Bertrand: The Patriots overpaid for Kyle Dugger… and that’s okay
Zolak & Bertrand react to the Patriots signing Kyle Dugger to a four-year contract extension that can be worth up to $58 million with $32 million guaranteed. Beetle says that the Patriots overpaid for Kyle Dugger… and that’s okay:
Did the Patriots overpay for Kyle Dugger?
Beetle: Okay, so the Patriots got the damn deal done. Good. Credit to them. Because it would have been a bad situation if they didn’t get an extension done with Kyle Dugger after giving him the $13.8 million transition tag.
Zolak: I think they priced this out correctly. Not a massive market for him out there. He got a good deal.
Beetle: And they wisely locked him up. And do you think he’s overpaid now?
Zolak: No, I don’t.
Beetle: Oh. He is. He’s overpaid. But he’s truly one of the overpaid guys in the sense that I don’t know that this contract was out there on the market for him. If they had let him go look. And so that’s why they ended up overpaying. So I still think they screwed themselves monetarily if they were looking to save every last dollar. But you know what I don’t care about right now? The Patriots saving every last dollar! Because they suck. There are four win team. And they’ve got to overpay to keep guys as part of their core. And he’s one of them. So keep them. You actually have your own players that still want to be here. Good. That’s a good thing. They need that. They desperately need that right now. And so I’m okay with it. Oh they overpaid him? Yeah a little bit. They overpaid, one of their own guys. They overpaid a safety in a league that doesn’t value them anymore. Does he show up and play for the team every Sunday? Sure does. Is he great in coverage? No. Not really. That’s not really his thing.
Zolak: But I love the fact you’re going to keep him and Peppers back there and save as safeties with Mapu.
Beetle: Well, to me he’s one of these identity guys right? And if you’re going to keep a good defense intact, which we know it is, the only thing this team has going for it is they got a good defense. They got good players on that side of the ball. He’s a part of the identity of that defense. So I value that for them. I value is his presence there.
NFL Mock Draft 2.0: Patriots trade down, then back up
Mock Draft Monday is back, with our second full first-round NFL Mock Draft of the spring. This week, the goal is to answer one question – what might the New England Patriots’ draft look like if they trade down, rather than staying and picking with at third overall?
While this may not be the most likely outcome, it’s a situation worth being ready for. Speaking to the media in recent weeks, Patriots de facto general manager Eliot Wolf and head coach Jerod Mayo have hardly closed the door on the trade-down option.
—Kyle Dugger returns on four-year deal
—Who are the ‘Eliot Wolf wide receivers’ in this year’s draft?
—Who was at the Patriots’ local pro day?
“I know everyone likes to think they have the special formula to picking players. But honestly, the guaranteed way to win is to accumulate more picks,” Mayo said last week, in the strongest defense yet of the trade down option. “So if we don’t feel convicted [about a player] at number three, we are willing to do that as well.”
We’ve already looked at what might happen if the Patriots do have conviction in taking one of the top quarterbacks in the draft third overall. That situation was included in our first NFL Mock Draft of the spring.
But, what if the Patriots don’t like any of the top quarterbacks and move down? Working from that belief as a starting point, it’s time for NFL Mock Draft 2.0. Plus, we continued what this Patriots draft might look like through Days 2 and 3 in Patriots Mock Draft 2.5, which you can find here.
There’s one other trend we’re going to explore here as well, and that relates to the quarterbacks. Just how high will the top six players at the position go?
This class has often been compared to the 2021 class. That year, the need for quarterbacks drove players well up the board. Is something similar shaping up for the Class of 2024? Given the reports and rumors around players like Michael Penix and Bo Nix – as well as on individual teams – from the last few weeks, that outcome is feeling more and more likely.
How would this scenario we’ve created play out? Let’s take a look with NFL Mock Draft 2.0…
Note: Trades referenced were made for this mock specifically. Previously completed trades are not detailed.