Barth’s 10-point plan for the Patriots’ offseason, Part 1: Find new coordinators
We begin our offseason plan with a no-brainer here, as the Matt Patricia play-calling experiment has reached its logical conclusion, as the team confirmed Thursday night. Many of the issues with the Patriots’ offense this year clearly related directly back to coaching.
As the season wound down at it became clear the Patriots were going to need to go into a direction, the conversation seemed to become binary in nature. The two options were hire current Alabama and former Patriots OC Bill O’Brien, or stick with Patricia for another year.
O’Brien is certainly a strong candidate, and is among the most logical and qualified people for the job. His familiarity with the Patriots’ organization, their traditional offense they ran under Josh McDaniels, as well as his previous working relationship with Mac Jones (Jones helped teach O’Brien the Alabama playbook to prepare him for the Tide’s OC job in the spring on 2021) would all help make a seamless transition).
At the same time, he’s not the only one who could lead a Patriots offensive revival. Fired Arizona Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury and current Los Angeles Rams QB coach and passing game coordinator Zac Robinson – who both briefly played quarterback for the Patriots in the 2000s – would also bring a more modern and reenergized offensive approach.
UPDATE: Kingsbury has since said he has no interest in returning to coaching at this time.
Those three make the most sense, but other names could sneak into the conversation as well. Early on in camp last summer, the Patriots were trying to run a scheme that somewhat resembled the Shanahan system, despite not having anybody with experience in that system on the coaching staff. If that’s a direction they want to go again, recently-released former Jets OC Mike LaFleur is now available and has years of experience with that playbook.
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The offense wasn’t the only unit to flutter in 2022. This was one of if not the worst special teams season in the Bill Belichick era, highlighted by the fact the team allowed three kick return touchdowns (all in crucial games) after not allowing a single one for the previous 10 years. Cam Achord clearly is knowledgeable, has a passion for the game and the respect of his players, but at this point, the results speak for themselves. Whether its moving Joe Judge back to his old position or making an outside hire, a change is needed.
As for the defensive side of the ball, a new coordinator could be in play as well. Late last week, the team released a statement that they are in negotiations to bring back Jerod Mayo, who has since turned down defensive coordinator and even head coaching interviews elsewhere. In order to keep Mayo, the Patriots likely need to give him a bump up the coaching depth chart, so a defensive coordinator title could be in play.
There is also some speculation that Mayo could be in line to be the next head coach of the Patriots once Belichick’s time comes to an end. If that’s true, the team should start preparing the next defensive coordinator as well. The obvious choice there would be Steve Belichick, who has split the role with Mayo the last few years.
You can check out the full offseason plan below…