Mac Jones aims to 'earn the respect' of Patriots after rough 2022 season
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Quick-hit thoughts and notes around the New England Patriots and NFL:
1. Mac’s fresh outlook: There was something noticeably different with quarterback Mac Jones last week.
He was at ease in his first news conference since the end of a disappointing 2022 season. A relaxed Jones revealed a humbled, vulnerable side that was more human and less robotic and cliché-filled than what usually unfolded in those Q&A’s through a trying second season in the NFL.
One of the more telling parts of his 10-minute media session on the edge of the Patriots’ practice fields came when he shared part of his offseason approach.
“There’s mental, physical, emotional, and I’ve addressed all that. You try to fill up each bucket the right way,” he said.
The 24-year-old Jones essentially acknowledged that he didn’t always do that in 2022.
“Sometimes the most confident people come from a year where they might not have been their best. I feel like that’s where I’m at,” he said. “Really great people are formed through ups and downs. Some of the learning experiences I had last year will really help. There’s a lot of things I can do better as a person, as a player.”
It had been almost six months since Jones last answered questions from reporters, in the aftermath of the team’s season-ending 35-23 loss to the Buffalo Bills in Orchard Park, New York, that knocked New England out of the playoffs.
On that day, Jones looked spent from one of his most adversity-filled years in football and said: “It wasn’t the progress any of us wanted to make. It starts with me.”
Jones’ work ethic to improve on the field this offseason was never in question; it’s something coach Bill Belichick has consistently mentioned and did so again last week when he said, “Mac works hard every day. He puts in a lot of time in the weight room, the classroom, on the field. His work ethic is really good and hasn’t changed.”
But there’s a lot more than on-field work for players, and Jones’ reference to filling his mental and emotional “buckets” highlights it.
Last season, he was fined twice for unnecessary roughness, and once for unsportsmanlike conduct. And while some teammates empathized with him for being put in a challenging position with a new offensive system and staff that had top coaches whose primary background was on defense or special teams, Jones still let his frustrations get the best of him at times on the sideline. It wasn’t always top-shelf leadership.
Perhaps that’s what he was thinking of when he said this past week: “I’m going to do everything I can to earn the respect of everybody in this building again.”
Jones, who joked with a reporter that he liked his golf bucket hat and how he couldn’t pull off the same look, talked about “starting fresh,” building trust, and his plan to “run my own race and look up at the end and see where I’m at … hopefully everybody will run right behind me.”
It probably wasn’t a coincidence that his first answer began this way: “I think every year is a great year to just stay positive.”
It’s easier to say that in early June. Nonetheless, the difference from last year stood out in Jones’ hopes to author a comeback story.
2. Tyquan’s goal: Wiry second-year receiver Tyquan Thornton, who missed the first four games of last season with a broken collarbone, said one of his goals this offseason has been to add strength and weight to help make it through the 17-game season. The 6-foot-2, 182-pound speedster also wants to be “more strategic with routes” with the idea of “selling every route like it’s a ‘go’ ball.” After an early dropped pass, he had one of the plays of the day Wednesday, getting behind the defense on a double move and hauling in a deep delivery from Jones that drew audible praise from the offensive coaching staff.