News Patriots Team Notes

Patriots sign veteran Brenden Jaimes to practice squad in center swap

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In Foxborough, the first week of the regular season began with a change on the interior offensive line.

The New England Patriots signed veteran Brenden Jaimes to the practice squad on Monday. To make room among the group of 17, the organization announced the release of fellow center Alec Lindstrom.

Jaimes, 26, has appeared in 46 games since entering the NFL in the fifth round of the 2021 draft at pick No. 159 overall. After four seasons with the Los Angeles Chargers, he signed with the Tennessee Titans as an unrestricted free agent in April and was released at the 53-man roster cutdown last week.

A 6-foot-5, 300-pound Nebraska product, Jaimes stands with three career starts. His time in the league has included 274 snaps on offense along with 197 snaps on special teams.

Lindstrom, 27, signed with his hometown team as training camp got underway in July and was retained on the practice squad at its formation upon clearing waivers. The 6-foot-3, 300-pound native of Dudley, Mass., went undrafted in 2022 after twice earning first-team All-ACC honors at Boston College. He spent his rookie year on the practice squad of the Dallas Cowboys before entering the UFL ranks.

Stints with the Los Angeles Rams and New York Jets followed for Lindstrom in 2024. His NFL debut came in the kicking game last campaign. Then, a spring return to the Memphis Showboats brought 10 starts at center.

The Las Vegas Raiders visit Gillette Stadium for the season opener next Sunday. Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...-jaimes-release-alec-lindstrom-practice-squad
 
K’Lavon Chaisson to serve as extra ‘game captain’ for Patriots vs. Raiders

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The New England Patriots announced their team captains on Monday, but the six men will not be the only ones carrying that honor into the season opener against the Las Vegas Raiders. Outside linebacker K’Lavon Chaisson has also been named a special “game captain” by head coach Mike Vrabel.

Vrabel revealed Chaisson as a seventh captain for Week 1 after naming the permanent six captains.

“The game captain, because he got votes on special teams and defense, KC,” Vrabel told the team ahead of Monday’s practice.

Chaisson joined the Patriots in March via a one-year, $3 million free agency deal. Since then, he has been a mainstay for the team along the defensive edge and recently played himself into a starter spot opposite fellow offseason addition Harold Landry. As evidenced by the fact he received captaincy votes in two areas, the 26-year-old also projects to play a prominent role in the kicking game.

Before arriving in New England, Chaisson spent four seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars, who had selected him 20th overall in the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft. He later had a brief offseason stint in Carolina before making his way to the Raiders. In his lone season in Las Vegas, he set new career highs in sacks (5) and forced fumbles (1).

Now going up against his ex-club, he will join the Patriots’ other captains. The six players announced to hold that title for every game this season are quarterback Drake Maye, tight end Hunter Henry, the aforementioned Harold Landry, linebacker Robert Spillane, cornerback Marcus Jones, and special teamer Brenden Schooler.

New England will kick off its 2025 season at 1 p.m. ET on Sunday, Sept. 7, versus the Raiders at Gillette Stadium.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...klavon-chaisson-game-captain-patriots-raiders
 
Patriots work out group of wide receivers, defensive backs heading into Week 1

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Seven free agents stopped by Gillette Stadium to begin the first week of the regular season.

The New England Patriots worked out wide receivers Andrew Armstrong and Jakobie Keeney-James as well as defensive backs Tyron Herring, Doneiko Slaughter, Major Williams, Trey Dean and Malik Dixon-Williams on Tuesday, according to the NFL transaction wire.

Armstrong, 24, signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent in May. The 6-foot-4, 210-pound rookie wideout was waived at the league’s 53-man roster deadline to end August. After beginning his collegiate career at Texas A&M-Commerce, Armstrong went on to amass 134 catches for 1,904 yards and six touchdowns across a pair of campaigns at Arkansas. The reigning first-team All-SEC selection led the conference in receptions, receiving yards and receiving yards per game in 2024.

Keeney-James, 24, was waived by the Detroit Lions during roster cutdowns after arriving as an undrafted rookie in the spring. The 6-foot-1, 195-pound receiver spent five seasons at Eastern Washington before moving on to Massachusetts as a graduate student in 2024. He led the Minutemen with 50 catches for 839 yards and six touchdowns through 12 games last fall.

Herring, 24, joined the Green Bay Packers as a rookie free agent following April’s NFL draft. The 6-foot-2, 195-pound cornerback spent four years at Dartmouth before heading to Delaware in 2023. He went on to serve as a team captain, totaling 72 tackles, four interceptions, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery across 23 games with the Blue Hens. Second-team All-CAA honors and an invitation to the East-West Shrine Bowl were garnered as a graduate student.

