Patriots quarterback Mac Jones is hoisted by center David Andrews after throwing a touchdown pass to Jakobi Meyers during the Patriots’ 50-10 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Paul Connors/Associated Press

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots squandered an opportunity to lock up the AFC East title in a humbling loss to the Buffalo Bills last week.

They took out their frustrations on the lowly Jaguars to earn their way back into the postseason.

New England returned to the playoffs when rookie quarterback Mac Jones threw three touchdown passes and Damien Harris and Rhamondre Stevenson rushed for two scores apiece in a 50-10 win over Jacksonville on Sunday.

The victory by the Patriots (10-6) snapped a two-game losing streak and gave Bill Belichick his 20th 10-win season as a head coach, tying Don Shula for the most in NFL history. A loss by Miami at Tennessee secured New England’s first trip to the postseason since Tom Brady left for Tampa Bay following the 2019 season.

“We’re trying to play as long as we can and get as deep as we can in the playoffs,” Jones said. “I realize what we’re playing for. … All the stuff that happens in the future, we’ll deal with that when it comes.”

The Jaguars (2-14) have lost eight consecutive games, including three straight since firing coach Urban Meyer. It was their 17th consecutive loss on the road, the longest streak in the league.

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Jones finished 22 of 30 for 227 yards in his first matchup against his hometown team, setting a franchise record for touchdown passes by a rookie with 21. Stevenson gained 107 yards on 19 carries. Harris rushed nine times for 35 yards before leaving in the second half because of a hamstring injury. He said afterward he was fine.

“We’ve got more games to play, it’s as simple as that,” Harris said. “We all believe we’ve got something special with this team.”

Patriots receiver Kristian Wilkerson had two touchdown catches – the first of his career – after being elevated from the practice squad for the second consecutive week. He pulled in a 6-yard TD to put the Patriots up 21-3 in the second quarter. His second touchdown came on a 20-yard pass on the opening possession of the second half, stretching the lead to 34-3.

New England’s defense also bounced back from a rough outing against Buffalo, holding the Jaguars to 253 yards and 3 of 9 on third downs. Myles Bryant, J.C. Jackson and Kyle Dugger had interceptions.

It was part of the latest rough outing for Jaguars quarterback and No. 1 overall draft pick Trevor Lawrence, who finished 17 of 27 for 193 yards. He threw a late touchdown pass, his first in five games. But it came against mostly backups.

“Obviously, it wasn’t a good day,” Lawrence said. “Didn’t play well, all phases of the game. It sucks. You prepare for the game and to go out there and not perform, it’s disappointing. Got to flip the page. … It’s definitely frustrating.”

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Jones, the fifth quarterback taken in the opening round of April’s NFL draft, now has victories over the top two quarterbacks selected – Lawrence and No. 2 overall pick Zach Wilson.

Jacksonville went into the game missing eight starters and 13 players in total who were sidelined because of COVID-19. The list included three starting offensive linemen – left tackle Cam Robinson, center Brandon Linder and guard Ben Bartch – and five backups.

“There’s a lot of circumstances and things that these guys are fighting through. I’m just asking for them to give me their best at all times. That’s what we’re hoping for,” interim coach Darrell Bevell said. “It didn’t work out for us today.”

INJURIES

PATRIOTS: Along with Harris’ hamstring injury, safety Adrian Phillips left in the second half because of a wrist injury.

MILESTONES

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Jackson’s second-quarter interception was the 25th of his career, tying the NFL record held by Lem Barney, Lester Hayes and Emerson Walls for the most by a player in their first four seasons.

With his 40-yard completion to receiver Laquon Treadwell in the first quarter, Lawrence set a Jaguars single-season rookie record for passing yards. He needed 47 yards to break the mark set by Gardner Minshew, who threw for 3,271 yards in 2019.

PROTECTING LAWRENCE

With the game out of reach in the fourth quarter, Bevell said there was a conversation on the sideline about possibly benching Lawrence in favor of backup C.J. Beathard. Ultimately, they decided to let Lawrence finish the game.

“We were able to put a drive together there, and we ended up scoring a touchdown. It ended up working out in our favor,” Bevell said. “It was important, obviously, that we protect him and do those things in that drive, but I thought it worked out OK.”

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