ClutchPoints
The New England Patriots had one of the quietest trade deadlines in recent memory, with general manager Eliot Wolf choosing to stand pat rather than make aggressive moves to bolster a defense that desperately needs reinforcement. While the front office’s restraint may have been calculated, the reality is that New England remains woefully underprepared at the edge rusher position heading into a critical stretch of the season. There is one move that could immediately address this glaring weakness: signing veteran defensive end DeMarcus Walker to provide depth, versatility, and experience.
Walker remains unsigned as of November 2025 after being released by the Chicago Bears in February, a shocking development for a player who started 34 consecutive games over the past two seasons. The Patriots have an opportunity to add a proven starter on a veteran-minimum deal, a move that could transform their defensive front and provide quarterback Drake Maye with the protection his development desperately requires. This is precisely the type of no-risk, high-reward signing the Patriots should pursue immediately.
New England’s defensive line has been a significant source of frustration through the season’s opening weeks. The Patriots yielded 389 yards of offense in their season opener against Las Vegas, with the Raiders’ offense operating with far too much comfort against a defensive line that failed to create consistent pressure. While Harold Landry showed promise with 2.5 sacks in his Patriots debut, the remainder of the edge rusher rotation failed to establish itself as a reliable pass rush threat.
The reality is that the Patriots need aggressive edge rushers capable of pressuring elite quarterbacks like Josh Allen, Patrick Mahomes, and Lamar Jackson if they hope to remain competitive in an increasingly difficult AFC East. The inactive trade deadline only reinforced the fact that New England must find solutions in free agency. Walker represents an immediate answer to a position group that desperately requires experienced depth.
Walker entered the 2025 offseason as a proven NFL veteran with significant starting experience. Over his past two seasons with the Chicago Bears, he started all 34 games, providing consistent snaps and reliability that the Patriots’ current edge rusher room lacks. While his sack production may not jump off the page—he recorded just 3.5 sacks in 2024—his overall contributions to run defense and pass rush disruption were substantial and consistently valuable.
One of the most under talked about crimes this coaching staff continues to commit is playing Demarcus Walker on the edge. He is a different player on the interior #Bears pic.twitter.com/AGWDEST7mQ
— Bears Blog Boy (@TommyK_NFLDraft) November 22, 2023
The veteran defender logged 47 combined tackles, 23 QB pressures, and 16 quarterback hits during his final season with Chicago. These numbers reflect a player still performing at a legitimate NFL starter level, not a declining veteran simply looking to extend his career. The fact that Walker remains unsigned well into November speaks more to the timing...