Slaughter, 23, agreed to terms with the Jacksonville Jaguars as an undrafted free agent in 2025. The 6-foot, 190-pound cornerback finished his collegiate run at Arkansas in 2024 following four years at Tennessee. Altogether, he tallied 167 tackles, four sacks, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery and two interceptions. From the Volunteers to the Razorbacks, Slaughter appeared in 56 games with 28 starts.

Williams, 24, signed with the Kansas City Chiefs in May after attending rookie minicamp on a tryout basis. The 6-foot-1, 190-pound defensive back transferred from Virginia and twice earned D2Football.com All-American recognition at Carson-Newman. Dating back to 2022, his tenure there brought 155 tackles and 3.5 sacks along with four interceptions, one forced fumble and two recoveries. Two touchdowns were added on punt returns.

Dean, 25, entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent out of Florida in 2023. The 6-foot-2, 200-pound safety spent his rookie year between the practice squads of the New York Jets and Super Bowl LVIII champion Chiefs. A stint with the Cleveland Browns followed before he joined the DC Defenders in the spring and won the 2025 UFL championship. An interception was notched in the postseason.

Dixon-Williams, 24, signed with the Los Angeles Rams as an undrafted rookie in April and was waived in August. The 6-foot-1, 200-pound safety played collegiately at UConn dating back to 2019. He finished his 46-game Huskies career with 258 tackles, seven interceptions and a touchdown runback. Two forced fumbles were also forced.

The practice squad currently carries an open spot following the release of rookie defensive tackle Jahvaree Ritzie.

The Las Vegas Raiders visit Foxborough on Sunday. The opening kickoff is set for 1 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...s-work-out-seven-free-agents-andrew-armstrong
 
New England Patriots links 9/03/25 – Season predictions

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TEAM TALK


LOCAL LINKS

  • Steve Balestrieri‘s Patriots–Raiders Week 1 key matchups as the Vrabel Era begins. 1. Patriots RBs vs. Raiders front seven: Edge New England.
  • Tom E. Curran and Phil Perry gaze into their Patriots crystal ball to predict 2025 stats, storylines and more. 1. Stefon Diggs will finish the 2025 season with 71 catches for 816 yards and six TDs.
  • Chris Mason posts the MassLive experts’ predictions for the Patriots’ record in 2025, Super Bowl and division winners.
  • Andrew Callahan‘s 2025 NFL season preview: Super Bowl predictions, division picks and award winners. Bills win division. Coach of the year: Mike Vrabel. ‘The Patriots make the playoffs after four losing seasons in five years and back-to-back 4-13 campaigns. Enough said.’
  • Alex Barth explains how from Day 1, the Patriots have a lot riding on their 2025 rookie class.
  • Ryan O’Leary suggests Mike Vrabel is prioritizing culture over talent in Year 1 as Patriots head coach.
  • Phil Perry points out Christian Gonzalez will be eligible for a contract extension next offseason and may want to play it safe with his hamstring in the early part of the season to ensure he can play up to his standards and secure his own payday in 2026.
  • Meghan Ottolini notes Drake Maye feels he has ‘a lot to live up to’ as first-time Patriots captain
  • Alex Barth reports Jack Westover has been playing fullback for much of the summer. Now, he has the jersey number to reflect his new position.
  • Alex Barth reports the Patriots hosted a group of 7 WRs and DBs for free agent workouts.
  • Mike D’Abate reports Patriots three-time Super Bowl Champion, safety Duron Harmon retires.
  • Taylor Kyles and Mike Kadlick react to the Patriots’ captains: Who were the biggest surprises, and which players were the biggest snubs? (5 min. video)
  • Pats Procrastination podcast: Clare and Chudders take us into Week 1 vs. the Raiders (38 min. video)

NATIONAL NEWS

  • Josh Alper (ProFootballTalk) Mike Vrabel expects Stefon Diggs to play in Week 1.
  • Josh Alper (ProFootballTalk) Mike Vrabel: Wasn’t right time for Patriots to pursue Micah Parsons.
  • Frank Schwab (Yahoo! Sports) 2025 NFL preview: The top 10 breakout candidates, highlighted by a pair of second-year quarterbacks. Drake Maye included. /Click for commentary.
  • Vinnie Iyer (Sporting News) NFL predictions 2025: Expert picks for final standings, playoffs, Super Bowl 60. Patriots 7-10, 2nd place in division. ‘Patriots have buzz but watch out for 2026 more with Mike Vrabel.’
  • MMQB Staff (SI) 2025 NFL predictions: Super Bowl, playoffs and award winners.
  • Staff (Yahoo! Sports) 2025 NFL predictions: Super Bowl champion, MVP, biggest surprise/disappointment, team who picks No. 1 and more
  • Staff (NFL.com) Super Bowl LX picks, predictions.
  • Eric Edholm (NFL.com) NFL power rankings entering Week 1. Patriots 22nd, Raiders 25th.
  • Eva Geitheim (SI) Five quarterbacks that have most to prove during 2025 NFL season. Pats not included.
  • Alex Kirshner (The Ringer) The last gasp of Steelers exceptionalism; Pittsburgh has long acted like it’s better than its NFL peers. As the Aaron Rodgers era begins, will this team be anything more than average?
  • Jeff Kerr (CBS Sports) New kickoff rule has improvements for 2025, but there’s still one change NFL needs to address.
  • Charean Williams (ProFootballTalk) NFL MVP, players of the year will wear gold shield patch on jerseys.
  • Mike Florio (ProFootballTalk) NFL says it won’t play on opening Friday of 2026 season.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...188/patriots-links-9-03-25-season-predictions
 
