Jon Gruden Reveals Secret To Patriots’ Success, Invoking Brady-Belichick Era

Jon Gruden Reveals Secret To Patriots’ Success, Invoking Brady-Belichick Era
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The New England Patriots are back, baby. A 28-23 victory win on the road in Tampa in Week 10 brought the Pats’ record to 8-2, tied for the best mark in the NFL. Drake Maye is playing like an MVP, and head coach Mike Vrabel hasn’t required any runway to turn this franchise back into a contender. It’s all happened much quicker than fans anticipated.

And while Maye demands most of the headlines for his stellar play at the sport’s most important position, one of the secrets to the 2025 Patriots’ success is that they are ego-less. Maye is always giving other people credit. He even deflected a question about MVP chants inside Raymond James Stadium on Sunday, telling CBS’ Tracy Wolfson that the chants must have been for Bucs QB Baker Mayfield.

Maye also shouted out TreVeyon Henderson and Kyle Williams in the interview. Maye wants his teammates to succeed, and he plays for a head coach in Vrabel who believes in a 52-man effort, wherein it doesn’t matter who gets acclaim, as along as winning is happening.

This type of philosophy is reflected in New England’s offensive attack, which is something that Barstool Sports’ analyst Jon Gruden talked about before the game on Sunday.

“When I say New England has excellent ball distribution, that’s putting it mildly,” Gruden said. “They have 13 different Patriots that have scored. … They have eight guys with 10 or more catches and 100 or more yards. Nobody in the NFL can say that.”

“They’ve had six games this year where they’ve had a different leading receiver,” Gruden continued. “So they really don’t care who catches it. They’re unselfish, and that’s something that is part of the ‘Patriot Way’ if you go back into the history of their success.”

The Patriot Way, of course, has its roots in the Tom Brady and Bill Belichick-led dynasty that spanned nearly twenty years and ended not too long ago.

Belichick in his heyday was the king of presiding over ego-less football teams, where production and sacrifice — not reputation, fame or salary — were the most valuable forms of currency in the Patriots’ locker room. It’s the type of culture that enabled guys like Roman Phifer, Dan Koppen, or Malcolm Butler to grow into unsung Super Bowl heroes during the Pats’ dynasty.

It’s also a culture that kept opposing teams on their toes at all times, not knowing who would be the Patriots’ next secret weapon. Vrabel knows this all too well from playing with Belichick, under whom he caught 10 touchdown passes in his career, despite being a defensive player.

Now, things have come full circle for Vrabel. He’s the one sitting in the head coach’s seat these days, and he’s employing the same “all hands on deck” approach to winning. It’s a proven strategy, and when you combine that blueprint with a talented roster, the possibilities are endless.