They will wrap up their preseason schedule Thursday against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium. Kickoff is set for 8 p.m. ET on Prime Video.
Once the preseason concludes, Vrabel’s squad will prepare for its Week 1 matchup against the Las Vegas Raiders on Sept. 7. The game will mark Vrabel’s regular-season debut as Patriots head coach, opening a new chapter in a storied franchise where both he and Rob Gronkowski left lasting marks — though, remarkably, never at the same time.
Vrabel built a reputation as a versatile and reliable player during his time in New England before moving into coaching following his retirement. He later served as head coach of the Tennessee Titans, guiding them to multiple playoff appearances, and then spent the 2024 season as a coaching and personnel consultant with the Cleveland Browns, before returning to New England to take the helm as head coach in 2025.

For Gronkowski, the revelation is striking. Both he and Vrabel were central figures in different phases of the Patriots dynasty, which began in 2001 under Bill Belichick and spanned nearly two decades. Their overlapping tenures were tantalizingly close, but not close enough to place them in the same locker room.
Vrabel now enters his first season leading New England, tasked with revitalizing a franchise that has struggled in recent years. The Patriots have opened the preseason 2-0, following a 20-12 victory over the Minnesota Vikings last Saturday, and anticipation is high for how he will handle the regular season.
“Everyone thinks I’m like best friends with Vrabel and everyone thinks we won championships together, but I never even met Coach Vrabel ever in my life,” Gronkowski said in a candid interview. “Actually one time, real quick, at the NFL Honors — and it was for five seconds. So I don’t really count that as truly meeting someone.”
The admission comes as a surprise to many fans, who had long assumed that the two Patriots stalwarts had shared countless pivotal moments, locker-room banter, and postgame celebrations together. Instead, their paths, while intertwined through the broader franchise legacy, never truly crossed.

“It’s like we just missed each other in New England,” Gronkowski added. “I feel like we would have been great teammates together. We would have loved each other. We have the same mentality out on the football field — just get the job done and go full speed. But I really love what he’s doing here in New England right now, and he’s just turning that program around.”
The revelation raises intriguing questions about the narrative of the Patriots’ dynasty. While both players were key contributors to the team’s sustained success, their lack of direct overlap challenges the perception of a unified roster. Fans, analysts, and commentators have begun debating whether the legend of the dynasty has been somewhat mythologized, with Gronkowski and Vrabel often portrayed as integral collaborators when, in reality, their tenures were sequential rather than simultaneous.
Vrabel’s approach as head coach will now face the ultimate test: can he reinvigorate a franchise that has struggled in the post-Brady era, while maintaining the competitive culture that Belichick and the former dynasty players instilled over nearly two decades? Gronkowski’s praise suggests confidence in his leadership, but the absence of their direct overlap adds a layer of curiosity — and perhaps, pressure — to Vrabel’s first season.
NFL observers are closely monitoring how the Patriots will balance legacy, leadership, and new coaching philosophies. Gronkowski, whose career has been defined by clutch performances, Super Bowl victories, and his dynamic presence on the field, now watches a former teammate-in-spirit guide the next generation.

“It’s funny how football works,” Gronkowski reflected. “Two guys who could have been unstoppable together just missed each other by timing. But that doesn’t take away from what he’s doing now. I’m excited to see the impact he has. The team, the city, the fans — everyone is going to feel it this season.”
As the Patriots prepare to conclude their exhibition slate against the Giants, the storyline of Gronkowski and Vrabel’s near-miss connection has added an unexpected layer of drama to the preseason. What could have been a simple coaching transition now carries a narrative rich with history, missed opportunities, and the ever-present tension between past glory and future ambition.
And while their eras didn’t align, their legacies will continue to shape the franchise in ways fans are only beginning to grasp — a testament to both the dynasty they helped build and the new chapter Vrabel is now writing.