Patriots vs. Raiders Wednesday injury report: Christian Gonzalez the lone non-participant

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The New England Patriots practiced with an active roster of 52 on Wednesday.

Starting cornerback Christian Gonzalez remained the lone absence as work on the Las Vegas Raiders continued. The reigning All-Pro has not practiced since a hamstring injury arose during the first padded session of training camp in July. With the calendar now turned to September, his availability for the season opener is in doubt.

Here’s the initial injury report leading up to Sunday’s 1 p.m. ET kickoff at Gillette Stadium.

DID NOT PARTICIPATE​

Patriots​

  • CB Christian Gonzalez (hamstring)

Raiders​

  • No players listed

No member of the 2024 Patriots defense played more snaps than Gonzalez’s 978. Only one start was missed by the former No. 17 overall pick. “He’s continuing to work and he’ll do some stuff on the side, but I’m not going to rule anybody out,” head coach Mike Vrabel said during his Wednesday press conference. “… We’ll continue to work and treat and make sure that we’re doing everything we can to help him, and he’s doing everything he can to get back out on the field.”

LIMITED PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • CB Charles Woods (concussion, groin)

Raiders​

  • No players listed

Also in the secondary, Woods practiced in a limited capacity on Wednesday due to a concussion as well as a groin injury. The sophomore cornerback had been claimed off waivers in Foxborough following the NFL’s 53-man roster deadline. He spent his rookie season with the Los Angeles Rams.

FULL PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • WR Efton Chism III (knee)

Raiders​

  • QB Kenny Pickett (hamstring)
  • CB Kyu Blu Kelly (hamstring)

Working back from a knee issue, Chism went in full for the Patriots on Wednesday. He had stayed sidelined for August’s finale after catching 12 passes for 121 yards and two touchdowns through two preseason games. The undrafted rookie out of Eastern Washington resides on an active roster featuring six wide receivers.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ury-report-christian-gonzalez-non-participant
 
Patriots relying on anticipation and adaption against new-look Raiders

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Their upcoming season opener will be the first real opportunity for Mike Vrabel and his new-look New England Patriots coaching staff to present themselves to the NFL. The same is true for their opponent: the Las Vegas Raiders also made sweeping changes in this area over the offseason.

Hiring Pete Carroll as their new head coach as well Chip Kelly as offensive coordinator, the Raiders are set to look quite different from the team that went just 4-13 in 2024. What exactly they will look like, however, remains a mystery and thus a challenge for New England.

How are Vrabel and company trying to meet said challenge? By adhering to the two As: anticipation and adaptation.

“They have a first-year defensive coach with a coordinator that’s been there and done stuff, and then they have a new offensive coordinator who’s been in the NFL and has also come from The Ohio State University. And so, that’s a pretty unique blend of what we have to try to anticipate,” New England’s head coach said on Wednesday.

“There’s going to be numerous plays in the game that we won’t have seen or we won’t have run in practice in this preparation. That’s how it goes.”

“You go through training camp and you have rules in place,” added special teams coordinator Jeremy Springer on Thursday. “You just have to be ready for everything and be ready to, if they come out in something different that you haven’t seen before you hope your rules hold up against those things right there. And if they don’t, you adjust halftime, throughout the game. That’s how it goes in Week 1, but everyone, every team is going through the same thing. So, it’s just the way it goes.”

Led by Carroll, the longtime Seattle Seahawks head coach who also held that title in New England in the late 90s, the Raiders’ coaching setup is a new one. However, its individual members — from the head coach, to the coordinators, to the starting quarterback — all have a track record the Patriots hope to use to their advantage.

“Just trying to get themes and concepts and ideas of what they may want to do defensively with [Patrick Graham] and Pete’s style and scheme,” Vrabel said, “and then what they may want to do offensively from what Chip’s done in the past in the NFL, from what he’s done in college, what Geno [Smith] likes. Certainly, quarterbacks in this league like things, and will get things added, so I’m sure there will be things that he’s liked that they’ll run from plays he liked in Seattle.”

