I mean, I basically talk to those guys at the end of every series,” Belichick said. “I talk to Scott (O’Brien) in the kicking game — maybe not after every play, maybe a series of plays — and I usually talk to Billy (O’Brien) and Matt or other coaches. It could be Dante (Scarnecchia), it could be somebody else, about the series that happened. What we need to do, what they’re doing, what we need to do about that, whatever it happens to be. So, that’s part of the whole. And then we talk about that. I mean, it’s hard on the headset. If we’re on offense, we’re calling plays, we’re substituting people, that’s not really the time to have philosophical conversations. But when you come off the field after we’ve scored or punted or whatever, ‘OK, next time we get out there, you want to go no-huddle? What do we want to try to do the next series? What are we going to do the next time they give us a certain look? What are we going to do in (certain situations). If there’s a particular situation we’re not doing well, what are we going to do the next time? Same thing defensively. … We talk about that in-between series.