New England Patriots star answers if Mike Vrabel has changed after the Dianna Russini controversy
· Yahoo Sports
Milton Williams says Mike Vrabel has not changed inside the New England Patriots building, despite the noise surrounding the Dianna Russini controversy.
That is an important question because Vrabel’s first offseason back in New England has been defined by storylines that have little to do with what happens on the field. From missing the final day of the NFL Draft to his return for offseason work, every detail of his demeanor has been closely watched.
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Williams’ view was straightforward. Whatever is happening outside the building, the coach players see in meetings and practices still sounds like the same Vrabel.
Photo by Bob Kupbens/Icon Sportswire via Getty ImagesMilton Williams says Mike Vrabel is the same New England Patriots coach after Dianna Russini controversy
In a recent Doug Kyed X post, Williams was asked whether Vrabel had changed since the controversy became part of the Patriots’ offseason.
“Same guy, talking s___, getting guys ready to roll,” Williams said.
That answer said more than any polished locker-room speech. Williams was not suggesting Vrabel had become distant, quieter or distracted around the team.
Instead, he described the same sharp, competitive coach who has built his reputation on direct communication and hard-edged energy.
For a Patriots locker room trying to reset under a new staff, that consistency matters more than any public statement.
Mike Vrabel needs New England Patriots players to see football focus after Dianna Russini fallout
Photos of Vrabel and Russini surfaced, and the coach stepped away from Day 3 of the NFL Draft to focus on family matters and counseling. The absence made his availability and focus a major talking point before he had even coached a regular-season game back in New England.
He later returned to offseason work and tried to steer attention back toward coaching, development and the players added through free agency and the draft.
That is why Williams’ comment helps the Patriots. Players do not need Vrabel to win every public-relations conversation; they need him to run the building with the same authority every day.
If he is still challenging players, setting the tone and getting the team ready to work, then the locker room has something steadier than outside noise.
For New England, that is the real test now. Vrabel has to make sure the controversy remains background noise, while the Patriots’ football identity becomes the main story again.
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