After landing offensive coordinator, Patriots quickly linked to positional coach
FOXBOROUGH, MA: A view of New England Patriots helmets at Gillette Stadium on Oct. 17, 2021. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
The New England Patriots filled their empty offensive coordinator job on Thursday evening, hiring former Cleveland Browns OC Alex Van Pelt. Now, Van Pelt will work to fill out the Patriots offensive coaching staff.
It didn’t take long for the Patriots to be linked to a positional coach. ESPN’s Mike Reiss reported Thursday evening that the team is “targeting” Seattle Seahawks offensive line coach Andy Dickerson to take the same job in New England (Seattle is expected to change up its coaching staff after having its own head coaching change).
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Dickerson has been the Seahawks offensive line coach the past two seasons, and before that was their run game coordinator for one year. Prior to joining Seattle’s organization he spent nine years as the assistant offensive line coach for the St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams.
A former Tufts offensive lineman, Dickerson’s first job in football was in the Patriots’ operations department in 2005. He then held a number of general assistant and quality control jobs until joining the Rams in 2012.
This isn’t the first time Brown has received interesting from another team this offseason. He interviewed for the Browns’ offensive coordinator job, which was later filled by Ken Dorsey.
Offensive line coach may not be the only spot the Patriots have to fill under Van Pelt. The quarterbacks coaching job is open after Bill O’Brien’s departure, but that could go to Van Pelt. The status of last year’s positional coaches at running back, receiver, and tight end are unknown.
Patriots coaching staff tracker: Building out the staff
With Jerod Mayo’s introduction in the books, the New England Patriots’ next step is to build out his coaching staff for 2024. That begins with the coordinators, with the Patriots interviewing candidates for all three positions – offense, defense, and special teams. They’ll also have to hire positional coaches once those coordinators are decided.
In 2024, the Patriots will be on their fourth offensive coordinator in four years. When Josh McDaniels left after the 2021 season the team went without an officially-titled coordinator in 2022, with former defensive coach Matt Patricia handling the bulk of the play-calling responsibilities that year. Last year the Patriots brought in Bill O’Brien to replace Patricia, but O’Brien ended up being one-and-done in New England – he took a job at Ohio State earlier this month.
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The Patriots haven’t had an officially titled defensive coordinator since Patricia held the job from 2012-2017. Those responsibilities went to Brian Flores in 2018, then were split between Mayo and Steve Belichick from 2019 to 2023.
On special teams, the Patriots haven’t officially parted ways with either coordinator Cam Achord and assistant head coach Joe Judge, who worked almost exclusively with the unit last year. However, the fact they’re taking interviews at the position means those two likely won’t be kept on Mayo’s staff.
So, who will be coming in to take these jobs on the new Patriots coaching staff? Here’s a look at the confirmed interviews for each position, which will be updated as more news comes in…
Alex Barth is a digital content producer and on-air host for 98.5 The Sports Hub. Barth grew up in the Boston area and began covering both the New England Patriots, Boston Celtics, and Boston Red Sox in 2017 before joining the Hub in 2020. He now covers all things Boston Sports for 985TheSportsHub.com as well as appearing on air. Alex writes about all New England sports, as well as college football. You can follow him across all social media platforms at @RealAlexBarth.