Patriots Legend Just Said What AFC East Fans Feared About Drake Maye

Amid rising expectations and an impending challenge from a daunting schedule, the Patriots' renewed optimism under young QB Drake Maye has their AFC East foes on high alert.

The buzz around Drake Maye has only grown louder this offseason, and one of the Patriots’ most respected voices just turned that volume up another notch.

Matthew Slater, the longtime New England standout, said on 98.5 The Sports Hub that he believes Maye’s ceiling is practically impossible to pin down after the quarterback’s first year working with Josh McDaniels. Slater made it clear he’s speaking with a Patriots lens, but he also left little doubt about how highly he views the 23-year-old.

“Look, I'm extremely biased because I think Drake is a great young man and obviously he's a special player, but you know, I think you can't really put a ceiling on what they can accomplish with him. You know, I think last year he looked really comfortable in Josh's system, and as he continues to get acclimated and has more command over the offense, the sky is the limit.

He's such a unique talent in this league, and it's certainly an exciting time for the team. You can really feel the buzz, but you saw it last year like this kid is going to be a special, special player.”

That kind of praise lands differently when it comes from a Patriots legend, especially with New England’s optimism already running hot after Maye helped push the team to the Super Bowl this past year. The finish wasn’t perfect, but the rise was impossible to miss. A 23-year-old quarterback taking a 4-13 team all the way to the Championship is the kind of leap that changes how a franchise gets talked about.

The expectations for 2026 haven’t softened either, even with a tougher schedule on the way. If anything, the confidence around Maye seems to be spreading beyond Foxborough. That’s bad news for AFC East rivals, who have watched the Patriots sit near the bottom of the NFL since Tom Brady left in 2020.

Maye’s rookie season did more than hint at upside. He came within one vote of winning MVP, finishing just behind 17-year veteran Matthew Stafford. That performance only sharpened the belief that New England has finally found the quarterback who can put the franchise back in the hunt at the top of the league.

And now the setup around him looks stronger too. McDaniels is back to guide the offense, the line is expected to be better, and the receiving group has added A.J.

Brown and Romeo Doubs. With that kind of support, the range of what Maye could do this fall is enough to make rival teams uneasy.

For now, the message is clear: the Patriots think they have something special, and Slater’s latest comments only poured more fuel on that idea.

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