FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The New England Patriots sit at No. 31 overall with the 2026 NFL Draft less than two weeks away, and the message from every major mock draft rings loud: protect Drake Maye. Peter Schrager’s latest ESPN projection sends Georgia Tech guard/center Keylan Rutledge to Foxborough at 31, a pick that addresses the protection gaps exposed in the Super Bowl run even if some scouts call it a slight reach.
OL and Trenches Dominate Projections as Patriots Eye Maye’s Future
The Pats added guard Alijah Vera-Tucker and wide receiver Romeo Doubs in free agency, but those moves didn’t close the book on the offensive line. Schrager points straight to the tape: Rutledge allowed just two sacks across 43 career starts. He dominated at the Senior Bowl and answered athletic questions at the Combine. Teams see him as a Day 1 or Day 2 talent, yet the fit in New England clicks because this roster already reached the Super Bowl. They don’t need flash. They need guys who win in the trenches.
Rutledge brings interior versatility. He can slide to guard or center and step in right away. You could almost feel the collective sigh of relief from the coaching staff if he lands here. Mike Vrabel has hammered home the need for stronger fronts all spring. The chilly New England winds won’t matter when the pocket stays clean for Maye in his third year.
Other mocks paint the same picture with different brushes. Tim Crean at ClutchPoints likes Arizona State tackle Max Iheanachor at 31, pushing for long-term left tackle stability and potentially sliding Will Campbell inside. Pete Prisco of CBS Sports goes EDGE with Missouri’s Zion Young, citing the persistent pass-rush hole even after recent defensive tweaks. Daniel Jeremiah at NFL.com slots Ohio State defensive tackle Kayden McDonald in the middle, a run-stuffing force that lets the edges fly free. And The Ringer’s Danny Kelly keeps the skill-position door open with Texas A&M wideout KC Concepcion, a quick route-runner and YAC machine who gives Maye another weapon outside or in the slot.
Mike Reiss reported the Patriots will explore trading up, armed with eight Day 3 picks including two fourths and four sixths. This year’s late rounds look weaker than last, so moving around makes sense if a target slides. The mock draft market keeps circling back to the same theme: fortify the line of scrimmage.
“This might not be the same level of surprise as the Patriots’ Cole Strange pick was a few years back, but I haven’t seen anyone put Rutledge in Round 1 yet. It could happen. In talking to teams over the past few weeks, Rutledge is viewed as a Day 1 or Day 2 prospect. He allowed just two sacks over 43 career starts. At this point, the Patriots need to protect Drake Maye, and even if it’s viewed as a reach on draft day, this could be the guy to get the job done.” — Peter Schrager, ESPN
What It Means for 2026 and Beyond
New England enters the draft with 11 total picks and a clear mandate from Vrabel: build a front that controls games. The Super Bowl spotlight showed exactly where Maye took extra hits. Drafting Rutledge or a similar trench warrior gives the young quarterback a clean pocket and buys time for the rest of the offense to develop. Trade-up scenarios could land them even higher on an elite tackle or edge rusher if the board falls right.
Fans packing Gillette Stadium next season won’t remember the mock draft debates. They’ll remember when the pocket holds and Maye rips one downfield. The pre-draft cycle has clarified one thing: the Patriots aren’t chasing highlights. They’re chasing wins in the dirt, where games are really decided.

