News Patriots Team Notes

D’Ernest Johnson, Leonard Taylor III revert to Patriots’ practice squad following divisional round

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D’Ernest Johnson and Leonard Taylor III reverted to the New England Patriots’ practice squad on Monday after serving as standard elevations for the AFC divisional round.

The running back and defensive tackle both had a hand in what became a 28-16 win over the Houston Texans at Gillette Stadium.

Johnson, 29, played five snaps on special teams and posted kickoff returns of 22 and 25 yards. The 5-foot-11, 205-pound running back had been waived to open a spot on the 53-man roster last week before rejoining the practice squad. He continued to round out an active depth chart led by starter Rhamondre Stevenson and rookie TreVeyon Henderson on Sunday.

Heading to Foxborough in October, Johnson has made nine appearances in all for the Patriots, totaling 25 yards as a rusher and 175 yards as a kickoff returner. The 2018 undrafted free agent out of South Florida stands as a veteran of 107 combined NFL games. He has handled 228 carries for 1,014 yards, 53 catches for 467 yards, as well as three starts and three touchdowns in the regular season. The Alliance of American Football alum made previous stops with the Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars, Baltimore Ravens and Arizona Cardinals.

Taylor, 23, made his playoff debut in the wild card against the Los Angeles Chargers and got the nod again against the conference’s No. 5 seed. After playing 22 snaps last week, the 6-foot-3, 305-pound defensive lineman logged an additional 19 snaps between defense and special teams on Sunday.

Also signed to the practice squad in October on the way reaching the elevation limit by January, Taylor’s stay with the AFC East champions has featured eight tackles and one quarterback hit. The former Miami Hurricane entered the league with the New York Jets in 2024. His career includes 35 tackles, 1.5 sacks and a handful of stops for lost yardage through 21 total games.

Three elevations from the practice squad are permitted in the regular season before requiring a move to the 53-man roster to take the field. Once the calendar turns to the playoffs, there is no call-up ceiling.

Head coach Mike Vrabel’s side will visit the Denver Broncos for the AFC Championship Game next Sunday. Kickoff at Mile High’s Empower Field is set for 3 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ts-practice-squad-afc-divisional-round-texans
 
Patriots injury analysis before AFC Championship Game vs. Broncos

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The New England Patriots’ divisional round playoff game against the Houston Texans was a tightly-contested battle, and it led to some casualties on both sides. Several players were injured during the contest, with multiple Patriots among those to go down.

With the AFC Championship Game against the Denver Broncos on the horizon, let’s assess the damage after rewatching the Patriots’ 28-16 win.

Patriots injury analysis: NFL divisional playoffs​


LB Robert Spillane: The Patriots’ defensive leader took a trip to the blue medical tent on the sideline after the Texans’ second series and was announced as questionable to return with a thumb injury. However, the issue did not keep him out long. While he did end up missing five defensive snaps, Spillane was back on the field at the start of the next series in the late first quarter.

RB TreVeyon Henderson: Henderson remained on the ground after a short run in the early second period, but eventually jogged to sideline under his own power. He did get checked out by trainers and was not on the field for the subsequent two offensive snaps, but returned for the next series midway through the quarter. No injury was announced by the team.

RB Rhamondre Stevenson: The Patriots’ lead running back spent some time on the sideline in the first half after getting poked in the eye. He was ultimately announced as questionable to return, but by the third quarter was back in action wearing a clear visor on his helmet. Stevenson ended up carrying the ball 13 times for 45 yards after reentering, and did not show any limitations.

S Craig Woodson: The rookie safety took a hard hit on his interception with 8:37 left in the second quarter and looked shaken up afterwards. He visited the medical tent and was announced as questionable to return with a head injury, but ultimately was cleared for return and ended up missing just two defensive snaps.

CB Charles Woods: On the very next play after Craig Woodson’s return, another defensive back got banged up. No. 4 cornerback Charles Woods was slow to get up after a punt, but he ultimately made his way to the sideline and did not end up missing any time. As with the aforementioned TreVeyon Henderson, no injury was announced by the team.

OT Morgan Moses: The Patriots’ starting right tackle was slow to get up after a lost fumble midway through the third quarter, but he made his way to the sideline under his own power. No injury update was announced, and Moses was back in action after New England had reacquired possession five plays later. He did end up missing a pair of snaps later in the game, though: on the two final kneel-downs, backup tackle Thayer Munford Jr. took his spot in the lineup.

ED Anfernee Jennings: Jennings was able to sack Houston quarterback C.J. Stroud with 2:37 left in the third quarter, but with teammate Christian Elliss coming in to clean up came down hard on the ground. The sixth-year defender was shaken up a bit, but never entered the medical tent and was back in action after two plays.

CB Carlton Davis: After catching two interceptions earlier in the game, Davis had to exit the contest in the early fourth quarter. The veteran cornerback was banged up after making a tackle on a run play, and was immediately removed from the field. He went into the medical tent and was announced as questionable to return with a head injury. Eventually, Davis departed for the locker room and was ruled out with two minutes left in the game.

What this means for the Patriots​


The Patriots’ injury situation obviously is not as dire as the Broncos’ — Denver lost starting quarterback Bo Nix to an ankle injury on Saturday — but there are still some question marks hanging over the team. The biggest among them is starting cornerback Carlton Davis, whose head injury will be worth paying close attention to in the coming days.

Davis himself did not speak with the media after the game, which is standard procedure for players dealing with head injuries. On Monday, Mike Vrabel did not provide any update on his status.

Should Davis end up missing time, the Patriots’ backup cornerbacks will be pressed into action. Based on the season so far, Charles Woods projects as the next man up. The team also recently got Alex Austin back from injured reserve and has rookie Kobee Minor as additional depth on the 53-man roster.

As for the other injuries listed above, none of them seemed overly serious. Of course, the days following a game can always change the outlook, which is why we will get a first true update on Wednesday: the Patriots will hold their first practice of the week that afternoon and later release their initial injury report.

The AFC Championship Game at Denver’s Mile High Stadium will be kicked off at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, Jan. 25.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...playoffs-broncos-afc-championship-game-texans
 
Rookie Craig Woodson playing like a veteran in Patriots secondary

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Devin McCourty knows a thing or two about playing safety in the NFL. Over his 13 years in the league, he appeared in 229 games and helped the New England Patriots win three Super Bowls.

So, when he takes to social media to say a rookie “plays like a 10-year vet,” it is not some random Joe Schmo giving his opinion.

The rookie in question is Patriots fourth-round draft pick Craig Woodson, who played a critical role in New England’s divisional playoff win over the Houston Texans on Saturday. Playing all but five of his team’s 75 defensive snaps, he registered two takeaways and therefore had an active hand in his team giving up only 16 points on the day.

It was the latest step up for a player whose quick development has been a factor in the Patriots’ defensive success so far this year.

“Very consistent. Continues to improve,” said head coach Mike Vrabel on Monday. “He takes coaching. He practices hard every day. He’s really been a good tackler for us. It was good to see him make some plays on the football yesterday, catching the tipped ball and then being a factor on some other throws where he got some PBUs — we had 14 PBUs [Sunday]. So, the more times you touch the ball or hit the quarterback, those are good for the defense.

“But he’s an easy guy to coach, he’s very coachable. You don’t have to explain things too many times to him, he usually tries to get it. He makes mistakes, but not too many, and rarely makes the same mistake twice.”

Woodson spent his entire six-year college career at Cal, and was ultimately selected 106th overall by the Patriots in this year’s draft. Joining a veteran room headed by multi-year starters Kyle Dugger and Jabrill Peppers, early projections had him as a rotational option and possible core special teamer.

However, Woodson quickly outgrew those expectations. In fact, his progress over the summer might very well has been what directly led to the Patriots first demoting and later trading Dugger as well as outright releasing Peppers before the season opener.

Vrabel and the coaching staff clearly were high on the 24-year-old, and he kept proving them right. While not immune from rookie growing pains, he remained on an upward trajectory and along the way became a mainstay and surprising veteran presence on the defensive side of the ball. In fact, no other player on the Patriots’ defensive roster has played more snaps than his 1,080 through 19 games (and that’s not counting his 75 special teams snaps over that same span).

