Patriots reportedly now ‘moving forward’ with GM search
With the bulk of the offseason now behind them, the New England Patriots are reportedly ‘moving forward’ with their search for a new lead front office executive.
When the New England Patriots parted ways with Bill Belichick back in January they were left needing to fill not one job, but two. In addition to head coach, Belichick served as the de facto general manager of the team for the better part of his tenure, especially after then-VP of Player Personnel Scott Pioli left to become the GM of the Kansas City Chiefs following the 2008 season.
The head coaching part of Belichick’s role, of course, was filled quickly. Jerod Mayo had a clause in his contract that allowed the team to promote him without first going through an external coaching search.
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However, the team has yet to name a long-term replacement for Belichick as the head of the front office. Initial reporting back in January indicated the Patriots wouldn’t conduct a search to fill that role until after the draft.
On Monday, that process got underway. As first reported by Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports, the Patriots “are moving forward with a search for their next top football executive.” Jones added that the job the Patriots are looking to fill may not be titled as a general manager, but “the position would outrank all other football positions in the building.”
The Patriots haven’t had a titled general manager since Patrick Sullivan in 1990, meaning Kraft has never employed one under his ownership. Pioli was the closest to having that sort of role outside of Belichick.
Patriots GM history from Pro Football Reference
Following Jones’ report, Doug Kyed of The Boston Herald added that the team sent out requests to interview external candidates on Monday. Both Jones and Kyed added that current director of scouting Eliot Wolf is also a candidate for the job with Jones noting that Wolf’s “work over the past four months will be key in his evaluation.”
Wolf was given ‘final say’ for personnel decisions this offseason following Belichick’s departure – but wasn’t given a new title or role. Andrew Callahan of The Boston Herald reported in February that Wolf was “rebuilding the Patriots on an audition basis” and was “near the end of his contract.” No update on Wolf’s contract status has been reported since.
However it wasn’t as simple as simply naming Wolf general manager, or another title with equivalent responsibilities. Any hiring for that job would have to be compliant with the Rooney Rule, which means the team would have to interview at least two external minority candidates before making a hire.
So, none of that means for sure that Wolf won’t get the keys to the car moving forward. It would be surprising to say the least for the Patriots to part ways with him after allowing him to orchestrate an offseason that included completely rebuilding the offensive coaching staff, handing out major contracts to guard Mike Onwenu, safety Kyle Dugger, and defensive tackle Christian Barmore and then using the third overall pick in the NFL Draft on quarterback Drake Maye. Wolf was the unofficial face of the organization for all of those moves, holding press conferences at the NFL Combine and after the draft.
It’s very possible this search will end with Wolf’s lead front office role being cemented, once the necessary interviews have taken place. According to Mark Daniels of MassLive, “there are people inside Gillette Stadium and those on different NFL teams who expect Wolf will come away with the job.”
Why would the Patriots wait until after the draft to make Wolf’s new role official? It’s tough to say, but one reason could be the team wanted to focus on the roster-building task at hand, rather than have to spend the early weeks of the offseason conducting interviews before truly getting started.
Wolf has spent the last four months building the new core of players and coaches for the Patriots moving forwards. Now it becomes a matter of whether or not he officially becomes the one that will continue working with that core, which we should learn over the next few weeks.
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