
New England Patriots safety Craig Woodson is no longer flying under the radar after earning “best-kept secret” recognition following a breakout rookie season that quietly reshaped the team’s defense.
While Drake Maye dominated headlines during New England’s transition season, Woodson emerged as one of the Patriots’ most important defensive building blocks, and one league observers may have badly overlooked.
The “best-kept secret” designation came Monday from Bleacher Report‘s Brent Sobleski, who named Woodson New England’s most underappreciated player heading into 2026 OTAs.
While Maye’s emergence consumed the national conversation out of Foxborough, Woodson was logging 93% of New England’s defensive snaps, more than any other player on the roster, and delivering production the organization had no right to expect from the No. 106 overall pick.
The Patriots grabbed Woodson out of the University of California, where coaches had given him a nickname that turned out to be prophetic: “The Eraser.” Former Cal defensive backs coach Tre Watson told ESPN that Woodson was always the player “adjusting and cleaning up everything for us,” sealing off the deep middle and fixing broken assignments before they became big plays. That instinct translated quickly to Foxborough.
Woodson Dominated in Patriots’ Playoff Run
In the regular season, Woodson started 15 of 17 games and posted 79 combined tackles with four tackles for loss. Veteran safety Jabrill Peppers saw it early.
“Smart. Savvy,” Peppers told ESPN‘s Mike Reiss. “He’s doing a great job soaking up what the coaches want him to do.”
When the postseason arrived, Woodson made the leap from overlooked to unmistakable. Thomas Valentine of Pro Football Focus named him to the 2025 All-Playoff Team, crediting an 84.3 PFF grade that tied for the best among all safeties in the postseason. His 91.2 PFF run-defense grade led the position outright. His 29 total tackles were the most of any safety in the playoffs. He allowed just four catches on 14 targets for 28 yards in coverage, adding an interception and two pass breakups.
Craig Woodson’s Role Set to Expand With New England Patriots in 2026
The four-game postseason run stretched all the way to Super Bowl LX and earned Woodson a $1.14 million NFL Performance-Based Pay bonus, as reported by Reiss.
Now entering his second season, Woodson will line up alongside free agent addition Kevin Byard, a veteran with 10 NFL seasons who has already flagged his new teammate as someone special.
“A very smart — he’s a mature guy as well,” Byard said, as quoted by Yahoo Sports. “I know he’s only in his second year. He seems very mature how he goes about his business.”
That maturity traces back to six years at Cal, where Woodson recovered from a torn ACL, rebuilt his game and emerged as a full-time starter. He arrived in New England already developed mentally in ways most fourth-round rookies never are. With Byard beside him and a Super Bowl run on his résumé, Woodson heads into 2026 OTAs as exactly the kind of player Bleacher Report says he is — one the rest of the league is only now starting to take seriously.



Patriots Safety Called Team’s ‘Best-Kept Secret’ After Playoffs Breakout