New England’s J.C. Jackson celebrates one of his two interceptions against the New York Jets on Sunday in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Bill Kostroun/Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Mac Jones kept his mistakes to a minimum, moved the ball down the field and did enough to earn his first NFL victory with the New England Patriots.

Thanks, also, in large part to a nightmarish outing by Zach Wilson for the New York Jets.

Jones was smart and efficient, Damien Harris and James White had touchdown runs, and the Patriots intercepted Wilson four times in a 25-6 victory Sunday.

“It feels good,” Jones said. “It’s what everyone is saying: It’s hard to win in the NFL. You’ve got to take it for what it’s worth. We’ll get better. Anyone who watched the game would agree that the offense can play better.”

At least he and the Patriots were better than Wilson and the Jets. And it wasn’t close.

Jones, the No. 15 overall pick in the draft, went 22 of 30 for 186 yards for the Patriots (1-1), a week after he was 29 of 39 for 281 yards and a touchdown in a loss to Miami.

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“He’s going to compete for four quarters, no matter what’s going on,” White said. “He stays motivated. It’s tough out there being a rookie quarterback. A lot of things get thrown at you. He stayed locked in throughout the entire game.”

New England topped New York for the 11th straight game, boosted by Wilson throwing the ball to the wrong team in the home opener for the Jets (0-2), who have lost 11 straight in September.

It got so bad early in the fourth quarter that when the No. 2 overall draft pick overthrew a receiver, the crowd at MetLife Stadium – boisterous and excited early at their first game since Dec. 22, 2019, because of the pandemic – began booing the young QB.

“They should be booing, right?” Wilson said. “We didn’t play well on offense. Our defense gave us a good chance to win. We didn’t execute, we didn’t move the ball well and we didn’t score any points. We’ve got to do a better job there.”

Wilson (19 of 33 for 210 yards and the four INTs) struggled right away.

“It’s on my shoulders,” Wilson said. “I’ve got to do better.”

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Wilson’s struggles might have been expected: Bill Belichick is 22-6 against rookie quarterbacks since taking over as Patriots coach in 2000.

“Bill always talks about winning the turnover margin, and how big an indication that is of who wins the game,” said Patriots safety Devin McCourty, who had one of the four interceptions. “In order to win the turnover margin, we’ve got to create turnovers. We did a good job of that early in the game. That had a big impact on the game.”

After Marcus Maye’s sack pushed the Patriots out of field goal position on their opening drive, the Jets got the ball at their 8. Wilson threw downfield to Corey Davis in traffic and J.C. Jackson tipped it into the air, McCourty deflected it, and the ball landed in Jackson’s hands for his first of two interceptions.

The Patriots capitalized with Nick Folk’s 46-yard field goal.

“You go out there and set the tone,” Jackson said, “and hopefully your teammates feed off that.”

Wilson’s second pass was also picked off, this time Adrian Phillips grabbing the ball after a high throw went off Davis’ hands. New England got into the end zone, with White running it in for a 10-0 lead.

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Wilson made another poor decision on New York’s fourth drive with an underthrown pass to Elijah Moore that was easily picked off by Jackson again.

Wilson was the first player since at least 1991 to throw INTs on each of his first two pass attempts in a game, according to NFL Research. He was also the first player since at least 1991 to throw three INTs in his first five pass attempts.

“He was off a little bit,” Jets Coach Robert Saleh said.

The fourth interception opened the second half when he floated a pass downfield that was easily picked off by McCourty. Two plays later, Harris shed what appeared to be seven tackle attempts by the Jets for a 26-yard touchdown.

Folk, a former Jet, made a 32-yarder in the third quarter for his franchise-record 32nd consecutive field goal. He added a 26-yarder to cap his day.

“I’ve heard, but it doesn’t matter to me really,” Folk said of the mark. “I’ve never been one for records.”

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The Jets trailed only 13-3 at halftime, but history showed the Patriots had it all but wrapped up. New England has won 41 consecutive games when leading by double digits after two quarters, the NFL’s longest such active streak.

BOO!

With Wilson struggling, Patriots linebacker Kyle Van Noy – inactive with a throat injury – took to Twitter and got social media buzzing.

“Ghosts again?!?” Van Noy tweeted in the third quarter.

He was referring to former Jets quarterback Sam Darnold being caught on TV saying he felt as though he was “seeing ghosts” in New England’s 33-0 rout in Week 7 of the 2019 season.

GAME OVER

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The Jets trailed only 13-3 at halftime, but history showed the Patriots had it all but wrapped up. New England has won 41 consecutive games when leading by double digits after two quarters, the NFL’s longest such active streak.

INJURIES

Patriots: Right tackle Trent Brown sat because of a calf injury, and replacement Yasir Durant was benched in the second half after allowing three sacks. Durant was replaced by Dustin Herron.

Jets: Wide receiver Jamison Crowder was a surprise scratch after Saleh said his groin injury “flared up” a bit Friday.

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