Coaching freedom limited
FOXBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS – NOVEMBER 05: New England Patriots Offensive Coordinator Bill O’Brien looks on from the bench during the game against the Washington Commanders at Gillette Stadium on November 05, 2023 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
Once the staff was assembled, it seems as though the ability to operate on their own wasn’t always there. There are reported instances of this at multiple levels.
When discussing a replacement offensive coordinator for Patricia, the need for a ‘head coach of the offense’ was discussed – an offensive coordinator with enough experience and pedigree to make major decisions outside the purview of Belichick, given the way the 2022 season went. While O’Brien was viewed as such a candidate, it now doesn’t seem like he was given that freedom when it came to building the offensive staff around him.
“According to league sources, some assistants came to believe O’Brien wanted to clean house and build his own offensive staff upon arriving in January, but Belichick denied him,” the Herald says. “Belichick allowed one hire, [Will] Lawing, who replaced ex-tight ends coach Nick Caley. To onlookers, a clear hierarchy developed with O’Brien and his assistants: there was Lawing and assistant quarterbacks coach Evan Rothstein, then everyone else.”
The piece goes on to describe the Patriots’ offensive coaching staff as, “a coaching mash unit bound not by a system, philosophy or even experience with the coordinator. There was O’Brien, Klemm, new tight ends coach Will Lawing, a loyal O’Brien disciple, and Belichick’s holdover assistants that included two former college defensive players under 30 (running backs coach Vinnie Sunseri and wide receivers coach Ross Douglas).”
Once the staff was set and the season began it seems like O’Brien had more say. “O’Brien also pulled the offense closer to him, running more unit meetings – which involve all offensive players – than Belichick and Patricia had the year before” the story says. “Consequently, positional meetings became scarce, sources said, which limited individual time shared between players and their position coaches. Most everything flowed through O’Brien.”
Within that though there are questions about just how much the Patriots’ positional coaches did. That brings us back to Klemm, who was a highly-regarded and high-priced hire.
“On the surface, it was a sensible reunion. Klemm had played and learned under legendary Patriots offensive line coach Dante Scarnecchia from 2000-04. However, his fit in the year 2023 struck some in the organization as questionable,” the story says. “Klemm’s techniques and philosophy had evolved since his playing days under Scarnecchia, molded by stops at SMU, UCLA, Oregon and in Pittsburgh with the Steelers.”
Did the Patriots hire Klemm because they believed in him and his coaching system? Or did they hire him to try to replicate a system he hadn’t been a part of for 20 years, discounting the rest of his coaching experience? In the Herald piece, starting left tackle Trent Brown shares that after Klemm took a health-related leave of absence mid-season, Belichick took on a bigger role coaching the offensive line and that “with Klemm out, the patchwork offensive line was now practicing Scarnecchia’s techniques and drills instead of those he had taught.”
“I think that has to do a bit with people being set in their ways,” Brown added. “I think Klemm brings more of a new-age (approach).”
According to the story, Klemm is not expected to be back with the Patriots next year.
That leads to a big overarching question. Are the Patriots’ offensive coaching issues – and by extension their offensive issues overall – a product of bad coaching or simply micromanaging and not trusting the coaches they have to do what they think is best?