FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Bill Belichick was 39 years old when he coached the Cleveland Browns to a win over the New England Patriots in 1991 – his first as an NFL coach.
As Belichick trotted toward the center of the field Sunday, his trademark cutoff hooded sweatshirt soaked in rain following the Patriots’ 27-13 win over the Browns, he did so as a member of a small but elite group of coaches.
Tom Brady threw for 259 yards and two touchdown passes to help Belichick earn his 300th career victory in the Patriots’ win.
Belichick sits behind only Don Shula (347) and George Halas (324) on the NFL’s all-time list.
“Fortunately I didn’t play in any of those games,” Belichick said. “I was a part of those, but honestly, players win games in this league and I’ve been fortunate to coach a lot of great ones.”
The Patriots improved to 8-0 for the third time in team history and the first time since 2015, when they started 10-0. The Browns have lost three straight games.
Brady completed 20 of 36 passes, hitting Julian Edelman on eight of them for 78 yards and both TDs.
New England capitalized on three first-quarter turnovers by Cleveland to take a 17-0 lead. Running back Nick Chubb had back-to-back fumbles, and Baker Mayfield threw an interception.
The Patriots have forced a league-high 25 turnovers.
Safety and captain Devin McCourty said they go into games expecting to force two or three turnovers.
“It’s an awareness to hunt the football,” he said. “As a defense, we all know that.”
The Browns trimmed New England’s lead to 17-10 early in the third quarter. But the Patriots struck right back on their next possession, using a 59-yard completion from Brady to James White to help set up a 14-yard touchdown pass from Brady to Edelman.
Chubb ran for 131 yards, and Mayfield finished 20 of 31 for 194 yards and a touchdown. The Patriots have won 21 straight games against first- or second-year quarterbacks, the longest such streak in NFL history.
Cleveland’s first-quarter turnovers came on consecutive plays.
After the Patriots grabbed a 3-0 lead, Chubb took a handoff but had the ball kicked out of his hands by left guard Joel Bitonio. It was scooped up by Dont’a Hightower and returned 26 yards for a touchdown.
On the next play after the Patriots’ kickoff landed out of bounds, Chubb broke free and appeared headed for a touchdown, but New England cornerback Jonathan Jones gave pursuit and hammered the ball from Chubb’s hands. It was recovered by McCourty at the 4.
Following a Patriots’ punt, the Browns’ next series ended when Lawrence Guy broke into the backfield and stepped in front of Mayfield’s shovel pass attempt to Jarvis Landry on the Cleveland 16 for his first-career interception.
New England needed just two plays to score, as Brady connected with Edelman for an 8-yard touchdown.
“They’re going to take advantage of stuff like that. That’s just the kind of team they are,” Mayfield said. “This isn’t Nick Chubb’s fault. He’s going to be very hard on himself.”
Cleveland finally found some traction in the second quarter on its sixth possession, capping a six-play, 54-yard drive with a 21-yard pass from Mayfield to Demetrius Harris.
The Browns made a handful of changes on both sides of the ball in hopes of ending a two-game losing streak to the Patriots.
Justin McCray made his first start at left tackle in place of Greg Robinson. Starting cornerbacks Denzel Ward and Greedy Williams returned to the lineup after missing four games because of hamstring injuries.
The Patriots tested both cornerbacks early on.
On New England’s second drive, Phillip Dorsett beat Williams along the sideline and caught a 33-yard pass.
But after the Patriots extended the drive by converting on fourth-and-7 from the Browns 33, Ward nearly intercepted Brady’s third-and-2 pass into the end zone. New England settled for a field goal.
STREAK BUSTER
Mayfield’s TD pass to Harris ended a 71-0 scoring streak by the Patriots. They scored the final 21 points in their win over the Giants on Oct. 10 and then shut out the Jets 33-0 last week.
BAD COMPANY
Cleveland’s three turnovers on consecutive offensive plays marked the first time any team has done so since the Dolphins did it in Week 1 of the 2012 season against the Texans. It’s only the seventh time it has been done since 2000.
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