behind the line: 2-of-4 for 10 yards, INT
0-9 yards downfield: 13-of-16 for 98 yards, TD
10-19 yards downfield: 4-of-9 for 95 yards, TD, INT
20+ yards downfield: 1-of-1 for 40 yards, TD
Notes: Maye overcame some predictable nerves in the first half, when the Patriots opened with a three-and-out and his interception, then mustered just three first downs over their next three drives. Unable to run the ball as Houston staked an early 14-0 lead, the Pats foisted all their hopes on Maye’s shoulders with less than a minute left before halftime.
He delivered.

Maye kick-started that two-minute drill with one of his best plays of the game. He made a full-field progression read that pulled Maye back to his right, where he whipped a 22-yard completion to DeMario Douglas while absorbing a hit in a closing pocket. On that play alone, Maye flashed processing, toughness and an ability to throw off-platform. He targeted Douglas twice more on that drive and picked up two more first downs, wisely setting up his first career touchdown pass.
Maye’s 40-yard touchdown to Kayshon Boutte beat another blitz. Thanks to some outstanding protection — including a Hunter Henry chip to help right tackle Demontrey Jacobs versus Pro Bowl pass-rusher Danielle Hunter — Maye had time and space to launch a pinpoint ball to the end zone. This was Maye at his best.

In the second half, he repeatedly turned to Douglas to beat man coverage, and especially man-blitzes. The two connected for a 35-yard touchdown, and Maye never took a sack against extra pressure. The third-quarter strip sack should cause the Patriots’ coaches to emphasize ball security moving forward, and his sloppy footwork popped up on the first interception, plus a bad misfire to Austin Hooper in the second quarter and JaMycal Hasty on a hitch route in the fourth.
But all in all, given his surrounding talent, resilience against pressure and consistent processing, great job, kid.
Turnovers: Patriots 4, Texans 1
Explosive play rate: Patriots 7.9%, Texans 9.7%
Success rate: Patriots 38.1%, Texans 34.8%
Red-zone efficiency: Patriots 1-1, Texans 3-3
Defensive pressure rate: Patriots 35.2%, Texans 40.4%
Personnel breakdown: 64% of snaps in 11 personnel, 35% snaps in 12 personnel, 1% snaps in 21H personnel.***
Personnel production: 36.5% success rate in 11 personnel, 41% success rate in 12 personnel, 100% success rate in 21H personnel.
First-down down play-calls: 54% run (33% success rate), 46% pass (61.5% success rate)
Play-action rate: 16.7%
Offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt authored a solid game plan for Maye, opening with three play-action passes on his first five dropbacks to simplify his reads and create throwing lanes. He also put Maye on the move to steer him away from Houston’s pressure, which only reached Maye twice in the Pats’ first four possessions. Overall, the Pats finished with a 62.5% success rate when passing on first down, a sign of effective play-calling against basic, early-down defensive looks.
But Van Pelt had three problems: the Patriots couldn’t run the ball, fell behind and the offensive line lost more starters to injury. The Patriots finished with two waiver claims — Demontrey Jacobs and Zach Thomas — at offensive tackle. That limited Van Pelt’s ability to call passing plays with five-man protections, because when tight ends or running backs weren’t chipping to help Jacobs and Thomas, Maye got sacked.
One lasting criticism: too many isolation routes. For a coordinator and play-caller with a lackluster receiving corps, too often the Patriots’ wideouts are being asked to win 1-on-1 without scheme help. This partly explains why the Texans, who run a zone-based defense, felt comfortable calling man-to-man on 40% of Maye’s dropbacks before garbage time.

