Watch: Bills Coach Rip Josh Allen For Awful Interception Vs. Patriots

J.C. Jackson pulls out interceptions like crazy, and the Patriots could really use his help against the Buffalo Bills. Well, the Bills coach isn’t really happy about it. Jackson intercepted a throw by Josh Allen in the first quarter of the game.

The quarterback dropped back and fired a deep ball towards Zay Jones. Well, Jackson took it.

Bills offensive coordinator Brian Daboll has spent 10 seasons carrying several functions in New England. However, he wasn’t happy about Allen’s move, and he decided to give him an earful on the sideline. He was angry. You could see that.

Daboll better be happy with Allen’s first drive of the second half. The quarterback was a perfect 6-for-6 and finished a drive with 1-yard touchdown. This shrunk the Patriots’ lead to 13-10.

Patriots head coach Bill Belichick was well aware of the danger brought by Alln.

He’s like a running back,” Belichick said of Allen on Wednesday morning. “He breaks tackles. He’s got good speed, good power, and he’s shifty. He avoids and breaks a lot of tackles. It’s another dimension, sixth receiver in the passing game if you will. Gives them another blocker in the running game when they have designed run plays for him.

“They’ve played a lot of him in critical times, a lot of big plays, touchdowns, red area, third-down conversions, things like that. They use him in some timely ways, well-designed plays that create problems for the defense. He adds that element to their offense and they’ve used it very effectively.”

John Brown is one of his greatest concerns though.

“(Brown is) definitely fast. He’s a good player. He’s really made a big impact on their team; he’s made some big plays for them. I don’t know if he’s faster than (Robert) Foster,” Belichick said. “I’m not with both those guys, but I don’t know who would be faster than Foster. They have really good speed. … But I don’t know if anybody could take the top off the defense better than Foster could. I mean, that guy can really – he can really run. We saw that last year. We saw it at the end of the season, you know, the second-half of the season.

“But Brown’s certainly in that category. I mean, they get him on over, not just vertical-routes,” the head coach added. “They get him on over-routes and plays to the other side of the defense, which really, those are dangerous plays. Not everybody can run those, but if you have a fast player and you can line up one side of the field and run him deep on the other side of the field, that puts a lot of stress on zone and man coverages. Just by the amount of distance that he can get to and how hard it is to defend that space.”

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