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DENVER, COLORADO - DECEMBER 24: Tight end Pharaoh Brown #86 of the New England Patriots reacts after catching a pass during the 2nd quarter of the game against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field At Mile High on December 24, 2023 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
The Patriots may be turning to a familiar face following tight end Julian Hill’s injury, with a former Bill Belichick-era tight end emerging as a potential solution to bolster depth at the position.
New England’s reported interest comes as the team evaluates its options behind Hunter Henry, and the veteran’s reputation as a physical, reliable blocker could make him an appealing reunion candidate.
Hill went down with a season-ending knee injury during this offseason, leaving the Patriots short on depth at tight end. ESPN Patriots insider Mike Reiss flagged the position as a likely free-agent target in his June 14 minicamp notes, writing that the team would ideally add a “Y-type option who can move bodies on the line of scrimmage.” One top candidate, according to Reiss, would be former Arizona Cardinals tight end Pharaoh Brown.
Head coach Mike Vrabel confirmed the urgency, saying, “Just from a numbers standpoint at camp, I think that is probably somewhere where we would have to address,” as quoted by Reiss.
Reiss named Brown alongside Will Dissly and Nick Vannett as the most established veterans currently available, with former Packer John FitzPatrick as a younger alternative recovering from an Achilles tear sustained last December.
Brown, 32, entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Raiders in 2017 and has made stops with the Browns (two stints), Texans, Colts, Patriots, Seahawks, Dolphins, and Cardinals. The 6-foot-5, 250-pound tight end from Oregon comes with 74 career receptions for 752 yards and three touchdowns. He has never been a volume target. His value comes from physicality, blocking, and situational effectiveness.
Brown last suited up for New England in 2023, joining the practice squad in late August before earning a promotion to the active roster in September of that year. He operated under offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien — a system Brown already knew from his Texans days — and made an early impression, hauling in a 58-yard touchdown from Mac Jones against the Jets during the 2023 season, according to ESPN. His PFF receiving efficiency on limited targets ranked among the highest for tight ends with meaningful snaps that season.
Taylor Kiles of CLNS Media revisited that tenure and raised the possibility of a reunion in commentary posted June 15 on CLNS Media‘s social media account. “He hasn’t been on active rosters consistently, at least not last year, and he is a few years older,” Kiles said. “So I’m not really sure what version of him you’re going to get.”
The caveat acknowledged, Kiles drew a pointed comparison.
“He’s almost like the offensive version of Corey Durden, where it seems like everything he does is trying to pick a fight and get the other person so pissed off they get a flag,” the CLNS Media commentator said. He added that Vrabel would welcome that edge, and that Brown’s prior time in O’Brien’s system would reduce the adjustment period. “It’s not going to be as hard for him to get reacclimated to this system,” Kiles said.
Brown’s familiarity with O’Brien’s offense, first in Houston, then in New England, stands as arguably his sharpest selling point. For a team that needs production at a specific position profile in a specific system, a veteran who already knows the terminology and the blocking assignments represents a low-risk, potentially high-floor addition.
Jonathan Vankin JONATHAN VANKIN is an award-winning journalist who covers MLB, NBA, NFL, NHL, boxing, golf, and Olympic sports for Heavy.com. He twice won New England Newspaper and Press Association awards for sports feature writing. He was a sports editor and writer at The Daily Yomiuri in Tokyo, Japan, covering the Olympics, pro baseball, boxing, sumo and other sports. More about Jonathan Vankin
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