For Woodson, they key to his growth lies in one thing: confidence.

“Just trusting myself, just having confidence out there,” he said. “I think it’s getting easier with my teammates supporting me and having the coaches have my back. So, just trusting the plays that I see and then improving; my tackling and communication have gotten a lot better.”

His improvement culminated in a standout outing against the Texans. Woodson was one of the most impactful players on the field on Sunday, and as a consequence now is only one win away from the Super Bowl.

“Feels good,” he said. “It’s a blessing. I have some teammates from Cal in the league now not even in the playoffs. So, just to be able to be in this position right now, it’s a blessing. And I’m going to take it one day at a time, one week at a time, and hopefully we can just stack days, win on Sunday, and then get to that next one.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...woodson-secondary-nfl-playoffs-texans-broncos
 
After free agency pursuit, Jarrett Stidham now stands in Patriots’ way

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As Mike Vrabel and the Patriots’ staff were deciding who would back up Drake Maye this past offseason, the group looked at free-agent quarterback Jarrett Stidham.

Nearly 10 months later, Stidham — who ultimately re-signed with the Denver Broncos — will be under center Sunday against the Patriots in the AFC Championship Game.

“It was kind of ironic, just speaking with his agent. They’re like, ‘Well, if you don’t want your starter to get hurt, sign Jarrett.’ That was before yesterday or two days ago,” Vrabel said.

Stidham will be thrust into action after Denver starter Bo Nix suffered an ankle fracture in the Broncos’ divisional-round victory last weekend.

Stidham played just four snaps for Denver this season and has not thrown a pass in game since Jan. 7, 2024. When he takes the field Sunday, it will mark 749 days since his last pass attempt — more than double the longest gap between attempts for a quarterback starting a playoff game since 1950.

Still, the Patriots are expecting the best from the 29-year old, who was originally drafted by New England back in 2019 before following Josh McDaniels to the Las Vegas Raiders in 2022.

“Just going back to when Josh had him and playing against that,” said Vrabel, “I think he sees things really well. I think he’s athletic enough to extend, like we talk about a lot of quarterbacks. Accuracy. I think the decision-making – he’s really decisive in the games that we went back and watched. This is even going back to when I was in Tennessee as well.”

“Sean [Payton], he gets his guys ready to go,” linebacker Christian Elliss added. “Honestly, whoever’s at the helm, they’re going to be ready to play and they’re going to be a challenge in themselves. Everyone’s in this league for a reason. From my experience and from watching them, Sean has been just a really good coach at getting them prepared and getting them in the right state of mind.”

Broncos head coach Sean Payton is clearly a fan of his backup. In Payton’s first year in Denver, he signed Stidham away from Las Vegas on the first day of free agency. This past offseason, Stidham’s extension made him the highest-paid backup quarterback in the league at the time of signing.

“Stiddy’s ready, and we’ll be ready for the next challenge,” Payton said after announcing Nix’s injury. “I’ve said this at the beginning of the season, I feel like I have a [No.] 2 [quarterback] that’s capable of starting for a handful of — a number of teams. I know he feels the same way. So watch out. Just watch.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...jarrett-stidham-broncos-afc-championship-game
 
Stefon Diggs has Drake Maye’s back after recent fumble issues

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Throughout his first two career playoff starts, Patriots quarterback Drake Maye has experienced his share of growing pains. Still, Maye has delivered key plays that have helped New England reach the AFC Championship Game.

With a trip to the Super Bowl now on the line, Maye’s teammates continue to express confidence in the young quarterback despite some recent mistakes.

“Our quarterback continues to show up, especially in those moments where things can go left or right,” wide receiver Stefon Diggs said. “He’s making the right reads. He’s making the right throws. He’s rolling with the punches.

“Playoff ball — it’s not going to be pretty. I’ll take an ugly win any day.”

Maye has fumbled six times and lost three over the Patriots’ first two postseason games. Nonetheless, he has shown a short memory, bouncing back to make pivotal plays — such as fourth quarter touchdown passes to Hunter Henry against the Chargers and Kayshon Boutte versus the Texans — in order to secure a pair of wins.

“I think none of his plays are really bad plays. It’s just part of football. I watch him, and his demeanor and his temperament throughout the game, it never changes. I think he’s consistent,” Diggs said. “The more people that band behind him, you see it. Once he gets rolling, he’s real scary. He’s a young quarterback but he has had a maturation process second to none in my opinion.”

As Maye and the Patriots now prepare for a Denver Broncos defense that led the league in sacks, ball security will be a major point of emphasis. That focus extends beyond Maye, as well, as the quarterback has not always been the primary cause of the fumbles.

“We have to be able to not get careless with the football. We can’t be reckless,” head coach Mike Vrabel said. “A lot of it is operation. We had two turnovers where we all weren’t on the same page. Not only is that a negative play if you don’t have everybody on the same page, but even worse, you lose the football or if you don’t have somebody on the same page and they blitz, somebody gets hurt. Those are the things we talk about when we’re not on the same page. I think that the operation is going to be critical.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...e-ball-security-afc-championship-game-broncos
 
Patriots vs. Broncos Wednesday injury report: Carlton Davis III among New England’s limited

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The New England Patriots began preparations for the AFC Championship Game without two.

Linebackers Harold Landry III and Marte Mapu stayed sidelined during Wednesday’s practice inside the WIN Waste Innovations Field House. But a handful were limited as sights set on the Denver Broncos, including cornerback Carlton Davis III, who entered the NFL’s concussion protocol late in the divisional round.

Here’s the first injury report ahead of Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET kickoff at Empower Field.

DID NOT PARTICIPATE​

Patriots​

  • LB Harold Landry III (knee)
  • LB Marte Mapu (hip)

Broncos​

  • QB Bo Nix (ankle)

Landry has been managing a knee injury since the midway mark in the regular season. The defensive captain and sack leader began the week of the divisional round with back-to-back limited practices before sitting out on Friday and earning a questionable game status. He saw 11 out of 75 defensive snaps from there against the Houston Texans. As for Mapu, the core linebacker handled 58 percent of the workload on special teams in the 28-16 win at Gillette Stadium.

LIMITED PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • TE Hunter Henry (not injury related — rest)
  • OT Morgan Moses (not injury related — rest)
  • OT Thayer Munford Jr. (knee)
  • LB Christian Elliss (hip)
  • CB Carlton Davis III (concussion protocol)

Broncos​

  • RB J.K. Dobbins (foot — IR return)
  • WR Pat Bryant (concussion protocol)
  • WR Troy Franklin (hamstring)
  • C Alex Forsyth (ankle)

Officially among five partial participants in Foxborough, Davis headed to the locker room and was ruled out in the closing minutes last Sunday. The veteran corner turned in four tackles, including one for loss, along with two interceptions and two pass breakups before then. He is trending in the right direction ahead of the matchup with a new starting quarterback at Mile High.

FULL PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • RB TreVeyon Henderson (shoulder)
  • RB Terrell Jennings (concussion protocol — IR return)
  • DT Joshua Farmer (hamstring — IR return)
  • LB Robert Spillane (hand)

Broncos​

  • TE Lucas Krull (foot — IR return)
  • OT Frank Crum (ankle)
  • C Luke Wattenberg (shoulder — IR return)
  • LB Drew Sanders (ankle — IR return)
  • S JL Skinner (quad)

A week after opening Jennings’ 21-day activation window, the Patriots opened Farmer’s. The rookie defensive tackle sustained a hamstring injury in December and was a full participant in his first practice back. Both find themselves eligible to go from injured reserve to the active roster before Saturday at 4 p.m. ET. For now, the AFC East champions’ 53 stands at capacity as the No. 1 seed awaits.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...arte-mapu-sidelined-carlton-davis-iii-limited
 
Drake Maye, Mike Vrabel among five Patriots named award finalists

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The New England Patriots will be well represented at this year’s NFL Honors as they feature finalists for six awards in the 2025 Associated Press NFL Awards.

Drake Maye is among the finalists for two of those awards: Most Valuable Player and Offensive Player of the Year. Maye, who was voted second-team AP All-Pro behind Matthew Stafford, was one of the biggest reasons for New England’s rise to 14-3 this regular season.