One thing the Raiders are atop their organizational structure is seasoned. Carroll is on his third head coaching job in the NFL and a one-time Super Bowl winner from his time in Seattle. His coordinators — Chip Kelly on offense, Patrick Graham on defense, Tom McMahon on special teams — are all longtime veterans in their respective fields. Geno Smith, meanwhile, started his NFL career in 2013 and brought the experience of four teams and 84 career starts to Las Vegas.

As a result, Vrabel and the Patriots know they cannot overthink Sunday’s game.

“The one thing you don’t want to be is too cute, certainly, in Week 1 or at any time, and think, ‘Well, they know and they think we’re going to do this, so then we’re going to do this,’” he said. “We have to be really sound and use our rules, and if we see something that’s new, we have to keep our composure and keep our poise and figure out ways to make it work.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...pation-adaption-new-look-raiders-pete-carroll
 
Raiders wide receiver retires 3 days before Patriots game

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Just three days before the season opener versus the New England Patriots, Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Amari Cooper has opted to retire. According to a report by Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, the 31-year-old “informed the team that he no longer has the desire to play football.”

Cooper, 31, returned to Las Vegas on Aug. 25 via a one-year, $3.5 million contract. The deal allowed him to return to his football roots: the Raiders gave him his start in the league, making him the fourth overall selection in the NFL Draft back in 2015.

Between that selection and his retirement, he spent time in Las Vegas as well as with the Dallas Cowboys, Cleveland Browns and Buffalo Bills. In total, Cooper appeared in a combined 162 regular season and playoff games and caught 742 total passes for 10,378 yards and 66 touchdowns. He was voted to the Pro Bowl on five occasions, most recently in 2023.

His retirement now removes a layer of depth from the Patriots’ Week 1 opponent. While no longer projecting as a high-volume player at this stage in his career, Cooper would have provided experienced depth in the Raiders’ wide receiver. With him gone, that room now consists of Tre Tucker, Jakobi Meyers and rookies Dont’e Thornton Jr. and Jack Bech. Las Vegas also has three receivers — Alex Bachman, Shedrick Jackson, Justin Shorter — on its practice squad as possible promotion candidates.

The Patriots will welcome the Raiders to Gillette Stadium on Sunday, Sept. 7, for a 1 p.m. ET kickoff.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/around-t...ide-receiver-amari-cooper-retirement-patriots
 
Facing former team no source of extra motivation for Patriots OC Josh McDaniels

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It’s been nearly two years since Josh McDaniels was fired as the head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. Now in his first year back in the NFL as the New England Patriots offensive coordinator, it just so happened the Raiders are first up on the schedule.

Getting ready to face his former team, McDaniels did not hint towards any extra motivation.

“Every year, every team is different. There’s obviously people on a lot of teams in the league that we all have familiarity with or know well,” McDaniels said on Thursday. “Certainly, there’s some people there that I still know well and have relationships with and hopefully will have forever. But just excited about our opportunity to get going. Excited to be home on opening day.”

After a one-and-a-half year stint as the Denver Broncos head coach in 2009-10, McDaniels’ time in Las Vegas ended in similar fashion. Following a 6-11 first year, McDaniels was dismissed halfway through the 2023 season with the Raiders sitting at 3-5.

Through both stops, lessons were learned the hard way for McDaniels.

“You go into every opportunity, and this is my next one, and you do the best that you can,” he said. “You learn more, honestly, when you fail than when you have success. I’ve always tried to take each opportunity as an experience that I can learn from. Some you learn more from than others.

“The one thing I know I’ve tried to get really good at over the course of time is just take the lessons and digest those, and use them for something positive. There’s no reason to have — I don’t harbor any ill will towards any of the things that haven’t worked out my career, and there’s been many of them. You do the best you can with what you have, and you give everything you have to the job that you’re in, and you hope it works out the best that it can.”

Back in a familiar spot on the sidelines of Gillette Stadium, McDaniels will have a familiar Week 1 matchup against his old team — which defensively is run by longtime NFL coach Pete Carroll and former Patriots assistant Patrick Graham.

The duos contrasting styles of Carroll’s zone schemes and Graham’s man-blitz tendencies will leave a level of unknown for McDaniels and his Patriots offense entering the week. But, the long-time coordinator is ready to handle whatever comes there way.

“It’s a good team with a lot of good players and obviously the unknown of how much is Pete’s influence with Pat and Pat’s influence with Pete,” McDaniels explained.

“I think opening day is really more about yourself and trusting your rules and how well have you ingrained those rules into your team so that whenever you get a look, a defense, a blitz, a coverage, you trust that you know what to do. And then you just got to follow your rules. And I think the second part of opening day is it’s always about making an adjustment.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...discusses-matchup-against-former-raiders-team
 
Patriots vs. Raiders Friday injury report: Christian Gonzalez ruled out for Week 1

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The New England Patriots will be down an All-Pro against the Las Vegas Raiders.

