Patriots Address Key Roster Need With Sudden Peter Manuma Signing

New England Patriots signing Peter Manuma celebrates on the field.
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Peter Manuma impressed at Patriots rookie minicamp, leading to a sudden signing as New England addresses a key defensive back need.

The Patriots signed UDFA defensive back Peter Manuma after a standout rookie minicamp tryout revealed an emerging secondary depth opportunity. The sudden signing was first reported by Doug Kyed of the Boston Herald.

New England signed only one rookie minicamp tryout player despite evaluating 17 participants over the weekend. Manuma’s rapid rise from rookie minicamp tryout player to defensive back with a pro contract could become one of New England’s more intriguing under-the-radar offseason developments. The Hawaii product reportedly impressed coaches with his movement skills and 4.49-second 40-yard dash speed, better than the NFL Combine average of 4.53 for DBs this year, giving the Patriots another developmental option in the secondary ahead of training camp competition.

Patriots Fill Gap Left by Draft With Manuma Signing

The Patriots selected zero safeties across seven rounds of the 2026 NFL Draft, leaving a conspicuous hole in the developmental pipeline behind starters Craig Woodson and Kevin Byard. The acquisition of Manuma directly addresses that roster gap. Byard, in particular, appears to be only a short-term solution. The veteran safety is under contract for 2026 only. New England needs bodies capable of growing into the position before Byard’s deal expires.

Manuma arrives with legitimate credentials for an undrafted prospect. The 6-foot, 205-pound defender from Ewa Beach, Hawaii, spent four years as a starter with the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors, racking up 280 career tackles and five interceptions. His final college season saw him record 80 total tackles and seven pass breakups. He was named one of two Rainbow Warriors captains, according to Sports Illustrated‘s Ethan Hurwitz.

The Patriots were not the only team that noticed Manuma. He also worked out with the Seattle Seahawks during their rookie minicamp the week before New England’s camp, a detail that underscores the level of league-wide interest a player needs to generate just to land a tryout slot. The defending AFC champions won the competition for his name on the dotted line.

Manuma’s Speed Could Lead to Patriots Special Teams Role

The 4.49-second 40 time Manuma posted at his pro day clears the 2026 NFL combine average of 4.53 seconds for defensive backs, according to NFL.com. His speed jumped off the evaluation sheet during minicamp, where coaches were spotted using Manuma as a punt returner alongside tryout punter Mitch McCarthy.

Patriots beat reporter Ric Serritella of Boston Sports Journal noted that Manuma had drawn attention even before the minicamp invitation, flagging him as a player who distinguished himself at the Dream Bowl during the pre-draft process.

“Patriots uncovered a gem in Hawaii safety Peter Manuma,” Serritella wrote on X.

The precedent for this kind of signing working out in New England exists. Under head coach Mike Vrabel, the Patriots inked Mehki Butler and Isaiah Iton to contracts after their respective minicamp tryout performances last season. Butler remains on the roster heading into the 2026 offseason program. New England has demonstrated an organizational willingness to take a flyer when a tryout player earns it. Manuma appears to have done exactly that.

The road from a post-minicamp contract to a 53-man roster spot is a rocky one. But for a team that left the draft without a single safety addition and faces a one-year clock ticking on Byard’s deal, Manuma represents precisely the kind of low-risk, high-upside developmental bet that offseasons are built on.

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Patriots Address Key Roster Need With Sudden Peter Manuma Signing

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