By not making a move before the NFL’s trade deadline, the New England Patriots sent a few important messages of their own.
With a surprising 7-2 record, tied for the best in the NFL, conventional wisdom said the Patriots would spend Tuesday tinkering with their roster and, at a minimum, adding depth at a few key spots.
Instead, the Patriots stood pat as the division rival New York Jets initiated a fire sale; the Indianapolis Colts, another surprising 7-2 team, acquired star cornerback Sauce Gardner; and the Dallas Cowboys gave up a haul for defensive lineman Quinnen Williams after trading away Micah Parsons, arguably the league’s top pass rusher, just two months ago.
Without a trade of their own, the Patriots revealed a couple of things about their team.
The first is that they seem to be accepting that, despite its fantastic record, this team isn’t so good that it’s one or two small deals from reaching the Super Bowl. At the very least, the Patriots seem to realize they’re ahead of schedule in what was supposed to be another rebuilding year.
The Patriots are the NFL’s seventh-worst 7-2 team since 1978, based on DVOA. Undoubtedly, they have taken advantage of an easy schedule. Still, our predictor gives the Patriots the best chance of any team to make the playoffs and greater than a 60 percent chance to host a postseason game. Those odds seem worth reinforcing with a trade.
Here’s another table, this time the worst 7-2 teams by DVOA. The #Patriots are now seventh on this list.
A couple of these teams really turned it around in the second half of the season, and it’s surprising how well these teams did in the postseason. pic.twitter.com/tapuoPFCuJ
— Aaron Schatz 🏈 (@ASchatzNFL) November 4, 2025
Coach Mike Vrabel’s message to his team will probably be something like this: “You guys, the players currently on the roster, are the ones who have upped expectations and shocked the league. We don’t need any newcomers via trade. You’re the ones who should get to see the season through.”
Still, the reality is that the Patriots balked at the chance to improve amid this magical season. Even though the future looks awfully bright, you never know how things are going to shake out.
The Washington Commanders thought they’d be back in the mix for the NFC Championship Game this season after their magical campaign a year ago with a first-year coach and a rookie quarterback. Instead, they probably won’t make the playoffs.
The point is, outlooks change quickly in the NFL. Just because you’re good now and have a young quarterback and a promising coach, that doesn’t mean you’ll be good next season.
In truth, it’s not shocking that the Patriots avoided the kinds of blockbusters the Colts and Cowboys pulled off. For as good as they’ve been this season, the long-term view was always that their window of legitimate contention would open next year.
Maybe that’s the most important message to take from a quiet deadline day in Foxboro.
Just because they’re an upstart team that has surprised through nine weeks, the Patriots didn’t veer from their long-term plan. They want to build through the draft. They have 10 picks in the 2026 draft (11 if Keion White plays in six more games for the San Francisco 49ers) and want to use those to build the roster. They’ll likely enter next offseason with the most salary-cap space in the league for a second straight year, and they deserve the benefit of the doubt for how they’ll manage free agency since most of their offseason pickups from last spring have worked out well.
It’s also not like the Patriots entered the day wholly uninterested in making trades. They inquired about Jaelan Phillips before he was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles.
Last week, they traded White and Kyle Dugger, a pair of players who didn’t fit their scheme despite being important pieces for previous regimes. But even if they weren’t great fits, those moves only hurt New England’s already-thin depth at edge rusher and safety.
Now, after not acquiring anyone at the deadline, the Pats need to hope they can avoid injuries. They’ve been one of the healthiest teams in the NFL, and they’ll need that to continue since things could look pretty bleak if, say, Jaylinn Hawkins or Harold Landry or Christian Gonzalez or one more running back were to go down to an injury.
In all likelihood, Vrabel and the Patriots will say all the right things on Wednesday. They’ll say that the price of doing business was simply too high, or that the right fits weren’t out there or that the deals they could have made just didn’t make sense for this team. And all of that might be true.
But it’s a bit surprising that after all of the team’s success through the first nine games this season, the Patriots didn’t make even a few minor moves while still keeping the big picture in mind.
It’s also worth noting that most of the players available on Tuesday were in the final year of their contract. They were, essentially, rentals for the final eight games of the season.
In the end, for all of the fun this season has been for an upstart team, the Patriots kept an eye on 2026 and beyond by sitting tight, even if it feels a bit disappointing for 2025.

