Let’s be honest. Watching the Patriots’ pass rush last season was the football equivalent of trying to open a pickle jar with wet hands. A lot of effort, very little to show for it. New England finished tied for 26th in the NFL with just 35 sacks, and if you watched that Super Bowl LX beatdown at the hands of the Seattle Seahawks, you saw a pass rush that could barely lay a finger on Sam Darnold. One sack. One. In the Super Bowl.
So when word dropped that the Patriots had agreed to a three-year, $39.5 million deal with pass rusher Dre’Mont Jones, let’s just say the collective exhale from Patriots Nation was loud enough to rattle the Gillette Stadium rafters.
Who Is Dre’Mont Jones?
If you’re not familiar with Jones, allow me to introduce you to the newest reason for opposing quarterbacks to lose sleep.
Jones, 29, is a 6-foot-3, 281-pound defensive end/tackle hybrid who entered the NFL as a third-round pick for the Denver Broncos back in 2019. He came in as a 3-technique, the same role he played at Ohio State, before eventually working his way out to the edge, where his size and athleticism could do the most damage at the pro level.
Over seven NFL seasons with the Broncos, Seattle Seahawks, Tennessee Titans, and Baltimore Ravens, Jones has racked up 253 tackles, 37.5 sacks, 87 quarterback hits, and three forced fumbles. Those aren’t Hall of Fame numbers, but they’re the kind of numbers that make offensive coordinators circle a player’s name on a scouting report and write “DO NOT IGNORE” next to it.
Jones Just Had the Best Season of His Career
Here’s the part that should really excite Patriots fans: Jones is not a player on the decline. He’s trending in the right direction.
According to Pro Football Focus, Jones posted a career-high 51 total pressures in 2025. He also set career highs with seven sacks and 24 quarterback hits across two teams, the Titans and Ravens. When the Ravens picked him up mid-season from Tennessee for a measly conditional fifth-round pick, he brought something Baltimore desperately needed: relentlessness. His pressure rate of 11.4% led the entire Ravens defense over that stretch. That’s not a fluke, that’s a player who has figured something out.
The fact that he accomplished all of this bouncing between two teams mid-season makes it even more impressive. Give the man a full offseason, a proper training camp, and a consistent role in a defense? Things could get interesting very quickly in Foxborough.
What This Means for New England’s Defense
The Patriots needed this. Badly.
Harold Landry is a solid edge rusher, but he’s coming off a knee injury that slowed him down the stretch. Behind him? The depth chart is more of a polite suggestion than an actual plan. Anfernee Jennings, Elijah Ponder, Bradyn Swinson, and Jesse Luketa are names that inspire confidence in approximately zero opposing offensive linemen.
Jones changes that equation. At 281 pounds, he’s immediately the biggest edge rusher on the roster, and his ability to slide inside to 3-technique gives defensive coordinator Patrick Graham genuine flexibility in how he builds his packages. One play, he’s rushing the passer off the edge; the next, he’s collapsing the pocket from the inside. Quarterbacks hate that. They really, really hate that.
The K’Lavon Chaisson Question
There’s a wrinkle to this signing worth paying attention to. K’Lavon Chaisson, who has quietly become one of the team’s emotional leaders and a postseason performer of note with three sacks, nine QB hits, one forced fumble, and 10 pressures in three playoff appearances, is set to hit free agency. Jones’ arrival puts Chaisson’s return in genuine doubt.
That’s a tough call. Chaisson has given the Patriots more than just production; he’s given them personality. Those things don’t show up in the box score, and they’re harder to replace than people realize.
The Bottom Line on the Dre’Mont Jones Signing
New England entered this offseason with a clear message: the Super Bowl loss to Seattle stung, and it would not be allowed to happen again without a fight. Signing Dre’Mont Jones won’t fix everything. The Patriots still have questions to answer across the roster, but it’s a statement.
It says the front office watched that pass rush get neutered in the Super Bowl and decided, loudly and clearly, that next year will look different. For $39.5 million over three years, with $14.5 million due in the first year, the Patriots have added the kind of disruptive, versatile, high-pressure defender that contending teams are built around.
Patriots fans deserve to feel good about this one. Let it breathe. Just don’t get too comfortable; free agency is only getting started.
