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"Like I say after every loss," linebacker Jerod Mayo said, "as long as we learn something from it and it doesn't repeat itself, it's worth it."
The Patriots have learned plenty from their last loss, 34-14 at Cleveland. Since then, they've won all six games while scoring an average of 37.8 points.
"Cleveland was a wakeup call for us," nose tackle Vince Wilfork said. "They put it to us. We had a gut check. I don't think there is one guy who left that game happy with anything he did that day. And I think we came together as a team and started putting more emphasis on little things.
"It's not the big things. It's all about the little things because the little things take care of the big things in the end. Ever since then I think we've just been focused in and one of our goals has been finishing" games.
They did it last Sunday night in a 31-27 win over Green Bay when Wilfork recovered quarterback Matt Flynn's fumble on the Patriots 15-yard line on the final play, ending the Packers' hopes.
"We've been fortunate enough to play well down the stretch even though we probably bent a little bit during the game," Mayo said. "I think it might be mental toughness. We've been talking about that all year."
The Bills have shown that, too, with nine of their games decided by eight points or fewer.
Still, Buffalo did lose its first eight games and has lost 14 straight against New England.
But a letdown could force the Patriots into a must-win situation a week later against Miami if they're to get a first-round playoff bye. So they're not likely to look past the Bills.
"Any team wants to control their own fate," tight end Alge Crumpler said, "so getting this win would be great."
[Associated Press;
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