New England Patriots 2025 NFL offseason, NFLPA report card: Mike Vrabel is in, and the roster needs work

2024 season: 4-13, fourth in AFC East, missed playoffs

Overview: The Patriots were expected to be bad, with a talent-poor roster. That didn’t stop them from firing Jerod Mayo after just one season as head coach. The Patriots started OK, including a win at Cincinnati in Week 1. That ended up being the brightest highlight of the season for them.

FOXBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS - JANUARY 05: Drake Maye #10 of the New England Patriots throws a pass against the Buffalo Bills during the first quarter at Gillette Stadium on January 05, 2025 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Billie Weiss/Getty Images)
Drake Maye proved in his rookie season that he was worth the draft investment. (Photo by Billie Weiss/Getty Images)

The Patriots weren’t good on offense or defense, though 2024 first-round draft pick Drake Maye provided plenty of hope for the future. The Patriots didn’t show much improvement late in the season, though it seemed unfair to pin that all on Mayo, who was given a bad roster to work with. Still, Mayo was fired as soon as the season ended.

He was replaced by Mike Vrabel, who can build a new culture but does have a lot to work with in terms of talent. The one good piece of news is Maye looks like a keeper at quarterback. The job of building up around Maye begins this offseason, starting with the fourth pick of the draft and a lot of salary cap space.

Ranking: 31st

Problems with and outdated locker room, weight room and travel accommodations persist for the Patriots, with players calling out the team plane specifically. They say the plane is too small, doesn’t offer Wi-Fi and the seats still, stunningly, have ashtrays in the armrests. However, it’s worth noting the team expects a new $50 million facility to be completed in 2026. That will presumably improve many of these issues.

Here’s how it broke down from the NFLPA and where the Patriots rank:

Here is the New England Patriots' 2025 NFLPA report card. (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)
Here is the New England Patriots’ 2025 NFLPA report card. (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

CB Jonathan Jones
DE Deatrich Wise Jr.
DT Daniel Ekuale
QB Jacoby Brissett
TE Austin Hooper

Who’s in/out: Often when teams have an inordinate amount of cap space, some will be used on re-signing their own free agents. The Patriots don’t have that issue. Jones and Wise are solid players but the rebuilding Patriots shouldn’t be spending big on anyone in their 30s. This seems like as clean of a slate as you’ll find in the NFL when it comes to roster building.

Offensive line
Receiver
Edge rusher

Why the holes? The Patriots did a poor job of talent acquisition in Bill Belichick’s final few offseasons, including some terrible drafts. The 2024 NFL Draft class had Drake Maye, and that’s the most important piece, but there aren’t many other obvious home runs. When you keep missing on draft and free-agent classes, you end up like the Patriots, needing help at just about every position. Other than quarterback, anyway.

(Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)
(Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)

The good part of not having many blue-chip players is you don’t have many big contracts on the books. The Patriots have a staggering $126 million in cap space, according to Spotrac. That’s more than any other team in the NFL by far entering the offseason. They should be a major player in free agency.

WR Kendrick Bourne
LB Sione Takitaki (cut on Feb. 19)

Why they might be gone: The Patriots don’t have a lot of players who are obvious cut candidates. Bourne has a $7.9 million cap number for 2025 but it’s not like the Patriots have much receiver depth if they cut him. And it’s not like the Patriots need to clear any cap space. The team did release Takitaki, which opened up $2.68 million in cap room.

1st round: No. 4
2nd round: No. 38
3rd round: No. 69
3rd round (from Falcons): No. 77
4th round
5th round
7th round (from Titans)
7th round
7th round (from Chargers)

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