In his second season, Maye led the NFL and set a Patriots franchise record with a 72 percent completion rate in addition to leading the league in several other advanced metrics. He is the only player (and quarterback) as a finalists for both awards.

Two of Maye’s top offensive weapons — Stefon Diggs and TreVeyon Henderson — are finalists for Comeback Player of the Year and Offensive Rookie of the Year, respectively.

A year after tearing his ACL, Diggs was New England’s top pass catcher as he eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark for the seventh time in his career. He also led the team with 85 receptions as he became a trusted and key weapon for Maye.

After being selected in the second-round of this year’s draft, Henderson delivered as one of the most explosive players in all of football behind four 50-plus yard touchdowns. Overall, Henderson overcame a slow start to finish the season with over 1,100 scrimmage yards and 10 total touchdowns.

The Patriots’ coaching staff will also be represented which starts with head coach Mike Vrabel who is a finalist for Coach of the Year. Vrabel, who previously won the award in 2021, immediately rebuilt the culture in his first year in charge and led the Patriots to a 14-3 record and the team’s first AFC East title since the 2019 season.

Offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels was then a key part Maye’s development and the team’s offensive turnaround this season. In the midst of his third stint in New England, McDaniels is now up for Assistant Coach of the Year.

The winners will be announced Feb. 5.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...bel-among-five-patriots-named-award-finalists
 
Drake Maye adjusting to Denver air, not aggressive style, in AFC Championship

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When the Patriots team plane lands in Denver on Saturday, it will mark the first time Drake Maye has stepped foot in Colorado.

As the quarterback then gets ready to take on the Broncos in the AFC Championship Game, he’ll quickly have to learn the effects of throwing a football in altitude.

“I haven’t thrown at altitude before,” Maye explained. “I’ve never really been to Colorado or to a place with altitude that I’ve thrown a football at, but I think there is some adjustment to it. Feeling it out in warmups, seeing what a deep ball is like or what the altitude does.”

The thinner air can make it more difficult for players to breathe and run due to less oxygen, while a football can also travel farther and faster because of reduced air resistance. Warmups will be key for Maye as he acclimates to both factors.

“The biggest thing, for us, just kind of fatigue-wise, I think we’ll try to get a feel for it in warmups,” Maye said. I know it’s a little different, but I know a lot of teams play out there all the time. So, we’ll have an adjustment. Just for me, just feeling out warmups, maybe throw a few extra deep ones, see how it is. I think it’ll be pretty cool. Get a few extra yards on a deep ball, you can always use that.”

Not that Maye needs it, but he will certainly take an extra yards. Maye was one of the league’s more aggressive — and successful — quarterbacks in throwing downfield this season, finishing with more air yards per attempt (8.9) than any other quarterback. New England also ended the regular season with the NFL’s top explosive play rate.

Now, against a Broncos pass rush that leads the league in sacks, Maye doesn’t plan to shy away from taking shots.

“I don’t think you’re trying to change it,” he said. “I think last week, you change it, and Kayshon doesn’t make the play. So little things like that, just knowing the time and place for it. I think trying to get the ball out of my hand, just being cognizant of the edge rushers and taking care of the football is the number-one thing.

“So, if we have time and have a look down field, you know me, I’m going to take a look and take a shot.”

Maye is coming off an outlier performance throwing downfield, completing just one-of-six attempts of 20-plus air yards. That lone completion, however, was the play to Kayshon Boutte he referenced — a 32-yard touchdown that helped the Patriots secure a spot in the AFC Championship Game.

With a trip to the Super Bowl on the line, Maye will look for a stronger downfield showing in the altitude while continuing to be calculated when taking those shots.

“When you’re trying to be aggressive in this game against these teams that we’re playing against now, you better be calculated, because you’re usually throwing against good players, against good scheme coaches that are trying to discourage you from doing it,” offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels said.

“It’s going to be important to really identify what you’re dealing with when the ball is snapped, because a lot of times you’re not going to see the truth until you have the ball in your hands. And then once they go ahead and start to play the coverage once the ball’s been snapped, now you got to make good decisions about is this a good opportunity for us or am I wasting a play or it’s a low percentage play. So I think he’s done a nice job of that all year. Hopefully we’ll have him some opportunities this week to make some explosives and do those kind of things.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl.../drake-maye-altitude-broncos-afc-championship
 
Patriots vs. Broncos Friday injury report: Harold Landry III out, four questionable

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The New England Patriots will be down a defensive captain against the Denver Broncos.

Outside linebacker Harold Landry III has been ruled out for the AFC Championship Game after staying sidelined for three consecutive practices due to a lingering knee injury, head coach Mike Vrabel announced Friday.

But running back Terrell Jennings, wide receiver Mack Hollins, defensive tackle Joshua Farmer and inside linebacker Marte Mapu will head from Foxborough to Mile High with questionable game statuses.

Here’s the final injury report leading up to Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET kickoff at Empower Field.

OUT​

Patriots​

  • LB Harold Landry III (knee)

Broncos​

  • QB Bo Nix (ankle)
  • RB J.K. Dobbins (foot — IR return)
  • TE Lucas Krull (foot — IR return)
  • LB Drew Sanders (ankle — IR return)

In 15 games, Landry finished the regular season atop the Patriots with 8.5 sacks and 19 quarterback hits. His 10 tackles for loss also tied for the team lead. Even so, a knee injury has kept the veteran outside linebacker on the injury report since fall met winter. And in the divisional round, after being a non-participant last Friday, he played 11 out of 75 defensive snaps while carrying a questionable game designation.

The AFC’s No. 1 seed will keep a trio of recent returnees on injured reserve for the title bout.

QUESTIONABLE​

Patriots​

  • RB Terrell Jennings (concussion protocol — IR return)
  • WR Mack Hollins (abdomen — IR return)
  • DT Joshua Farmer (hamstring — IR return)
  • LB Marte Mapu (hip)

Broncos​

  • WR Troy Franklin (hamstring)
  • C Luke Wattenberg (shoulder — IR return)
  • C Alex Forsyth (ankle)
  • S JL Skinner (quad)

After staying sidelined for consecutive sessions with a hip issue, Mapu was back for New England’s in-stadium practice in a limited capacity. The core linebacker has handled 32 snaps in the kicking game since the start of the postseason.

As for the others listed as questionable, the Patriots opened Hollins’ 21-day practice window midway through Broncos prep. The starting receiver, who went on injured reserve due to an abdomen injury in December, missed four games before going from partial to full participation. Leading the depth chart in offensive snaps at the time of his injury, he finds himself with 46 receptions for 550 yards and two touchdowns on the campaign. Along with Hollins, Jennings at running back and Farmer at defensive tackle also await potential activations from injured reserve.

The Patriots currently stand with a full 53-man roster, but with a cleared member of the secondary.

Cornerback Carlton Davis III will get the green light. The veteran intercepted the initial two passes of his stay last weekend before entering the NFL’s concussion protocol in the closing minutes. He shed the red non-contact jersey on Friday after being a limited participant for back-to-back practices.

Saturday at 4 p.m. ET marks the deadline for AFC Championship Game transactions.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...t-harold-landry-iii-out-afc-championship-game
 
Patriots release veteran defensive end Darrell Taylor from practice squad

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Darrell Taylor’s stay at Gillette Stadium has ended one week after it began.

The New England Patriots officially released the veteran defensive end from the practice squad on Friday, as signaled during head coach Mike Vrabel’s press conference.

Taylor, 28, signed to the practice squad leading up to the AFC divisional round after clearing waivers via the Houston Texans. With the AFC Championship Game against the Denver Broncos on deck, that spot has opened and he has become a free agent again nine days later.

Selected in the second round of the 2020 NFL draft at No. 48 overall, Taylor stands 69 games into his career, including 13 starts. The 6-foot-4, 255-pound edge defender made previous stops with the Seattle Seahawks and Chicago Bears before joining former Patriots director of player personnel Nick Caserio’s roster in March.

An ankle injury limited Taylor to four appearances while in the AFC South. He was placed on injured reserve in November and briefly activated as the calendar turned to January. It was on to Foxborough from there.

