Taylor Kyles: The Patriots are very much in the infancy of their rebuild, but Mike Vrabel’s fingerprints are all over this operation. Penalties and inconsistency have plagued New England through two weeks, but there’s a level of toughness and attention to detail that’s been lacking in recent seasons. He’s also stayed true to his promise to adapt to opponents, going from a man and blitz-heavy plan against the Raiders to a zone and four-man-rush-heavy strategy against the Dolphins. These were fairly dramatic scheme changes that would be difficult to execute for most first-year coaches. Drake Maye has also shown improvement in critical situations, an area Vrabel emphasized when he first arrived in New England.
TK: Drake Maye battled a slow start and poor accuracy in Week 1, but he looked like a different player in Week 2. He was decisive, accurate, largely had his eyes in the right place, and took what the defense gave him to set up manageable late-down situations. Maye also used his legs wisely and even made up for his own mistake, scrambling for a touchdown despite calling the wrong pressure scheme and allowing an unblocked rusher.
Growth is never linear, but if Maye continues at a similar trajectory, he’ll quickly vault towards the top of the league. That said, he must prove he can be accurate, close out games, and protect himself and the offense consistently.
TK: Mike Vrabel has hinted at Christian Gonzalez being available on Sunday, so at this point, I’d be surprised if he didn’t play some role. The secondary has been competitive and shown flashes of ball-hawking ability. The defensive backs are physical in coverage and against the run, but they major more in size and length than change of direction or long speed.
The defensive line is the strength of the entire team, with highly-paid starters Milton Williams, Christian Barmore, and Harold Landry proving to be worth every penny. Former Raider K’Lavon Chaisson also leapfrogged Keion White on the depth chart and has made an impact in back-to-back weeks.
The linebackers have been the greatest weakness. Robert Spillane and Christian Elliss lead the NFL in missed tackles, with coverage being a particular liability. Former safety Marte Mapu was swapped in for some sub packages, and he intercepted a bad throw from Tua Tagovailoa. Whether through execution or a shift in the depth chart, this area must improve for New England to have a chance.