Had their views on the quarterback position changed? Or were they just in a tight spot and acquired the best player still available to them?
When the Patriots signed Cam Newton last summer, it may have served as an indication that Bill Belichick was changing his standards for the most important position on his roster. Perhaps Belichick believed that having a quarterback factor into the running game was important. Maybe accuracy, which had long been among the most important qualities in a passer for Belichick, wasn't a requirement to the same extent it had been in the past.
The reality is the Patriots wanted more competition at quarterback last year. They signed Newton. He won the job. They re-signed Newton this offseason while still in need of competition at the quarterback position, and he's now on a backup-quarterback contract with incentives.
While Belichick is constantly looking to evolve, and while his ideas on the quarterback position and how it should be played may have pivoted at times over the years, his pact with Newton seems more representative of an insurance plan than it does a real philosophical shift.
What makes the 2021 NFL Draft interesting is that, if he invests a high draft pick in a quarterback, we'll learn more about what Belichick values at quarterback than maybe ever before. Still, based on the 11 quarterbacks Belichick has drafted we have a decent idea of what he likes and what he wants to see from draftees at that position.
Since 2000, Belichick has typically selected quarterbacks who played in Power Five conferences and stood 6-foot-2 or taller. Their hands usually measure more than nine inches. He's exclusively drafted quarterbacks who have spent at least four years in college, even if they didn't have four years of playing experience. Their career touchdown-to-interception ratio averaged out to be better than 2-to-1. Their yards per attempt was often 7.5 or better. And they normally completed more than 60 percent of their passes. Most had at least 800 pass attempts under their belts.
Not every quarterback checked every one of those boxes -- Tom Brady hit on six of the nine categories listed above; Jimmy Garoppolo played at the FCS level -- but most hit most.
For more context on what Belichick is looking for at the position, it's also worth noting what he told Browns scouts back in the 1990s when he was establishing his program there. The following is from a Cleveland scout's notes, passed along by NFL Media's Daniel Jeremiah.
"[No. 1] is to make good decisions -- then arm, size, physically tough, leadership, guys look up to and have confidence in," the notes read. "A real competitor. Accurate rather than a guy with a cannon. Emphasis on our game will be on decision, timing, accuracy. Guy needs to be confident.
"Intelligence is important but not as much so as field awareness and judgement. Can't be sloppy fundamentally unsound guy with ball-handling, [techniques] ... footwork, drops, release, etc. Quarterback has to be able to throw the ball with accuracy."
Nothing there about athleticism or mobility or making the first pass-rusher miss. Would Belichick add an amendment to reflect the athletes -- particularly on the defensive line -- in the game today? Maybe. But we're going to adhere to what we've seen from Belichick in terms of his tendencies drafting quarterbacks, which means the first player listed here certainly isn't here because of his athletic traits.
Perry's Prototypical Patriots series: RBs