Travis Shaw walks into Patriots training camp with a frame that jumps off the page before he ever takes a snap. At 6-foot-5 and 335 pounds, he is the heaviest defender on a roster that already has plenty of mass up front, and that sheer size is a big part of why the undrafted rookie has a real path to hanging around into the regular season.
New England currently has 91 players on its roster, including 24 listed at 300 pounds or more. Seven of those are defensive linemen, and Shaw stands out even in that crowd. He wears No. 62, turns 22 on Dec. 1, 2003, and brings a testing profile that matches the eye test: 9 3/8-inch hands, 33 1/8-inch arms, an 80-inch wingspan, a 5.28-second 40-yard dash, an 8.15-second 3-cone drill, a 5.08-second short shuttle, a 26 1/2-inch vertical, an 8-foot-3 broad jump and a 3.19 Relative Athletic Score.
That kind of build made Shaw a major name in recruiting. He was a five-star prospect and a top-five high school player in the country at Grimsley High in Greensboro, N.C., and he drew more than a dozen scholarship offers, including from Alabama, Clemson and USC. He stayed close to home and signed with North Carolina.
His college career never matched the early buzz. Shaw played three seasons for the Tar Heels, appearing in 37 games without a start and finishing with 55 tackles and two fumble recoveries.
Before Bill Belichick arrived at North Carolina, he entered the transfer portal and headed to Texas as a four-star transfer. He spent one season with the Longhorns, played in 13 more games and picked up the first start of his career.
Even with that pedigree, Shaw went unselected in the 2026 NFL Draft. The Patriots brought him in after a successful rookie minicamp workout, and now he’s trying to turn rare size into a roster spot.
The appeal is obvious. Shaw can eat space, take on double teams and hold his ground as a run defender in a two-gap look.
His length helps him strike first and keep ball carriers from slipping away once he’s engaged. He’s also capable of pushing the pocket from the middle when he’s left one-on-one, and for a man his size, he moves better than you’d expect laterally and in pursuit.
The concerns are just as clear. Shaw never became the pass rusher many expected when he was coming out of high school.
In college, he produced only eight pressures on 402 pass-rush snaps, a 2.0% rate, and he never recorded a sack. His rush package is basic, and he leans on power more than craft.
Pad level and balance can drift, his burst is not a calling card, and at 335 pounds, conditioning is part of the evaluation too.
His 2025 season at Texas reflected that same limited profile. Shaw played 13 games with one start, logged 184 defensive snaps and one special teams snap, and finished with 13 tackles, one tackle for loss, one quarterback pressure and no penalties.
He did not miss a tackle. He was used mostly as a part-time interior lineman and ranked fifth among Texas interior defenders in snaps.
The Longhorns did not get much pass-rush impact from him, and he went tackle-less in six of the 13 games.
That year in Austin did not change the overall picture much. Shaw arrived at North Carolina with first-round talk attached to his name, but three uneven seasons there and a quiet finish at Texas left him far from that kind of projection.
For the Patriots, the opening is at nose tackle after Khyiris Tonga left for Kansas City in free agency. Shaw fits that spot on paper. He is a big-bodied control player best suited to early downs and some short-yardage work, and physically he is the closest thing New England has to Tonga.
The upside is limited by what he has shown so far. Shaw was a slow developer in college, and there is not much evidence that a major leap is coming now that he is in the NFL.
His size is unusual, but the technical foundation is still thin and the athletic ceiling is only so high against pro competition. The best-case outcome looks a lot like a Tonga-type role as a starting nose tackle.
He did line up at multiple techniques in college, but he is not a particularly versatile player. That does not rule him out, though it does narrow how the Patriots can use him.
From a roster standpoint, Shaw is on a three-year UDFA deal with a $885,000 base salary in 2026. Because that number is not high enough to count toward Top 51 status and the contract has no guarantees, he currently carries a net cap hit of $0 for New England. That would change if he makes the roster or practice squad after camp.
He is still an undrafted free agent trying to claw his way up the depth chart, but his profile is different enough to matter. The Patriots have nine interior linemen on the roster, and only three spots currently look occupied. That gives Shaw a lane.
The comparison to Tonga is going to follow him all summer, and it makes sense. Shaw has the same kind of body type and the same kind of early-down utility. Making the 53-man roster is still a climb, but if he gets quality reps throughout camp and preseason, he has a real chance to push for a spot on the team or, more realistically, the practice squad.
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