The issue NOT whether we should sign one-year contracts. Obviously, they have an important place in rosters building, especially signing show-me contracts.
The issue is that a MAJOR part of building our future was supposedly in signing free agents who will help us build our divison-compeititvr teams in 2025 and 2026.
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The last time we had this discussion, someone had the two real reasons for the lack of three (or even two) year contracts.
1) Folks just didn't want to come to a team (primarily on Offense) with so many question marks.
2) The unexpected HUGE increase in cap money allowed many cap-tight teams to sign their own free agents, greatly limiting those available in the 2024 free agent market.
I appreciate your clarification, I see now.
First bolded portion: what plan called for free agency being a major part of our future? Not saying you're wrong at all, I miss quotes all the time so I'm asking from where this comes.
Second bolded part and largely my answer: As far as building a team goes, your strategy better out what you can and can't control. The market this year was out of the Patriot's control (and almost always is), so if someone in the organization made ripples by announcing that the free agent market is key to our future - the 2024 free agent market that we're currently in - I'd, personally, be a bit underwhelmed and worried. Even from my more-than-casual, but less-than-serious knowledge, it didn't seem like this market wasn't gonna be all the great. Even without knowledge of a huge increase, I just always assume there's some weird contract ****ery that's going to keep the best players in house.
Personally, I think it's hard to burn cash when you don't know what you need that'd merit burning cash, if that makes sense. The most clear example is QB: if I don't really know what I have in the driver's seat, I'm gonna be disciplined in the way I approach free agency; I really don't know what works with this guy yet. I don't know
if that guy works yet. It's a tough balancing act. You can't let it blind you from making some less-than-safe decisions, but you also can't just assume that dumping big money into a great WR will show worthwhile return.
Maybe the idea of free agency being key was floated, but come free agency time, they recognized they'd have to lean into their draft more than expected because free agency wasn't shaking out.
I could see 2025 being a big year for FA. Even is Maye isn't a world beater. We at least have a full year of figuring out and understanding who he is, and therefore are more comfortable burning cash for longer term housing.
This is all kinda how I was thinking approaching free agency this year. I just kept thinking "this is not the FA market for what the Patriots need."