Christian Barmore missed most of last season with recurring symptoms from blood clots, but he’s expected to be a full participant at Patriots practices. Mike Vrabel told reporters (including ESPN’s Mike Reiss) that Barmore has been given clearance to participate in the team’s voluntary offseason program, which started today.
“He popped in the other day to see the doctors. When he walked into the training room, just his energy and presence, so I know that he’s feeling better,” Vrabel said last week (via Reiss).
“We’ll continue to evaluate him. It’s something very serious. We take the health of our players extremely serious, especially when you’re talking about something like blood clots, and we’re going to have a great plan for him.”
Barmore inked a four-year, $92MM deal ($41.8MM guaranteed) last offseason, but he proceeded to miss the first 10 games of the season after being diagnosed with blood clots. He returned for four games late in the year, but he subsequently landed on the non-football illness list after experiencing recurring symptoms.
Fortunately, it sounds like Barmore will be able to resume his NFL career in 2025. The defensive lineman had a breakout season when he was last healthy in 2023, compiling 8.5 sacks and 13 tackles for loss. The Patriots will presumably pencil Barmore in next to free agent acquisition Milton Williams on the defensive line.
More notes out of New England…
- The Patriots have made plenty of additions to their roster this offseason, but the team is still searching for help at certain positions. Tom E. Curran of NBC Sports Boston expects the team to make an addition to their running backs corps, a group that currently consists of Rhamondre Stevenson and Antonio Gibson. Doug Kyed of the Boston Herald notes that Vrabel has also expressed interest in adding to the position via the draft, while ESPN’s Mike Reiss wonders if the team could eye a versatile, pass-catching RB that resembles former Patriots mainstays like Kevin Faulk, James White, and Danny Woodhead.
- Former offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt only lasted one season in New England, and the organization’s decision to change coaching staffs will cost a pretty penny. According to Ben Volin of the Boston Globe, the Patriots still owe Van Pelt a little under $6MM over the next two years. Many of the other departed coaches on Jerod Mayo‘s staff still had one year remaining on their contracts.
- The timing of the recent Joe Milton trade was plenty deliberate by the Patriots. According to Reiss, the organization wanted to deal the quarterback before the start of the team’s voluntary offseason program. Specifically, Vrabel believes this is an important date for “establishing team culture and the dynamic that ideally unfolds within each position group”…a pretty clear hint that the team wanted to avoid any type of QB controversy, no matter how unlikely. The Patriots dealt the 2024 r0okie for a fifth-round selection, leaving Joshua Dobbs as the clear backup to hopeful franchise QB Drake Maye.
Pats D could be nasty this year!
If trading Milton was Vrabel’s decision, then fine. But don’t tell me in the next breath that there will be a competition for every position.