Hartford Courant

Patriots: Draft-day QB plan news to them

- By Andrew Callahan

INDIANAPOL­IS — Two months out from the NFL Draft, the Patriots have reportedly decided how to address the quarterbac­k position.

According to Masslive, the Patriots plan to draft a quarterbac­k at No. 3 overall, likely LSU senior Jayden Daniels or North Carolina’s Drake Maye, and sign a veteran free agent who could start over him.

If so, that plan is news to multiple high-ranking personnel evaluators within the team.

According to sources, such a decision has not been communicat­ed throughout the Patriots’ front office. Director of scouting Eliot Wolf recently led pre-combine meetings where scouts deliberate­d drafting a quarterbac­k at No. 3, sources said. One front-office source views all three of the top quarterbac­ks in this year’s class, including projected No. 1 pick Caleb Williams, as worthy of the third pick.

This week, the Patriots arrived at the NFL combine with Wolf and head coach Jerod Mayo entrenched as their chief decision-makers. Mayo, in an interview with Masslive, said this week “there are about 10 scenarios that can actually happen,” with regard to the quarterbac­k position.

Several league sources believe the Patriots will ultimately take a quarterbac­k at No. 3 overall, which one front-office member admitted the team is aware of during the draft process. A veteran personnel executive who previously worked with Wolf told the Herald he would be “shocked” if the Patriots did not select a quarterbac­k, even though he doesn’t believe Williams,

Maye and Daniels are all worthy of a top-3 pick. The Patriots met with all three passers at the combine, as well as Michigan’s J.J. Mccarthy and Oregon senior Bo Nix, according to sources.

In free agency, the Patriots’ top options include Kirk Cousins, Baker Mayfield, Jacoby Brissett and Ryan Tannehill. Mayfield could be a fit in New England, given his Cleveland ties to Wolf, new offensive coordinato­r Alex Van Pelt and quarterbac­ks coach T.C. Mccartney. However, league sources expect Mayfield to return to Tampa Bay, provided his free-agent salary demands — which could exceed $40 million annually — don’t price the Buccaneers out.

Brissett, a 2016 Patriots draft pick, is the most logical fit among the free-agent options. He started 11 of 16 games for the Browns in 2022 and is well-regarded as a leader and teammate. Brissett appeared in three games last season with the Commanders, going 18-of23 for 224 yards, three touchdowns and zero intercepti­ons.

Offer made to Duggar:

The Patriots have an offer on the table to impending free-agent safety Kyle Dugger, a source confirmed to the Boston Herald.

Dugger is set to hit free agency when the new NFL league year starts on March 13 at 4 p.m. Other teams can begin engaging his agents in contract talks starting on March 11, when the league’s legal tampering period begins.

Dugger is one of the top free-agent safeties set to hit the open market. The transition tag would cost the Patriots nearly $14 million, while the franchise tag is just over $17 million.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States