If there was ever a night to remind the league that the Patriots are not the team to sleep on, this was it. The lights were bright, the crowd was deafening, and Coach Todd’s squad came out swinging — literally and figuratively — in a wild 55–38 win over last year’s playoff-bound Minnesota Vikings.
As confetti cannons hissed and “Shipping Up to Boston” roared through the speakers, Coach Todd grinned the kind of grin that tells you a locker room just got its swagger back.
“This one mattered,” Todd said postgame, sweat still rolling down his cap. “That’s a playoff team over there, and we didn’t flinch. We took a punch early and gave three back. That’s how good teams respond.”
Offense Finds Its Rhythm
It wasn’t perfect, but it was potent — 448 yards of total offense, the kind of balance that forces defenses into headaches. The Patriots gashed Minnesota for 157 yards on the ground and piled on 291 through the air.
Drake Maye, who’s been under the microscope since the offseason, looked like a man shaking off the noise. He went 20-of-29 for 298 yards and three touchdowns, tossing one pick he immediately made up for by driving the team 75 yards the next series.
“We felt in control,” Maye said. “That one mistake stung, but I knew I had to stay aggressive. Coach trusted me, and the guys around me kept making plays.”
Maye also flashed some wheels, scrambling three times for 15 yards — each one extending a drive that would’ve otherwise died.
The two-headed monster in the backfield — TreVeyon Henderson and Antonio Gibson — continued to justify the hype. Henderson’s 17 carries for 75 yards and a touchdown were all grit and balance, while Gibson looked electric in limited touches: 69 yards and two touchdowns on just five carries.
“We feed off each other,” Henderson said with a grin. “When one eats, the other’s waiting with a fork.”
Passing Game? Scary Good.
Drake Maye spread the wealth, but it was clear who set the tone. Stefon Diggs — playing with the kind of emotion that only comes against his former division rival — hauled in four passes for 82 yards and a score, punctuating it with a stare-down at the Vikings’ sideline that drew gasps from the Gillette crowd.
“They know what it was,” Diggs said, smiling when asked if it was personal. “I’m just doing what I do. They left me open, I made ‘em pay.”
Calvin Austin’s deep speed stretched Minnesota’s defense like taffy, with two catches for 67 yards and a touchdown that came off a beautiful play-action bomb.
Demario Douglas found the end zone too, turning a short cross into a 29-yard sprint that left two defenders tackling air. But the real difference-maker might not have scored at all.
Brock Bowers didn’t need to — his seven catches for 69 yards felt like a chess master clearing the board. Every time he motioned, defenders shifted nervously, opening lanes for everyone else.
“It’s funny,” Bowers said. “I don’t need to be the one catching touchdowns to know I’m causing problems. You can see it on their faces.”
Defense Bends, Then Bites Back
The Vikings didn’t roll over. Quarterback Jordan Addison (filling in for an injured Cousins) aired it out for 394 yards, finding soft zones early and keeping Minnesota alive. But while the yards came easy, the turnovers came costly.
Second-year safety Woodson had the kind of night that puts you on highlight reels — and maybe in Pro Bowl conversations. Ten tackles, two interceptions, and one pick-six that turned Gillette Stadium into a madhouse.
“Man, I was just reading the quarterback’s eyes,” Woodson said. “But that second one? I knew it was mine the second it left his hand. I saw the end zone and wasn’t stopping.”
Corners Davis and Gonzales each grabbed interceptions of their own, but the dagger came late — a diving pick by Ronnie Hickman that stopped what could’ve been a game-tying touchdown. One play later, the Patriots offense slammed the door.
“He saved us,” Coach Todd said bluntly. “That’s the kind of situational awareness you can’t coach. Hickman made a veteran play.”
And let’s not forget the unsung hero: backup linebacker Willie G**, who blew up a kick return in the first half, forcing a fumble that the Pats recovered and quickly turned into points.
“We’re taught to finish through the play,” G** said. “He didn’t see me coming, and I wasn’t about to slow down.”
Minnesota Fought — But the Patriots Wanted It More
Give credit where it’s due — the Vikings came to fight. Their passing game moved the chains, and they refused to fold even as the scoreboard ballooned. But effort only gets you so far when the other team’s hungrier.
Coach Todd’s squad looked possessed. Every sideline cheer, every defensive stop, every hit — it felt like a team reclaiming its identity.
“We remembered who we are tonight,” Todd said postgame, voice steady. “You can’t teach hunger. Either you’ve got it or you don’t — and my guys have it.”
Eyes on Week 2: The Jets Await
When asked about next week’s divisional showdown, Todd didn’t hesitate.
“Division games are bloodbaths,” he said. “The Jets are physical, they’re disciplined, but we’re coming in confident. If we clean up some coverage mistakes, we can make a real statement.”
Drake Maye echoed his coach’s sentiment, cracking a grin before walking off the podium.
“Jets next week? Good. Let’s keep feeding the fire.”
Final Thoughts
This wasn’t just a win. It was a declaration — that Coach Todd’s Patriots can score with anyone, that their defense can create chaos even when it leaks yards, and that when the lights hit Foxborough, they’re still capable of putting on a show.
55 points. One message to the rest of the league: Don’t sleep on New England.