“Well, we had conversations with him in free agency,” Vrabel told reporters last week. “Ended up going somewhere else. And then, when he became available, we got together and had a conversation and were able to bring him in.”

Taylor’s run in the league has spanned 126 tackles and 24.5 sacks, led by 9.5 sacks back in 2022. The Tennessee Volunteers product has seen 1,960 snaps on defense and 326 snaps on special teams while also registering seven forced fumbles, one fumble recovery and five passes defensed.

The Patriots ruled out starting outside linebacker Harold Landry III on the final injury report of the week, while three others move forward as questionable for Sunday.

Kickoff at Mile High’s Empower Field is set for 3 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...aylor-practice-squad-afc-championship-broncos
 
Patriots QB Drake Maye named 2025 PFWA Most Improved Player of the Year

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The 2025 Pro Football Writers of America’s Most Improved Player of the Year resides in Foxborough.

Quarterback Drake Maye got the call on Friday, becoming the first player in New England Patriots history to receive the award since it was introduced by the PFWA in 2000.

.@DrakeMaye2 has been named @PFWAwriters Most Improved Player of the Year 💪 pic.twitter.com/jGe8VceXdE

— New England Patriots (@Patriots) January 23, 2026

Previous recipients dating back to the turn of the century include Jeff Garcia, Kordell Stewart, Chad Pennington, Jon Kitna, Drew Brees, Osi Umenyiora, Frank Gore, Derek Anderson, DeAngelo Williams, Miles Austin, Arian Foster, Victor Cruz, Dez Bryant, Alshon Jeffery, Le’Veon Bell, Kirk Cousins, Josh Norman, Vic Beasley, Jared Goff, George Kittle, Ryan Tannehill, Josh Allen, Trevon Diggs, Cordarrelle Patterson, Geno Smith, Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold.

Arriving at pick No. 3 overall in the 2024 NFL draft, Maye made 12 starts at quarterback during his rookie year. The University of North Carolina product completed 66.6 percent of his passes for 2,276 yards with 15 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. Along the way to a 4-13 record, he added 421 yards and two touchdowns as a rusher.

Much has changed at Gillette Stadium since then. The 23-year-old Patriots captain started all 17 games during his sophomore regular season. He did so while going 354-of-492 passing for 4,394 yards, 31 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Under the watch of offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels & Co., No. 10 also turned in 450 yards and four touchdowns on the ground.

Earning AFC Offensive Player of the Week honors at the start of December, Maye led the NFL with a 72.0 completion percentage while also pacing the league with 8.9 yards per attempt and a 113.5 passer rating. He posted 13 games with a passer rating of 100 or more, including a stretch of eight in a row, to set a new franchise mark.

A 14-3 record and the No. 2 seed followed for the AFC East champions.

A Pro Bowler and an Associated Press second-team All-Pro, Maye was named to the All-AFC team during preparations for the AFC Championship Game. The week of PFWA announcements also saw running back TreVeyon Henderson and kicker Andy Borregales selected to the All-Rookie team, while head coach Mike Vrabel was voted Coach of the Year.

The Denver Broncos host Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET kickoff at Mile High’s Empower Field.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...025-pfwa-nfl-most-improved-player-of-the-year
 
Sunday Patriots Notes: Pats strike perfect balance around Drake Maye

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After two straight home playoff games, the New England Patriots will be taking their act on the road on Sunday. The AFC Championship Game will see them go up against the Broncos at Denver’s Mile High Stadium, one of the most challenging settings in all of football.

Naturally, our focus this week was almost exclusively on this game. However, the stories told in the NFL are manifold. So, let’s clean out the notebook: welcome to this week’s Sunday Patriots Notes.

Ashton Grant brings balance to Drake Maye’s development​


One of the big reasons for the Patriots’ success this season is the play of their sophomore quarterback, Drake Maye, and the tutelage he is receiving from veteran offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels. The six-time Super Bowl champion, however, is only one of the voices Maye is hearing both during the week and on game days.

The other is quarterbacks coach Ashton Grant, whose presence allows the team to strike a perfect balance in his development.

“Ashton’s been awesome,” Maye told reporters this week. “He’s been awesome for me just because the offense I came from last year, he was running it in Cleveland. So, we’ve had a cool experience translating the offense into what we started with, trying to get the old terminology out and get the new Coach McDaniels terminology in. He’s been great.

“He’s been great earlier in the week, kind of giving us an intro. The quarterbacks sit in there with him, and he gives us an intro. We watch some stuff on tape that helps me a lot. He’s just good about staying positive. He’s in the box during the game, comes down at halftime, always has something good to say, always something positive to say, and he’s fun. He’s funny. He’s one of my No. 1 hype men, and I appreciate that about him. He’s always in a good mood, and he keeps it real. I think that’s the biggest thing I appreciate, he tells me when I need to do something that I need to work on, and he pumps me up a lot, which I appreciate.”

Grant joined the Patriots during the 2025 offseason after spending the previous two seasons as an offensive assistant focused on working with the quarterbacks. His background is significantly more diverse than that one particular position group: a wide receiver at Assumption, he started his career in quality control at Holy Cross and with the Browns.

He also spent three seasons in Cleveland in a fellowship role, where Grant was given access to several position groups. Besides working with Browns’ QBs, he also spent time in the running back room as well as with the wideouts and tight ends.

In 2024, he did so with Mike Vrabel working alongside him as a coaching and personnel consultant.

“I got to evaluate him every day and what he did in Cleveland,” Vrabel explained, pointing out how Grant and McDaniels complement one another.

“I think it’s a good balance between him and Josh. And Josh was really excited for us to be able to add Ashton. Was in on those interview processes that we had for the quarterbacks coach, and I think Ashton really fit the vision that he had. First year in the system, Josh is going to have a heavy role in that, but also, I’ll go in there and Ashton will be meeting with these guys situationally. I think it is a good balance between him and Josh and how long Josh has done it. And maybe the newness and the youngness of Ashton is a nice little balance.”

That balance has played an important role in Maye’s development.

Easy schedule argument gone​


One of the popular talking points surrounding the Patriots this season was the strength of their schedule, or the lack thereof. And while it is true that they have had the easiest path so far in terms of opponents’ combined wins and losses at .391 — making them the only team below .400 — they have managed to rise to the challenge in the first two rounds of the playoffs.

After beating the 11-6 Los Angeles Chargers on wild card weekend, the Patriots beat the 12-5 Houston Texans in the divisional round. And while one could argue the quality of both teams’ offenses in particular, there is no denying how good both defenses were: Houston’s ranked second in the NFL in EPA per play (-0.108), Los Angeles’ sixth (-0.077).

The task won’t get any easier on Sunday: Drake Maye and company will go up against the No. 8 defense in football in the AFC title game (-0.058)

Elliss vs. Elliss​


One week after offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels went up against his brother, Texans assistant Ben McDaniels, linebacker Christian Elliss will have some family connections to the opponent: Denver linebacker and special teamer Jonah Elliss is his younger brother.

“We’re excited. It’s a huge blessing for our family,” said Christian this week. “One of us is going to the Super Bowl one way or the other, so we’re very excited. For me, it’s a little bit of smack talking, a little bit of — it’s just something between him and I. We’ll have a little side bet and the loser will be reminded forever.”

Christian entered the NFL as a rookie free agent in 2021, spending time in Minnesota, San Francisco and Philadelphia before coming to New England in 2023. One year later, Jonah was picked in the third round of the draft by the Broncos.

On Sunday, they will go up against one another for the first time in their careers.

“Never played against each other. We’ve never been on the same field like at the same time. So, it’s special to me,” Christian said. “I’m so excited to have his jersey and frame that and have this moment last forever, because my favorite moment even up to this point was playing against my older brother when he was on the Saints. I remember blocking him — he was on punt and I was on punt return — and I came and I tried to blow him up. And we’re laughing the entire way down the field. And out of all my moments — Super Bowl, big plays, all that — that’s probably my favorite one so far. It’s the one that I’m going to hold on to forever.”

Special bonds​


On average, the specialists are the least experienced position group on the Patriots’ roster. While punter Bryce Baringer is in his third year, he is flanked by two rookies, kicker Andy Borregales and long snapper Julian Ashby. According to their coach, however, the three have developed a good dynamic over the year.

