Free agency stakes have never been higher for Bill Belichick, Patriots
Ted Johnson, appearing on The Zach Gelb Show on CBS Sports Radio this past week, doesn’t believe the Hoodie will be able to get the Patriots back into the playoffs anytime soon.
He went through the laundry list of weak areas, citing wide receiver, tight end and the defensive line as being among the worst position groups in the league. So a quick fix wouldn’t appear to be in the cards for the 68-year-old head coach.
“Right now, everybody’s in a wait-and-see. Can Bill turn this thing around? But there’s so many deficiencies,” said Johnson. “I think it’s going to be a long haul. I don’t know if Bill’s going to have what it takes, and have enough gas in the tank to completely turn this thing around.”
Johnson also doubted the Patriots’ ability to sign top free agents in just over a week’s time, when the window officially opens. Between the departures of Brady and Rob Gronkowski, and no quarterback in sight, who is going to want to land in New England?
“If I’m a player, I’m like, ‘Man, why did those players want to leave so bad over there?’ That would worry me,” said Johnson. “The roster is one of the worst Bill has ever constructed.
“So those two factors would make me very worried,” he went on, “and the fact Bill has no plan so far, and we’re going into a year and a half post-Tom Brady without an answer at quarterback? I’d be very, very skeptical of signing with the Patriots.”
Beyond that, how much patience will Patriots owner Robert Kraft have if the team continues to be a postseason spectator for the foreseeable future?
Let’s just say Belichick has earned the benefit of the doubt, and a bit of time to turn it around and get back on the right track.
While the slack on the rope might be tightening, Kraft surely still has enough faith Belichick will make the Patriots great again.
Said Billick: “To think that if it doesn’t go well this year, the Krafts would fire Belichick? I just can’t see that. That’s hard to believe.”
Everyone is in agreement the cure for the Patriots begins at quarterback. If Belichick can’t solve that riddle, there won’t be a light at the end of the tunnel. It really comes down to that.
“If he doesn’t figure out the quarterback situation, nothing else matters,” said Billick. “So he’s got to get the quarterback situation straight. If he can get that locked down … .”
Billick didn’t finish the thought.
But the sentiment was pretty easy to read: All bets are off.
Same old Jets
One minute, Jets GM Joe Douglas tells the media he believes his quarterback Sam Darnold “has a bright future in the league.”
The next?
In a videoconference Wednesday, Douglas said regarding trade pitches for Darnold: “I will answer the call if it’s made.”
So give him an offer, and Darnold, the third overall pick in the 2018 draft, will be cast out with the Jets using their No. 2 overall pick for a potential franchise quarterback.
Woody, a former Jet, believes the best course of action would be to keep Darnold, and build around him.
“If I’m the Jets, I’m keeping Sam Darnold, I’m trading down from the No. 2 pick,” Woody told the Herald. “I’m acquiring even more assets and finally surrounding the guy with legitimate weapons and seeing what he can do.
“Of all the quarterbacks in his class — Baker Mayfield, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson — he’s been in the worst position by far of any of those guys as far as the organization, how they built around him.
“So now the Jets have a prime opportunity to surround him with a bunch of weapons because they got a bunch of draft picks, and the second-most cap space in the league, so they can really do right by him this offseason. And honestly, I think they should.”
QB draft talk
NBC Sports’ Chris Simms unveiled his quarterback draft rankings, discussing this year’s top QB prospects heading into the 2021 NFL Draft, on the Chris Simms Unbuttoned podcast.
Of note, he has BYU’s Zach Wilson ahead of Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence, the presumed top pick in the draft.
NFL Hall of Famer Gil Brandt, the one-time Cowboys personnel head, told the Herald in a recent interview he thought Wilson was going to be “something special,” so he has a few fans out there.
It was also interesting that Simms had Alabama’s Mac Jones at No. 3, and North Dakota State’s Trey Lance No. 6 with Texas A&M’s Kellen Mond, and Ohio State’s Justin Fields also ahead of him.
While Simms liked Lance’s “raw talent,” he marked him down because he hasn’t played enough, missing this past year.
Brandt, meanwhile, also likes Jones.
“He has excellent accuracy,” Brandt said. “He doesn’t throw interceptions. I think if he’s in a system like Bill (Belichick) has, I think he has a chance to be a winning quarterback.”
The Brady Chronicles
Tom Brady has been referred to as the GOAT for quite some time. It doesn’t hurt when Joe Montana puts the crown on his head.
While the Hall of Fame quarterback and former 49ers great held the distinction for quite some time, he acknowledged on ESPN’s First Take Wednesday that Brady now has the title as greatest quarterback of all time.
“I think Tom has taken his place on the top up there a long time ago,” Montana said. “He’s had a tremendous career, he’s fun to watch. Everybody always contests over that, but I think if you look at what Tom has been able to accomplish in his time that he’s played, I think it puts him definitely up there on the top of the list.
“There’s a lot of great guys, as I said, before me, even you go back to Otto Graham, who won 10 or 11 championships. It’s hard to compare them — but if you’re looking at it, yeah, definitely Tom at that point.”