FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Forget the noise. Forget the spread. Look at the sidelines.
Seven minutes. That’s how long the New England Patriots had until they needed to clear the field for the biggest game of the year. Most head coaches are in the bowels of the stadium right now, staring at a whiteboard or hyperventilating into a headset. Not Jerod Mayo.
The Patriots Head Coach was spotted right up against the wall at Gillette Stadium, marker in hand, signing footballs and jerseys for a freezing crowd that has been waiting for this moment since 2019. He isn’t pacing. He isn’t panicking. He’s looking fans in the eye.
The Texans are on the ribbon board. The “Plymouth Rock” sign looms in the background. It’s 28 degrees out here, but Mayo is working the line like a politician who doesn’t need the votes. This matters. In a league defined by anxiety and control freaks, Mayo’s willingness to stay loose and connect with the “Foxborough Faithful” right up to the buzzer sends a massive signal to his locker room: We are ready. We aren’t scared.
“That’s a leader of men right there. You see the other sideline? They look tight. Mayo looks like he’s about to host a barbecue. That confidence trickles down to every guy in a helmet today.” — Patriots Beat Reporter (Pre-game observation)
This gesture ends the second the whistle blows. The Texans’ offense is fast, and they aren’t here for autographs. But if you wanted to know if the pressure of the playoffs was getting to the second-year head coach, you just got your answer. Mayo isn’t hiding from the moment; he’s signing his name on it.

