QUINIX Sport News: Who will be the next Patriots head coach? 8 names to consider this offseason

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For the second offseason in a row, New England is searching for a new head coach. Will Robert Kraft turn to another former Patriots linebacker to lead the team?

Jerod Mayo is one and done as New England Patriots head coach, and that leaves one major question: Who on Earth is going to step into the building for the Patriots?

It’s never easy being the guy replacing a Hall of Famer, as Mayo did with Bill Belichick, but being the next guy in the chain won’t be easy either in New England. A franchise that went nearly two decades without a losing season, with six Super Bowls along the way, is going to have sky-high expectations, no matter how the last few years went.

The Patriots already have what is supposed to be their franchise quarterback in Drake Maye, as well as the fourth overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. Mayo was fired for not immediately turning the team around after Belichick’s leaner final years, and his replacement could face a similar mandate.

Here are some guys we think could be up for it:

This is the best place to start, as Vrabel is almost certainly going to be considered the favorite at first for this opening.

Vrabel spent this past season working as a consultant with the Cleveland Browns after losing his job leading the Tennessee Titans, who he took to a pair of division titles and the AFC championship game over his six seasons in Nashville. But after he was fired following the 2023 campaign, he’s been considered a top-tier candidate for openings across the league.

And, of course, he has plenty of connections with the Patriots. Vrabel spent eight seasons playing for the franchise, and he won three Super Bowls there alongside Tom Brady. He was even inducted into the team’s Hall of Fame in 2023, which was something that reportedly helped lead to his firing in Tennessee.

Vrabel has already interviewed elsewhere in the league this cycle — he was reportedly in conversations with the New York Jets — and he’s sure to interview more in the near future, but the Patriots are undoubtedly a great fit for him personally. If there was a spot for Vrabel, who was once one of the hottest coaches in the league, to make his return, it’s in New England.

CLEVELAND, OHIO - NOVEMBER 21: Coaching consultant Mike Vrabel of the Cleveland Browns looks on prior to a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Huntington Bank Field on November 21, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)CLEVELAND, OHIO - NOVEMBER 21: Coaching consultant Mike Vrabel of the Cleveland Browns looks on prior to a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Huntington Bank Field on November 21, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)
Mike Vrabel makes as much sense as anyone if the Patriots want to recreate their success under Belichick. (Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images)

For Johnson, it’s not really a question if the Patriots should want him, but if he should want the Patriots.

Johnson has been among the top head coaching candidates for three straight cycles now, and it’s become clear he’s not leaving Detroit for anything short of an ideal situation. The Patriots can try to sell him on their current situation, and it could be something that he started his coaching career at nearby Boston College, but that might not be enough.

Helping the Patriots is that none of the other current coaching vacancies are ideal. The Jacksonville Jaguars are a mess, the New Orleans Saints are facing salary cap armageddon and the Chicago Bears still have widely maligned general manager Ryan Poles. Bears QB Caleb Williams would also have been a big draw for Chicago, had it not been for a disastrous rookie year.

Like Vrabel, Flores has plenty of connections of his own in New England. He spent more than a decade working under Belichick there before he took over as the head coach with the Miami Dolphins. That job, however, ended after issues with the front office and quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. And Flores is still involved in a lawsuit with the league over racial discrimination.

But since that tumultuous departure, Flores has thrived as the defensive coordinator with the Minnesota Vikings. He’s helped transform their defense into one of the best in the league.

If Vrabel or Johnson aren’t the move for Kraft, Flores would be a perfect option here to lead the team long-term in the post Belichick era — especially if he lands a great OC to help direct Maye.

 

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