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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Payback for Pats

Cassel, Moss too much for Dolphins

Dolphins’ Andre Goodman bats away a pass intended for the Patriots’ Randy Moss, who caught three touchdown passes.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By STEVEN WINE Associated Press

MIAMI – The standards are awfully high for the New England Patriots, who were annoyed Sunday by a handful of penalties, a couple of turnovers and the necessity to punt once.

By the way, they beat the Miami Dolphins 48-28.

“At times we sputtered,” receiver Randy Moss said with a straight face. “We’ve got a little work to do.”

There actually were some rocky moments: Three times the Patriots lost the lead, and three times they took it back. Matt Cassel threw for 415 yards, Moss caught three touchdown passes and resilient New England pulled away in the fourth quarter against the feisty but outgunned Dolphins.

The Patriots (7-4), who remained a game behind the AFC East-leading New York Jets, avenged an upset loss to Miami in September. New England hasn’t been swept in a season series by a division opponent since 2000.

“Every game is important,” coach Bill Belichick said. “It was a division game, and they got us the first time. At least we squared it up with them.”

For the Dolphins (6-5), the loss snapped a four-game winning streak and hurt their chances of an improbable playoff berth after going 1-15 last year. They unraveled as the game slipped away, drawing three late personal-foul penalties, and defensive linemen Vonnie Holliday and Jason Ferguson apologized for the emotional lapses of teammates.

“We didn’t show much class at the end,” Holliday said. “What’s so disappointing about this loss is not only were we beaten, but the way we handled the loss, especially at the end.”

They couldn’t keep up with Cassel, who had his second consecutive 400-yard day, doubling Tom Brady’s career total. Working mostly from the shotgun, Cassel completed 30 of 43 passes, including touchdowns of 25, 8 and 29 to Moss, and ran for a score.

The Patriots netted 530 yards. Their only higher total was 597 against the Jets in 1979. They’ve gained 1,041 yards in the past two games.

“The production is starting to come around,” Cassel said. “When it all works together and works right, it’s easy for me.”

Moss was impressed by Brady’s backup.

“Matt is getting in the comfort zone,” Moss said. “He’s playing some hellified ball.”

Moss gained 125 yards on eight catches, several of the circus variety. It was his best day since an injury ended Brady’s season in September, and he took advantage of frequent single coverage by the Dolphins.

“Anytime I feel disrespected, I want to go out there and make it happen,” Moss said.

The Patriots needed the big showing on offense, because they had trouble stopping Chad Pennington, who threw for a career-high 341 yards and three touchdowns. The result was an offensive display reminiscent of the Dan Marino era, with the teams swapping scores until New England pulled away in the last 16 minutes.

The sixth and final lead change came on Moss’ 8-yard touchdown catch to put the Patriots up 24-21.

Things got ugly when Miami linebacker Channing Crowder and New England tackle Matt Light were ejected midway through the fourth quarter. Crowder lost his helmet when blocked by Light on a field-goal attempt and shoved Light, who responded by taking several swings at Crowder’s head.

“It looked like a lack of poise,” Dolphins coach Tony Sparano said. “We did the things that young, immature teams do.”