“I think all three of those guys have a really good relationship. They’re always together as they should be,” said special teams coordinator Jeremy Springer. “With two rookies, Bryce has had to really take on a leadership role, just how to approach the day by day. And to be honest with you, you think about Ashby and Andy, they were Combine-training at this time last year. So, they have not stopped in a full year, over a year in training — kicking, snapping for a full year. So, for those guys to stay locked in this amount of time, it’s not easy at all.

“We still got unfinished business. But I’m really proud of those guys for just sticking it through, staying the course and just believing in what we’re doing here and then trying to take ownership of that and get better.”

Longest-tenured AFC East head coach​


After the Miami Dolphins fired head coach Mike McDaniel earlier this month, the Buffalo Bills followed suit this week. Despite making the playoffs in eight of his nine seasons and winning five straight division titles between 2020 and 2024, Sean McDermott was fired on Monday — a decision later explained by owner Terry Pegula and general manager Brandon Beane in a bizarre press conference.

The move, which kicked off a head coaching search still ongoing, creates a massive vacuum atop the Bills’ coaching staff. It also creates an interesting fact: Mike Vrabel is now the longest-tenured head coach in the AFC East.

Despite only being hired by the Patriots last offseason, no other coach in the division has the same experience:

  • Patriots: Mike Vrabel (12 months, 13 days)
  • Jets: Aaron Glenn (12 months, 3 days)
  • Dolphins: Jeff Hafley (6 days)
  • Bills: TBD

Given his success this season in speed-running the organizational turnaround, Vrabel is not just the longest-tenured coach on that list, but also the most secure in his position.

Well-rounded Rhamondre Stevenson​


When you look at all NFL players this postseason through yards from scrimmage, Rhamondre Stevenson reigns supreme. Through two games, the Patriots running back has amassed a combined 209 yards through runs and carries.

A majority of that yardage was gained on the ground, with Stevenson carrying the ball for 123 yards against L.A. and Houston. He also caught 86 yards worth of passes, though, a significant percentage of his output.

For Josh McDaniels, this speaks for his overall development as a passing game contributor.

“He’s very dependable,” McDaniels said. “If you’re in the game as a pass catcher, you have to also be in there as a blitz protector. If all you can do is go in there and release into the patterns, it’s hard to hide that from the defense. So, I think his ability to block blitzes and protect the quarterback has allowed him to play a role as a pass catcher. And I think he’s improved significantly in both of those area over the course of his career.

“He’s got a broad route tree, really good hands, and a really good understanding of what to do to help the quarterback and be friendly to him. Just not a lot that I wouldn’t say complimentary about Mondre in the passing game.”

Mack Hollins’ return has teammates excited​


The Patriots will not have all hands on deck against the Broncos, but they will have a pretty big piece of their offensive puzzle available again: wide receiver Mack Hollins was officially activated from injured reserve on Saturday. After missing the last four games with an abdomen injury, the 32-year-old is set to make his comeback on Sunday.

“Mack’s been awesome. It’s been awesome having him back,” said quarterback Drake Maye. “He’s a great player for us, been a great player for us all year. He practices hard. He’s one of those guys that brings it every day and has ever since I met him. I know he started off in OTAs and training camp battling a little injury, but since then, he’s been all gas, no breaks, and that’s how he is.

“He’s staying, running routes after practice. He’s doing all the little things. I always see him before the games on Saturday nights, drawing every single play up in the pass plays. He does those things, and you can tell why so many different teams wanted him and how he plays at a high level.”

Hollins’ presence was not just felt on the offensive side of the ball, as cornerback Marcus Jones pointed out.

“It means a lot,” the team captain said. “He brings a lot of energy when it comes down to it at practice. High enthusiasm, so we always want him to be a part of practice when it comes down to it.”

Hollins’ energy also was noted by fellow wide receiver Kyle Williams.

“Excitement, a lot of dawg, a good chip — he just adds a lot,” the third-round rookie said. “He’s a big missing piece of this puzzle. We’re just happy to have him back. … You could definitely feel it, the difference in what he brings when he’s on the field rather than when he’s gone. Just a great vet. Just a great teammate and a great friend to have on that field.”

Substantial cap carryover​


The Patriots are one of only four teams left standing in the 2025 season, which means that a vast majority of teams are already starting their preparation for the future. One of the first tasks of business will be getting the salary cap in shape for free agency, which is set to begin in mid-March.

New England projects to be in decent shape yet again, in large part because of its carryover. As highlighted by salary cap expert Miguel Benzan this week, the team is ranked first in the NFL by a significant margin: they are rolling over $47.3 million in unused cap space from 2025 to 2026. This will give the team a projected $39 million in cap space, putting them in the top-10 league-wide.

Robert Kraft outlines the plan​


When the NFL and the NFL Players Association negotiated a new Collective Bargaining Agreement in 2020, one of the big discussion points was the length of the regular season. Previously 16 games, it was increased to 17 with an option to go to 18 further down the line.

As Patriots owner Robert Kraft said this week, that is precisely what the owners have in mind.

“We’re going to push like the Dickens now to make international more important with us. Every team will go to 18 and two and eliminate one of the preseason games. And every team every year will play one game overseas,” he told 98.5 The Sports Hub.

“Part of the reason is so we can continue to grow the cap and keep our labor happy, because we’re sort of getting near the top here with the coverage. Ninety-three of the top 100 programs on television are NFL games. Think about that. It’s really amazing. And you look at the size of our crowds versus the other sports. We had that Amazon game on Thursday a couple of weeks ago, 31 million people streamed in. And so as long as we can keep growing revenue, we can keep long-term labor piece.”

The current CBA will run through the 2029 season, meaning that an 18-game schedule with only two remaining preseason games could be implemented as early as 2030.

Week ahead​


What the upcoming week will look like for the Patriots will be determined by the outcome of the AFC Championship Game. If they win, they are on to the Super Bowl, which means that they will do some practice this week before enjoying a bye and flying to California.

If the Patriots lose, their season is over. We will still get to talk to Mike Vrabel on Monday, but offseason mode would kick in quickly in that case: futures contracts would be signed, and the focus shift toward fixing what went wrong.

In addition, we will keep an eye on the Arizona Cardinals, who interviewed Patriots assistant coach Thomas Brown for their vacant head coach job. Brown also was a candidate for the Chargers’ offensive coordinator opening, but that role is expected to go to ex-Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...-drake-maye-development-afc-championship-game
 
Instant analysis from Patriots’ 10-7 win over Broncos in AFC Championship Game

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Mile High had been where the January journey ended for the New England Patriots in 1987, 2006, 2014 and 2016.

Not on Sunday. Head coach Mike Vrabel’s side outlasted the Denver Broncos by a score of 10-7 in the AFC Championship Game.

Here’s a glance back on the 3 p.m. ET kickoff at Empower Field as Super Bowl LX awaits.

Maye throws for 86, runs for 65 en route to Santa Clara​


From the wild card through the divisional round, Drake Maye survived five turnovers. To advance against the AFC’s No. 1 seed, there needed to be none. The 23-year-old Patriots quarterback went 10-of-21 passing for 86 yards at Mile High. But he ran for 65 yards and the offense’s lone touchdown.

Taking the field in jumbo “12” personnel, the first drive spanned three plays and nearly an interception by safety Talanoa Hufanga. The second series also ended in a punt after a deflection deep down the left sideline by cornerback Patrick Surtain II. So would the third and fourth series.

The opening quarter saw seven passing yards amassed. After a sudden change, however, Maye took a QB draw in for six from six yards out. But five punts in seven possessions got things to halftime. By then, the NFL’s last unbeaten road team had netted a single first down by air and only 72 yards of total offense.

Maye turned to his legs as conditions worsened, scrambling for a long of 28. The Pro Bowler, Associated Press second-team All-Pro and Pro Football Writers of America All-AFC honoree also had defensive tackles Khyiris Tonga and Milton Williams pushing behind him on a fourth-and-1 at the doorstep. But a dangerous direct snap as well as a sack at the goal line halted New England’s initial drive out of the break.

