The Patriots' 2024 Off Season Thread

See a common denominator?

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I don't see a ton of playoff wins.
 
IIRC correctly Covington was the DC for the Senior Bowl and almost got the Cardinals DC job last year. The Pats are going to interview him:


Wonder where this leaves Steve.
oh look! another guy with twice as much coaching experience as mayo has!
 
From Mike Reiss

Belichick sons: Steve Belichick and Brian Belichick, Bill's sons, have been told they've earned the opportunity to remain with the Patriots if they choose to do so. Mayo and Steve have a close friendship, so the projected fit on staff would be as an assistant head coach/senior adviser type. Brian, who came up through scouting and most recently served as safeties coach from 2020 to 2023, was still showing up at Gillette Stadium late this past week.
 
Finally a sports writer discusses the issue of cash spending!


if Kraft really wants to help Mayo become successful, if he wants those instincts to prove true, his wallet has to back it up.

It’s no secret the Patriots have been one of the lowest cash spending teams in the NFL.

That reality has to change. Spending to the cap is one thing, but the real money that’s doled out, a figure that’s largely derived from guaranteed money in contracts and what’s actually spent, is a truer indicator of a team’s commitment to bringing in talent.

As we learned during the past year, Kraft and Belichick seemed to be on different sides of the narrative when it came to who was responsible for not having a worthy roster.

Belichick put it out there that the Patriots were, on average, one of the teams that didn’t spend a ton of cash. He wasn’t pointing a finger at himself. The implication was that Kraft was tight with the purse strings.


“Our spending in 2020, our spending in 2021, and our spending in 2022 — the aggregate of that — was we were 27th in the league in cash spending,” Belichick said during his 2022 end-of-season press conference. “Couple years we’re low, one year was high, but over a three-year period, we are one of the lowest spending teams in the league.”

To no surprise, the Patriots owner waged a counter attack during the league meetings in March when asked about having that label. Kraft put the ball back in Belichick’s lap.

“He’s never come to me, and not gotten everything he wanted from cash spending,” Kraft said of Belichick, speaking to a small group of reporters. “We have never set limits.

“This is a project of passion, and we want to win,” Kraft added. “Money-spending will never be the issue. I promise you. Or I’ll sell the team.”

During Wednesday’s introductory presser at the G-P Atrium at Gillette Stadium, Kraft made mention of the team’s draft position, and salary cap space as reasons the Patriots should be able to “position itself right.”


The only way that’s going to happen is if the Patriots make the right calls in the draft, and spend their money wisely. In recent years, those areas haven’t born much fruit.

In 2021, they dropped a bundle in free agency. They signed several players to big money contracts with large pots of guaranteed money and it turned out to be a mixed bag. Matthew Judon was worth the freight, and largely, so was Hunter Henry. Nelson Agholor and Jonnu Smith were not.

While Kraft prefers to build through the draft, he also knows the Patriots are at a crossroads. If they’re going to get up off the mat, they need to infuse the team with more talent.

Kraft understands the dynamic even more now with a new head coach. Whether it was Belichick being frugal, or the Patriots owner being somewhat disingenuous, Kraft is now faced with the opportunity to flex some monetary muscle to help Mayo’s cause, and show that willingness to spend.

Beyond showing prospective free agents the money with better guarantees, Kraft can also invest in Mayo’s coaching staff. Belichick typically employed one of the smallest staffs in the NFL. Part of the reason was likely due to Belichick’s salary being tied to the overall coaching budget. Given the $25 million Belichick reportedly made, there probably wasn’t much left over for a bigger staff.


Even though Mayo won’t make Belichick money, he should be free to add as many coaches as he’d like.

Adding good coaches, and bringing in more brain power is never a bad thing.

Of course, the way it’s constructed now, no one knows who’s actually picking the groceries, or, more to the point, who has the final say.

There are more questions, than answers.

Will Kraft have to spend his money in free agency on a quarterback (Kirk Cousins Baker Mayfield?), or will the Patriots rely on the draft? Same with addressing glaring needs at wide receiver and tackle. When it comes to free agency, though, the Patriots can’t continue to invest on the cheap for broken down players well past their prime. JuJu Smith-Schuster and Riley Reiff immediately come to mind on that count.

Mayo will have a say in some of these decisions. The point is, the Patriots can’t cheap out like the Red Sox and operate like a small market team.


They need to re-sign their key in-house free agents and cornerstone players (Mike Onwenu, Kyle Dugger) while also landing the top free agents they target to fill holes on the roster. They can’t let the DeAndre Hopkins of the world walk away like last season. They need to go the extra mile to make sure they get their man.

That’s what rebuilding teams do. Backed by Kraft, that’s what the Patriots need to do to give Mayo a chance. If they continue to be among the lowest cash spending teams in the league, that’s not going to cut it.
 
yes. but i still can't get over hiring a guy with a total of 5 years experience in coaching to be a h.c. josh was with the pats for 5 years before he was even named o.c.

