Giardi: NFL Notebook - Review/Preview of tackle situation; plus, big trades pre-free agency taken at BSJ Headquarters (Patriots)

(Adam Richins for BSJ)


The NFL Notebook is chock full of intel this week, but as we are on the eve of free agency, we continue our roster review/free agent preview, turning our attention to the offensive tackle position. The Patriots got significantly better play from that group than the season prior, a combination of a talent upgrade (first and foremost) and an offensive coordinator who knows how to protect his quarterback (even if the QB still hasn’t fully figured out how to protect himself).

UNDER CONTRACT: Will Campbell, Morgan Moses, Marcus Bryant, Yasir Durant, Sebastian Gutierrez, Lorenz Metz

FREE AGENTS: Vederian Lowe, Thayer Mumford

First, let’s begin with the number four overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, Campbell. After a mostly solid regular season, he was the weak link in the postseason. I had him for 10 pressures surrendered in the Super Bowl, and while many of those came in pure pass sets with the Pats down in the 4th quarter, it wasn’t like he was a block of granite in the first three quarters either.

His performance had plenty of folks squawking about the less-than-desirable arm length (you know where I stand on this, and I won’t re-try my case). Might a positional change be in the offing?

“We’re not moving him to guard," Eliot Wolf said on The McShay Show from Indianapolis. "He’s a young guy that had a tremendous season. I would say three of his four worst games happened to come in the playoffs, post-injury. He was healthy, but I think he’d be the first to tell you that maybe he wasn’t able to anchor the same way he had with the knee injury.”

If I had my conspiracy hat, I’d point out that Wolf didn’t say anything about moving Campbell to right tackle, but quite frankly, though I did give it a thought, my belief all along has been that the former LSU standout was getting two seasons at the very least to prove he’s the left tackle. Not even his playoff performance changes that.

“I know everyone talks about the arm length, but he has a set of skills that enable him to play with that arm length,” added Wolf in a separate conversation with Boston media. “He’s really quick out of his stance. He’s technically sound. He’s adding more and more different pass sets to his tool bag that he can use to combat different rushes. And again, he’s 22 years old, and we expect some improvement out of him as well.”

Bottom line: Campbell better show that, and I believe he can if he improves his technique, which has drawn sharp critique from past and present NFL tackles (Joe Thomas, Andrew Whitworth, Terron Armstead, et al.), he can be a solid player at the position. Can he be the first guy with his arm length, wingspan, and hand size to do that in the last 26 years to become an All-Pro? That’s quite a projection, and a large hill to climb. Even harder with short arms (oh, come on! Just trying to have a little fun, folks).

Moses was better than could have been expected. He was coming off a pair of injury-plagued years in New York with the Jets, and the idea of him playing a full season seemed about as unlikely as cornerback Carlton Davis doing the same. And yet, both did. Bow down to the power of Vrabel and his strength and conditioning staff, I guess. They managed Moses from the very beginning, and only three offensive players recorded more than his 1,294 snaps (Onwenu, Bradbury, Maye). 

It wasn’t just the availability. Moses played at a consistently high level, and as the year went on, he and Onwenu became a powerful run-blocking duo that the Pats leaned on. But having just turned 35 (March 3), can Moses be depended on for another season like the last? Wolf mentioned his age at the combine. The Pats know they are on borrowed time at that spot, and with both Lowe and Mumford as backups, need to find a legit backup with starting potential in this offseason cycle.

Is Bryant that guy, you ask? He’s got great length and had a solid summer. But after being the swing tackle to start the season, he got bumped by Lowe’s return, and then became a healthy scratch with the addition of Mumford. I can’t accurately predict what Bryant is capable of because we just didn’t get enough evidence, and that he fell down the depth chart isn’t exactly a ringing endorsement for future success. This will be a big five or six months for him.

Meanwhile, as mentioned, Lowe and Mumford are free agents. Lowe actually did a nice job filling in for Campbell when he sprained the MCL. My guess is he earned himself a better check than what the Pats will be willing to spend, but who knows how the market will shake out?

As for Mumford, his previous experience with Josh McDaniels paid some dividends in New England, but I’m not sure I’d bet on him being any sort of long-term answer. Of course, I’ve been wrong before...

FREE AGENTS

I’d be surprised if the Pats spend real money on the position this month. More likely, the wannabe RT comes from the draft. But were Moses to audible and call it a career (they aren’t expecting that), I’ve carved out a list.

1. Jermaine Eluemunor (31 years old, NYG) - This isn’t revisionist history when I tell you I didn’t think the Pats should have let him walk after the 2020 season. I saw Eluemunor as an ascending player, and that’s what he’s proved over the last handful of years. He’s no longer that, but he has been consistently solid in New York after having career years in Vegas. Again, Eluemunor would only get a call if Moses were to leave. PFF projects him at $36 million ($22.5 mil guaranteed) over 3 years.

2. Jack Conklin (31 years old, Cleveland) - Once a great player, injuries have kept him off the field or lessened his impact. As of the writing of this piece, it’s not even known if Conklin wants to keep playing. But if he does, and the Pats want a veteran whose best is still better than most, why not make the call? The worst thing he can do is say no. Or hem and haw about his future, in which

 case, you probably have your answer. Conklin won’t cost much (think one year and around $3 to $4 million).

3. Trey Pipkins (30 years old, LAC) - He can play three positions (both tackle spots and right guard) and has really improved in pass pro. Another injury concern, but Pipkins has proven to be a decent starter at RT when healthy. His contract projections are all over the board. The guess here is two years and $12 million, but less than half of that guaranteed.

Others of note: Braxton Jones (26 years old, Chicago), Elijah Wilkerson (31 years old, Atlanta), Jamaree Salyer (26 years old, LAC), Jedrick Wills (26 years old, Cleveland, already been in for a visit).

BLOCKBUSTER

When I wrote about my roster review/free agent preview focusing on the cornerbacks, I wondered about the nuclear option: moving on from Christian Gonzalez. No, it was not my preferred approach, but the cornerback is eligible for an extension that will surely go north of the two highest-paid DBs in the game - Sauce Gardner and Derek Stingley. 

The Chiefs found themselves in a similar spot with Trent McDuffie, and instead of writing him a giant check, they picked up the red phone and flipped one of the best corners in football for cap freedom and a bounty of draft picks.

The Rams were all too willing to be on the receiving end of that call, and didn’t blink, surrendering a 2026 first (29th overall), a fifth, and a sixth rounder, plus a 2027 third rounder. Oh, and they’ll have to hand McDuffie a boatload of cash. No problem for LA GM Les Snead, who once again said: “eff them picks.” This is now the 9th time in 10 years the Rams have traded their first-rounder. 

Snead has a team in win-now mode, arguably the 2nd best in football a year ago. He’s got a 37-year-old quarterback who is going year to year, and there were rumblings from football people (as always, those who work for teams, not those that cover ‘em) that Sean McVey might be ready to step away post-Stafford. McDuffie gives the Rams a massive upgrade from what they were rolling out there.

Meanwhile, the Chiefs maximized McDuffie’s value and now have a pair of chips in round one (9th and 29th) as well as the 4th most draft capital of any team. This move looks and smells a lot like the Tyreek Hill-to-Miami deal of a few years ago. They didn’t want to give Hill what he was asking for, amassed a ton of picks, and were able to extend their dynastic run. Time will tell if this carries

the same weight.

DESPERATE TIMES 

The talk amongst the front-office types I spoke to over the last couple of weeks was that the

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