Barth’s 10-point plan for the Patriots’ offseason, Part 6: Get a veteran No. 1 wide receiver
Over the past few years, the Patriots have made some nice additions to the wide receiver room in terms of complementary options like DeVante Parker and Kendrick Bourne. Those players can and should contribute in key roles for the offense moving forwards, but adding another such player at this point wouldn’t do much. What they need is the guy who will draw coverage away from those two, while still being competitive. A player on the boundary who will command the other team’s top cover corner, help over the top, and dictate coverage assignments across the board.
The last few years, the Patriots have had too many needs to invest the assets it takes to add a true, game-changing No. 1 wide receiver. While they certainly have other needs this year, they’re more targeted. It’s time to go get the pass catcher fans have been waiting for for years.
This would also line up with Jones’ development timeline. Across the league, the third year of a quarterback’s career seems to be when teams make this investment. From the Eagles getting Jalen Hurts A.J. Brown, to the Dolphins getting Tua Tagovailoa Tyreek Hill, and even the Bills adding Stefon Diggs for Josh Allen, the pattern is there.
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While it’s not the best year to make such a move, there are some intriguing options out there. DeAndre Hopkins will likely be the best player who will be available and fits the description. We went more in-depth on what a move to acquire him may look like here.
Another name to know is 2020 Broncos first-round pick Jerry Jeudy. Jeudy will turn 24 this spring and is entering the final year of his rookie contract, just like Brown and Diggs were when they got traded. Jeudy doesn’t quite have the production Hopkins has had, but he’s still a developing player and has managed to look impressive despite a clown car of quarterbacks throwing him the ball. Despite Russell Wilson’s issues in 2022, Jeudy still caught 67 passes for 972 yards and six touchdowns in 15 games.
One more name that could come up is Tampa Bay Buccaneers star Mike Evans. Evans, who will be 30 at the start of next season, is entering the final year of his contract with a $23 million dollar cap hit. That’s a tough enough number to manage to begin with, but if Tom Brady leaves Tampa and the Bucs go into a full-on rebuild, it makes even less sense for a team with a projected negative $54 million in cap space.
The Buccaneers can clear $2 million in cap space if they move him now, but if they wait until after June 1 then $14 million would come off the books. That may mean the Patriots may need to wait, but for a player of Evans’ caliber (he caught 77 passes for 1,124 yards and six touchdowns in 15 games this year) it might be worth it – especially if no other deals materialize.
More players could become available down the road as well. At this time last year, nobody thought anything close to the idea of a Tyreek Hill trade is on the table. Any movement in the market is a good thing for the Patriots.
What the Patriots should not do is go into the draft to address this need. For one, this is a weak wide receiver class, especially when compared to the last two years. The pass catcher fitting the description of what the team needs above doesn’t appear to be on the board. If any of them do, it’s TCU’s Quentin Johnston, but given his lack of experience the Patriots’ history of failing to develop receivers, picking him would represent a tremendous risk in an offseason where the Patriots can’t afford to miss with a premium asset. Instead, the goal needs to be to find a wideout who has already proven he can be a difference-maker in the NFL.
You can check out the full offseason plan below…