Patriots OC Josh McDaniels breaks his silence, reveals a “sensitive issue” surrounding Stefon Diggs and Hunter Henry, leaving fans with major questions about New England’s Super Bowl ambitions
Foxborough, Massachusetts – December 20, 2025
The New England Patriots offense has hit a troubling wall late in the 2025 season, and offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels isn’t sugarcoating the problem. With the passing game sputtering and consistency hard to find, McDaniels pointed directly to how defenses are attacking the Patriots’ two most dangerous targets: Stefon Diggs and Hunter Henry. According to McDaniels, opposing teams have made it clear where their priorities lie.
“Teams are making a conscious effort to take those guys away,” McDaniels explained. “They’re bracketing Diggs, they’re getting hands on Hunter early. When defenses decide that’s their plan, you’re going to see a lot of tight coverage and a lot of one-on-one situations elsewhere.” The result has been an offense forced to grind for yards rather than generate explosive plays, something that became painfully evident in recent losses.

Diggs, a four-time Pro Bowler with a long history of elite production, has felt the impact most visibly. He’s seeing constant double teams, safety help over the top, and physical coverage at the line. “There are games where Stef is getting that kind of attention on almost every snap,” McDaniels said. “That’s respect from the defense, but it also means we have to be better at punishing it.” Without consistent wins in isolation elsewhere, Diggs’ opportunities have shrunk.
Hunter Henry’s situation mirrors that frustration. Once viewed as a reliable safety valve for quarterback Drake Maye, Henry is now being jammed at the line and shadowed in the middle of the field. “They’re not letting him get free releases anymore,” McDaniels noted. “Linebackers are sitting on him, safeties are cheating down. That changes the math for a young quarterback.” Henry’s targets have dropped as defenses dare New England to look elsewhere.
That “elsewhere” remains the core issue. The Patriots have yet to develop a consistent third option capable of forcing defenses to loosen their grip on Diggs and Henry. “This league is about matchups,” McDaniels said. “If you don’t win your one-on-ones, it doesn’t matter how good the play call is.” Until another receiver steps up — or protection improves enough to buy Maye extra time — New England’s offense will continue searching for answers.
May You Like

A white flower under the lights of Sunday Night Football – a quiet message that touched the hearts of Drake Maye and Patriots Nation