Christian Gonzalez has officially been ruled out for the 2025 season opener, head coach Mike Vrabel confirmed during his Friday press conference. After sustaining a hamstring injury during the first padded practice of training camp in July, the starting cornerback remained the lone non-participant through the first week of September injury reports.

Here’s the rest of the game statuses for Sunday’s 1 p.m. ET kickoff at Gillette Stadium.

OUT​

Patriots​

  • CB Christian Gonzalez (hamstring)

Raiders​

  • No players listed

Gonzalez ranked atop the Patriots in defensive snaps last season and missed only one start. His absence leaves the active cornerback group in the hands of veteran Carlton Davis III, captain Marcus Jones as well as Alex Austin and D.J. James. The depth chart’s elevation candidates from the practice squad include Corey Ballentine, Miles Battle and No. 257 overall pick Kobee Minor.

QUESTIONABLE​

Patriots​

  • OT Will Campbell (ankle)
  • CB Charles Woods (groin)

Raiders​

  • No players listed

Campbell had been added to the Patriots’ injury report as a limited participant on Thursday due to an ankle issue. Yet following Friday’s in-stadium practice in Foxborough, the left tackle out of LSU was announced as questionable to play. Pick No. 4 is in line to make his first career start next to another rookie draft choice from the SEC, left guard Jared Wilson. And elsewhere, an August waiver claim also stands as questionable after being upgraded to full-go to end the week.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...stian-gonzalez-out-will-campbell-questionable
 
Patriots O-line to feature two rookie starters against Raiders, Mike Vrabel confirms

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The signs were already pointing in that direction, but on Friday head coach Mike Vrabel made it official: the New England Patriots are going to start a pair of rookies along their offensive line on Sunday versus the Las Vegas Raiders.

Besides first-round draft pick Will Campbell, who is expected to line up at left tackle despite being listed as questionable for the contest with an ankle injury, the Patriots will also have third-round selection Jared Wilson in their starting lineup. Wilson will fill the left guard spot next to Campbell.

“He’s worked hard and competed,” Vrabel said about Wilson. “We’re going to end up playing different combinations of guys, but Jared will be there Sunday. Other guys will be ready to go in there. I think the more he plays, the better he’ll get and improve and work and figure out the tricks of the trade as he goes along.”

The Patriots relying heavily on rookie contributors along the offensive line is unusual but nothing new. You only need to go back one opening day to find a recent example, at least for one first-year player being in the lineup.

Fourth-round pick Layden Robinson began the 2024 season as New England’s right guard and ended up starting 11 games in his first NFL season. Making the jump from college to the NFL, Robinson, who currently resides on the New England injured reserve list, experienced his fair share of growing pains.

Vrabel knows that neither Campbell nor Wilson are immune to those. However, the goal would be to be mindful of that and find a way to still stay on course even in the face of potential adversity.

“There will be things that they do really well. There are things that they are seeing, and that’s part of playing young guys,” Vrabel said. “I want them to have fun. I want them to enjoy it and understand that mistakes are going to happen. We’ll just pick it up, and we’ll move on and get back to center and go play the next play and not worry about it being perfect. Just focus on being precise.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...nsive-line-raiders-campbell-wilson-nfl-week-1
 
Sunday Patriots Notes: Week 1 brings trial by fire for the rookie class

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The last time we saw the New England Patriots play a competitive football game, they looked drastically different both on and off the field. However, the last eight months brought massive change to the organization from the top down — change whose impact will be on display on Sunday: at 1 p.m. ET, the Patriots will play their first game of the Mike Vrabel era against the visiting Las Vegas Raiders.

Throughout the week, our focus was on that particular contest. We looked at the Raiders’ roster, the decisive matchups, the key questions entering the game, the Patriots’ X-factors for the contest, and a lot more.

However, those are not the only stories coming out of Gillette Stadium and indeed the NFL this week. So, to clean out the notebook, welcome to the latest edition of our Sunday Patriots Notes.

Trial by fire for the rookie class​


With the recent addition of defensive tackle Eric Gregory, the Patriots’ 53-man roster now features 12 rookie players. Almost a fourth of the team is set to make its NFL debut on Sunday, but not the entire class will naturally be involved at the same level.

A handful of rookies will see extensive action, while others might only play rotational roles or be ruled out entirely. For that first group, which is headlined by fourth overall draft pick Will Campbell, the game against the Raiders will be trial by fire: the ramp-up period is over, now it is time to showcase what they have learned over the last few months going back to the offseason workout program.

Campbell and third-round pick Jared Wilson are set to start at left tackle and guard, respectively, and if all goes according to plan will lead the Patriots’ rookies in snaps against Las Vegas. For veteran Morgan Moses, who will line up alongside them as New England’s right tackle, the key for them lies in their poise and confidence.

