FOXBOROUGH – Mike Vrabel addressed the 2025 Patriots one last time on Tuesday morning and issued a strong message to his players.
In his final team meeting, the Patriots coach used a construction analogy while talking about where this team is headed. After his first season ended with a loss in Super Bowl 60, Vrabel sees the arrow pointing up.
“We built a foundation, but we aren’t done remodeling,” rookie Will Campbell said. “(He said) that we did some great things this year, and there’s obviously a lot of area for improvement and that’s up to us to do.”
Coming off a loss to the Seattle Seahawks, the Patriots flew home on Monday. Vrabel held his final team meeting a day later to officially wrap up the team’s remarkable 2025 season. This marked the final time he’d speak to this roster before everyone departed for the offseason.
Coming off back-to-back 4-win seasons, the Patriots quickly rebuilt their program under Vrabel. Now, he said, it’s time for a small remodel to get them back to the championship.
“I just talked about a disappointing finish to a phenomenal, exciting, enjoyable year. It’s unfortunate,” Vrabel said. “Talked to them about the foundation I think that we’ve built. Much like a home, you build a home and then run out of things to do, so you continue to add on to it, you finish the basement, you make additions to it, and we’ll try to do that to this football team. I like the foundation of it, and we’ll try to improve on it.”
With a brand-new roster and many young players, the Patriots defied expectations. That wasn’t lost on the players on Tuesday.
A team’s locker room clean-out day can be demoralizing. It signals the end for a team that will never be the same again. Every year, teams remake their roster and coaching staff, adding new players and removing others. While cleaning out their lockers on Tuesday, many talked with optimism about the Patriots’ future.
This year, the Patriots finished the season with 13 rookies on their active roster and another four on the injured reserve. In Super Bowl 60, they had four first-year players start and eight rookie players overall.
First-round pick Will Campbell said the playoff run taught them a lot.
“I think you learn a lot just from not just this game from this season. You understand what it takes to get there,” Campbell said. “Now, I think that’s a big thing, is you got a bunch of young dudes who have seen what it takes and understand how hard it is to get there. I think that’ll be good for us. You just learn that your best football has to be played when it’s needed, and we didn’t do that, and we can’t change it now, but we can learn from it.”
Part of the foundation also came from veteran free-agent signings. The Patriots had big contributions from newcomers such as receiver Stefon Diggs, receiver Mack Hollins, center Garrett Brady, right tackle Morgan Moses, defensive tackle Milton Williams, edge rusher K’Lavon Chaisson, linebacker Robert Spillane, and cornerback Carlton Davis.
The Patriots spent more than any team last season, but Vrabel was intentional about adding quality people to his locker room to change the culture. Together, the new veterans and rookies played massive roles in this turnaround.
Of course, players also know that change is inevitable in the offseason.
“I think this April is going to look a lot different than last April,” Bradbury said. “There was so much new – a new coach, a new roster, and I think we built something this year. Built something we’re proud of. Certainly didn’t finish the last game, but still proud nonetheless. I think we do have the foundation, we have the identity. So how can you improve it? How can you make it better? And that’s what the staff and coaches will spend the next few months on.”
Of course, the biggest part of the foundation is already set with the head coach and quarterback Drake Maye.
Vrabel won the NFL’s Coach of the Year. His messaging resonated well with his players, and they quickly bought into their head coach. In his second NFL season, Maye finished runner-up to the NFL’s MVP award.
That’s a combination that elicits optimism around the locker room.
“You got Drake Maye. You got Coach Vrabel. That’s a great start to any organization,” Davis said. “So from there on, we just keep building. We just keep putting the right pieces together, keep meshing together and keep working. And you guys will see us soon.”
In his final team meeting, Vrabel’s message hit home with his players.
Last offseason, the Patriots came together for the first time with a new head coach, not knowing what to expect. After winning 17 games and losing in the Super Bowl, they ended this season feeling good despite the loss to Seattle.
They know there’s more work to be done, but as Vrabel said, it’ll just take a remodel as opposed to a rebuild.
“I think that was a great analogy,” Chaisson said. “We set a good foundation for what we want this new era of the franchise to be.”