Mac Jones Just Opened A Painful Window Into Patriots QB Chaos

Mac Jones opens up about the chaotic quarterback dynamics with Bailey Zappe during the New England Patriots' challenging 2023 season.

Mac Jones isn’t pretending the Patriots’ quarterback situation from 2022 and 2023 was anything close to normal.

On the Bussin' With The Boys podcast with former NFL players Taylor Lewan and Will Compton, the former New England starter opened up about the awkward, stop-and-start stretch that saw him and Bailey Zappe trade places under center while the team spiraled.

“It was really weird. The communication wasn't great,” Jones said.

“It was weird. Honestly, it was weird for both of us.

We were both young and it was really the second year, too, when we had like Matty P and stuff. He went in there and played really good, which was awesome.

But, it was kind of weird because it was my team. I felt like that.

I felt like I deserved that shot.

“It just felt weird. There was two guys, you know?

But Zappe, he was cool. He worked hard and that's pretty much it.

We weren't really close friends or anything.”

That tension had been building for a while. Jones’ 2022 season ended after he got hurt in the final seconds of a loss to the Baltimore Ravens, and when Brian Hoyer went down with a concussion the next week, Zappe got his first NFL action against the Green Bay Packers. He pushed that game to overtime before New England lost on a field goal.

Then Zappe briefly gave the Patriots a spark. He led back-to-back wins over the Detroit Lions and Cleveland Browns, and suddenly the conversation around Jones had changed.

The whole thing got even stranger on Monday Night Football against the Chicago Bears. Jones returned to the lineup, only to be pulled after a couple drives when the Patriots went to an alternating setup. Zappe came in, threw a touchdown to Jakobi Meyers, and stayed in a game New England lost 33-14.

“I got hurt, we played the Bears, and I was ready to play, but they were kind of like, 'We're gonna alternate you guys,'” Jones said. “And I was like, 'I just went to the Pro Bowl last year.'

Like, I wasn't terrible my first couple of games. I'm not proven, I'm not saying I've arrived.

But at least let me have a chance to go out there.”

Jones eventually got the job back in Week 8 and helped New England win five games, though the Patriots still missed the postseason by one game. Even then, the season felt like it was held together with tape.

By 2023, the bottom fell out. New England was 2-8 by its Week 11 bye, and after a dreadful loss to the Indianapolis Colts overseas - one that included Jones’ historically bad interception - Bill Belichick and offensive coordinator Bill O'Brien had seen enough.

Jones was benched, Zappe took over, and he stayed there the rest of the year. Zappe also threw an interception in that game, but the Patriots stuck with him.

New England won only two more times that season, beating Pittsburgh on Thursday night and Denver on Christmas Eve. Jones was traded to the Jacksonville Jaguars the next offseason before ending up with the San Francisco 49ers.

“They were like blowing it up in the media and stuff. So it was just kind of sloppy,” Jones said.

“I saw (Zappe) at the end of the game last year. He's on the Browns at the time, like dapped him up.

We're cool, but you know how it is? It's just kind of awkward.

“Like it was a bad year, we didn't win that many games, there was a lot of media hype between the battle of what was going on. It was tough. We were both like first and second-year players pretty much.”

Zappe’s run in New England didn’t last much longer either. Belichick was gone in January, Jerod Mayo was hired to try to change the direction of the program, and even though Zappe had a meaningful role as Drake Maye’s backup in the preseason, he was released that summer.

Looking back, Jones didn’t dress it up.

“I get it all,” he admitted, “but it was just weird.”

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