Mike Vrabel led one of the most impressive turnarounds in recent NFL history during his first season as New England Patriots head coach. After a 4-13 campaign under Jerod Mayo, Vrabel led the Patriots to a 14-3 record, an AFC East title, and a Super Bowl 60 appearance. Moreover, Drake Maye emerged as an MVP candidate, and the team’s future looked promising.
The on-field success, however, has been overshadowed by a noisy offseason. The scandal involving Vrabel and former NFL insider Dianna Russini dominated headlines throughout the offseason and raised questions about the head coach’s standing within the organization.
Robert Kraft Stands Behind Mike Vrabel Ahead of Training Camp
The saga began when Page Six published photos of Vrabel and Russini at the Ambiente luxury resort in Sedona, Arizona, on April 7. The images showed the two holding hands and hugging at the adults-only resort.
The Athletic launched an internal investigation into whether Russini’s alleged relationship with Vrabel compromised her NFL coverage, and she resigned from the outlet on April 14. Additional photos surfaced showing them together at a New York City bar in 2020, when Vrabel was coaching the Tennessee Titans, and Russini was working for ESPN.
Vrabel even missed the third day of the 2026 NFL Draft to attend counseling, but despite that, the Patriots organization continued to back him. Now, with training camp approaching, owner Robert Kraft addressed the situation publicly on ESPN’s “First Take” and defended Vrabel.
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“We’re privileged to have Mike as our head coach,” Kraft said. “No one is infallible. What’s great about Mike is he has great intellectual knowledge about football – all the technical skills – [and] he relates to the players beautifully. He’s someone I have a strong belief and faith in. I hope he’s going to be our head coach for many years to come.”
Question (via @shaepeppler on @FirstTake): Since we last saw the Patriots in the Super Bowl, it’s been a bit of a tumultuous offseason for your head coach, Mike Vrabel. What’s it been like navigating that in the offseason?
Robert Kraft: “We’re privileged to have Mike as our… pic.twitter.com/ONlpEimH6Y
— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss) July 17, 2026
It doesn’t seem like the off-field noise will have an impact on the Patriots’ season, as both the players and the organization are fully behind Vrabel. However, a tougher schedule could cause problems for New England in the upcoming season.
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This year, the Patriots will play nine games against last season’s playoff teams, including a Super Bowl 60 rematch in Seattle to open the season. Among the non-playoff teams on their schedule are the Kansas City Chiefs, Minnesota Vikings, and Detroit Lions, all of whom have rosters capable of contending for the Super Bowl.
As training camp opens later in the month, the Patriots’ ability to move past the Russini controversy and refocus on football will depend on whether Vrabel, Maye, and the roster can prove that a lopsided 29-13 Super Bowl loss to the Seahawks was a stepping stone rather than a measure of how they will look against the very good teams.