“Keep poised. Be poised,” Moses said his message to them would be. “Believe in the techniques and the work that you put in for these last six, eight weeks. And then go out there and play football. You guys are here for a reason. You were drafted for a reason. Obviously, they worked their tails off all offseason and all training camp to be in the roles that they are. So, just going out there not doubting yourself.”

Besides the two offensive linemen, the Patriots will also rely on a trio of Day 3 selections to play prominent roles. Craig Woodson emerged as a starter-level safety over the course of training camp, pushing former top option Kyle Dugger down the depth chart and making another veteran, Jabrill Peppers, expendable.

Woodson earning the starter title on Sunday as well would therefore not be a surprise.

“Very comfortable or he wouldn’t be in there,” said defensive coordinator Terrell Williams about the fourth-round pick. “He’s a rookie. He’s earned his way to being one of the guys that has a chance to play for us. So, we fell very comfortable. Scott Booker’s done a great job of getting the kid ready to play, and he comes from a great program and so he’s definitely smart enough to do the things that we’re asking him to do.”

Barring any unexpected developments, Campbell, Wilson and Woodson will be the Patriots’ only rookies in the 22-player starting lineup. However, that does not mean the rest of the group will not be heavily involved as well.

Second-rounder TreVeyon Henderson will play a big role as a dynamic running back option; at least one of Kyle Williams or Efton Chism making the game day roster as a backup wide receiver should be expected; Marcus Bryant and Joshua Farmer will provide depth at offensive and defensive tackle, respectively; Elijah Ponder could see heavy action on special teams. And speaking of the kicking game, there are two other players who will be actively involved in that part of the game as well come Sunday.

Seventh-rounders Andy Borregales and Julian Ashby will make their debut as New England’s kicker and long snapper, respectively. While not starters in a traditional sense, their roles essentially fall in the same category — something that is also reflected by the pressure they will be under.

“Every day is a new day,” said special teams coordinator Jeremy Springer. “As rookies, those guys are going to hit highs and lows. I try to tell them, ‘Don’t ride the rollercoaster of emotion. Just continue to get better, stack days.‘ There have been a lot of days where I have to challenge those guys, and I’m going to continue to do that as we progress because they’re still rookies. They’re going to have their days, and I have to make sure I have my foot on them and make sure they’re working their tail off and earn their role and continue to prepare to win as well.”

Since 2000, 29 rookie players have started on opening day for the Patriots. Come Sunday afternoon, at least three

Makings of a good team captain​


The Patriots announced their 2025 team captains earlier this week, with six players getting the honors for the upcoming season. Among them are longtime NFL veterans Hunter Henry and Harold Landry, who first entered the NFL in 2016 and 2018. Following their selections, they were asked what makes good captains in their estimation.

For them, it all starts with consistency.

“A guy that is the same guy every day,” said Landry. “He’s consistent, he’s a true pro, and he just leads by example; he backs up what he says.”

“It starts with consistency, who you are as a person, as a player, as a teammate,” added Henry. “Showing up every single day being the same. I want these guys to be able to rely on me in any situation on and off the field. I think it starts with that, and then encouraging guys, trying to be positive, trying to lift guys up any way I can.”

Besides those two, the Patriots’ players also voted for quarterback Drake Maye, linebacker Harold Landry, cornerback Marcus Jones and special teamer Brenden Schooler as captains.

Winning the second half​


With their key personnel being limited throughout the preseason, Sunday will be the first time the Patriots — just like their counterpart — will need to go a full 60 minutes. For head coach Mike Vrabel, the second half will therefore be key to the game.

The message all week has therefore been a simple one: the Patriots aim to win the second half.

“If you’re not in shape, it’s easy to show up and not do what you’re supposed to do. The excuses multiply when you’re out of shape,” Vrabel said.

“I guess the phrase that kind of has got passed around for years now and everybody tries to take credit for, but this is certainly not mine, is conditioning makes cowards of us all. When you’re tired, you can make an excuse for why you didn’t get a block, why you didn’t hold onto the ball, why you didn’t pass protect, why you didn’t make a tackle. But when you’re in shape, and you can see somebody else out of shape, your opponent out of shape, it’s a much better feeling.”

Athletic shortcomings​


Relative Athletic Score, a number compiled by NFL analyst Kent Lee Platte, was become a staple of pre-draft discussion about prospects. While not the be-all and end-all of player projection, it does give some context where certain players’ athletic strengths and weaknesses lie.

The same can be said for teams as a whole. A recent analysis of the NFL’s 32 roster reveals that, if using RAS as the basis, the Patriots have one of the least athletic teams in the league entering 2025: they are ranked 30th with an average score of 7.05, a slight step back from 2024 (when they were ranked 28th). New England is 29th in players over 8.0 and 30th in players under 5.0.

