Bill Belichick, Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski

New England Coach Bill Belichick and the Patriots traded down in the draft for the 13th straight year, sending the No. 23 pick to the Chargers for a second and third rounders. Steven Senne/Associated Press

BOSTON — The word for the Patriots on Day 1 of the NFL draft was patience.

New England opened its first draft since the departure of quarterback Tom Brady by trading out of the first round Thursday night, sending the 23rd overall pick to the Los Angeles Chargers in exchange for the 37th (second round) and 71st (third round) selections.

The Chargers used the pick to select Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray.

It marked the 13th straight year the Patriots have made a deal to move down on the draft board.

New England now has 13 total draft picks and could make as many as five picks on Day 2. It addition to the picks it received from the Chargers, the Patriots also hold the 87th, 98th, and 100th overall selections of the third round.

New England entered the night without a second-round pick. The trade Thursday reduced what would have been a sizable gap between the 23rd and 87th picks it entered the night with. The Patriots currently have at least one pick in every remaining round.

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Patriots director of player personnel Nick Caserio said moving down into the second round “just made sense” and wasn’t necessarily based on the unavailability of any players.

“It puts us in a position to pick in the top of the second round with four thirds,” he said. “I’m sure we’ll be active tomorrow.”

The high number of picks will give them many options to fill holes on both sides of the ball.

Caserio likened the position they’re in to 2009, when the Patriots selected four players in the second round, including current starting safety Patrick Chung. They also got receiver Julian Edelman in the seventh round that year.

Brady deciding to end his 20-year tenure in New England to sign with Tampa Bay is by far the Patriots’ biggest offseason development.

But the exits of linebackers Kyle Van Noy (Dolphins), Jamie Collins (Lions), Elandon Roberts (Lions) and DT Danny Shelton (Lions) in free agency and safety Duron Harmon (trade to Lions) were also big on defense.

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New England had a chance to snag players at both quarterback and linebacker at No. 23, passing on available big-name prospects such as Murray and Utah State quarterback Jordan Love (taken by the Packers at No. 26).

The fact that Patriots passed on Love may be the clearest sign yet that Coach Bill Belichick is content to enter the season with second-year quarterback Jarrett Stidham as the front-runner to be the 2020 starter.

Still, Caserio said it didn’t rule out selecting a quarterback at some point over the next two days,

“We’ll have to kind of take it pick by pick here,” he said.

The trade with the Chargers will also give the Patriots a chance to improve upon some recent missteps in the second round.

Defensive back Cyrus Jones, taken in the second round in 2016, started just one game before being waived in 2018. They tried to replace him that year by drafting Duke Dawson in the second round. But because of injuries, Dawson didn’t play in a single game before being traded to Denver in 2019.

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“There’s plenty of second-rounders that had good careers here. So, we’ll see how it goes,” Belichick said earlier this month. “But each draft is different, every year is different, each player is different.”

New England now owns the following picks:

2nd round – 37

3rd round – 71, 87, 98, 100

4th round – 125, 139

5th round – 172

6th round – 195, 204, 212, 213

7th round – 230

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