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North Carolina head football coach Bill Belichick took an apparent swipe at the New England Patriots while explaining how he was acclimating to college football approximately 10 days before the Tar Heels open the 2025 season versus TCU.

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While speaking to the Boston Globe’s Ben Volin, Belichick compared his initial experience with college football to his 49 years coaching in the NFL.

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“It’s a much more cohesive, and I’d say unified, view of what we’re trying to do and how we’re trying to do it,” Belichick said. “It’s a lot of football, and there’s not much in your way.”

However, Belichick didn’t just leave his thoughts there and let people interpret them. He got more specific about the obstacles he dealt with in the Patriots’ front office. Belichick said decisions had to go through many tiers, cluttering the process with too many voices, starting with team owner Robert Kraft and his son, team president Jonathan Kraft.

“There’s no owner, there’s no owner’s son, there’s no [salary] cap, everything that goes with the marketing and everything else, which I’m all for that. But it’s way less of what it was at that level,” Belichick continued.

“Generic NFL teams, you have the owner, president, general manager, personnel director, college director, pro director, cap guy, some other consultant, then head coach,” he added. “I’d say when we had our best years in New England, we had fewer people and more of a direct vision. And as that expanded, it became harder to be successful.”

Belichick was clear on what he viewed as the problems in the Patriots’ management structure that prevented him from continuing the success he achieved during the height of his 24-season run in New England. Too many cooks in the proverbial kitchen.

New England Patriots team owner Robert Kraft and head coach Bill Belichick parted ways after the 2023 season. According to Belichick, the bureaucracy of the team’s front office became an obstacle. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

(Maddie Meyer via Getty Images)

Belichick’s replacement, Jerod Mayo, was fired after just one season. The Patriots changed their front office structure upon hiring Mike Vrabel, the former Tennessee Titans head coach who played under Belichick and won three Super Bowls.

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Another of Robert Kraft’s sons, Josh Kraft, left his post on the team’s board of directors. Ryan Cowden joined the front office as vice president of player personnel, working under executive VP of player personnel Eliot Wolf. Pat Stewart remains as director of pro personnel with senior personnel executive Alonzo Highsmith.

Belichick may look at that hierarchy as similar to what prevented him from continuing his success in New England, even if some names have changed. He obviously still harbors hard feelings about it. Whether Vrabel is able to navigate that bureaucracy better than his mentor did remains to be seen.

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