Patriots select wide receiver Javon Baker in fourth round of 2024 NFL Draft
Oct 21, 2023; Norman, Oklahoma, USA; UCF Knights wide receiver Javon Baker (1) makes a catch in fron tof Oklahoma Sooners defensive back Gentry Williams (9) during the second half at Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium. Credit: Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports
Make it five picks and five offensive players for the New England Patriots. With the 110th overall pick – their second of the fourth round – the Patriots selected wide receiver Javon Baker from UCF. The Patriots hosted Baker for a visit during the pre-draft process.
Baker is the second wide receiver drafted by the Patriots this year. They took Washington wideout Ja’Lynn Polk in the second round after trading down. The pick they used on Baker is the other pick they got in that trade.
—Did the Patriots reach on Ja’Lynn Polk?
—The Patriots have a plan to maximize third-round pick Caedan Wallace
—How Drake Maye is embracing the toughest part of being the Patriots quarterback
At 6-foot-1, 202 pounds Baker is a skilled receiver who is at his best in the intermediate and deep parts of the field. He’s not a burner – he ran a 4.54 40 at the Combine this year, but still has a wide catch radius thanks to his leaping ability, long arms, and body control.
After starting his career at Alabama and receiving limited playing time, Baker transferred to UCF in 2022. He had a solid first season with the Knights then broke out in 2023 with 52 catches for 1,139 yards and seven touchdowns in 13 games.
In drafting Baker, the Patriots will have to sort out what is now a crowded wide receiver room. Baker and Polk, as high draft picks, are likely roster locks along with DeMario Douglas and Kendrick Bourne. That leaves K.J. Osborn, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Jalen Reagor, and Tyquan Thornton (who has no guaranteed money in his contract for 2024) likely competing for one or two spots.
This was the Patriots’ second pick in seven selections. They took guard Layden Robinson 103rd overall.
The Patriots are scheduled to have a significant gap before their next pick. After trading the 137th overall selection to the Los Angeles Chargers in that deal last night, they’re set to be back on the clock at 180th overall, then again at 193rd.
Read more…
Drafting Drake Maye isn't the end of a process for the Patriots, it's the beginning
The New England Patriots finally have their new quarterback. On Thursday night, the team drafted North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye third overall, making him the organization’s latest attempt at finding their next franchise quarterback.
For many fans, this pick probably feels like the end of a long, arduous process. That began with watching these quarterbacks play back in October after the Patriots themselves got off to a 1-5, and then 2-8 start before the bye, and continued throughout the pre-draft process during the spring.
—Drake Maye is exactly the kind of quarterback the Patriots needed to gamble on
—Ranking the biggest needs on the Patriots’ roster
—Full Patriots coverage
In a sense, yes this is the end of an expansive process. But it’s also the beginning of one. Choosing the right quarterback is only half the battle – now the team has to develop him.
So often leading up to the draft, prospects (especially quarterbacks) are talked about in a bubble. Will a player be ‘good’ or ‘bad’ in the NFL is a common question, when in reality, it’s much more complicated than that.
Drafting the right player is only half the battle, the team also has to put that player in a position to succeed. There have been good prospects who went to bad situations and saw their potential impact lessened or their careers outright derailed. There are even some examples of lesser prospects who were elevated by good surroundings.
Thursday night, the Patriots took care of the first half of the battle. Maye is a high-ceiling player with a big arm, great size, toughness, and mobility at the quarterback position. He has plenty of tools that simply aren’t coachable. But now, it’s up to the Patriots’ organization to continue on the process and fill in the rest. This pick is a vote of confidence in the re-built offensive coaching staff and front office, and now it’s the staff’s turn to deliver.
What does that look like? There are multiple angles at play here. What we can do is use the Patriots’ failed development of Mac Jones – who they selected in the first round in 2021 – as a guide. What do the Patriots need to do differently this time around? We’ll narrow in on some key areas.
Before we start though let me be clear about something. Some parts of this may come off as a defense of Jones. It isn’t. He isn’t without blame for the Patriots’ past three years, and Maye comes into the NFL with substantially more physical tools than he did. But the Patriots had their missteps in his development as well, and that’s what we’ll be looking at here.
Alex Barth is a digital content producer and on-air host for 98.5 The Sports Hub. Barth grew up in the Boston area and began covering both the New England Patriots, Boston Celtics, and Boston Red Sox in 2017 before joining the Hub in 2020. He now covers all things Boston Sports for 985TheSportsHub.com as well as appearing on air. Alex writes about all New England sports, as well as college football. You can follow him across all social media platforms at @RealAlexBarth.