In 2016, Bennett had an average of 3.8 yards of separation from the coverage.
Chris Hogan had 3.2 yards of separation, which Brady clearly missed over the second half of the season when Hogan was sidelined. Edelman had 2.7 yards of separation and Mitchell had 2.6 yards of separation.
In 2017,
Danny Amendola leads the Patriots with 2.9 yards of separation, while
Brandin Cooks has 2.6 yards of separation and
Rob Gronkowski has 2.3 yards of separation. That’s not a recipe for a thriving passing offense. Hogan averaged 2.7 yards of separation, so his return should help the rest of the offense gain more space.
Oh, and Bennett averaged 3.1 yards of separation in his limited time on the field in 2017, so he still has that magic and would have been a nice piece for the offense.
Part of the reason for the lack of separation by the Patriots receivers is the strategy of the opposing defense. Gronkowski receives just 4.6 yards of cushion at the snap, which is the 4th-lowest amount of space in the NFL, right up there with Marvin Jones (4.2),
Antonio Brown (4.3), Amari Coopers (4.5), and
DeAndre Hopkins (4.6). Cooks has just 5.2 yards of cushion.