FOXBORO — On Monday night, Jay Cutler will be looking to drastically alter his personal history against the Patriots.

The Dolphins quarterback has lost all three of his career starts vs. New England — and was on the sidelines recovering from a concussion during the Pats’ 35-17 victory over Miami two weeks ago at Gillette Stadium.

Cutler’s humbling losses to the Patriots were as a Chicago Bear, and he tallied more interceptions (five) than touchdowns (four) and was sacked seven times.

“I think it’s the whole team in general,” said Cutler during his weekly meeting with the Miami media on Wednesday.

“It’s a very, very smart team. They are situationally aware. They do things the right way. I think they tackle well on defense. Their assignments are on point.”

Cutler’s battles against Bill Belichick’s defenses began badly and didn’t get much better. In his first tilt against the Patriots in 2008, at Gillette Stadium, Cutler was 17-for-26 for 168 yards with a touchdown and two picks in a 41-7 laugher.

Cutler didn’t fare much better at Chicago’s Soldier Field two years later. He was 12-of-26 for 152 yards with no touchdowns and two picks in another blowout, 36-7.

Cutler had his best statistical game in a 51-23 shootout loss against Tom Brady at Gillette Stadium in 2014, finishing 20-of-30 for 227 yards and three touchdowns, with one pick.

“I think (Belichick has) notoriously taken away your No. 1 receiver,” said Cutler. “He makes you get to 2 and 3 (and) he makes you do things that are maybe a little bit out of your comfort zone.

“I think they do a really good job keeping it in front of them, making offenses go the long road. Three, four or five first downs to score. We’ve just got to figure it out.”

Belichick treated Cutler with the customary respect he shows all NFL passers.

“Cutler is a very experienced guy,” said Belichick. “He’s got a great arm and he can throw the ball all over the field to any position.

“I think that is probably the No. 1 thing, his ability to get the ball anywhere on the field from any type of body position that he is in. You have to cover everybody and he is very good on deep ball throws and he has a good release.”

Cutler was Denver’s first-round pick (11th overall) out of Vanderbilt in 2006. He played three seasons there before being traded to the Bears with the blessing of Broncos’ first-year head coach Josh McDaniels, the current Patriots offensive coordinator.

Cutler played eight seasons with the Bears and appeared in 102 games. His best season was 2014, when he completed 370-of-561 passes for 3,812 yards and 28 touchdowns.

He retired from the Bears after a bitter 2016 season, but the Dolphins called after quarterback Ryan Tannehill suffered a season-ending knee injury in late August.

“I don’t even remember that game in 2014 but I know he’s a guy that gets the ball where he wants,” said Patriots safety Devin McCourty. “I talked to one of our scouts about him and he is super talented delivering the ball and he’s going to take shots downfield.”