The better candidates may not want to come here bc of the lousy record this year, lack of a QB and the lack of the requisite players.
 
ummmm wut???
Mayo continued: "You look at the offensive side of the ball, however you want to slice it, whoever the quarterback is... the quarterback has to have some type of leadership ability and, hopefully we can get to that point where-- David Andrews great leader on the offensive side of the ball as well, Hunter Henry great leader on the offensive side of the ball. But what I will say is, it's hard to lead through tough times. And that's when you really start to see people change. You really start to see the attitudes change. People getting in small huddles and things like that, and that's when people are looking for a leader. When everything is not going right they're looking for a leader. When you're winning games it's easy, like, 'C'mon guys family on three: One two three family!', and then you go on a six-game losing streak and you're like forget it."

He was then asked specifically about Mac Jones and if the quarterback struggled in a leadership role in his third NFL season:

"I’m not saying that," Mayo explained. "What I will say is, when I think about Mac, he obviously has talent– and once again we’re in the evaluation phase. I will say with that, you know, the confidence of a player is very fragile, especially with these players now– like I’m an old man or something like that. But confidence goes a lot way and honestly as I continue to evaluate, as we continue to evaluate as a coaching staff, we’ll see. But you know these guys can play football, like they’re here for a reason. It’s not like we went over to Brockton High School and just pulled some people over here, right? These guys are players and at the end of the day there has to be a shared vision, there has to be– you know the players really have to feel like they’re being heard. They have to feel like they have
some stake in the gameplan so if it doesn’t go right, the accountability piece starts to show up. If you just throw some pages at [them], you know ‘Here, this is what we’re doing this week,’ not saying that that’s what we’ve done, but defensively we’ve always tried to take the input of the players, and they’re on the field…"

So from a coaching staff perspective, does Mayo think the Patriots let Mac Jones down?

"The thing I would say is, if you were to ask Mac Jones, he made mistakes along the way as well," said Mayo. "The coaching staff, we made mistakes along the way as well and I’m not just talking about the offensive coaching staff. One thing about Mac, you know everybody talks to Mac. Special teams, defensive players, offensive players and we were trying to help him with that confidence but I think everyone has– there’s enough blame to go around."
 
ummmm wut???
Mayo continued: "You look at the offensive side of the ball, however you want to slice it, whoever the quarterback is... the quarterback has to have some type of leadership ability and, hopefully we can get to that point where-- David Andrews great leader on the offensive side of the ball as well, Hunter Henry great leader on the offensive side of the ball. But what I will say is, it's hard to lead through tough times. And that's when you really start to see people change. You really start to see the attitudes change. People getting in small huddles and things like that, and that's when people are looking for a leader. When everything is not going right they're looking for a leader. When you're winning games it's easy, like, 'C'mon guys family on three: One two three family!', and then you go on a six-game losing streak and you're like forget it."

He was then asked specifically about Mac Jones and if the quarterback struggled in a leadership role in his third NFL season:

"I’m not saying that," Mayo explained. "What I will say is, when I think about Mac, he obviously has talent– and once again we’re in the evaluation phase. I will say with that, you know, the confidence of a player is very fragile, especially with these players now– like I’m an old man or something like that. But confidence goes a lot way and honestly as I continue to evaluate, as we continue to evaluate as a coaching staff, we’ll see. But you know these guys can play football, like they’re here for a reason. It’s not like we went over to Brockton High School and just pulled some people over here, right? These guys are players and at the end of the day there has to be a shared vision, there has to be– you know the players really have to feel like they’re being heard. They have to feel like they have
some stake in the gameplan so if it doesn’t go right, the accountability piece starts to show up. If you just throw some pages at [them], you know ‘Here, this is what we’re doing this week,’ not saying that that’s what we’ve done, but defensively we’ve always tried to take the input of the players, and they’re on the field…"

So from a coaching staff perspective, does Mayo think the Patriots let Mac Jones down?

"The thing I would say is, if you were to ask Mac Jones, he made mistakes along the way as well," said Mayo. "The coaching staff, we made mistakes along the way as well and I’m not just talking about the offensive coaching staff. One thing about Mac, you know everybody talks to Mac. Special teams, defensive players, offensive players and we were trying to help him with that confidence but I think everyone has– there’s enough blame to go around."
If he does not make it as a HC he has a future as a politician.
 
When you're the anointed starter by the owner, you don't necessarily have to do the same things other guys do.
And that’s assuming that that tweet is somehow something more than typical Clickbait. No sources.
 
If he does not make it as a HC he has a future as a politician.
🤣
it's not surprising he was in the business world. they learn to bs so well that we used to have a "meeting bingo" card to play with during meetings.
 
yes. but i still can't get over hiring a guy with a total of 5 years experience in coaching to be a h.c. josh was with the pats for 5 years before he was even named o.c.
BOB and BB have about 80 years combined experience. 4-13
 
If he does not make it as a HC he has a future as a politician.
He talked about things a LOT more than BB, and I got a little info, but he was vague and said contractory things. Mostlyhe confirmed that Steve and Brian B have the option to stay.
 
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