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TRANSCRIPT: Mike Vrabel Press Conference 10/8

Ian Logue
Ian Logue on Twitter
October 8, 2025 at 4:07 pm ET

TRANSCRIPT: Mike Vrabel Press Conference 10/8
(PHOTO: Mark Konezny-Imagn Images)
🕑 Read Time: 8 minutes

Here’s what Patriots coach Mike Vrabel had to say during his press conference with the media on Wednesday, October 8, 2025.

On how he feels Zak Kuhr has progressed since taking over the playcalling duties:

“I think everybody over there has done a really good job as far as just organizationally, the communication to put the plan together, the efficiency to put a plan together, and the practice, preparation, and everything else. I think, again, there’s no perfect call. I’ve said this millions of times. As long as our personnel is in the game and the call gets in there and it’s decisive and one that the players understand, then it’s a good call. We’ll have good execution, and sometimes we won’t have such great execution, but I do think that we haven’t had any trouble with those. We haven’t been pressed. We’ve been in two-minute situations. We’ve been in third down. We’ve stayed in personnel groups, we’ve changed personnel groups. I think Zak’s doing a good job, and we’ll need to do a great job this week for what they do offensively.”

On the fact he’s talked about his input on offense and what his involvement is with the defensive game planning:

“I think it stays the same. I try to be in a lot of different places and try to help where I can.  I enjoy being defensively and certainly help offensively when I can. Special teams-wise, I think I try to help where I can.”

On the fact he’s talked talked about working guys harder after a win, being able to do that in the past and how does he handle an emotional game like that as far as getting them back mentally ready:

“You practice and you go through meetings, you focus on a new opponent. We don’t really know this opponent, I would say. This is new for a lot of players here and maybe some coaches here as far as their personnel and what they do and their skilled players offensively and [Chris] Olave and [Rashid] Shaheed and how good [Alvin] Kamara is and [Kendre] Miller coming on and running as hard as he did.

“They got all their tight ends available and up ready to go, so we’ll have to understand the difference between Jennings and when Taysom’s [Hill] is in the game or [Foster] Moreau and right on down the line. Defensively, it’s a big physical front. I’ve always appreciated the way Demario Davis plays the game. Corners are active, big, long, play the football at 24 PBUs on the season as a defense. So they’re creating turnovers, and that was the difference in last week’s game.”

On what some of the traits are that have helped Terrell Jennings stick around:

“I think he’s a great teammate. I think he cares about the team. He’s able to play on special teams. He’s able to play on fourth down. I think he’s got a toughness to him, and I think he’s improved.”

On when he puts himself in the shoes of the players, if it can be a challenge to show the same energy and resolve the week after having such a big week and a big emotional win on Sunday night:

“We have a job to do. It’s the same every week.  We try to think that if we are consistent each and every week, I think it allows us to get past some of those things. We’re disappointed after we lost, happy when we won, disappointed when we lost. I think we’ve responded. We’ll have to make sure that we’re doing everything that we possibly can to prepare to go on and handle another tough environment. Just being able to handle the road environment and the crowd noise and everything else.  I’m sure they’ll be excited. They played really well last week. I’m sure they’ll have the same great support that they always have in the Dome.”

On the fact they added a running back to the practice squad yesterday and if that’s a position he’ll continue to look to add to with [Antonio] Gibson’s injury:

“We’re continuing, I think, to probably, hopefully look everywhere. If there’s somebody that we feel like can help us, whether that’s at running back or any other position. But right now, nothing new to add.”

On the fact Craig Woodson leads the team in defensive steps and what is the most important thing that he’s done to earn his trust:

“I think he’s a good communicator. He’s good in the open field. He’s been able to handle a lot of volume, take care of his body. It hasn’t been perfect, but feel like he’s just… Some snaps I’m sure he’d like to have back, but it hasn’t been too big for him, and he’s stayed healthy. That’s the biggest thing.”

On what are some of the things that he’s seen Spencer Rattler do:

“The ball comes out really quick. I think that he’s decisive with the football, and I think he also is really good when he runs it. They designed some plays for him to run. He’s been good in that regard. Then there’s been some play extensions where he’s been able to get out of there pretty quickly. I think the decisiveness is continuing to show up and improve. They played well in Buffalo. It was a one-score game in the fourth quarter. They roughed the punter, and that was pretty much the end of it. Then obviously, they got down last week. I think it was an impressive job on their part and Kellen [Moore]’s job and be down 14-3 and come storming back and hit a big play and then create some turnovers.”

On Alvin Kamara, specifically, looking back on this last game, how was the defense able to stop James Cook?

“Not getting the message yourself.”

Louder?

“No, we were just worried about Alvin Kamara and Miller.

On how can you build a …

“We’ll have to do it over again, and we’ll have to work through the week to build a wall, to set an edge, and to swarm, and tackle, and be able to fit the runs up that they’ll probably have in a scheme and everything else. But what you did one week certainly doesn’t guarantee what you’re going to do the next week, positively or negatively.”

