Barth’s 10-point plan for the Patriots’ offseason, Part 5: Contract extensions
As we’ve established in Part 4 of the offseason plan, this year’s Patriots internal free agency group isn’t as consequential as in years past. At the same time, they are projected to be towards the top of the league in available cap space. While they can and should use some of that money in free agency (more on that tomorrow) it also provides them with a chance to get ahead on some of next year’s pending contracts.
Three players stand out as candidates for long-term extensions as their rookie deals wind down – Kyle Dugger, Michael Onwenu, and Josh Uche. All three are set to be free agents after the 2023 season. If the Patriots can get an extension done with at least one player in this group this offseason before the cap jumps next year, that would be big.
If there’s only one deal to do, it should be Dugger. Safety contracts are exploding at an exponential rate, and if he continues to grow on the trajectory he showed this season, he’ll be among the most high-priced free agents in the league next spring. Throughout 2022 he looked like he can be a difference maker on the defensive side of the ball, so if the Patriots can get ahead on paying him, it could end up saving them significant money.
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Onwenu also wouldn’t be a bad candidate. Despite the rest of the offensive line falling apart around him this year he was the 8th-ranked guard in football according to Pro Football Focus. The Patriots are going to have a young quarterback, Mac Jones or otherwise, under center for the foreseeable future. Offensive line stability will be key, and Onwenu is as stable as they come.
Uche’s case is a bit more complicated. After two and a half years of inconsistent play he flashed down the stretch in 2022 with 11.5 sacks in the final 10 games. For Uche, there may be incentive to take a deal now, and cash in on that run. On the other hand, if he believes he can put together a full season like that in 2023 he’d be looking at a massive deal next spring.
The same conundrum exists for the Patriots – pay Uche now for a two-month stretch, bank on that run not being his peak, and potentially lock up a pass rush weapon on a value deal? Or wait and see how it plays out, not take the risk of paying him but potentially setting up a chance where a top pass rusher walks away?
The Patriots haven’t been shy about getting extensions done in the past, although their last few big ones have been in-season. Is this the year they break that trend?
You can check out the full offseason plan below…