The problem is that we had so many holes to fill, we really could not do it all. There's that and there's is also the issue of value at your draft position. I don't think that just picking the best available player at your position of need regardless of value is necessarily the correct move. This was always going to be a multi-year rebuild. I was hoping they would be more agressive in free agency to fill some of those holes especially since they had money under the cap. But that did not pan because <fill-in-your-reason-here>
There were a number of reasons they couldn’t do much in the high end of free agency, but they did pretty good when it came to keeping the players they wanted to keep, and bolstered the middle of the roster.
1) Teams across the league got a late expansion of the salary cap, which allowed them to keep their most important players who were hitting free agency.
2) They sucked in 23’. Players tend to go for the money, but they also don’t want to go to the worst team’s in the league, and there is no denying they were one of the worst team’s in football last season, and are projected to repeat that in 24’.
3) Uncertainty at QB. Free agency obviously pre dates the draft, and at free agents, especially offensive skill positions that want to go to a good offense, we’re looking at a terrible QB situation, and the worst offense in football in general. This could change significantly next offseason if Maye plays well when he gets on the field later this year.
4) Personal preference. Whether it’s the location, weather, or taxes, the odds don’t favor the Patriots when it comes to these factors influencing final decisions. The fact of the matter is that the vast majority of players come from somewhere other than New England, and it will always be tougher to get players from warm weather locales to go play outside in an area of the country where they will freeze their asses off both on and off the field. And the tax situation in Mass.obviously doesn’t help any, as it obviously reduces the value of the deal being offered in relation to the same $$$ being offered elsewhere.
Regardless of these disadvantages the Patriots front office has to be able to overcome them going forward. They can’t do anything about the personal presences, but it looks like they have addressed the most important issue for the other factors by getting what should be their franchise QB in the draft. If true their offense will improve dramatically in coming seasons, and skill players will want to come play here. This obviously also addresses the suck factor, as having a franchise QB should help turn them back into a successful franchise.
As far as taxes go they will have to adapt their free agency offers to offset tax losses, as there is no other mechanism to manage that issue.