FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots have thrived in the final month of the season since Bill Belichick and Tom Brady’s arrival.

They’re hoping their 24-10 victory Sunday over the Minnesota Vikings is the start of another memorable December.

Tom Brady passed for 311 yards and a touchdown, and Bill Belichick earned his 250th victory as Patriots coach.

Including a 27-10 postseason record, Belichick is 250-87 in 19 years with the Patriots.

Brady completed 24 of 32 passes and now has 579 touchdown passes, including the playoffs, tying him with Peyton Manning for the most ever. He also has 508 regular-season TD passes, which ties him with Brett Favre for third on the career list. Manning is first with 539 and Drew Brees is next with 518.

James Develin added a career-high two touchdown runs. New England finished with 471 yards. Brady said the diversity of their attack was his biggest takeaway.

Advertisement

“Seven guys running, eight guys catching – that makes it hard for them to defend us,” he said. “Hopefully we can keep it going.”

The Patriots (9-3) have won 8 of 9 since starting the season 1-2.

The Patriots have clinched their 18th straight winning season. It is the second-longest streak in NFL history. The record is held by the Cowboys at 20 seasons from 1966-85.

Minnesota (6-5-1) has lost two of its last three. The defeat prevented Minnesota from gaining ground on the NFC North-leading Chicago Bears, who lost 30-27 in overtime to the New York Giants.

The Vikings entered the game allowing the third-fewest rushing yards in the league (93.6 per game). But New England was able to spread them out, rushing for 160 yards.

Kirk Cousins finished 32 of 44 for 201 yards and touchdown for Minnesota, but had two late interceptions.

Advertisement

Brady improved to 5-0 against Minnesota, one of five teams he has a perfect regular-season record against. The others are Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas and Tampa Bay.

With New England leading 10-7 in the third quarter, Stephen Gostkowski missed a 48-yard field-goal attempt wide right. It snapped a regular-season streak of 35 successful field goals of less than 50 yards, going back to October of last season.

The Vikings tied the game on the ensuing series with Dan Bailey’s 39-yard field goal.

But the Patriots bounced back, needing just four plays for Brady to cap a 75-yard drive with a 24-yard pass to Josh Gordon that put the Patriots back in front, 17-10.

Following a Minnesota punt, the Patriots picked up where they left off. This time they needed only six plays to drive for a 2-yard TD run by Develin.

The Vikings survived a challenge of a spot on a fourth-down rush by Latavius Murray on their next possession. Belichick’s challenge led to a brief verbal exchange between him and Vikings receiver Adam Thielen. It included linebacker Kyle Van Noy coming to his coach’s defense.

Advertisement

“Everybody’s out there battling,” Patriots safety Devin McCourty said. “Sometimes football comes down to a yard. … But Bill’s fiery. We see it every day.”

Facing fourth-and-11 later in the drive, the Vikings turned it over when Cousins’ pass to Laquon Treadwell came up short.

Thielen said the loss is a wakeup call for the Vikings.

“Obviously we’ve got to get better. I’ve got to get better,” Thielen said. “I didn’t make the plays I needed to.”

Minnesota got the ball back quickly after Brady threw his first interception in five games, to Eric Kendricks. But a pass into the end zone by Cousins was tipped by J.C. Jackson and intercepted by Duron Harmon.

“Every guy on the offense, they’re hungry. You know, just like the defense. We’re all hungry,” Patriots receiver Cordarrelle Patterson said. “We all know our role and we embrace it.”

Advertisement

SPOT ON

Minnesota Coach Mike Zimmer pulled out his red challenge flag at just the right time late in the first half to help get his team on the scoreboard.

The Vikings successfully challenged the referee’s spot after an apparent first-down completion to Rob Gronkowski. It left the Patriots with third-and-1 on their 26, and Minnesota stopped the ensuing run by James White, forcing a punt.

Cousins then went to work in the 2-minute offense, opening Minnesota’s drive with completions of 24 and 23 yards to Stefon Diggs and Kyle Rudolph. He added another 10-yard completion to Diggs to set up a 5-yard touchdown pass to Adam Thielen that trimmed the Patriots’ lead to 10-7 at the half.

RUN BRADY RUN

Brady reached another milestone: 1,000 yards rushing in his career.

Advertisement

He hit the mark on a 5-yard scramble in the first quarter. He slid to a stop, popped to his knee and signaled for a first down.

Brady avoided losing a yard when he kneeled forward on the final play of the game.

“I’m not trying to go backward,” he said. “I don’t want us to go backwards anymore.”

Never considered a mobile quarterback, it took Brady 19 years and 265 games to reach the 1,000-yard milestone. At 41, he is also the oldest player to reach 1,000 career rushing yards since 1970.

He has averaged 1.7 yards per carry and 3.8 yards per game, with his most “prolific” season in 2002, when he ran for a total of 110 yards.

INJURIES

Vikings cornerback Trae Waynes was evaluated for a concussion in the second quarter and ruled out for the rest of the game.

Patriots safety Patrick Chung was helped off the field in the fourth quarter.


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.