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BREAKING: After the Jets’ 14–27 loss, Aaron Glenn drops 20GB “rigged game” video—then Vrabel’s 9 words ignite absolute NFL chaos.

In a gritty Thursday night clash at Gillette Stadium, the New England Patriots secured a convincing 27-14 victory over their AFC East rivals, the New York Jets. The win improved the hosts to 9-2, while the visitors slumped further to 2-8.

Drake Maye orchestrated a balanced attack, completing 25 of 34 passes for 281 yards and a touchdown, complemented by TreVeyon Henderson’s two rushing scores. Defensively, the Patriots limited Justin Fields to 116 passing yards amid two sacks.

TRENDING: New #Jets wide receiver AD Mitchell is having a historically BAD game tonight.

Mitchell already has three drops in just his first game in New York…

Pathetic from a #NFL receiver
pic.twitter.com/fZUQIMNHQf

— MLFootball (@MLFootball) November 14, 2025

As celebrations subsided, whispers of uneven officiating emerged, with several pivotal calls tilting the scales. Defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn, incensed by perceived favoritism, compiled exhaustive footage exposing what he deemed systematic referee lapses favoring the home side.

Glenn’s 20GB manifesto, uploaded post-midnight, dissected three flagrant non-calls: a blatant holding penalty overlooked on a third-down Patriots run, gifting them a fresh set deep in Jets territory during the second quarter.

“I’m furious; the referees showed clear bias against the Jets all game,” fumed Jets coordinator Mike Vrabel in a viral sideline clip, his nine-word tirade igniting social media frenzy and demands for league scrutiny.

Justin Fields Jets butt fumble (2025) pic.twitter.com/dMppGEPfLw

— NFL Drop (@TheNFLDrop) November 14, 2025

One flashpoint came midway through the third: Jets cornerback Jarvis Brownlee Jr. drew a dubious personal foul for incidental contact, extending a Patriots drive that culminated in Henderson’s second touchdown, widening the gap to 20-7.

Earlier, officials waved off a roughing-the-passer infraction on Fields after a late hit, nullifying a potential Jets momentum swing following their lone score—a 15-yard strike to John Metchie III.

Compounding frustrations, a non-call on pass interference against Patriots safety Jaylinn Hawkins allowed a contested 36-yard completion to DeMario Douglas, setting up field position for New England’s final score. Jets faithful decried the lopsided penalties: 20 yards against them versus none conceded.

The fallout reverberates league-wide, with Glenn’s video amassing millions of views and Vrabel’s outburst trending globally. As the NFL reviews footage, questions linger: Was bias at play, or mere human error in a high-stakes rivalry renewed?

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