2005 New England Patriots season

2005 New England Patriots season
OwnerRobert Kraft
PresidentJonathan Kraft
Head coachBill Belichick
Home fieldGillette Stadium
Results
Record10–6
Division place1st AFC East
Playoff finishWon Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Jaguars) 28–3
Lost Divisional Playoffs
(at Broncos) 13–27
Pro BowlersQB Tom Brady
DT Richard Seymour
AP All-ProsDT Richard Seymour (1st team)
QB Tom Brady (2nd team)
Uniform

The 2005 season was the New England Patriots' 36th in the National Football League (NFL), their 46th overall and their sixth under head coach Bill Belichick. With a Week 6 loss to the Denver Broncos, the Patriots failed to either improve or match their 14–2 record from last season; they finished with a 10–6 record and the division title before losing in the playoffs to the Broncos, ending their hopes of becoming the first NFL team to three peat in the Super Bowl.

Ten days after earning a victory in Super Bowl XXXIX, linebacker Tedy Bruschi suffered a stroke and initially planned on missing the entire season; Bruschi returned to the field against the Buffalo Bills on October 30. Cornerback Ty Law was released in the offseason, and injuries at cornerback, as well as a season-ending injury to safety Rodney Harrison in Week 3, forced the Patriots to start a number of players in the secondary early in the season. Overall, injuries caused the Patriots to start 45 different players at one point or another during the season, an NFL record for a division champion (breaking the record of 42 set by the Patriots in 2003).[1]

Beginning the season with a 4–4 record, the Patriots lost their first game at home since 2002 against the San Diego Chargers in Week 4. The team ended the season on a 6–2 run to finish 10–6, earning their third straight AFC East title. (The Patriots were the first team in NFL history to alternate wins and losses in each of their first nine games.)[2]

With the fourth seed in the AFC playoffs, the Patriots defeated the Jacksonville Jaguars in the wild card round but fell to the Denver Broncos on the road in the divisional round, committing five turnovers in the game and marking the first playoff loss in the Brady/Belichick era and the first since 1998. They were the last defending champion to win a playoff game until the 2014 Seattle Seahawks. This would begin an 18-season stretch in which the defending NFL champions failed to defend their Super Bowl title before eventually being broken by the 2023 Kansas City Chiefs.

  1. ^ Bill Belichick Biography Archived June 2, 2007, at the Wayback Machine New England Patriots. Retrieved April 23, 2007.
  2. ^ This was later broken by the 2013 New York Jets, who alternated wins and losses in their first ten games

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