Ivan Fears, mentor​


Ivan Fears was a core member of the Patriots’ coaching staff in the 2000s and 2010s and as wide receivers and later running backs coach helped the team win six Super Bowls. He retired after the 2021 season, but has still made regular appearances at Gillette Stadium through the years — including in 2025.

This has allowed New England’s current running backs coach, Tony Dews, to get close to the 70-year-old.

“I talk to him just about every day,” he said this week. “We converse, whether it’s about life and his kids or my kids, or there have been times when I’ve asked him football questions. Obviously, he’s a legend. He did it for a long time. He’s coached in a bunch of Super Bowls. He’s coached a bunch of very good backs. You don’t stay at a place for 20 years, 20 seasons and have the accomplishments you do without being really good. And so, me at this point, he’s a resource.

“Why wouldn’t I use him if I have a question about something? I’m not the smartest guy in the room, and if I don’t have all the answers and there’s someone that could help you and provide some who’s been in the system, who’s worked alongside Josh for a lot of years and coached a lot of successful players, why wouldn’t you use that resource when it’s available to you? I certainly take advantage of that opportunity. Any chance that I get or if there’s a question I need, he’s been so awesome and willing to answer any question I have.”

While that may sound like Dews and Fears have known each other quite some time now, that is not the case.

“This is the first time I’ve had a chance to really meet him,” Dews clarified. “When I got up here, obviously, I’ve watched him from afar and what he’s done with the players that have come through, the backs that he’s coached throughout his time here in this system.”

Safety requirements​


Whether it was the development of rookie Craig Woodson, the demotion of former starter Kyle Dugger, or the surprising release of Jabrill Peppers, the Patriots’ safety position has been in the spotlight since the start of training camp. What exactly does the team want out of its players at that particular spot? Terrell Williams explained this week.

“Guys that can cover, guys that can tackle. That’s really what it is,” Williams said. “And guys that can also get players lined up. When you play safety in this league and in our defense, a lot of times you’re the last line of defense. So, we got to make sure if anything breaks through that they are able to get guys down on the ground. We ask a lot of them, and we’re happy with the guys that we have.”

Real’ depth chart


Leading up to their season opener, the Patriots updated their depth chart to reflect the players who are on the team after roster cuts and subsequent movement. Those depth charts tend to get overanalyzed, especially in light of one key fact: they are not released by the coaching staff or personnel department, but rather by the PR team and thus very much unofficial — a label that actually is attached to them.

Sunday’s game will allow for a first look at the real depth chart, but even that is not set in stone. Based on opponent, in-season performance or injury, even what looks like the Week 1 depth chart remains a fluid collection of players. An NFL team is never final, even after final cuts or with the season underway.

Bears’ QB process


Friend of Pats Pulpit Ty Dunne recently published a deep dive into the Chicago Bears’ dysfunction over on his Go Long blog, and it also features a few tidbits on the Patriots and their young quarterback, Drake Maye. Like the Bears’ eventual first overall pick in the draft, Maye also came out as a highly-touted prospect in 2024.

Chicago general manager Ryan Poles, however, did not view him this way. Quite the opposite: he openly ridiculed both Maye and the few open supporters he had within Chicago’s scouting staff. The entire story is worth reading, and we recommend you do, but this is a taste of what was going on with the organization’s QB evaluation last year:

The worst football moments of Drake Maye’s collegiate football life were plastered on the screen for all to breathe in. This was no accident. Multiple people inside this 2024 draft meeting say they knew exactly what Ryan Poles was up to. “He’s not sneaky,” recalls one scout, “and he thinks he is.” The Chicago Bears general manager, it appeared, was implanting the worst possible first impression he could inside the minds of his personnel men.

One year into their respective careers, one has to wonder whether or not Poles’ judgement was accurate.

‘We are all Patriots’ goes beyond the field


While we try to keep things all-football around these parts of the internet, that is not always possible. And Sunday will be a reminder of that: the Patriots playing their first game of the season, after all, will also be the first opportunity for their cheerleading squad to present itself — a squad that is not exclusively female, as some primarily conservative commentators seemingly would prefer.

You may not agree with it, but our stance on the matter is simple when it comes to New England (and by extension the rest of the NFL): if you celebrate the “We are all Patriots” slogan the team has adopted since 2001, it should also extend to the cheerleading squad and its members — regardless of sex or gender.

Setting up the week ahead​


The Patriots’ 2025 regular season is almost underway, and so is their traditional Sunday-to-Sunday schedule. This means that we will have a classic in-season week ahead of us: some media availability Monday followed by an off-day on Tuesday leading up to three straight days of practice; on Friday, the final injury report will be released, with practice squad elevations set to be announced a day later; New England will also fly to Miami on Saturday.

Then, on Sunday, the Patriots will take on the Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium. Kickoff is again scheduled for 1 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...riots-notes-week-1-trial-by-fire-rookie-class
 
Bill Belichick’s feud with the Patriots is getting embarrassing

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We tried to avoid this topic. We really did. However, the ongoing confrontation between Bill Belichick and the New England Patriots, the team he coached for 25 years and won six Super Bowls with, has turned into open warfare and cannot be ignored any longer.

