I disagree with Lombardi saying you dont go into the draft with the end result in mind. Thats crazy.Beleichick went into the 2010 draft wanting to run a TE based offense and drafted Gronk and Hernandez. He wanted a younger RB corp last year and drafted Vereen and Ridley. There was some sort of plan, BJGE was heading to FA and could be gone.
Belichick goes into every draft wanting to run a TE-based offense. No season has gone by without Belichick saying something in the press about how it would be preferable to have great TEs instead of great WRs in his offense, your offense, any offense, because they could do more things.
Over Belichick's long tenure here, TE has probably been the most overdrafted spot on the roster. Before Wes Welker came on board and the Pats went to more of a spread concept, it was a veritable lock that a TE would get drafted. Even if there was clearly no available roster spot for them, Belichick would draft them, and draft multiples of them, seemingly only because he liked watching as many TEs as possible during training camp. Belichick once drafted a TE in the fourth round (Garrett Mills) because he wanted him on the practice squad, and then got publicly upset when Mills was claimed on waivers. That is how much Belichick has loved collecting TEs.
Gronk and Hernandez were drafted not because Belichick suddenly woke up the day after the 2009 season ended and went "TEs are going to be big this year! Let's draft two!" but because that was the year injury and character concerns pushed two very talented TEs down the board to where the Pats were happy to draft them.
Likewise, the key feature about Vereen and Ridley is not that the Pats had to have them in order to get younger, but that that was the year the Pats felt there would be value in drafting some running backs high due to other teams undervaluing the position. The Pats traded back because another team, the Saints, saw value in trading up to take the first running back (Ingram), then took the third (Vereen) running back off the board at a spot (56) far lower than the third running back came off the board in 2008 (Felix Jones, 22), 2009 (Beanie Wells, 31) and 2010 (Jahvid Best, 30).
Further emphasizing that the Pats were targeting value, there was a run on running backs right after Vereen at 56. (Leshoure at 57, Thomas at 62, Murray at 71) Ridley got drafted at 73 because he was one of those sleepers the Pats identify; every draft "expert" felt was a reach that high.