CHARGERS-PATRIOTS
THE BACKSTORY
A Divisional Round party at Gillette Stadium has become an
annual occurrence, and the New England
Patriots have been nearly unbeatable in their own building this
decade. Can Philip Rivers and
the upstart Los Angeles
Chargers end Tom Brady's
home playoff dominance?
Bill Belichick's squad has won eight straight postseason
home games against AFC opponents (last home loss to AFC opponent was 2012 AFC
Championship vs. Baltimore). The Patriots have
lost only one postseason game to an AFC opponent since 2014, going 7-1 (the
lone defeat came at Denver in the 2015 AFC Championship Game).
On the flip side, the Chargers have
been road warriors this season. With last week's wild-card win, Rivers' bunch
became just the eighth team in the Super Bowl era
to win nine-plus games in a season (including playoffs) outside of their home
stadium. The Chargers are
8-1 on the road (including playoffs) and added a "home" win at
Wembley Stadium in London. Their only road loss came in Week 3 to the
L.A. Rams.
The Chargersare
undefeated this season when they travel by plane.
The Patriots have
a decided historical advantage over the perennially disappointing Chargers.
Bill Belichick is 6-1 against coaches in their first
postseason -- his only loss came in Super Bowl LII
to Doug Pederson. Anthony Lynn won his first playoff game as a coach last week.
The Chargershave
never won multiple road games in a single postseason.
Brady's history over Rivers looms large. TB12 and the Patriots defeated
Rivers and the Chargers,
21-12, in the 2007 AFC Championship in their only playoff battle en route to
a Super Bowl appearance.
Brady is 7-0 versus Rivers in his career (including playoffs) -- Rivers' lone
career win against New England came in 2008 when Matt Cassel started
at QB while Brady was out with a knee injury (Chargers won,
30-10, at home).
The Chargers became
the eighth team since 2002 (divisional realignment) to win 12-plus games and
not win the division. None of the previous seven such teams made the Super Bowl -- only one of the
previous seven such teams made a Conference Championship (2013 49ers).
History, however, isn't playing Sunday. The Chargers boast
a more well-rounded roster and enough firepower to derail the Patriots on
the road. However, the GOAT had a week to rest his 41-year-old body, New
England got healthier down the stretch and will have a boisterous Foxboro crowd
at its back.
UNDER PRESSURE
PATRIOTS OFFENSIVE
LINE: The book on Tom Brady has
been out for a long time: Rattle him with pressure up the gut. Easier said than
done.
The Pats O-line has been good this season protecting TB12,
ranking No. 1 in pass blocking by Football Outsiders. Per Next Gen Stats, Brady
finished the season with the lowest pressure rate in the league (17.4 percent),
most of which can be attributed to the Patriots allowing
the lowest pressure rate to pass rushers aligned on the edge this season -- 9.6
(New Orleans finished second at 11.0). Brady's quick trigger -- 2.61 seconds to
release was the fifth-fastest release time among qualified passers in 2018 --
and short passing attack aid the low-pressure rate.
The Chargers,
however, boast two of the best pass rushers in the entire NFL in Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram.
Ingram was the best player on the field in the entire NFL last week, destroying
the Ravens'
game plan. Since his return to the starting lineup in Week 12, Bosa ranks
second among 62 edge defenders with 100-plus pass rushes a 3.7 percent sack
rate (including playoffs) -- 6.5 sacks (t-most in NFL) on 177 pass rushes since
Week 12.
Tackles Trent Brown and Marcus Cannon will
have his hands full on the edge, but guards Shaq Mason and Joe Thuney are
enjoying the best years of their careers. Expect the Chargers to
move Ingram around, particularly to the inside to try to push the pocket into
Brady's lap.
The best attribute of the L.A. defense is they get pressure
without blitzing. If the Chargers can
rush four and drop seven into coverage, taking away Brady's outlets, they could
slow the Pats pass attack.
PHILIP RIVERS: It's legacy-pressure for Rivers.
The Chargers quarterback
has the most career completions (4,518), pass yards (54,656), and pass TD (374)
of any QB to never make a Super Bowl appearance.
He'll have to go through Brady to have a shot at ending that dubious record.
Rivers is 5-5 in the playoffs in his career, while Brady is 27-10. Rivers is
1-4 in his career in the Divisional Round -- the lone win coming against Peyton
Manning's Colts in
2007.
Rivers has more than a history problem, however. With
running back Melvin Gordon clearly
less than 100-percent, the Chargers balanced
offense faltered. Being put in disadvantageous situations, Rivers and the
passing game have gone quiet. Last week against Baltimore, Rivers averaged just
5.0 yards per pass and 160 total passing yards with no touchdowns. That won't
get it done at Gillette.
It wasn't just a one-week struggle either. In Rivers' last
five games, including playoffs, he's averaged a 65 percent completion
percentage, 210.0 yards per game, 6.6 yards per attempt, 4-6 TD-INT ratio and a
76.3 passer rating. Those are closer to Case Keenum numbers
than Drew Brees numbers.
Expect the Patriots to
blitz often to supplement their pass rush, which is lacking outside of Trey Flowers,
to take advantage of a mediocre Chargers offensive
line and put pressure on Rivers. The New England defense had the second-lowest
sack rate (4.7 percent) in the NFL and ranked 23rd in QB pressure rate (25.5
percent). Rivers could excel if the Pats don't get pressure. He generated a
115.9 passer rating when not under pressure, ranking fifth among 33 qualifying
QBs during the regular season.
MATCHUP TO WATCH
PATRIOTS RUNNING
BACKS VS. CHARGERS DEFENSIVE
DIVERSITY: Much was made of the Chargers using
seven defensive backs against the Ravens last
weekend. While we won't likely get that setup quite as much from Gus Bradley's
defense this week, we should expect to see a bevy of six-DB looks given L.A.'s
lack of linebacker options. The defensive back-heavy operation worked against
an unsuspecting Ravens team
that never adjusted. Can it work against Belichick, Brady and Josh McDaniels?
Look for the Patriots to
use a cornucopia of big-package looks. New England used the second-highest rate
of 21 Personnel (2 RB, 1 TE) in the NFL (27.9 percent) and fourth-highest rate
of 22 Personnel (2 RB, 2 TE) (6.1 percent).
The Patriots offense
has looked its best this season when employing a power-running attack with
rookie Sony Michel,
who averaged 71.6 rush YPG this season (second among all NFL rookies). With
the Chargers lack
of linebacker depth, New England's game plan will likely include a lot of
heavy-package runs early. In the passing game, the running backs should also
play a big role. James Whitehad
751 receiving yards this season (second among all NFL RBs). White could get
loose against an L.A. defense that ranked 23rd in the NFL covering running
backs in the passing game, per Football Outsiders' metrics.
PREDICTION
The Chargers enter
Sunday's matchup boasting the more complete roster, but facing Tom Brady at
home after a week of rest is a different beast. The Patriots'
defense will make enough plays to force L.A. to settle for field goals and
swipe a close, low-scoring affair at home. MY
PICK PATRIOTS 23, CHARGERS 20
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