What has happened? The story of the breakup between the two parties in January 2024 has been well-documented, as has been the rather indirect back and forth between Belichick and Patriots owner Robert Kraft ever since. Lately, however, the situation has escalated to an entirely new level.

The first reports of it came out earlier this week: Belichick’s new team, the North Carolina Tar Heels, has banned Patriots scouts from attending practice. While the school did generally impose stricter restrictions since the coach’s arrival in December, his ex-club was being singled out for reasons that are bordering on embarrassing for the future Hall of Famer.

“It’s clear I’m not welcome there at their facility. So, they’re not welcome at ours. It’s pretty simple,” Belichick said in the aftermath of UNC’s win over Charlotte on Saturday.

Belichick’s statement is a shocker. While he has always been known to hold grudges against certain individuals, he never aired his grievances out in the open like that.

That is a drastic change of course for a coach who built a dynasty on the principle that no one individual was bigger than the team, including himself. And yet, here he is having his personal business inevitably negatively impact on his team.

Sure, the Tar Heels improved to 1-1 on Saturday night, but robbing players of the opportunity to showcase themselves even in as limited a setting as practice seems counterintuitive. There also does not seem to be some 4D chess behind it all: it simply is done out of spite for the Patriots and the Kraft family in particular.

Of course, it goes without saying that this is not a one-way street either. There is still a lot we do not know, and likely never will, about what went down before and after Kraft and Belichick held a press conference to announce their mutual parting of the ways (part of it is due to agenda and neither man appearing to be a particularly reliable narrator).

Believing New England’s ownership to be totally blameless in this affair would also be naive. From all we know, it looks like the Krafts started inserting themselves in the team’s football operations at some point in the early 2020s — as is their right as owners, but it was still a clear departure from the established setup — and were seemingly trying to rewrite the narrative that their coach and quarterback Tom Brady were the primary reasons for the franchise’s success through the years.

However, this latest development is still nothing short of bizarre. Maybe something happened behind the scenes that led up to this escalation, we don’t know. The gist still remains: based on the available evidence, this looks like a childish form of retaliation as well as an unnecessary obstacle for UNC’s players.

Those worthy of being drafted will still get drafted, maybe even by the Patriots. But the overall message is quite different form the one Belichick used to preach when he was at the peak of his coaching powers.

But now, if you excuse us, we will return to more important matters.

To paraphrase a legendary coach whose accomplishments during his tenure with the Patriots and the joy he brought to the entire region for more than two decades should not be overshadowed by recent developments: on to the Raiders.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...atriots-getting-embarrassing-scouts-kraft-unc
 
Harold Landry sees dominant potential in Patriots defense despite Week 1 loss

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Even though they lost their season opener 20-13 to the visiting Las Vegas Raiders, not all was bad for the New England Patriots on Sunday. Near the top of the list of things to feel good about is team captain Harold Landry: the outside linebacker finished his Patriots debut with 2.5 sacks and five tackles.

The free agency pickup was a bright spot for New England in Week 1, and he feels confident that others will soon follow suit. In fact, even as his team surrendered 6.8 yards per play and nine plays of more than 20 yards, Landry saw glimpses of dominant play within his unit.

“I feel like we came out with good energy. I felt like we settled down after that first drive,” Landry said at the post-game podium at Gillette Stadium. “I felt like you could see the glimpse of dominance that our defense has.”

A former second-round draft pick by Tennessee, Landry joined the Patriots in March to reunite with longtime Titans head coach Mike Vrabel. He promptly earned a starting role and was voted a captain, and on Sunday against the Raiders led the team’s front seven to a four-sack performance against Raiders QB Geno Smith.

While that outing was not enough to secure a victory, the flashes displayed by the 29-year-old were encouraging. Likewise, he is optimistic that this was just a starting point for him and the rest of New England’s defense.

“We all know on the defensive side of the ball, the sky’s the limit for us,” Landry said. “I think for us it’s just that consistency snapping in and snapping out and not having any lapses. You can easily tell that we have so much potential on that side of the ball.”

Coming off their loss to the Raiders, Landry and company will get their next chance to meet his expectations in a week from today. The Patriots will travel to Miami to take on the Dolphins in their first division game of the year next weekend.

In order to earn a W in South Beach and showcase what Landry thinks the New England defense is capable of, however, a quick turnaround will be necessary — on that already starts on Monday.

“We just have to come to work, leaders have to lead, and we just have to come to work tomorrow ready to improve, hungry to improve,” Landry said. “You can see it, this is an exciting defense, I’m excited to be a part of it.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...potential-patriots-defense-raiders-nfl-week-1
 
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