Browns DE Myles Garrett Praises Patriots Rookie Despite “Having Him Read” at Gillette — “He’ll Be the Future of New England”
FOXBOROUGH — After a 13–32 defeat at Gillette Stadium, Myles Garrett didn’t dwell on his sacks or pressures. Instead, he turned the spotlight on Patriots rookie left tackle Will Campbell. The Browns’ defensive superstar called Campbell “the future of New England,” emphasizing his refusal to quit.
Garrett truly dominated off the edge, repeatedly bending the corner and squeezing the angle so Campbell had to operate on a “short corner.” The Patriots tried to help with tight end chips, but Garrett still broke through, forcing New England to adjust its snap rhythm.
After the game, Garrett spoke candidly about their one-on-one battle: “He got beat by me — that’s true — but I genuinely see huge potential in him, a refusal to quit. He kept coming back and kept fighting; that’s why they won.”

The message was both praise and a real-world exam for Campbell — the No. 4 pick in the 2025 Draft — whom the Patriots selected to lock down elite edge rushers. At Gillette, he learned the hard way: reading hands, syncing footwork, and handling the speed-to-power of a DPOY-caliber force like Myles Garrett.
Tactically, New England gradually leaned into quick game, slide protection, and varied set points to soften Garrett’s rush angles. Campbell still lost a few sprints to the apex, but his biggest plus was the mental reset — returning for the next play without letting his technique unravel.
That mentality is what Garrett highlighted. He described Campbell as someone who “just kept coming back and fighting” every drive. For a rookie quarterback like Drake Maye, having an LT who absorbs lessons and makes corrections on the fly is a foundation for keeping the offense on schedule.
Campbell’s road ahead is packed with tests: rushers with deep toolkits, third-step burst, and compact bull rushes into the inside shoulder. But if he sustains the Gillette arc — take the hit, get up, correct the error — he has the makings of a blindside anchor, just as Garrett forecast.
In the postgame press room, Garrett’s closing line landed like a veteran’s benediction to a younger peer: “He’ll be the future of New England.” For the Patriots, hearing that from one of the league’s premier defenders — right after he “had you read” — is as good a sign as any for tomorrow.
CEO Robert Kraft with a Warm Gesture Defending Female Patriots Fans After Controversial Incident

Foxborough, Massachusetts – October 28, 2025
After the New England Patriots’ dominant 32–13 victory over the Cleveland Browns at Gillette Stadium, a video circulating on social media sent shockwaves through the NFL community. In the clip, a group of female Patriots fans wearing bikinis were seen dancing and cheering from the stands at the moment their team sealed the win. While many fans viewed this as a “spontanous burst of joy,” it also faced harsh criticism from some spectators who called it “lacking public decorum.”
Amid public pressure, many awaited a response from the Patriots’ leadership—and team owner Robert Kraft took an unexpected stance: standing up to defend the group of fans.
“I don’t see anything shameful in it at all. They love the team, they love this victory, and they expressed their genuine emotions. In a world where everything is scrutinized, sometimes we forget that football—ultimately—is about joy, connection, and freedom of spirit,” Kraft said during a brief press conference Monday morning.

His statement quickly spread across social media, garnering thousands of supportive comments. Many Patriots fans wrote: “Thank you Mr. Kraft, finally someone sees things with heart instead of judgment.”
One of the female fans featured in the video shared on X (Twitter): “We didn’t mean to offend. We were just so happy. When I heard Mr. Kraft speak, I started crying. I felt understood.”
Robert Kraft’s actions went beyond words. According to internal sources, he sent a personal thank-you letter to the group of fans, with the message: “The Patriots are more than just a team—they are a family. And in this family, no one is left behind just for expressing joy.”
In an era where judgment spreads faster than empathy, Robert Kraft’s message rings out as a simple reminder: sports are not just about winning or losing—but about emotion and humanity.

