The New England Patriots on Sunday provided one of the most incredible pass/run ratios in recent history. Last year, teams were very pass-happy against the Jets, as a result of New York having a great run defense and a terrible pass defense. The Jets pass defense is significantly better this year, but that didn’t stop the Patriots from pretending the run option didn’t exist.

New England finished the day with 54 pass attempts, 3 sacks, and just 9 carries, representing an incredible 86.4% pass ratio. If you consider that Tom Brady had two scrambles and a third “carry” that went down for zero yards but was a sack on a pass play where Brady managed to get back to the line of scrimmage, and the Patriots really meant to pass on 60 plays, while calling runs just six times. A fourth run was a Brady sneak, leaving just five rushing attempts for the rest of the team that totaled exactly one yard. Brady was effective but not stellar in the passing game, but it was pretty clear that passing was the best option for the Patriots offense on nearly every play.

Two other big notes from week 7: Washington fell behind 24-0 against Tampa Bay, but won in the final minute of the game. That gave Washington a remarkable victory in a game where the team posted a -9.3 Game Script, topping the Bears game against the Chiefs for largest comeback as measured by Game Script. And, on the far other end of the spectrum, Miami produced an unreal 25.9 Game Script, the top score of the season. There have been three Game Scripts this year of over 20 points, and two of them have come against the Texans. The third was the previous high of the season, Arizona’s 24.3 Game Script against the 49ers.

Below are the Game Scripts data from week seven.

Team H/R Opp Boxscore PF PA Margin Game Script Pass Run P/R Ratio Op_P Op_R Opp_P/R Ratio MIA HOU Boxscore 44 26 18 25.9 24 35 40.7% 53 25 67.9% OAK @ SDG Boxscore 37 29 8 18.5 32 26 55.2% 59 21 73.8% NOR @ IND Boxscore 27 21 6 13.7 47 36 56.6% 48 13 78.7% SEA @ SFO Boxscore 20 3 17 11.4 29 41 41.4% 30 15 66.7% JAX BUF Boxscore 34 31 3 8.9 31 31 50% 46 27 63% STL CLE Boxscore 24 6 18 8.5 25 26 49% 41 24 63.1% CAR PHI Boxscore 27 16 11 6.7 25 33 43.1% 51 30 63% ARI BAL Boxscore 26 18 8 5.2 31 28 52.5% 43 16 72.9% KAN PIT Boxscore 23 13 10 4.2 34 29 54% 31 24 56.4% NYG DAL Boxscore 27 20 7 2.2 26 25 51% 28 41 40.6% NWE NYJ Boxscore 30 23 7 0.6 57 9 86.4% 41 29 58.6% MIN @ DET Boxscore 28 19 9 0.2 38 33 53.5% 33 17 66% ATL @ TEN Boxscore 10 7 3 0.1 38 31 55.1% 36 15 70.6% WAS TAM Boxscore 31 30 1 -9.3 41 19 68.3% 30 30 50%

In other pass-happy news, Oakland passed 32 times and ran just 26 times in a game the Raiders led 30-6 at halftime! Derek Carr was excellent in this game, but that’s a really pass-friendly ratio given the Game Script. Don’t expect anything to change next week, though, as the Raiders host the Jets. Tennessee passed on 70% of plays in a neutral game. That’s pretty weird given that, you know, Zach Mettenberger was the quarterback, but Antonio Andrews did rush for 57 yards on 10 carries.

Two teams stuck out as run-heavy this week. The Panthers stuck to the ground against Philadelphia, and for good reason: Thanks to three interceptions, Cam Newton averaged just 3.00 Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt, while Carolina rushed 33 times for 204 yards and two touchdowns thanks mostly to Jonathan Stewart. But the most pass-averse team of the week was Dallas: the Cowboys were the only losing team in week 7 that rushed more than it passed. That makes sense given that Matt Cassel was the quarterback. The Cowboys averaged 4.0 ANY/A, but rushed for 233 yards and a touchdown on 41 carries.

What stands out to you from week 7?