3 bold predictions for the Patriots’ 2023 season

Here are three bold predictions for the Patriots in the 2023 season.

It’s go bold or go home time as we gear up for the New England Patriots’ 2023 regular season. After a tumultuous 2022, everyone in New England would like to forget the past and move on to the Bill O’Brien era.

Mac Jones and company have looked improved in all facets of this camp, outside of the injury bug on the offensive line and lack of nose tackle depth on defense.

The Patriots got better, but so did everyone else.

These bold predictions are only considered bold because of the stigma the Patriots and Jones currently have on them. They’ll need to wash the stink off of them with their play, and these three things could help everyone forget.

Stock up, stock down for Patriots ahead of preseason opener

Who’s stock is up and who’s stock is down for the Patriots?

The New England Patriots are approaching their first preseason game of the 2023 season on Thursday, which will be an important test for every player on the 90-man roster. Each player is fighting for a role and an opportunity to make the 53-man roster.

As each week passes, we will be taking a look at players or position groups and breaking down how they have been performing this summer.

Stock watching is a way of sharing what we see and how a player is performing or building off of their past performances. Generally, the more a stock drops, the lower their roster lock status becomes.

As with all roster moves, there are multiple facets that get taken into consideration, like contracts, draft status and positional need. Let’s take a look at who is up and who is down in the Patriots’ stock watch.

Could these draft picks mean the end for Cole Strange at guard?

Is an offensive line shake-up inevitable for the Patriots?

The New England Patriots shocked everyone  at the 2023 NFL draft when selecting not one, not two, but three interior offensive lineman after selecting Cole Strange with a first-round pick back in 2022.

It would be one thing if these picks were in the sixth round and were merely fliers, but they spent real capital in the fourth and fifth rounds to add a center and two guards.

My first reaction to this was to naturally assume they would be depth pieces, but in all honesty, they’re better than depth, and would probably start Year 1 for most teams. So I started to wonder if there was something going on with the Mike Onwenu contract negotiations. Was this is a situation where the Patriots were looking a year out?

I’m all for retaining homegrown talent, and it would be a shock if Onwenu doesn’t stick around after 2023. But the Patriots have been pretty consistent in letting good interior lineman walk, like they did with Ted Karras and Joe Thuney.

Maybe the philosophy is to get ahead of impending free agents entirely, and Onwenu will walk after 2023. I then shifted to thinking that Onwenu would slide to right tackle, but Matt Groh was pretty quick to shut that down.

My next natural progression—and one that makes the most sense—is that the rookie offensive linemen, Atonio Mafi and Sidy Sow, will both compete for the left guard slot, and Cole Strange will kick outside.

That may sound crazy, but let’s take a look at if this is even possible.

A look at Strange’s RAS score as an offensive tackle prospect is a great way to start. This will help us see if he is even remotely capable of doing so.

Strange is on the smaller side, standing at 6-foot-4 and 301 pounds, but he has the composite athletic ability to make up for it with an elite first step, change of direction and agility.

There is a good chance, like he mentioned in exit interviews with the media, he wanted to add some weight in Year 2 to take on power rushers. If Strange were to add 20 pounds to his frame, he would actually score a 9.82u (unofficial) with this year’s tackle prospects.

To put things into perspective, according to RAS, that score is better than Tristan Wirfs and Austin Jackson in 2020, Better than Andre Dillard (whom the Patriots were in on in the free agent period) in 2019 and Penei Sewell in 2021.

Left tackle is actually not a foreign thing to Cole Strange, who has played meaningful snaps at the position in college. He was primarily a guard, but he does have the experience and athletic traits to give the tackle position a shot in camp.

There is a reason the Patriots retained Conor McDermott, added Riley Reiff and Calvin Anderson, drafted two guards and hired Adrian Klemm to coach the offensive line. I think it is all connected to a Cole Strange project.

If the Patriots tried Strange at left tackle and it didn’t work, they still have four capable starters and two backups that could sit a year, while the team decides the future of Onwenu. But if it were to work, the Patriots would have a battle at left guard between Sow and Mafi, while Trent Brown moves to right tackle.

They’d have good depth at both tackle slots.

The Patriots need long-term tackle help, and if Strange does in fact move, I think a lot of Patriot fans would feel differently about the 2022 pick. It’ll be fun to see what training camp looks like for the Patriots’ offensive line, but they have a lot more quality depth than they did last season and better coaching.

Let’s hope it translates to more time in the pocket for Mac Jones and more regular season wins.

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2023 official NFL draft kit from Cam Garrity

All of your draft needs are here, from big-board rankings to breakdowns and grades for top prospects.

As the 2023 NFL Draft rolls in, it’s time for our official draft kit. I did this kit last year for our friends at Lions Wire wanted to bring it back for another year.

I typically start official draft preparation in the New Year and spend a few months diving into players on film and re-watching full games for situational awareness. I do watch college football games year-round. So I have a general sense of the players that popped. This is just a deeper dive that is started in January.

I like to spend all my focus on one player at a time before giving out my grade, essentially filling out my top 10 at each position then organizing the top-50 big board. This helps form the kit right in time for the draft so that any fans reading it can get a general sense of the player, their skills, where they went and how they fit.

I also take a look at the big boards across multiple different sources and different mediums to understand the general consensus of players eligible and where people rank them. This is usually done as quality control for my own work once my evaluations are completed.

The big board is just a starting point in a vacuum.

As the draft rolls on, positional value, team needs and fit all come into play. So sometimes, player No. 10 might go first overall, and that’s simply because players 1-9 do not make sense for them to grab. I would recommend filling for need and fit regardless of the big board, unless that player was a can’t miss, Hall of Fame-level talent right out of the gate.

Before we jump right into the kit, here’s a little background of the grading system I use: