The New England Patriots didn’t get around to filling a major need until the sixth round of the 2026 NFL Draft, but that delay may end up working out just fine if Namdi Obiazor keeps flashing the way he already has.
Taken with the 212th pick on Day 3, Obiazor arrives in New England with a profile that fits a rookie trying to carve out a role the hard way: production, speed and a lot of work on special teams. At TCU, he was a fixture in the defensive rotation, appearing in 53 games and piling up 302 total tackles, 8.5 sacks, three interceptions and six pass-breakups across 2,627 snaps.
The Patriots are betting that his motor will translate quickly. The 6-foot-3, 229-pound linebacker has already turned heads during May’s rookie camp and June’s mandatory minicamp, and his game is built around exactly the kind of traits that tend to pop early in the summer - pursuit speed, athleticism and effort.
That’s why there’s at least some belief he could push for a meaningful job sooner rather than later. As The Athletic’s Dane Brugler put it: “Obiazor has only average instincts versus both the run and pass, but his pursuit speed and compete skills lead to production,” wrote The Athletic’s Dane Brugler. “ He will have a chance to earn a backup and special teams role as a rookie.”
Training camp will tell the next part of the story, and the Patriots will be looking closely at how he handles both his versatility and his physical style. Though he’s listed as a linebacker, Obiazor also logged time at cornerback and safety in college, giving New England another layer to work with if it wants to move him around.
He also brings something many rookies don’t: a proven special teams background. Along with his work as a pass rusher at TCU, Obiazor was a regular on coverage units, lining up on 322 snaps in the kicking game over four seasons. Most of that came on kickoff and punt coverage, where he recorded 11 tackles and wasn’t charged with a miss.
That combination could be his ticket. If the Patriots find ways to use him in multiple spots, Obiazor has a real path to becoming one of the more useful surprises in this rookie class.
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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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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 🡒]
