FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — They said his knee was a ticking time bomb. They said a 31-year-old receiver couldn’t rebound from a Week 8 ACL tear and be ready for Training Camp. Stefon Diggs didn’t just return; he rewrote the timeline.
The NFL officially named the Patriots receiver a finalist for the 2025 AP Comeback Player of the Year award tonight, cementing one of the most improbable individual seasons in franchise history. Diggs finished the regular season with 85 receptions, 1,013 yards, and 4 touchdowns, acting as the primary safety valve for MVP-candidate Drake Maye during New England’s stunning 14-3 run.
This wasn’t the volume-heavy Diggs of his Buffalo days. This was a surgical precision tool. After signing a three-year deal in free agency, Diggs wasted no time.
- Availability: Started all 17 games (0 missed despite the 9-month recovery window).
- The 1K Mark: Crossed the 1,000-yard threshold in Week 17 vs. the Jets, becoming the first Patriot to do so since the Julian Edelman era.
- Reliability: Dropped only 2 passes on 100 targets.
The veteran beat out a crowded field of comeback candidates, including Christian McCaffrey and Dak Prescott, but his 9-month return-to-play timeline sets him apart. Most receivers take 12 months to regain explosiveness; Diggs was burning corners in August.
“I remember looking at the calendar in the hospital bed in Houston thinking, ‘I’m playing Week 1.’ People laughed. Nobody’s laughing now. This 1K isn’t for me—it’s for everyone who helped me learn how to walk again.” — Stefon Diggs, Patriots WR
“He’s the heartbeat. When things got shaky in the pocket, I knew #8 was going to be exactly where he needed to be. He taught me how to be a pro.” — Drake Maye, Patriots QB (MVP Finalist)
The timing of this announcement adds fuel to the fire ahead of Sunday’s AFC Championship Game against the Denver Broncos. While the award is a nice individual accolade, Diggs’ immediate value is tactical. The Broncos boast the league’s top-ranked secondary, led by Pat Surtain II.
New England’s offense has evolved. Early in the season, they relied on rookie sensation TreVeyon Henderson (Offensive Rookie of the Year finalist) to move the chains. But down the stretch, Coach Mike Vrabel put the ball in the air. Diggs has averaged 14.6 yards per catch over the last month. If the Patriots want to punch their ticket to the Super Bowl, they don’t need Diggs to be a decoy—they need him to be the alpha one more time.