“They do a good job. They’re on the ball. They have runs out of tempo. They have shots out of tempo. They’re under center, they’re in the gun, in the pistol. So there’s a lot to be able to get ready for, formationally. So, things that we’ll have to be ready for.”

On the fact it seems like a few of the defensive touch-ons allowed to involve motion and if there have been any theme in those? And what does he have to do be better …

“Just communicate and understand that those are all scheme plays and that that’s what we’re going to get.  And we have to do a better job in the red zone of communicating and anticipating what that is. I don’t think they’re just going to line up and run a play. There’s going to be something involved that grabs your eyes, it grabs your attention, misdirection. I don’t know what the plays are. I can just try to explain what the concepts are going to be. They’re going to change them a little bit each week, but when you look around, that’s what it is.”

On with five weeks down, what he likes about the captains from this team in terms of them setting the standard and the communication between coaches and the team:

“I think they do a good job of relaying the message that we try to create each week. I think they do a good job of bringing some things that maybe some other players or some younger players may have throughout the week to me. My job is to listen. My job is to try to make a decision that’s best for the team, but to try to listen to them. Not that I’m always going to do everything that they ask, but I do appreciate them coming and sharing some of those thoughts from the rest of the team.”

On the fact it’s only been a five-game sample with the new head coach and if he’s gotten a sense, holistically of how Kellen [Moore] and his staff want to play games and win:

“I think that they want to run the football. I think they do. I think they want to use tempo on their terms, which they’ve done a great job of. I think they want to make you prepare for a lot. I think they’ve got a lot of speed on the edges that they’re trying to create, but also understand with a young quarterback that they want to be able to try to get it out of his hands just from a numbers-wise and not sit there and hold it. So they’ve been successful with that. Try to keep it in third and manageable.”

On the fact the running game at this point is toward the bottom of the League 27th ranked and how can he improve on that:

“Just keep working at it. I’m with you. We understand that. It’s got to be better. It has to be better at the line of scrimmage at the second level, and then continue to try to finish to break some of these.  We’ve had some good runs. It’s just not enough of them, not enough double-digit runs that help your average. Again, I think that we got to stop talking about being one guy away or one block away. I think that was a big theme from last week, and that’ll have to fix.”

On that he’s said that he learned that penalties are not a strong indicator of wins and how did that information change his approach to coaching that area:

“Well, it’s not that we don’t care about penalties. We want to make great decisions. But I also understand that team fouls are ones that happen before the snap that we have to be better on. Hunter [Henry] communicating with the official and thinking that we got… Hoping we got that cleaned up. We don’t want to line up offsides. We don’t want to extend drives, competition fouls, and we ask them to play full tilt to the tackle. But then there’s a line there, and we have to play by two things: the whistle, right? I just don’t understand how a professional athlete could assume that anybody in this league was down, and we’re going to play to the whistle, and we’re going to play to two feet in the white.”

“We have to pass rush and not hit the quarterback in the head, can’t hit him in the knees. Then, when another player has two feet in the white, we can’t hit him or give the appearance that we’re hitting him. I think Schooler ran over there and stood there, and the same guy got tackled by Marcus [Jones], and the official saw that. So again, you just have to understand kind of what they’re looking at. But we have to play aggressive. I think that there has to be an aggressiveness to the way that we play, but also that comes into the decision-making and when to make a great decision. It’s hard for me to sit here and fault Josh [Farmer] from last week. There’s no whistle and running backs acting like he’s going to flip the ball back to the quarterback. I certainly would have liked to not had a penalty called, but I can see it both ways. Just ask that they blow the whistle. That’s the easy way for us to say that the play is over and that our efforts need to stop. But I don’t know how else to coach it. I don’t know how else to coach professional players on defense in this league with the type of athletes that you’re going against.  It’s hard to bring them down. One guy, they keep running, they bounce in, next thing you know… So again, we’ll keep coaching it. It’s not that it’s not important. It’s important But it’s also there’s something behind it.”

“I’ll tell you, every X-play run, we got to have Taylor [Kyles] track this, every X-play run in this league, there’s probably a hold. You know what I mean? It’s just that they don’t call it, that they don’t miss. They don’t see or they don’t feel like they should call it. That’s what happens. You want to be aggressive, certainly just not reckless.”

On the fact he’s said the players need to earn their role but for the players who are currently on the show team or a scout team, what do they need to do to earn their role to be with the regulars:

“Well, I think it’s twofold. I think it’s one, based on who’s in front of them and the health of that player. Two, prepare as a starter each and every week, continue to improve and get recognized, and three, take advantage of their opportunities when it comes. We have a lot of guys that are getting better and improving in that area.  That’s valuable. It’s valuable for us to be able to rep against them, and also very valuable for them to improve and get those practice reps. Hopefully, when we need them or they earn the opportunity, they’ll be ready.”

(EDITOR’S NOTE: This transcript was done based on the available footage and is subject to typographical errors.  If you spot anything, please let me know in the comments below.)

About Ian Logue

Ian Logue is a Seacoast native and owner and senior writer for PatsFans.com, an independent media site covering the New England Patriots and has been running this site in one form or another since 1997.


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