The Patriots spent the offseason trying to patch up an offensive line that needed real help, and the moves they made tell the story. After their showing against one of the league’s best defensive groups in Super Bowl LX, it was obvious they needed more depth and maybe even a different look up front.
That’s why they brought in Alijah Vera-Tucker, who is expected to start at left guard this season. That shift pushes Jared Wilson to center, the spot he handled in college, while the rest of the starting line stays the same.
Even with that reshuffling, there’s still uncertainty around Will Campbell’s long-term future at left tackle. With that in mind, the Patriots used their first-round pick this year on Caleb Lomu.
But Lomu’s path to playing time looks crowded. He’s projected as a backup swing tackle because Campbell is expected to stay on the left side and Morgan Moses is set at right tackle. That setup is what led Bleacher Report’s Moe Moton to give Lomu an ugly label before Week 1, calling him a bust.
That’s not the kind of word anyone in New England wants attached to a first-round pick, and it’s a worrying prediction. Still, Moton’s reasoning is rooted in the roster reality.
"So, if Campbell and right tackle Morgan Moses are healthy, Lomu won't see the field. He doesn't have notable experience at guard and didn't take reps on the interior during the spring.
Unless New England changes its tune about Campbell's status as a starter, Lomu will be a wasted pick for at least this year."
That’s the uncomfortable part for the Patriots: a first-rounder who may not get a starting chance right away. Lomu did impress during the spring, but the current setup leaves him without an obvious role.
The hope in New England is that Lomu eventually becomes more than just depth. There has already been talk about him replacing Moses after the upcoming season, which would give the Patriots long-term answers at both tackle spots. But taking a player in the first round who might not start until Year 2 is not usually the kind of return teams want from that draft slot.
Even so, Moton’s prediction seems aimed more at Lomu’s immediate outlook than his ceiling. If Campbell falters, Lomu could step in at left tackle.
If Campbell holds that job, Lomu could be Moses’ eventual successor. Either way, the Patriots would still be trying to solve a line that remains very much a work in progress.
In Other News...
Patriots Already See Something In This Rookie Corner Others Missed
Karon Prunty did not arrive in New England with the kind of draft buzz that usually follows a rookie corner, but the Patriots have seen enough in the spring to believe there is more here than his draft position suggested. Since rookie minicamp and OTAs, the 5th-round pick has drawn positive reviews for the traits that matter most to a young defensive back, especially his coverage ability and the way he has handled the learning curve.
The optimism around Prunty has also come from the people evaluating him every day, with the coaching staff and front office appearing to share the same view of him as a developmental piece worth patience. For now, the path is straightforward: help on special teams, earn trust in the secondary, and keep building toward a rotational role while the Patriots figure out just how quickly his game can translate. [Read more 🡒]
Patriots Scouting Report On Undrafted DT Travis Shaw And His Roster Fight
Travis Shaw arrived in Foxborough as one of the more intriguing developmental swings on the Patriots defensive line, a massive interior body who already stands out in a room that values size and length up front. The undrafted rookie out of North Carolina and Texas played in 50 college games, but his rsum is more about experience than production, which is part of what makes his early Patriots audition worth watching.
For New England, the appeal is obvious enough: Shaw gives the staff a different kind of presence to evaluate as the roster starts to take shape after the draft. The question is whether that frame and background can translate into enough disruption to keep him in the mix for a spot on the 53-man roster, especially with the competition at defensive tackle only getting tighter as camp approaches. [Read more 🡒]
