Grading out the New England Patriots’ offense position by position through the first half of the 2024 NFL season.
As the calendar flips to November, the New England Patriots are just past the halfway point of their 2024 season. The team has nine games in the books, with eight more to be played (plus a bye week).
When we started doing these annual mid-season grades a few years ago, it was easy. Eight games in, time to take a big-picture look. The addition of the 17th game and 18th week makes it less clear, and since doing a full breakdown at halftime of Game 9 is unfeasible, here we are.
At 2-7, the Patriots are where many expected them to be record-wise. However, how they’ve gotten there has surprised some people as the team has come up short multiple times in close games. Let’s take a look at how each position has impacted that first nine games, in the form of mid-season grades.
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For those unfamiliar with how we do our grades, the grades include everything factoring into the position. That means players’ individual performances as well as coaching and usage.
There’s also a recency bias applied here, representing the idea that teams are supposed to improve as the season goes on. Finally these grades are on somewhat of a curve, with positions being graded compared to their preseason expectations, and how the group is performing relative to those expectations.
We’ll start with the Patriots’ offense (defensive grades coming tomorrow). It’s been a rough go of it for this group, which ranks 30th in the NFL averaging 15.7 points per game. That’s somehow up from last year’s team (which averaged 13.9 points per game for the season), but not by nearly enough.
Who’s the most responsible? And are there any bright spots? Let’s get to the grades…