How Patriots rookie Ja’Lynn Polk shined beyond the box score in NFL debut
FOXBORO — Patriots wide receiver Ja’Lynn Polk quietly (very quietly) had an impressive NFL debut in Sunday’s win over the Bengals.
Polk was targeted just once and caught a short 6-yard pass from quarterback Jacoby Brissett, but that doesn’t tell the full story behind his performance.
The rookie out of Washington actually finished fifth overall in “separation score,” a metric from the analytics company Fantasy Points Data. He was second in the NFL with a 40% win rate on routes when he was lined up outside, which accounts for 83.3% of his passing snaps, and his overall win rate was a team-high 33%.
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“Those guys were doing the dirty work,” head coach Jerod Mayo said of the Patriots’ wide receivers. “And I would also say, if you turn on the film, we had guys open. And so when we go back to getting better from Week 1 to Week 1, we got to find those guys and give them an opportunity to make plays.”
Polk and fellow wide receivers DeMario Douglas, Tyquan Thornton and K.J. Osborn combined for just 76 yards on eight catches in a game dominated by running back Rhamondre Stevenson.
They were still pleased with the performance, however.
“I love what our group did. Didn’t have many passes but trusting the process and believe what our running back do,” Douglas said. “He did what he was supposed to do, and we came out with a good dub, a whole 11, group, whole team played a good part into that win.”
Douglas added that the win matters more “especially after the year that we had last year” when the Patriots finished just 4-13.
The undersized slot receiver also said that quarterback Jacoby Brissett told him that he’ll be trying to target the wide receivers more in the future.
“Yeah, he said he’ll be looking. But some things all play a part into getting the ball,” Douglas said. “He’s got it hard back there, calling the plays, reading the defenses. That’s a hard position. You can’t put too much on the quarterback.”
If Polk has proven anything through the first four months of his NFL career, it’s that he’s a selfless player. Mayo has praised Polk’s blocking ability just as much as his receiving prowess since the wideout was drafted in the second round of the 2024 NFL Draft. Of Polk’s 35 snaps in Sunday’s game, nearly half (17) came as a run blocker.
The 22-year-old said he’s not focused on his individual numbers.
“I don’t be too focused on all that. I just do what I’m supposed to do for my team and everything else is going to come along,” Polk said. “I don’t go out there looking for certain amount of catches or a certain amount of touchdowns. That’s not me. I think the biggest focus, especially for us, is doing what our coaches ask us to do and having that mindset of winning every rep and knowing it’s going to come.”
The Patriots used a balanced rotation at wide receiver with Osborn leading the way with 39 snaps, Douglas with 38 and Thornton with 37. Douglas (22) and Thornton (21) ran the most routes in Sunday’s game, whereas just 35.9% of Osboron’s snaps came on passing plays.
At some point, the Patriots know they’ll have to pass the ball more than just 25 times to win. When asked what the Patriots will do when a team stacks the box on them to stop the run, Mayo said laughing, “then we turn into a pass team.”
“We can’t be rigid in the way we play,” he continued. “We can’t be rigid in the way that we think. Who knows? This week, Jacoby may throw for 300 yards or Rhamondre may run for 200 yards.”