Even so, the drive spanned 9:31 of game clock and resulted in a 10-7 lead. That held until it was on to Levi’s Stadium. From sunny skies to a snow squall, Maye ran a naked bootleg around the left side on the way to history.

In return, Hollins converts with two key catches​


A week after a trio of wide receivers found the end zone, the Patriots had to adjust to the elements. And to a secondary featuring a pair of second-team All-Pros.

The return of Mack Hollins played an integral part. Activated from injured reserve on the eve of the AFC Championship Game after missing four weeks with an abdomen injury, he was targeted twice while starting alongside fellow elder statesman Stefon Diggs. Those targets became 51 of his quarterback’s 86 passing yards.

Hollins’ initial look came on a deep dig route that gained 20 yards on third-and-13. His next? A flea-flicker for 31 yards and New England’s longest connection of the road trip.

Opposing passing attacks managed a 57.8 completion percentage along with 187.2 yards per game against the Broncos in the regular season. Defensive coordinator Vance Joseph’s group had allowed 18.3 points per game, a 33.8 percent conversion rate on third downs and a 42.6 percent conversion rate in the red zone.

2025 NFL sack leaders tack on five more​


Denver’s defense racked up 68 sacks in the regular season to lead the NFL. And entering Sunday, New England’s quarterback had been subject to 10 sacks since the calendar turned to the postseason. More loomed.

Will Campbell and Jared Wilson were in deep water on the blindside of the offensive line. Next to the No. 4 overall pick out of LSU and the No. 95 overall pick out of Georgia, there stood Garrett Bradbury at center, Mike Onwenu at right guard and reigning Pro Football Focus Offensive Player of the Week Morgan Moses at right tackle. Thayer Munford Jr. also drew the start as an eligible tight end and would be called upon heavily from there.

The Broncos had ears pinned back. Linebacker Que Robinson, defensive tackle D.J. Jones and defensive end Zach Allen all hit home for sacks in the first half. And prior to the break, New England’s rookie left tackle was flagged for a false start with AP Defensive Player of the Year finalist Nik Bonitto hovering across the line.

The AFC Championship Game went on to include five sacks altogether for Denver.

Stevenson takes it home with 25 carries​


Only the Jacksonville Jaguars had given up fewer rushing yards per game than the defense that calls Mile High home. But since the bye week in December, Sunday’s visitors had been averaging 162.3 yards on the ground per game.

Something would give.

Rhamondre Stevenson turned 25 carries into 71 yards. The downhill running back got New England’s initial first down of the game and added a long of a dozen yards up the middle. Style points did not hold weight. He was leaned on when visibility could not be, taking nine handoffs as the time ticked away in the fourth quarter.

Stidham’s start ends with interception​


Six quarterbacks in the Super Bowl era had made their first start of the season in the postseason. Jarrett Stidham made it seven, following Taylor Heinicke in 2021, Connor Cook in 2017, Joe Webb in 2013, Frank Reich in 1993, Gary Danielson in 1983 and Roger Staubach in 1972.

The 2019 Patriots draft pick hadn’t attempted a pass in a Broncos game in 749 days. He would on Sunday in the absence of injured starter Bo Nix, going 17-of-31 through the air for 133 yards with one touchdown and one interception.

New England’s defense opened in the nickel. And veteran Carton Davis III, who cleared the NFL’s concussion protocol before the weekend, was back on the perimeter. The afternoon began with a three-and-out, but fellow cornerback Christian Gonzalez was beat deep by Marvin Mims Jr. to the tune of 52 yards on third-and-10. And with safety Jaylinn Hawkins biting on play action, a rollout touchdown to tenured wide receiver Courtland Sutton followed for a 7-0 Denver lead.

A pair of punts, a turnover on downs, a lost fumble and a missed field goal followed for the Broncos going into the half. Another three-and-out was notched by Patriots defensive playcaller Zak Kuhr’s contingent coming out of it.

The Broncos did not move the sticks again until there was 10:04 left to go. And with 2:11 to go, the ball found No. 0, as Gonzalez got under his first interception since 2024.

New England’s front closes the road​


The Los Angeles Chargers’ running backs finished the wild card with 30 rushing yards over the course of 12 attempts. The Houston Texans’ running backs finished the divisional round with 31 rushing yards over the course of 18 attempts.

On Sunday, the commitment was clear. Denver rookie RJ Harvey was held to 37 rushing yards on 13 tries. No other Broncos running back posted a gain worth more than a handful.

A front missing sack leader Harold Landry III due to a lingering knee injury soon was without tackle leader Robert Spillane due to an ankle injury. Announced as questionable to return, the green dot would be handed over. So, too, would the football as the Patriots ramped up the pressure.

Intentional grounding became a backwards pass. And with that ruling, fellow starting linebacker Christian Elliss recorded a sack on third-and-4 with 2:59 left before halftime. Undrafted rookie Elijah Ponder was there to recover the fumble just 12 yards from the destination. New England’s takeaway gave way to a 7-7 game. And from there, defensive tackle Christian Barmore stormed through decorated Broncos guard Quinn Meinerz to get in the sack column.

Kicking through a whiteout​


The thin air was met by a swirling whiteout. It wasn’t what Andy Borregales was looking for. New England’s rookie kicker converted on 1-of-3 field goals in Denver. Standing 5,280 feet above sea level, he missed wide left from 63 yards out before halftime and wide right from 46 yards out after it.

The AFC Championship Game went about as smoothly for his holder. Bryce Baringer punted eight times for an average of 37.9 yards per.

But special teams coordinator Jeremy Springer got a hand from the practice squad. Defensive tackle Leonard Taylor III, who was elevated on the eve of kickoff, tipped a 45-yard attempt by Broncos kicker Wil Lutz with 4:46 remaining.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...onship-game-instant-analysis-patriots-broncos
 
Patriots Super Bowl opponent: Quick-hit thoughts on Seahawks matchup

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After taking on the No. 1 seed in the AFC on Sunday, the New England Patriots will take on the No. 1 seed in the NFC in two weeks. The Seattle Seahawks beat the Los Angeles Rams 31-27 in their conference championship to set up a meeting with the Patriots in Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8.

We will have in-depth analysis into the Seahawks throughout the next two weeks. For now, however, here are some quick-hit thoughts on the matchup.

Ghosts of the past​


The last time the Seahawks went to the Super Bowl, they came within a yard of winning back-to-back titles. Of course, that opportunity was spoiled by the Patriots: cornerback Malcolm Butler famously undercut a quick slant from quarterback Russell Wilson to secure what was at that point New England’s fourth championship. Eleven years later, the two Super Bowl XLIX opponents will cross paths again on the game’s biggest stage.

The rematch character extends beyond the teams, however. Seattle quarterback Sam Darnold also has a history with the Patriots. A first-round draft pick by the New York Jets in 2018, he went 0-3 in his tenure in the AFC East, including a 33-0 loss during his sophomore campaign that was highlighted by him admitting on the sideline that he was “seeing ghosts” on the defensive side of the ball.

Top-notch defense​

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By now, the Patriots have probably gotten used to playing against some of the best defenses in the NFL. Using expected points added as our metric of choice, they went up against the sixth-ranked team in the wild card round (Chargers), the second-ranked team in the divisional playoffs (Texans), and the eighth-ranked team in the AFC Championship Game on Sunday (Broncos).

They have saved the best for last. Seattle’s defense finished the year in the top spot overall, while ranking fifth against the pass and first against the run. The Seahawks also ranked first in the most important metric of them all, giving up just 17.2 points per game.

Needless to say, this is as formidable a unit as Drake Maye and the Patriots offense have faced all year. It also is one filled with some of the best players their respective positions have to offer: defensive lineman Leonard Williams, linebacker Ernest Jones and cornerback Devon Witherspoon were all named second-team All-Pro.

Big-play offense​


While Seattle’s defense is as good a group as any in football, the team’s offense is no worse. Led by the aforementioned Sam Darnold, who keeps showing that he was indeed worthy of the first-round draft pick the Jets had spent on him, the Seahawks finished third in the NFL in scoring this year with 28.4 points per game as well as 14th in EPA per play.

