The NFL’s latest offseason poll left out one of the Patriots’ most important players, and it’s the kind of omission that only adds to the strange way New England’s 2025 season keeps getting treated.
Mike Onwenu didn’t receive a single vote in ESPN’s annual ranking of interior offensive linemen, according to the findings Jeremy Fowler has been rolling out. That’s a sharp miss for a player who was central to the Patriots’ run and, in many ways, easy to overlook if you weren’t watching closely.
Onwenu’s value showed up in the details. He allowed a 3.24% pressure rate in 2025, which ranked second among right guards and eighth among guards overall. He also gave up six pressures in four playoff games and was the only real bright spot on a Patriots offensive line that struggled through that stretch.
The Patriots’ line problems were obvious during the postseason, especially on the left side, where teams kept attacking rookies Will Campbell and Jared Wilson. New England’s undersized center, Garrett Bradbury, was also a target. That made the team’s offseason moves easy to read: Bradbury was traded to the Chicago Bears, Wilson was moved to center, Alijah Vera-Tucker was signed to stabilize left guard, and Caleb Lomu was drafted in the first round to add help and competition at left tackle.
Onwenu, meanwhile, was the lineman the Patriots clearly wanted to keep. His contract had made him a cut candidate, with a $25 million cap hit and no guaranteed money left for 2026. Instead, New England reworked the deal into a one-year contract worth $10 million with $8.95 million in guarantees.
That new structure came with a pay cut for Onwenu, who was set to make about $16 million in cash this year. But the guarantees kept him on the roster and prevented him from reaching free agency.
The numbers back up why the Patriots made that choice. Per Pro Football Focus, Onwenu gave up just one sack over the final 11 games of the season, including the playoffs, and only one QB hit in that span.
He was also New England’s top pass protector overall and finished second on the team in run-blocking grade, behind only Morgan Moses. On top of that, he led the Patriots with 1,344 offensive snaps.
No one is calling Onwenu one of the 10 best guards in football. But not getting a single vote at all? That’s the latest sign that the league still isn’t giving the Patriots’ 2025 season - or one of its most valuable players - the respect it deserves.
In Other News...
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Newly filed court documents add another layer to the case, with Diggs seeking records tied to that trip and Griffiths side saying those materials are already in Diggs possession. Still, reports say at least five teams have checked in on the free agent, a reminder that for all the legal noise, clubs are at least doing their due diligence as they weigh whether to move forward. [Read more 🡒]
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Obiazors appeal goes beyond one position. He brought special teams experience from college and showed enough versatility there to keep himself in the conversation for a backup job and a role on kicking units, which is often the fastest path for late-round rookies to stick. The next step is turning that early buzz into something more concrete once the roster battles get real. [Read more 🡒]
Patriots Fans Can Finally Dream On A Real Tight End Splash
The Patriots have spent enough time searching for a true difference-making tight end that any serious trade idea is bound to get attention, and this one at least has the kind of upside that would make the conversation worth having. The proposed framework around Arizona is built on the same basic logic that tends to drive these kinds of deals: New England would be chasing a player who can change the middle of the field, while the Cardinals would be weighing the value of draft capital, cap flexibility and a chance to reshape parts of their roster.
The appeal is obvious from the Patriots side because the tight end in question has already produced at an elite level, putting up a record-setting season that included 126 catches, 11 touchdowns and 1,239 yards. Still, this remains a hypothetical, not a completed move, and the real question is whether New England would be willing to pay the kind of price that could make Arizona listen, or whether this stays in the category of the splash fans can dream on for now. [Read more 🡒]
