By MIKE LIPKA
STATS Writer
The New England Patriots played more like the franchise's
dominating 2007 version in two lopsided victories before a bye
week, and now they want to show their high-powered attack can
keep clicking against tougher competition.
They'll also have a few things to prove Sunday to the Miami
Dolphins, whose blowout victory in Foxborough last year keyed
their AFC East title.
The Patriots can further reassert their control over the
division they've won six times this decade as they face the
Dolphins, who try for a second straight road win as they attempt
to resurrect their season.
New England's uneven start seems like a distant memory after the
Patriots (5-2) outscored their last two opponents by a combined
94-7, with resurgent quarterback Tom Brady throwing nine
touchdown passes.
Wes Welker and Randy Moss combined for 33 catches and six TDs in
those games as Brady brought back memories of two years ago,
when he threw for an NFL-record 50 touchdowns during a 16-0
regular season. He missed nearly all of last year with a major
knee injury.
"For the most part, guys are in the spots where they need to
be," Brady said Wednesday. "We have a pretty good understanding
how we're going to attack people. I think everyone's excited for
what's ahead."
Both Tennessee and Tampa Bay were winless at the time of New
England's blowout victories, and the Patriots may find things a
bit tougher after their return from the 35-7 win over the
Buccaneers in London.
Their November slate includes visits to unbeaten teams
Indianapolis and New Orleans and division games against the New
York Jets and Miami (3-4).
"There's obviously some great teams," Welker said. "That's the
way it is week in and week out, but especially this next month,
so we're definitely going to stay on top of our game."
New England's defense was surprised by Miami's wildcat formation
at Gillette Stadium on Sept. 21, 2008, giving up 461 total yards
in a 38-13 loss that ended the Patriots' league-record 21-game
winning streak in the regular season.
They avenged that loss with a 48-28 win at Miami on Nov. 23, but
both teams finished 11-5 and the Dolphins won the division based
on a better conference record while New England missed the
playoffs.
Outspoken linebacker Joey Porter was sure to announce before the
season that the Dolphins are still "champions until proven
otherwise" in the division, but they'll fall three games behind
with a loss Sunday.
Miami could have been in even worse shape if not for a 30-25
road win over the Jets last Sunday. Although the Dolphins
mustered just 104 yards from scrimmage, they scored 21 points in
one third-quarter stretch without the offense touching the ball.
Ted Ginn scored on two kickoff returns of at least 100 yards,
and Jason Taylor had the other touchdown on a 48-yard fumble
return as the Dolphins continued to rebound from their 0-3
start.
With the run-heavy attack out of the wildcat faltering lately,
the Dolphins may need to find more balance offensively if
they're going to win for the fourth time in five games.
"We just need to get better overall against an eight-man front,"
said quarterback Chad Henne, who will face the Patriots for the
first time. "I don't think overall we executed - the running
game or the passing game."
The Patriots have been working with a patchwork defense after
Richard Seymour and Mike Vrabel were traded and Rodney Harrison
and Tedy Bruschi retired. New England also is missing defensive
end Jarvis Green after he had minor knee surgery, but coach Bill
Belichick said the team will be ready for whichever strategy the
Dolphins offense uses.
"They give you a lot of stuff to defend and I'm sure that we'll
need a lot of different options to handle the variations that
they show," Belichick said.
New England also could remain without left tackle Matt Light
(knee) and running backs Fred Taylor (ankle) and Sammy Morris
(knee).
While the Patriots won five straight AFC East crowns before last
season, Miami has often presented problems for New England this
decade, going a respectable 8-10 in the series since Belichick
took over in 2000.
The meetings have taken on an extra dimension since Bill
Parcells, the former Patriots coach and Belichick mentor, joined
Miami's front office in 2007, and Belichick said the Dolphins'
roster has Parcells "stamped all over it."
"They are a big, powerful team," Belichick said. "... That's
what Bill believes in and I think he has a great philosophy. And
it works for him. And it should work."
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