Darnold’s performance in his first season with the team naturally played a major role in that, but so did his supporting cast. The group is headlined by first-team All-Pro receiver Jaxson Smith-Njigba, who finished the regular season with a league-high 1,793 receiving yards on 119 catches as well as an NFL-best 14.5 yards per touch; his upcoming matchup against secondary led by stalwart cornerback Christian Gonzalez will be a heavyweight battle.

Complementing Smith-Njigba and the aerial attack is a ground game that also cannot be underestimated. Kenneth Walker III is a 1,000-yard rusher whose size and elusiveness makes for a rare combination.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl.../120514/seahawks-super-bowl-opponent-analysis
 
D’Ernest Johnson, Leonard Taylor III revert to Patriots’ practice squad following AFC title

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D’Ernest Johnson and Leonard Taylor III reverted to the New England Patriots’ practice squad on Monday after having a hand in the AFC Championship Game.

The 10-7 win at snowy Mile High marked the fifth standard elevation of the campaign for the running back. For the defensive tackle, it marked the sixth. Both made their way to organization in October and will soon make their way to Super Bowl LX.

Johnson, 29, returned a pair of kickoffs for 59 yards against the Denver Broncos. The 5-foot-11, 205-pound vested running back has appeared in 10 games altogether through stints on the practice squad and active roster in Foxborough, totaling 46 snaps on offense and 41 snaps on special teams. He reached the NFL limit in elevations during the regular season before the postseason provided a clean slate behind starter Rhamondre Stevenson and rookie TreVeyon Henderson.

Now 108 combined games into his career, Johnson stands with 228 carries for 1,014 yards, 53 catches for 467 yards, as well as three starts and three touchdowns. The product of the South Florida Bulls and Alliance of American Football’s Orlando Apollos went undrafted 2018. He has also been a member of the Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars, Baltimore Ravens and Arizona Cardinals.

Taylor, 23, blocked a 45-yard attempt by veteran kicker Wil Lutz during Sunday’s whiteout. That field goal would have made it a tie game with 4:46 remaining in the fourth quarter. Taylor saw 16 snaps on defense to go with four snaps on special teams at Empower Field. The 6-foot-3, 305-pound defensive tackle also reached the three-time limit by the end of the regular season, yet has since been called up for the wild card, divisional round and conference title.

Since being waived by an 0-6 New York Jets team in the fall, Taylor has also notched eight tackles and one quarterback hit elsewhere in the AFC East. A 2024 undrafted free agent by way of the Miami Hurricanes, his NFL run spans 35 tackles, 1.5 sacks and five stops for loss through 22 combined appearances.

New England's standard elevations from Week 1 through the AFC Championship Game, with October arrivals D'Ernest Johnson and Leonard Taylor III leading the way:

Oliver Thomas (@oliverbthomas.bsky.social) 2026-01-26T18:46:59.652Z

Head coach Mike Vrabel’s practice squad currently includes two open spots after the release of defensive end Darrell Taylor was followed by the release of wide receiver Trent Sherfield Sr. New England also recently opened the 21-day practice windows for running back Terrell Jennings and defensive tackle Joshua Farmer to be activated from injured reserve.

For now, the last 53-man roster left in the AFC stands at capacity leading up to Super Bowl LX versus the Seattle Seahawks.

Kickoff at Levi’s Stadium is set for 6:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, Feb. 8.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...-practice-squad-afc-championship-game-broncos
 
Patriots links 1/27/26: Vrabel Era starts with a bang… and a Bowl

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TEAM TALK


LOCAL LINKS

  • Jerry Thornton shares his knee-jerk reactions to the AFC Championship game: Patriots at Broncos. “…history is never going to care that Maye had an ugly stat line.”
  • Chad Finn’s Unconventional Review: Drake Maye/Mike Vrabel breakthrough has many similarities to the Tom Brady/Bill Belichick era; More.
  • Tom E. Curran makes the case that this Patriots’ turnaround is already one of greatest in NFL history.
  • Conor Ryan notes that stats don’t tell the story of Drake Maye’s improbable run to Super Bowl LX.
  • Ian Logue talks about how Mike Vrabel’s Patriots vision has become reality.
  • Andrew Callahan hears from Eliot Wolf on why he believed Super Bowl run was possible back in October.
  • Sophie Weller notes Stefon Diggs describes first trip to the Super Bowl as ‘perfect timing.’
  • Steve Balestrieri recaps the Patriots beating the Broncos and the snow to return to the Super Bowl.
  • Khari Thompson updates the Patriots Stock Watch to see who stood out or struggled in Sunday’s win.
  • Mark Morse picks through the Good, Bad, and Ugly from AFC Championship Sunday.
  • Ethan Hurwitz looks back at how the Patriots built their Super Bowl roster.
  • Justin Leger’s Patriots-Seahawks tale of the tape: Super Bowl 60 keys to victory and more. “There will be no Tom Brady, Bill Belichick, Russell Wilson, or “Legion of Boom” this time around. It will be two very different Pats and Seahawks teams facing off in Super Bowl 60 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif.“
  • Conor Ryan tells us 5 things to know about the Seattle Seahawks: Seattle boasts an elite defense; More.
  • Conor Ryan reports the Patriots open as underdogs against Seahawks in Super Bowl LX predictions.
  • Pats Procrastination podcast: Clare and Chudders recap Sunday’s AFC Championship win. (43 min.)

NATIONAL NEWS

  • Albert Breer (SI) NFL Takeaways: It’s time to believe in Mike Vrabel’s Patriots; More.
  • Daire Carragher (PFF) Ahead of Super Bowl 60, the Patriots’ run defense has turned a corner.
  • Henry McKenna (FOX Sports) 5 Observations from Championship Sunday. 3. Everyone is afraid to say Part 1: Drake Maye was the youngest QB in the playoff field, but he’s playing with wisdom beyond his years.
  • Jay Busbee (Yahoo! Sports) Yes, open-air NFL playoff games are chaotic. That’s exactly why we need them.
  • Gordon McGuinness (PFF) Highest-graded plays of the AFC, NFC title games.
  • Judy Battista (NFL.com) 13 biggest winners and losers from Patriots-Broncos, Rams-Seahawks.
  • Steven Ruiz (The Ringer) The winners and losers of the NFL’s Conference Championships.
  • Frank Schwab (Yahoo! Sports) Conference championship round winners and losers.
  • Henry McKenna (FOX Sports) Another Dynasty in New England? Patriots built for sustained success.
  • Jori Epstein (Yahoo! Sports) As snow and sacks thwart Drake Maye’s passing dreams, his ‘demoralizing’ legs find a way to send Patriots back to Super Bowl.
  • Staff (Football Zebras) 2025 AFC Championship Game: Patriots at Broncos live blog.
  • Frank Schwab (Yahoo! Sports) Are NFL teams going for it on 4th down too often? And will that trend reverse itself?
  • Mike Florio (ProFootballTalk) Mike Vrabel on fourth down decisions: We try to predict how many points we’ll need to win.
  • Jeffri Chadiha (NFL.com) Super Bowl LX: 5 factors that will determine Patriots vs. Seahawks. 2) Can Drake Maye return to regular-season form? More.
  • Matt Verderame (SI) Four key matchups that could decide Super Bowl LX.
  • Diante Lee (The Ringer) Four important questions about the Super Bowl matchup.
  • Staff (PFF) 2026 NFL Free Agent Rankings: Top 250 players set to enter free agency.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-england-patriots-links/120579/vrabel-era-starts-with-bang-bowl
 
Drake Maye addresses injury speculation ahead of Super Bowl 60

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As Drake Maye was taken to the turf following a third quarter scramble in the AFC Championship Game, the quarterback landed hard on his right arm/shoulder.

Two plays later, Maye connected on his best pass of the day as he hit Mack Hollins downfield off a flea flicker for a 31-yard gain. But between the plays, Maye was seen touching his right shoulder pad and rotating his arm after the hit — raising speculation that he suffered an injury during the play.

Making his weekly appearance on WEEI on Tuesday, Maye downplayed any potential injury.

“I’m feeling good,” he said. “We’ve got in some extra rest. Really, I don’t think it’s from the game. I think just the buildup of almost, including training camp, 30 weeks straight of throwing and four days a week. It can add up. But I got some extra rest and I’m feeling good and ready to go for the Super Bowl.”

