Lastly, my current day-two draft crushes are Indiana WR Elijah Sarratt and Tennessee WR Chris Brazzell II. Sarratt consistently showed out while watching tape of his teammate, Omar Cooper Jr., as a crafty route-runner who moves like a smaller receiver but has good size (6-2, 209). Sarratt’s game reminds me of former Patriots WR Jakobi Meyers. As for Brazzell, he’s a 6-foot-5 burner who stacks press-man corners and runs through off-coverage with long-striding deep speed. The Tennessee wideout also has an enormous catch radius to “Moss” corners downfield and present a QB-friendly target on intermediate in-breakers, while flashing impressive fluidity to snap off routes. As a deep-ball artist, Brazzell feels like a great fit with Patriots QB Drake Maye.

For the Patriots, the question is whether Boston and Concepcion test their way out of the Pats range at No. 31, while we’ll need to separate the early day-two cluster as well: Cooper, Sarratt, Brazzell, Malachi Fields (Notre Dame), Zachariah Branch (Georgia), and Chris Bell (Louisville/ACL recovery).

4. Early Impressions of a Very, Very Deep Class at Edge Rusher

The most-hyped position in this year’s draft is a stacked group of edge rushers, with pundits predicting that as many as 15 prospects could be selected inside the top-100 in April.

During the postseason, the Patriots ramped up their blitz rate to 44.3%, generating pressure on over 37% of their opponents’ drop-backs and recording 13 playoff sacks. New England obviously has the pass-rush juice on the interior with standout defensive tackles Christian Barmore and Milton Williams. However, Chaisson is now headed toward unrestricted free agency coming off a career year (career-high 54 pressures), while vet Harold Landry III saw a fast start to the 2025 season wane due to a lingering knee injury. There is a need to upgrade the Patriots standard four-man pass rush and possibly fill the starting void left by Chaisson.

With the insane depth in both the veteran market and the draft, New England could be patient with filling those needs, seeing that there’s a surplus of talent at EDGE this offseason. Although it might be tempting to trade a haul for Maxx Crosby, Crosby might be only high-impact veteran who is possibly available. The more realistic move might be to add multiple capable pass-rushers, like how Seattle built its defensive line with waves of depth.

As for the draft, the first-round cluster we need to sort through is as follows: Cashius Howell (Texas A&M), Keldrick Faulk (Auburn), T.J. Parker (Clemson), Akheem Mesidor (Miami), and R Mason Thomas (Oklahoma). During initial film study, Howell stood out as a prototypical Patriot edge rusher at 6-2, 255 pounds, with the ability to turn a tight corner and feature a variety of pass-rush moves. Howell’s game is similar to Landry’s in that he’s not the longest athlete, but he’s a crafty rusher who has the fluidity to play on tackles’ edges.

Other standouts were Thomas, a pure speed winner who fits New England’s mold of prioritizing first-step explosiveness, and Mesidor. The Miami product rushed opposite top-10 prospect Reuben Bain Jr., flashing short-area quickness, a well-schooled rush package, and alignment flexibility to win inside. Faulk is also an intriguing option due to his fluidity and length, allowing him to play more reps straight-up over tackles or guards. The Auburn product is projected to go inside the top-20, but he’s a bit of a tweener and is raw at just 21 years old, so he could slide in a stacked class. Based on the talent in the draft and need, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Patriots select an edge rusher with their top pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.

5. An Early-or-Late Class of Tight Ends With Some Development Options for the Patriots

Last draft cycle, the tight end position had two studs in Tyler Warren and Colston Loveland that headlined a top-heavy class. However, this draft is meatier in the middle with only one potential blue-chipper. Oregon’s Kenyon Sadiq is the prize of the tight end class. Although there are some buyer-beware elements to his production profile (1.72 YPPR in 2025), Sadiq has all the physical tools to blossom into a top tight end in the pros. He has a chiseled frame with an immediate burst to threaten vertically up the seams, win across the field, and is a capable blocker with room to grow technique-wise to become a difference-maker in the run game. In all likelihood, Sadiq will be drafted before the Patriots are on the clock.

From there, there’s a sizable gap between the top tight end prospect and the projected run of tight ends in the middle rounds. On our go-to consensus board, Sadiq is 19th overall and the next tight end prospect is Vanderbilt’s Eli Stowers at No. 66 overall. Still, that middle class will likely have a few hits, with yours truly’s eyes gravitating toward Georgia TE Oscar Delp. Delp has impressive fluidity and burst as a receiver and the size (6-5, 245) to develop as a blocker. With so many names in those middle rounds, the combine will help us stack this tight end class, which should see around 10 prospects go from picks 65-150.

6. Safety Question: Box Safety or Free Safety-Types (Thienemen vs. McNeil-Warren)

If the Patriots lose starting S Jaylinn Hawkins in free agency, safety becomes a more pressing need to fill the spot next to rookie standout Craig Woodson. The Pats also didn’t lean too much into dime (6 DBs) or three-safety packages last season, which are becoming more prevalent across the league. Many defenses are looking for versatile nickel-safeties who can cover the slot and take on strong-side run responsibilities vs. heavier personnel groupings (example: Seahawks S Nick Emmanwori).

Instead, the Pats played mostly three-corner nickel with NCB Marcus Jones, Hawkins, and Woodson. Furthermore, they transitioned away from their old hybrids, Kyle Dugger and Jabrill Peppers, in favor of better deep-coverage players in Hawkins and Woodson. That transition suggests that New England wants safeties who have split and post-safety range, can match routes from depth, fill the alleys as force defenders in run support, and occasionally blitz in simulated pressures.