NFL News

Takeaways from 2nd open session of OTAs

The New England Patriots played a comically small amount of football during their practice session on Tuesday during the second day of OTAs that has been open to the media.

They conducted some conditioning and some systemic installation — but not much. The practice was abbreviated (roughly 70 minutes), with the team apparently easing back off the holiday weekend.

There was a moment that stood above the rest, though I’d suggest taking it with a grain of salt from a session where coach Bill Belichick was dropping into coverage as a slot cornerback. So here it is…

In the early phases of the position drills, the practice took a slower pace than is typical for the Patriots. In practice, New England is usually mechanical, like an assembly line — without hiccups or wasted minutes. It’s most notable at joint practices when placed in direct comparison with other teams.

That automated pace wasn’t present on Tuesday, with offensive assistant Joe Judge and the passing offense taking more time than usual to get a drill set up. You don’t normally see that. Players and coaches often know what they’re doing — and that wasn’t the case here. These moments are where the coaching turnover and a young QB show themselves. Practice, at times, moved slower than in years past. And that’s probably, in part, because of the casual nature of this practice. But it was definitely a surprise.

The top takeaway: The Patriots are establishing the “proven” and the “prove-it” at WR

Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports

The receivers ran positional drills in two different lines. In one line: Jakobi Meyers, Kendrick Bourne, Nelson Agholor and DeVante Parker. In the other line: Tyquan Thornton and everyone else. It’s one of those minute details where the Patriots seem to be sending the players (and the media) a message. There’s a group of proven players. And then there’s a group of prove-it players.

Attendance

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