New England Patriots Head Coach Mike Vrabel Named AP NFL Coach Of the Year
Watching the New England Patriots over the last couple of years felt a bit like watching a prestigious, old luxury car slowly break down on the side of I-95. It was painful. It was confusing. But then came Mike Vrabel.
In a move that felt less like a hiring and more like a homecoming, the former linebacker-turned-head-coach walked back into Foxborough, took one look at a 4-13 mess, and essentially said, “We don’t do that here.” Now, just one season later, Vrabel has been named the 2025 NFL Coach of the Year by the Associated Press.
From 4-13 To Super Bowl Bound
The numbers are staggering. Turning a 4-13 cellar-dweller into a 14-3 juggernaut is the kind of stuff you do in video games, not in the actual NFL. But the stats only tell half the story.
The real story is the vibe shift. Vrabel didn’t just bring a playbook; he brought an attitude. He took a locker room that seemed to be walking on eggshells and injected it with that specific brand of tough love that only a guy who has caught touchdown passes from Tom Brady and sacked opposing quarterbacks can get away with.
He led the team on a 10-game winning streak that felt like a fever dream for fans used to checking mock drafts by mid-October. They clinched the AFC East, secured the conference title, and are now packing their bags for Super Bowl LX against the Seahawks.
Joining the Legends
This isn’t Vrabel’s first rodeo. He snagged this same honor back in 2021 with the Titans. But winning it in New England? That hits different. He joins a Mount Rushmore of Patriots coaching legends—Parcells, Belichick. It is great company. But if you’ve ever seen Vrabel on the sideline, jaw set, eyes scanning the field like a predator, you know the pressure doesn’t bother him.
Even Tom Brady, the man who seemingly never ages or stops winning, weighed in. “You’re not that good as a wide receiver,” Brady joked about his former teammate, “but you’re a hell of a coach.” When the GOAT is roasting you and praising you in the same breath, you know you’re doing something right.
The Job Isn’t Done
Here is the kicker: Vrabel doesn’t care about this trophy. It is nice to be recognized. But as he preps for Seattle, you can bet the Coach of the Year award is already collecting dust in the back of his mind. His eyes are on the Lombardi Trophy.
If he pulls it off, he becomes the first person in NFL history to win a Super Bowl as both a player and a head coach for the same franchise. That’s storybook stuff. That’s legacy stuff.