As the Patriots have two weeks to prepare for Super Bowl LX against the Seahawks, the team’s first practice of the week will take place on Thursday. When asked if he’d be limited in any fashion leading up to or in the game, Maye stated it was “too early to say.”

He then added: “Right now I’m feeling good and looking forward to getting out there and preparing for the Seahawks and prepping to get ready to go.”

Speaking earlier on Tuesday, head coach Mike Vrabel claimed Maye did not hurt his shoulder and that internet speculation was “probably” blown out of proportion. Vrabel did reiterate numerous times, however, that no player is 100 percent healthy at this point of the season.

“Again, this is a sport where there’s going to be things that come up, but I don’t think that there’s a — we’ll talk about whatever status each player has for the game once we’re required to,” he said. “We understand that. But we were able to function offensively, throw the football, run the football. So, that’s kind of where everybody’s at.”

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ses-injury-speculation-ahead-of-super-bowl-60
 
Patriots outline practice, travel schedule for Super Bowl 60

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Super Bowl LX between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks will not take place until next Sunday, but that does not mean the teams will just be enjoying some time off until then. The Patriots, for example, will hit the practice fields twice before flying out to California.

Their initial schedule until travel day has been released by the team, and it gives us a roadmap for the next few days.

Wednesday, Jan. 28​

  • No practice
  • No media availability

After flying back from Denver on Monday, the Patriots’ players are enjoying a few days away from the practice fields. Nonetheless, the team will release its first injury report leading up to the Super Bowl on Wednesday afternoon. It will be a projection, but it will give us a first look at some of the questions that will need to be addressed leading up to the game, particularly in regards to quarterback Drake Maye (shoulder) and linebacker Robert Spillane (ankle).

Thursday, Jan. 29​

  • Mike Vrabel press conference (1:10 p.m. ET)
  • Player media availability (1:20 p.m. ET)
  • Practice (2:15 p.m. ET)
  • Drake Maye press conference (ca. 4 p.m. ET)

Thursday will mark the first day of on-field preparation for the Super Bowl. The Patriots will practice in the afternoon, either outdoors or inside their field house, depending on the conditions. Later that day, they will release their first real practice report.

Friday, Jan. 30​

  • Practice (11:30 a.m. ET)
  • Mike Vrabel press conference (1:10 p.m. ET)
  • Player media availability (1:20 p.m. ET)

For a second-straight day, the Patriots will be hitting the practice fields on Friday. They will also make some select players and head coach Mike Vrabel available for the media, and release another injury report.

Saturday, Jan. 31​

  • No media availability

The Patriots will not open their doors to the media on Saturday, and they will also not release any practice report. That does not mean players will not still visit the facility for workouts, treatment or film study.

Sunday, Feb. 1​

  • Travel to Santa Clara

The Patriots will fly from Providence to Santa Clara on Sunday, and a send-off ceremony of sorts should be expected beforehand. Details have yet to be announced, though.

The additional schedule for next week has not yet been officially confirmed, but we can assume the Patriots will follow their traditional in-season pattern. Coming off a bye, this would mean practicing on Monday, followed by the traditional three-day block of Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, followed by a walkthrough on Saturday.

Super Bowl LX will be kicked off at 6:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, Feb. 8.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...triots-practice-travel-schedule-super-bowl-60
 
Patriots vs. Seahawks Wednesday injury report: Drake Maye projects as limited

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The New England Patriots began work on the Seattle Seahawks without an official practice.

But had head coach Mike Vrabel’s side of Super Bowl LX conducted one in Foxborough on Wednesday, tight end Hunter Henry, offensive tackles Morgan Moses and Thayer Munford Jr., as well as linebackers Harold Landry III and Robert Spillane would have been non-participants.

And alongside wide receiver Mack Hollins, quarterback Drake Make would have been limited due to an injury to his throwing shoulder.

Here’s the estimated injury report as the Feb. 8 kickoff at Levi’s Stadium moves closer.

DID NOT PARTICIPATE​

Patriots​

  • TE Hunter Henry (not injury related — rest)
  • OT Morgan Moses (not injury related — rest)
  • OT Thayer Munford Jr. (knee, illness)
  • LB Harold Landry III (knee)
  • LB Robert Spillane (ankle)

Seahawks​

  • OT Amari Kight (knee)
  • LB Ernest Jones IV (chest)

A handful projected as sidelined for the Patriots on Wednesday. The two captains on the defensive side of the ball bear watching as Santa Clara nears.

Landry, who finished the regular season atop the roster with 8.5 sacks, 19 quarterback hits and tied for the lead with 10 tackles for loss, did not practice leading up to the AFC Championship Game. The veteran starter off the edges has battled a knee issue since fall turned to winter and was ruled out for the Mile High visit. As for Spillane, who missed a month before returning for the playoffs, the veteran starter off the ball exited after 13 defensive snaps against the Denver Broncos. An ankle injury sent him to the blue medical tent and the locker room late in the opening quarter before being announced as questionable to return.

LIMITED PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • QB Drake Maye (right shoulder)
  • WR Mack Hollins (abdomen)

Seahawks​

  • QB Sam Darnold (oblique)
  • FB Robbie Ouzts (neck)
  • FB Brady Russell (hand)
  • WR Jake Bobo (hand)
  • TE Eric Saubert (hamstring)
  • OT Charles Cross (foot)
  • OT Josh Jones (ankle, knee)
  • LB Drake Thomas (shoulder)
  • S Julian Love (shoulder)

While Hollins went from injured reserve to catching two passes for a team-high 51 yards at Empower Field, his quarterback finished the 10-7 win with a right shoulder injury. Maye has been sacked 15 times since the playoffs began, and accounted for 86 passing yards, 65 rushing yards and New England’s lone touchdown during his latest start.

“I’m feeling good,” the 23-year-old told WEEI on Tuesday. “We’ve got in some extra rest. Really, I don’t think it’s from the game. I think just the buildup of almost, including training camp, 30 weeks straight of throwing and four days a week. It can add up. But I got some extra rest and I’m feeling good and ready to go for the Super Bowl.”

FULL PARTICIPATION​

Patriots​

  • RB Terrell Jennings (concussion protocol — IR return)
  • DT Joshua Farmer (hamstring — IR return)

Seahawks​

  • LB Chazz Surratt (ankle — IR return)

A pair of Patriots working back from injured reserve would have been the lone full participants on Wednesday.

The organization opened Jennings’ 21-day practice window leading up to the divisional round. The sophomore running back, who has cleared concussion protocol, carried a questionable game status entering last weekend yet was not activated. The same went for Farmer while working back from a December hamstring injury. The rookie defensive tackle returned to practice leading up to the AFC Championship Game and also awaits a potential return to the 53-man roster.

Source: https://www.patspulpit.com/new-engl...ye-mack-hollins-project-limited-super-bowl-lx
 
OH MAN this is just KILLING ME seeing all these Pats updates. Like I'm happy for you guys making it to the Super Bowl and all, but watching Vrabel turn that team around in one year while we're sitting here wondering if Josh can get some actual help next season is rough.

That said, I gotta give credit where it's due - that Leonard Taylor III blocked field goal was absolutely CLUTCH. Dude gets picked up off the Jets' scrap heap in October and ends up making a Super Bowl saving play? That's the kind of roster building that makes a difference. Meanwhile our practice squad guys are just... existing.

The Maye shoulder thing is interesting though. Vrabel playing it cool saying it's "probably blown out of proportion" while Maye himself is hedging with "too early to say" if he'll be limited? That's coach speak 101 right there. 30 weeks of throwing plus getting sacked 15 times in the playoffs will do that to a guy. Kid's been running for his life behind that line.

Gotta say the matchup against Seattle is gonna be fun to watch. Two teams that weren't supposed to be here, no Brady, no Belichick, no Wilson, no Legion of Boom. Just two hungry squads battling it out.

Still rooting against you obviously because AFC East rivalry and all that, but if you're gonna beat Seattle I won't be too mad about it.

Now if you'll excuse me I need to go cry into my Josh Allen jersey about our playoff exit. GO BILLS... next year anyway.
 
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