The Norwalk Hour

Energy already high among new additions on Pats roster

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BOSTON — The first time Kendrick Bourne walked into the New England Patriots’ team facility last week, he didn’t know what to expect.

During his four NFL seasons in San Francisco, the 25-year-old receiver developed a perception from afar about a “stuck up” franchise that won often but appeared to do so devoid of joy and levity.

It didn’t take long at all for those notions to melt away after he signed on to be part of the Patriots’ growing free agent class that will be tasked with erasing the sting of a humbling 7-9 season in 2020.

“The first day in the building, I could feel how natural our connection was between the players, the first time meeting each other,” Bourne recalled Monday. “It was just natural energy, positive energy.”

He left that day with a new sentiment.

“They’re going to turn it around in one year. I can honestly see it,” Bourne said. “I think it’s going to be an awesome year. And I can’t wait.“

Welcome to the New England Patriots’ new beginning, in which one of the league’s notoriousl­y frugal regimes has suddenly become one of its biggest spenders.

New England entered free agency with about $69 million in salary cap space, behind only Jacksonvil­le ($74 million) and Indianapol­is ($71 million).

As of Monday, the Patriots have already made 22 transactio­ns since the new league year began on March 17, coming to agreements with 19 free agents and adding another via trade.

That group is collective­ly guaranteed about $175 million in salary over the life of their contracts, a number roughly equal to what team owner Robert Kraft paid to acquire the team in 1994.

The spending spree gives new additions such as former Eagles defensive back Jalen Mills, who signed a four-year, $24 million deal, lots of confidence.

“It goes to show that they not only believe in us as individual­s, but they believe in the guys that were signed and the team that they we already have,” Mills said. “Those additions and also with the draft coming up, we’re going to make a difference. And that’s all you want as a player.”

New England has been the beneficiar­y of a free-agent market saturated with talent because of the reduction in the league’s salary cap because of the revenue lost last season because of COVID-19. It left many teams with fewer dollars to spend. Those — such as the Patriots — who did have cap space, are contending with fewer competitor­s.

It’s a sign that the six-time Super Bowl champions are focused on putting 2020 far behind them.

In an interview with NBC Sports, Kraft, likened this offseason to the spectating in the stock market.

“You take advantage of correction­s and inefficien­cies in the market when you can, and that’s what we did here,” Kraft said.

What it’s netted them is a group that on paper fills in the gaps that were most glaring during last season, which marked the Patriots’ first time at home for the playoffs since 2008.

Quarterbac­k Cam Newton is back on a one-year deal following a spotty first season in which pandemic restrictio­ns robbed him of participat­ing in an offseason program. He also struggled in the passing game without experience­d or dependable receivers.

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