FOXBOROUGH — The New England Patriots are not satisfied with just getting to the dance. Following a heartbreaking Super Bowl LX loss, Eliot Wolf and Mike Vrabel are reportedly looking to weaponize their draft capital. While the Patriots currently hold the 31st overall pick, league sources indicate a move into the mid-20s is on the table. The goal is simple: find a cornerstone offensive tackle to protect Drake Maye.
Maye finished his 2025 campaign with 4,394 passing yards and 31 touchdowns, but the underlying numbers tell a darker story. The second-year star was sacked 47 times during the regular season. In the Super Bowl, the pocket disintegrated too often, forcing Maye into survival mode rather than attack mode. To keep their franchise window open, New England must stop patching the line and start rebuilding it with elite talent.
Trading Up: The Hunt for a Franchise Tackle
ESPN’s Mike Reiss reports that the front office plans to explore moving around the board. New England owns eight Day 3 selections, including two fourth-round and four sixth-round picks. This stockpile is the perfect currency for a modest ascent. Moving from 31 to the 23-to-27 range would put the Patriots in striking distance for prospects like Alabama’s Kadyn Proctor or Georgia’s Monroe Freeling.
Standing pat at 31 is a gamble. At that point, the “blue-chip” tackles are usually gone, leaving teams to reach for interior depth or project players. If Wolf uses a fourth-rounder to jump six spots, he ensures Maye has a blindside protector for the next decade. This isn’t about depth; it’s about survival. The 2025 season proved that while Maye can produce under pressure, he shouldn’t have to. The stadium felt the collective gasp every time he took a hit last January. The front office cannot afford to let that continue.
- Trade Range: 23rd to 27th overall.
- Primary Assets: Pick 31 plus multiple Day 3 selections.
- Target Needs: Left Tackle, Edge Depth, Linebacker.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Patriots are no longer rebuilding; they are fine-tuning a contender. With Christian Gonzalez locking down the secondary and Maye ascending to a top-tier quarterback, the offensive line remains the final hurdle. Morgan Moses provided veteran stability last year, but at 35, he is a short-term fix. A successful trade-up for a tackle changes the math for the entire AFC East. If New England secures a high-ceiling blocker, the offense can expand its deep-passing concepts that were frequently cut short by pressure in 2025.
Expect Wolf to be active on the phones as the draft nears. The consensus among scouts is that this year’s Day 3 talent lacks the depth of the 2025 class. Trading volume for quality is the smartest play for a team that only needs two or three immediate starters to return to the Super Bowl. If they stay at 31 and draft a guard, it sends a message of caution. If they move up for a tackle, it sends a message that the Maye era is ready for total dominance.

