For the first time in over a month, someone other than Drake Maye is headlining this week’s New England Patriots Stock Watch.

Maye didn’t necessarily play a bad game against the Atlanta Falcons. He completed 19 of 29 passes for 259 yards and two touchdowns, joining the company of Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers and Peyton Manning by recording his eighth consecutive game with at least 200 passing yards and a passer rating of 100 or better.

Maye also committed two turnovers, however — a fumble and an interception — and based on the dazzling performances he’s delivered in recent weeks, those mistakes qualified as a regression for the second-year quarterback.

The good news for New England? Maye made enough plays to help the Patriots earn a 24-23 victory, and got plenty of help from a trio of offensive skill players. Our Patriots Insider Phil Perry highlighted those positive performances — as well as two players who had their hands full Sunday at Gillette Stadium — in his “Stock Watch” report for Week 9:

Stock Up

DeMario Douglas, wide receiver

The Patriots lost Kayshon Boutte due to a hamstring injury in this one, but Maye found Douglas for an explosive 58-yard catch-and-run that helped set up a touchdown. His 100 yards on four catches gave the Patriots a new leading receiver for the sixth time in nine games. — Perry

Hunter Henry, tight end

While Douglas led the team in receiving yardage, Hunter Henry was the go-to guy in critical situations. He converted on three separate third downs, including the final non-kneel offensive play of the game, when he wisely scooted up the sideline and stayed in bounds to burn time off the clock. — Perry

TreVeyon Henderson, running back

With Rhamondre Stevenson out, Henderson was inserted as the lead back and looked good. He averaged just 3.9 yards per carry on 14 attempts, but he ran with patience and power between the tackles and seemed to get what was blocked for him. At times he got more than that.

He also caught four passes for 32 yards. Good day for the rookie. — Perry

Stock Down

Mike Onwenu, offensive guard

The veteran right guard had trouble at times, it seemed, with Atlanta’s athleticism on stunts up front. Falcons pass-rusher Jalon Walker knifed through the line and past Onwenu on the end-of-half strip-sack that changed the complexion of the game.

In all, Onwenu allowed three pressures Sunday, per Pro Football Focus. — Perry

Marcus Jones, cornerback

Every so often, the opposition is able to get bigger-bodied wideouts on Marcus Jones and take advantage. Such was the case Sunday as the 5-foot-8 corner ended up on 6-foot-4 wideout Drake London twice in the red zone, leading to Atlanta scores.

The Patriots trusted him in those spots, allowing him to use his technique to try to separate London from the football, but it was London who came down twice with touchdowns. — Perry