FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The confetti at Levi’s Stadium was blue and green, not red, white, and blue. That image is burned into the retinas of New England fans after Sunday’s gut-wrenching 24-17 loss to the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl LX. But in the NFL, mourning periods are luxuries no one can afford. The 2026 Scouting Combine kicks off in Indianapolis in just ten days.
New England holds the No. 31 overall pick. It’s a bittersweet draft slot—a badge of honor for a fantastic season, yet a reminder of the one game they didn’t win. Head Coach Mike Vrabel made it clear in his exit interview: the team isn’t rebuilding, it’s reloading. But after watching Drake Maye hit the turf six times on Sunday, the mission is obvious. The Patriots need protection, and they need it now.
The Trenches: Fixing the Super Bowl Collapse
The Seahawks’ front four turned the Super Bowl into a track meet, bypassing New England’s tackles with alarming ease. If Maye is going to survive the AFC East gauntlet in 2026, the offensive line room needs a massive injection of talent.
Monroe Freeling (Georgia, OT)
You can’t teach 6-foot-7 with nimble feet. Freeling anchored a Georgia line that dominated the SEC, showing the kind of lateral quickness New England desperately lacked against Seattle’s speed rushers. He isn’t just a wall; he’s a gladiator who gets out in space. Scouts love his “first-phase positioning”—fancy talk for he beats the defender to the spot every time. If he falls to 31, the card should be turned in within seconds.
Gennings Dunker (Iowa, Guard/Tackle)
Here is your fan favorite waiting to happen. Dunker is a farm-strength mauler who literally won hay bale tossing competitions back in Iowa. He plays like it. He doesn’t just block people; he displaces them against their will. While some pundits see him kicking inside to guard at the pro level, his aggressive finish is exactly the nastiness this line missed in the fourth quarter on Sunday.
The Pass Rush: Finding the Finisher
New England’s defense held its own for three quarters, but when they needed a sack to kill Seattle’s final drive, the tank was empty. Ranking 19th in pass rush win rate simply won’t cut it against the league’s elite quarterbacks.
Cashius Howell (Texas A&M, Edge)
Howell is a problem. The Texas A&M transfer brings exceptional bend—the ability to dip his shoulder and turn the corner at an acute angle without losing speed. Quarterbacks hate him because he shrinks the pocket instantly. He isn’t the biggest end in the draft, but his sack production in the SEC speaks for itself. He is the spark plug this unit lacks.
R Mason Thomas (Oklahoma, Edge)
Speed kills, and Thomas has it in spades. He is a “twitched-up” rusher who explodes off the snap. Think of him as a heat-seeking missile for the backfield. He has added necessary mass during his time in Norman, transforming from a pure speed rusher into a more complete defensive end who can chase down plays from the backside.
T.J. Parker (Clemson, Edge)
If you want consistency, you look at Parker. He posted 11 sacks and forced six fumbles in 2024, proving he can change games single-handedly. He sets a firm edge against the run—something Bill Belichick always prioritized and Vrabel clearly values too. Parker plays with “league length,” meaning his arms are long enough to keep tackles off his chest and bat down passes.
“We watched the film. It hurt. It should hurt. But we aren’t burning the house down because of one bad night. We’re going to Indy, we’re finding guys who love football, and we’re coming back for that trophy.” — Mike Vrabel, Patriots Head Coach, Tuesday Press Conference
NHANFL Verdict: What Happens at No. 31?
Expect the Patriots to draft for the trenches. The Super Bowl exposed a fatal flaw in pass protection that simply cannot be ignored. While a flashy receiver might tempt the front office, the smart money says New England selects Monroe Freeling or the best available tackle to ensure Drake Maye stays upright in 2026. The road to Super Bowl LXI starts in the weight room, but it gets paved in the draft room.

