Hartford Courant

Kraft, Pats must preach patience at start of rebuild

- By Andrew Callahan

ORLANDO, Fla. — For someone standing still, Robert Kraft covered a lot of ground Tuesday morning.

Why he promoted de facto GM Eliot Wolf. Possibly drafting a quarterbac­k. Fan frustratio­n. “The Dynasty” docu-series, and “The Dynasty” backlash.

Yet of all the comments Kraft made in his meetup with reporters at the

NFL Annual Meeting — including an unexpected shout-out for Calvin Ridley’s wife — the largest leap was this: “My hope and expectatio­ns are to make the playoffs.”

Uh, come again?

A 4-13 team saddled with a rookie head coach, a GM they can’t name officially, no starting quarterbac­k and weapons that are more likely to backfire than wound a defense is expected to make the postseason? Did Kraft stop at the mimosa bar on his way over?

Minutes later, the evenkeeled owner seemed to straighten himself out. He took off his oft-referenced “fan hat” when speaking to the balance of instilling an urgency while also acting with the required patience of an NFL rebuild.

“We know we have to be patient. Everything is new,” Kraft said . “I think we have 20 new coaches. … I think (front-office executives) Eliot (Wolf ) and Matt (Groh) have really good knowledge of our product and what has to be done. I’ve told them, ‘Look, I don’t want to do splashy things just to get attention and get good headlines one day.

“I want us to do the things that are substantiv­e and good for the short term and long term.”

That’s better. Much better.

Jerod Mayo wisely reset his own messaging and expectatio­ns Monday morning, asking fans for their patience as the

Patriots try to “build this the right way.” He again backed away from burning cash, and said while his new leadership has money to spend, they will do so wisely.

Translatio­n: for your own sake, stop kicking the seat. Don’t ask “are we there yet?” Just buckle up.

This is going to be a long Sunday drive before Sundays count toward contending again in New England.

Because if nothing else, the Patriots’ offseason has proven they’re aiming for 2025 and beyond. This year is about laying a foundation.

Now, go ahead and quibble with the amount of investment made and concrete laid. No objections to those objections here. Zero.

Personally, I would have installed a L’jarius Sneed sunroom, even at the cost of a third-round pick in a trade with Kansas City. That’s a blue-chip player at a premium position, the type the Patriots not only don’t have and should chase, but fits their overlappin­g short and long term visions.

In the meantime, Mike Onwenu, Hunter Henry and Kyle Dugger are back for the dawn of a new era that hasn’t been lit with emerging sunlight, but clouds of gray uncertaint­y. These clouds cover the Patriots’ roster, front office and coaching staff, all of which are under a time crunch to establish themselves this offseason.

Though Kraft, ever the optimist, sees sunlight shining through.

“I think we’ve actually made some improvemen­ts,” he said. “I think we’re getting the system of functionin­g. … We signed a number of younger players that we had drafted or have been in our system. As a foundation, if you want to win consistent­ly, you have to draft well and then get those players on the second contract. We started to do that this year.”

 ?? NANCY LANE/ BOSTON HERALD ?? The New England Patriots and owner Robert Kraft, left, introduce Jerod Mayo as their new head coach during a press conference on Jan. 17 in Foxboro.
NANCY LANE/ BOSTON HERALD The New England Patriots and owner Robert Kraft, left, introduce Jerod Mayo as their new head coach during a press conference on Jan. 17 in Foxboro.

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