Tom Brady picked apart the lowly Washington Redskins, helped the New England Patriots stay unbeaten and climbed past a former NFL star in the record book.
Brady threw for 348 yards and three touchdowns, and the Patriots got another strong performance from their defense in a 33-7 rout of the winless Redskins on Sunday.
Now in his 20th season, Brady whisked by Brett Favre into third place on the career list with 71,923 yards passing. The 42-year-old Brady now trails only Peyton Manning (71,940 yards) and Drew Brees (74,845).
Brady also edged closer to Manning's record 539 touchdown passes, connecting with Julian Edelman, Brandon Bolden and Ryan Izzo to bring his total to 527.
Shrugging off four sacks, Brady completed 28 of 42 passes — including a 15-yarder to Edelman in the third quarter to eclipse Favre.
This is the fifth time in franchise history that New England has started the season 5-0, and only the second time since 2007.
Playing for the first time since breaking his leg against Philadelphia last December, Redskins quarterback Colt McCoy went 18 for 27 for 119 yards and an interception. McCoy began the season behind Case Keenum and rookie Dwayne Haskins Jr., but got the start over the injured Keenum and inexperienced Haskins for the Redskins (0-5).
McCoy was sacked six times, marking the first time in franchise history New England has four straight games with at least five sacks.
In addition, the Patriots completed a fifth consecutive game without allowing a touchdown pass, the first team to pull off that feat since the 1988 Cleveland Browns.
The defeat kept the pressure on Redskins coach Jay Gruden, whose job status appears to be tenuous in the wake of his team's 0-5 start. Gruden is 35-49-1 over five-plus seasons with Washington.
Many in the crowd were wearing dark blue jerseys and cheering for the defending Super Bowl champion Patriots. There were plenty of empty seats, a scenario more likely attributable to the Redskins' poor play this season than because baseball's Washington Nationals were hosting a playoff game on Sunday night.
After Brady's 10-yard TD pass to Izzo with 9:14 left made it 33-7, the chant "Brady! Brady!" rose from the stands while thousands of Redskins backers fled to the exits.
McCoy completed a 12-yard pass on Washington's first play from scrimmage. Two short runs and a sack followed, but New England's opening possession also ended with Brady getting dumped in his own backfield.
The Redskins jumped on top when Steven Sims Jr. scored on a 65-yard end around, but the Patriots led 12-7 at halftime and tacked on two touchdowns in the third quarter.
The difference between the seasoned Brady and untested McCoy (now 1-6 as a starter with Washington) was made evident late in the second quarter. With 58 seconds left, McCoy forced a pass that was intercepted by Jason McCourty, who took it 16 yards to the Washington 11.
Brady cautiously completed a short pass and twice threw the ball away before accepting a field goal try that kept New England's momentum flowing into halftime.
KICKING IT
Mike Nugent handled the kicking for the Patriots after Stephen Gostkowski (hip) was placed on injured reserve Wednesday. Nugent's first attempt was a botched conversion, but he bounced back with three extra points and field goals of 37 and 23 yards.
INJURIES
Patriots: WR Phillip Dorsett (hamstring) did not play the second half. ... RB Rex Burkhead (foot) was inactive. ... S Patrick Chung (heel) and S Nate Ebner (groin) were inactive. ...
Redskins: DL Daron Payne (knee) left in the second quarter but returned. ... OT Morgan Moses (stinger) played through the injury. ... CB Quinton Dunbar (stinger) left in the fourth quarter... Keenum (foot) was inactive.
UP NEXT
Patriots: New England faces another NFC East foe, the visiting New York Giants on Thursday night. The Patriots are 55-14 against NFC teams since 2002.
Redskins: Washington is presented with an ideal opportunity to nab its first victory against winless Miami next Sunday.