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No. 4 — Add explosive wide receivers

No. 4 — Add explosive wide receivers

Expectations have been significantly raised for the Patriots in 2026.

In Year 1 under new head coach Mike Vrabel, the Patriots went 14-3 during the regular season and unexpectedly made the Super Bowl after finishing 4-13 in consecutive seasons. Now it’s about figuring out how to get back to the Super Bowl and win it all.

Vrabel and top front-office executives Eliot Wolf, Ryan Cowden and John Streicher have over $40 million in cap space (with other means to free up more) and 11 selections in the 2026 NFL Draft.

The Herald is publishing a daily series with five offseason fixes that cover the draft, free agency and trades that can help the Patriots get back to the Super Bowl.

Step No. 1: Trade for Maxx Crosby

Step No. 2: Fortify offensive line

Step No. 3: Extend key homegrown players

During the regular season, the Patriots had a No. 1 receiver.

Stefon Diggs became the first player in New England to top 1,000 receiving yards since 2019, a feat he managed despite playing 55% of the team’s offensive snaps. He was a weapon versus man-to-man coverage and zone. He played his best when his best was needed, picking up 146 yards in a primetime win at Buffalo, and 138 over a fourth-quarter comeback at Baltimore.

Then the playoffs hit.

Diggs totaled a meager 110 yards over four games, looking every bit the 33-year-old he will be next season. Elite defenses were unafraid of him and the rest of the Patriots wideouts, who struggled to separate at times and weren’t a threat to take short catches and generate explosive plays. Too often, the Patriots needed perfectly executed play design or Drake Maye to extend plays in order to sustain their passing offense in the postseason.

Life cannot be that hard if the Pats want to take the next step. Maye needs someone else to shoulder the playmaking and creation on offense. Perhaps no stat captures how much Maye powered his passing attack, the most explosive in the NFL by yards per attempt, than the fact Patriots receivers forced the fewest missed tackles per reception of any offense in the league, per Sports Info. Solutions.

The Pats need more explosive players who can eat up yards in space or do more damage downfield. Yards after the catch and contested catches were two areas Vrabel referenced before the draft last year when highlighting the role of analytics in the team’s evaluation process.

‘You talk about durability, you talk about height, weight, speed, measurables, time missed, does that correlate to potential time missed in our league and the durability? So, those are all things that (analytics) can give you,” he said. “You can look at certain positions — analytically, it relates to the receivers and their drop percentage, their ability to gain yards after the catch, their contested catch or how many separation yards, right? And then you go to the next position.”

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