Howe: Why Mac Jonesā alleged āattitude problemā is a mischaracterization of Patriots QB
Jeff Howe
Donāt misconstrue competitiveness with attitude.
A leaky narrative evolved last week around
Patriots quarterback
Mac Jones, one that didnāt jibe with anything the team had grown to appreciate about their 2021 first-round pick since they aligned a year and a half ago.
According to some reports, Jones now has an attitude problem and a big ego, and it supposedly clashed with the coaching staff.
Prior to last week, none of these words had ever been used to describe Jones, according to numerous conversations with people from the organization and those close to the quarterback. And since this narrative took on a life of its own last week, all of these characterizations have since been shot down once again by some of those same people.
Now, letās back it up several years and revisit history to raise a few points.
Jonesās former high school coach, the late Corky Rogers, was notoriously demanding on his quarterbacks, once even threatening to bench Jones after a touchdown pass because Rogers wanted him to throw it elsewhere. They often clashed but in a familial way. The hard coaching wasnāt always welcomed,
but it was respected.
Later, Jones passed up other scholarship opportunities to commit to Alabama even though some coaches and advisors couldnāt understand it. The Crimson Tide already had quarterback
Jalen Hurts and a commitment from five-star recruit
Tua Tagovailoa, so Jonesā chances of ever playing were never guaranteed.
As he was biding his time in Alabama, Jones treated his responsibilities with the scout team like his own versions of games. During one particular run-heavy period against the starting defense that was stacking the line to prepare for an upcoming opponent, Jones kept changing the play at the line, throwing deep and celebrating with his receivers after each big strike.
The defense complained to head coach Nick Saban, who hollered at Jones to knock it off and stick to the script. Jones fired back something to the effect of, āIf you donāt like it, tell your defense to stop it!ā Saban was fuming on the field, but the Alabama coaches laughed about it after practice.
That story highlighted Jonesā competitive spirit that endeared him to both his Alabama coaches and, eventually, to those in New England, too.
But thatās the type of story that can easily be spun another way. For example:
In an effort to boost his own ego ā rather than help prepare the defense for their upcoming game ā Jones went rogue during practice, calling his own plays and screaming at Saban that his defense should figure out how to stop him.
See how that can work?
As Jones waited for a turn that was never promised, Alabama added uber-recruit Bryce Young to the QB room, but Jones didnāt transfer. He earned the backup job in 2019 and relieved an injured Tagovailoa midway through the season, then he beat out Young for the starting job in 2020. Jones was praised for his persistence throughout that entire process, and that proved to be a big draw for teams that evaluated him prior to the draft. They saw a player who had no ego and felt no entitlement.
This past offseason, Jones dove headfirst into a conditioning program to gain a leaner build. He was routinely one of the first players to arrive at Gillette Stadium, often getting there before coaches. That doesnāt sound like someone who was getting fat and happy after a Pro Bowl appearance in his rookie season.
And as the Patriots worked on a new offensive system ā mixing up the playbook and simplifying the language in the post-Josh McDaniels era ā Jones was lauded for his collaborative communication. Heād let them know ā forcefully, at times ā which plays or concepts he did and didnāt like based on their ability to execute them, but all parties involved had a voice in the process.
This was
all reported during the offseason, and Jones was largely commended for it. Now, following rookie
Bailey Zappeās sterling debut, thereās suddenly a narrative forming that Jones wasnāt happy with the direction of the offense. Perhaps, you could take the idea that he didnāt like certain plays and spin it into something else, but, according to those close to the quarterback, thatād be a disingenuous stretch.
Finally, Jones suffered a high ankle sprain four weeks ago against the
Ravens, and heās missed the last three games. The quarterback sought out multiple opinions on his rehabilitation plan and ultimately decided against surgery. According to league officials with knowledge of the situation, Patriots coach Bill Belichick was not pushing him toward a procedure, contrary to another narrative that indicated the sides clashed about his recovery.
Jones will retain control of his starting job once heās healthy enough to get through a full game, and
that is expected to be Monday night against the Bears. Zappeās performances over the past three weeks have been impressive and encouraging, but
no one at Gillette Stadium seriously considered reordering the depth chart, according to league officials with knowledge of the situation.
Itās illogical how something can spiral out of control like this. If Jones was praised for each of these examples as they happened, letās not rewrite history now in an attempt to sell a point that doesnāt exist.
(Photo of Mac Jones: Paul Rutherford / USA Today)
None of the narratives that have sprung up around the Patriots QB in the past week jibe with what they have grown to appreciate about him.
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