I'm really not trying to downplay their success as I know they have been good against good teams as well, but it gives them an easier ride through the playoffs with home games when they play them in the playoffs and that helps tremendously.While I agree that it "helps" to play in a division that appears to be as soft as it usually is, generally speaking, this idea that New England's success is largely attributable to a "soft schedule" due to a bad division has largely been debunked.
https://www.nbcsports.com/boston/pa...atriots-dominance-over-teams-outside-afc-east
The key takeaways (evaluation covers from 2001 through at least 2017 or 2018 season (can't tell from the article):
Patriots W/L % against AFC East opponents (78.2%) is comparable to their W/L % against every other team in the league (75.3%)
Patriots have 25 more non-division wins during that period than any other individual team in the NFL.
Patriots have a 24-14 record against division winners (63.1%). No other team in the NFL has a winning record against division-winning teams during that timespan.
And probably the most damning stats:
The Patriots are 60-33 against playoff teams during that span (64.5%). The second best team during that span is the Steelers... who win just 48%.
The Patriots are 75-45 against teams with a winning record during that span (62.5%). The second best team during that span is the Steelers... who win just 44%.
Or, think of it this way...
If the Patriots played a schedule that didn't include any AFC East teams at all, they would, on average, finish with a record of 12-4.
If the Patriots played a schedule that included only playoff teams, they'd still, on average, go 10-6.
One thing to take note of is that the 64.5% win rate vs. playoff teams is less then it has been during the actual playoffs, when they play them at home. I'm also not just saying AFC East teams, because two of those non AFC East teams are division winners. The years they have gone undefeated for a large amount of time has had the NFC East on the schedule and many times that has been a weak conference. Not all the time though.
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