Bill Belichick has led the Patriots to 12 straight wins over the New York Jets. Kirk Irwin/Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Look around the New York Jets’ locker room to find someone who remembers what it was like to beat the New England Patriots – and you can’t.

There’s no one left.

The Jets have lost 12 straight to Bill Belichick’s bunch, with their most recent win coming in Week 16 of the 2015 season. Todd Bowles was the coach of that 26-20 overtime victory at MetLife Stadium, led by quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick and wide receivers Brandon Marshall and Eric Decker.

Current Jets quarterback Zach Wilson was just a high school sophomore in Utah. Long snapper Thomas Hennessy, the Jets’ longest-tenured player, was a junior at Duke. And Coach Robert Saleh was the linebackers coach in Jacksonville.

Yep, it has been a while.

On Sunday, the surprising Jets (5-2) have a chance to end that skid and create a new storyline when they host the last-place Patriots (3-4). A victory would be New York’s fifth straight – which last happened, coincidentally, with that win over New England seven years ago.

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“They’ve been the gold standard of the AFC East for a very, very long time,” Saleh said. “They’re not going anywhere as long as Coach Belichick is there. They’re not going anywhere. They’re not going to disappear.”

But the Jets could make the Patriots continue to fade a bit. And get a small measure of revenge in the process.

The previous time the teams squared off, the Patriots embarrassed the Jets 54-13 just over a year ago at Gillette Stadium. Saleh has downplayed that aspect all week, but the memory remains for his players and coaches.

“I remember the score, I remember a lot of things,” defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich recalled Thursday. “I remember it being 40-plus and shots still being taken on us. … Been looking forward to this one.”

These Jets are also off to their best start since 2010, and the Patriots recognize that.

“It’s very clear with you watching the tape, they’ve figured out who they want to be, how they want to play and that they’re doing it,” Patriots special teams ace Matthew Slater said. “Kudos to them, because I really think they’re doing a tremendous job and they’ve found an identity and they’re playing really good football – as good as anyone in the league right now. I’m not surprised by that at all.

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“I think these things come and go in waves. It’s just the nature of the league.”

And while Belichick’s focus is on beating a division opponent, but he also could make some history by doing so. The Patriots coach has another shot at breaking a tie with George Halas for second on the NFL’s career victories list. Belichick and Halas each have 324, including playoffs, with Don Shula (347) the only coach with more.

A victory Sunday would be Belichick’s 100th in the regular season against AFC East foes as coach of the Patriots.

If it happens, it will start with Mac Jones. After being pulled from New England’s 33-14 loss to Chicago on Monday night, Jones will return as the starting quarterback against New York.

Belichick made the announcement Thursday after evaluating Jones at practice. Jones missed three games with a high ankle sprain before returning – briefly – against the Bears. Rookie Bailey Zappe had filled in for Jones, but Belichick decided on going with Jones against the Jets and giving him a full week of snaps with the starters.

“He’s ready to do that,” Belichick said. “So that’s what he needs to prepare for the game, and that’s what our offensive unit needs. Everybody working together. So we’ll get that this week.”

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Patriots center David Andrews will not be there to help as he remains in the concussion protocol after being injured late in last week’s loss to Chicago by a blindside block following an interception. It will be the first start he’s missed since 2020.

New England special assistant and offensive line coach Matt Patricia said backup James Ferentz will take his place. Ferentz has made seven career starts in various positions along the line during his five seasons in New England.

The Jets have done some shuffling of their own. James Robinson had no carries in Jacksonville’s loss last week to the New York Giants and the third-year running back should see a much heavier workload now that he’s with the Jets.

Robinson was acquired Tuesday from the Jaguars for a conditional sixth-round pick, helping the Jets replace injured rookie Breece Hall. It was uncertain how much Robinson would be involved Sunday as he learns the Jets playbook, but he’ll be part of dual-threat backfield bunch with Michael Carter and Ty Johnson moving forward.

“I love the vibe,” Robinson said of joining the Jets. “There’s a lot of guys that want to win and I can see that. At practice I can see that, too. It feels pretty good, I’ll tell you, to go to 5-2 from 2-5.”

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