Houston’s message: we’ve got the horses, and you don’t. Maye finished 6-of-11 for 113 yards, two touchdowns, one interception, plus 11 rushing yards versus man-to-man.
Broken tackles: RB Antonio Gibson 5, QB Drake Maye, RB JaMycal Hasty, WR DeMario Douglas, TE Hunter Henry, TE Austin Hooper
Pressure allowed: Team 5 (4 hurries, QB hit), RT Demontrey Jacobs 4 (2 sacks, 2 QB hits), LT Zach Thomas 3 (2 sacks, hurry), QB Drake Maye 1 (QB hit), RB Terrell Jennings 1 (QB hit), LT Vederian Lowe 1 (hurry), LG Michael Jordan 1 (hurry), C Ben Brown 1 (hurry)
Run stuffs allowed: RG Mike Onwenu 2, Team 2, Jacobs, Thomas
Drops: WR Ja’Lynn Polk 2


Personnel breakdown: 33% base defense, 26% three-corner nickel package, 20% three-safety nickel, 20% dime, 1% goal-line.****
Coverage breakdown: 56% zone, 44% man
Blitz rate: 38.2%
Blitz efficacy: 46% offensive success rate and 4.5 yards per play allowed
Like Houston, defensive coordinator DeMarcus Covington called an aggressive game Sunday.
The Patriots played a season-high 44% of passing snaps in man-to-man coverage, including several first-down plays (which is atypical). Covington also blitzed C.J. Stroud on more than one-third of his dropbacks. His staff figured that without Nico Collins, the NFL’s leading receiver, the Texans couldn’t separate often enough from Christian Gonzalez, Jonathan Jones and Marcus Jones.
Well, they did. Stefon Diggs beat Gonzalez for three catches in man-to-man, including a touchdown, while the Joneses were repeatedly victimized by Houston wideout Tank Dell.
The bigger problem? The Pats’ run defense is breaking. They allowed runs of 50-plus yards from base personnel (four defensive backs) and nickel personnel (five defensive backs). No matter how Covington is scheming or calling plays, players’ on-field fundamentals are undermining whatever’s drawn on the white board.
Interceptions: DB Marcus Jones
Pressure: DL Keion White 3 (2 hurries, QB hit), OLB Anfernee Jennings 2 (QB hit, hurry), DL Jaquelin Roy (sack), LB Christian Elliss (half-sack), S Marte Mapu (half-sack), DL Davon Godchaux (hurry), OLB Joshua Uche (hurry), LB Jahlani Tavai (hurry), DL Deatrich Wise (hurry) Team (hurry)
Run stuffs: Team 3, S Kyle Dugger, Jennings, Roy, Mapu
Pass deflections: White 2, Mapu, M. Jones
Missed tackles: CB Christian Gonzalez, S Kyle Dugger, LB Jahlani Tavai, S Marte Mapu, OLB Anfernee Jennings, LB Sione Takitaki, DL Jaquelin Roy


WR DeMario Douglas
Douglas’ 92 receiving yards were the most by a Patriots pass-catcher since Christmas Eve 2022. He also scored his first career touchdown.
S Marte Mapu
The second-year safety broke up a pass in the end zone that led to the Patriots’ only takeaway. He also tallied a half-sack and five tackles.
TE Austin Hooper
Hooper fumbled and finished with a single catch. When the Patriots played him and Hunter Henry together, they generated virtually no push in the run game, averaging 1.33 yards per carry.
WR Ja’Lynn Polk
Two drops and a single catch on four targets. The Patriots need more from their second-round rookie, whom Jerod Mayo said Monday must get over a “mental hump.”
*Explosive plays are defined as runs of 12-plus yards and passes of 20-plus yards.
**Success rate is an efficiency metric measuring how often an offense stays on schedule. A play is successful when it gains at least 40% of yards-to-go on first down, 60% of yards-to-go on second down and 100% of yards-to-go on third or fourth down.
***11 personnel = one running back, one tight end; 12 personnel = one running back, two tight ends; 13 personnel = one running back, three tight ends; 21 = two halfbacks, one tight end.
****Base defense = four defensive backs; nickel = five; dime = six; dollar defense = seven.