Judge to blame for OTA penalty
Sources: Special teams workshops went on too long
The Patriots have been docked two days of Organized Team Activities because of scheduling errors caused by Joe Judge-led special teams meetings earlier this offseason, league sources told the Herald.
According to documents obtained by Boston Sports Journal, Judge held 20-minute “special teams workshops” prior to regular offensive and defensive meetings that led to the violation. The NFLPA filed an initial complaint on May 4, citing three instances where these workshops directed players to stay at the facility longer than four hours per day, the maximum allowed by the league’s collective bargaining agreement. The Patriots responded almost two weeks later, per Boston Sports Journal, and cooperated fully with the NFL, which levied its punishment this week.
Pats coach Bill Belichick was also reportedly fined $50,000. On Wednesday, the team announced it was cancelling upcoming OTA practices on Thursday and Tuesday, May 30. The Patriots will next practice on Wednesday, May 31. The team is now down to eight allowed OTA practices this offseason, as it continues to install a new offense under returned offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Bill O’brien.
Judge lost his title as the team’s quarterbacks coach to O’brien in January, when O’brien was also named offensive coordinator. During the 2022 season, Judge’s first and only coaching quarterbacks, he repeatedly clashed with Mac Jones. Judge was also phased out of offensive meetings later in the year, per sources.
Belichick re- assigned Judge to an assistant head coach/special teams coach role this spring, when former offensive play-caller/offensive line coach Matt Patricia left the organization after co-leading the offense alongside Judge and Belichick last year.
The Pats will conclude their offseason with a mandatory, three-day minicamp running June 12-14. Every other portion of the team’s
offseason program is and has been voluntary, including OTA practices. Those sessions began this week, when the NFL allowed teams to open Phase Three of their offseason programs.
All OTA practices are nonpadded and non-contact.
Profootballtalk first reported the violation involved an internal scheduling error caused by the coaching staff.