“Enough blame to go”: Jason McCourty turns attention to Patriots coaching as Super Bowl LX loss sparks debate

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 Jason McCourty turns attention to Patriots coaching as Super Bowl LX loss sparks debate

Jason McCourty (Image via: IG/X)

Jason McCourty did not mince words while breaking down what went wrong for the New England Patriots on football’s biggest night. Following a 29–13 defeat to the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl LX, the former Patriots safety focused less on individual mistakes and more on how the game was handled from the sideline.

For McCourty, the loss revealed deeper issues tied to preparation and planning rather than effort alone.The Patriots entered the Super Bowl carrying the weight of a remarkable turnaround season under new head coach Mike Vrabel. A team that had gone 4–13 a year earlier suddenly found itself competing for a championship, with optimism building around a fast rebuild. That belief unraveled quickly as New England struggled to establish rhythm, protect its quarterback, or control momentum once the Seahawks seized command.

Jason McCourty shifts focus to offensive structure as Drake Maye struggles under constant pressure

Much of the postgame discussion centered on rookie quarterback Drake Maye, whose night was defined by early chaos. He was sacked six times, threw two interceptions including a damaging pick six, and looked uncomfortable as Seattle’s defense dictated terms. While Maye showed late composure in the fourth quarter and finished with two touchdown passes, the early breakdown proved costly.McCourty urged viewers to look beyond the stat line. Appearing on Monday’s episode of Up & Adams, he acknowledged that Maye missed a few throws but stressed that the larger failure belonged to the offensive structure around him.

“There were throws that I felt like, in the course of the game, he missed. And that was probably five throws. But overall, when you watch that game, a lot of that to me fell on the coaches and gameplan-oriented ... There's enough blame to go around for every coach and player that's on the offensive side of the ball.”McCourty’s criticism centered on how exposed Maye appeared early. The offense offered limited answers to pressure, forcing the rookie into reactive football instead of controlled execution.By spreading accountability across coaches and players, McCourty reframed the loss as a collective breakdown rather than a rookie failure. His assessment resonates in New England, where standards remain high and explanations matter.

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