The first of this year’s tackles chosen now has a contract. The Patriots and Will Campbell agreed to terms on his four-year rookie deal, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport tweets.
Chosen fourth overall, Campbell will be attached to a lofty fully guaranteed pact ($43.66MM). New England will have a fifth-year option on this contract, covering the 2029 season. This deal leaves Travis Hunter as the only top-10 pick unsigned.
The full guarantee on Campbell’s contract already ranks fifth among LTs, trailing only Andrew Thomas, Laremy Tunsil, Ronnie Stanley and Christian Darrisaw. Campbell’s No. 4 draft position this year calls for a substantially higher number than last year’s No. 4 choice (Marvin Harrison Jr.) received — at $35.37MM. The player Campbell has vowed to protect, 2024 No. 3 overall choice Drake Maye, will also see his LT’s terms outdistance his considerably. Maye is tied to a four-year, $36.64MM accord.
Although Cam Ward‘s No. 1 draft slot has not caught up with the monster payments the pre-rookie-scale era brought No. 1 QB choices, Campbell’s AAV and full guarantee have passed the final pre-rookie-scale No. 4 draftee (Trent Williams). The future Hall of Famer signed a six-year, $60MM Washington deal in 2010; that pact came with $26.38MM fully guaranteed. Campbell is the first rookie-deal O-lineman to surpass those terms in the rookie-scale era.
Moving beyond financials, the Patriots will have Campbell (barring injury) in their Week 1 lineup at left tackle. This comes after an ill-fated 2024 plan backfired, as a handful of options — free agent signings, low-end trade acquisitions and a waiver claim — took turns at the marquee O-line spot. The first of those options (Chukwuma Okorafor) left the team after one game. The Pats regrouped at tackle in Mike Vrabel‘s first offseason in charge, adding Morgan Moses to man the right side and targeting Campbell in Round 1. Although the Pats pursued Dan Moore Jr. and Cam Robinson for the blind side, Campbell and Moses will give Maye a better tackle setup compared to the makeshift configuration 2024 brought.
A consensus All-American at LSU, Campbell certainly performed like an elite LT in college. He still carried question marks heading into the draft. Specifically, scouts often criticized his lack of arm length. Campbell’s arm length measured 32.68 inches at the Combine, which falls short of the 33-inch point teams target with tackles. Oddly, Campbell then measured an even 33 inches at LSU’s pro day. Regardless of Campbell’s arm length, the Patriots were linked to the elite SEC blocker for months.
The Patriots have been unable to find a steady LT option since Nate Solder‘s lengthy tenure. Solder, who had succeeded long-running Tom Brady blind-sider Matt Light, left for a monster Giants contract in 2018. New England did well to land Trent Brown in a pick-swap trade with San Francisco that year, but its first-round pick that weekend — Isaiah Wynn — did not establish himself as a long-term option there. The Vrabel-Eliot Wolf pair will hope Campbell can do so, as his performance will be central to Maye’s development.
Bad pick. All sports sites were not sure if he’s a guard or tackle. Not top 5 talent w/o a true position.
Way too early to tell. Are those the same sites that chose trubisky over mahomes?
I hope the guy works out, but it was non-stop ‘is he a guard or a tackle…?’ debate. Being an O lineman, he’ll most likely play all 5 positions through his career.
If he turns out to be a great T or great G, I’d take that!
I’ve found very few sports sites have a clue about how offensive linemen will work out.
This is the guy that impressed me most on draft night. No “look at me, ain’t I great” hot dogging. He understood what a privilege it is to be selected as a first round choice and choked back some emotion of how blessed he was to have such a great opportunity. I hope he can maintain that attitude and not become disillusioned as is often the case with rookies. Now it’s up to the Patriots to help him reach his full potential. I hope they succeed.
He does grow on you.
I loved his comment “If you dont like violence, the offensive and defensive lines are probably not for you…”
I am paraphrasing but I love the comment.