I agree.
My view is that the Patriots have this rap about "not spending" when they have been tight against the cap under the entire Belichick regime.
We remember the Lawyer Milloy situation - the Patriots could not afford one of their key players because they were right against the cap - 20 years ago.
I think the "Pats are cheap" myth is driven by the focus on the middle class. I think Belichick really pushes the next-man-up strategy, expects unpredictable injuries, and wants better-than-average replacement players. So he has 'overpaid' for the middle class - in that he has three or four starting safeties, four or five starting defensive tackles, and so forth. At the expense of fewer elite players.
Brady made this work because he just took less than he could have at QB all those years - so they had an elite QB, the elite QB, at middle class cost.
And he always attracted a few late-career vets who were willing to take a below-market salary to compete for a Super Bowl. Now you see Buffalo and Kansas City playing that same move.
And the Patriots famously had a lot of really solid Nov-Dec-Jan records - partly because their replacements, wherever they were on the field, were a little better than their opponents' late season replacements.
But without an elite, low-cost QB, and without that player attracting high-end vets at middle-class salaries, the model doesn't work.
Pretty much. The circumstances have changed dramatically yet the model stays the same.
I dont mind keeping the core philosophy of middle class but like you said in order for it to work you have to account for circumstances.
The fact that Andrews (middle class) is THE ONLY player on offense signed to a second contract in NE speaks volumes.
There are ZERO players of higher let alone elite value beyond their first contract on the entire roster atm.
And it is far from given this situation will soon significantly change only bc they are full of future cap.
This is the first time BB doesnt have any homegrown core left.
DMC and HT said goodbye this week. After Slater (ST only) and maybe Andrews it will be a long time before another such ceremony.
Bill used to have the whole top homegrown backbone: TB-Jules-Gronk-VW-High-DMC.
The only position missing in there was OL. He relied on Dante factor and churned. When Dante left the “model“ fell apart.
In the new circumstances Pats not only have difficulties to attract good cheaper vets but also signing their own top players on second / longer term deals. Middle class philosophy without adjustments to circumstances naturally brings - middle class results. Which is the most difficult place from which to improve (no attraction for top FA, no high picks).
Staying this course AFTER you already invested your highest pick in 15y on your next possible franchise QB - with LOADS OF CAP over all future years at your disposal - is just beyond BAFFLING (not to mention the absurd coaching experiments).
And especially after serious commitment in 2021 - which despite some misses in FA laid good foundations and went in the right direction.
Only to be abandoned in 2022 and it seems 2023 as well.
I dont mind “next man up“ - but what happened to “putting players in best situation to succeed“? Let alone your potential QB of the future.