The New England Patriots investing high-end draft capital in wide receivers has not proven to be a particularly successful endeavor over the years. Whether it was Bethel Johnson or Chad Jackson in the 2000s, Aaron Dobson or N’Keal Harry in the 2010s, or most recently 2024 second-round flameout Ja’Lynn Polk, the team has struggled finding difference makers at receiver early on in the draft.

And yet, the team will have to keep taking swings — maybe as early as this year’s draft. There are several talented receivers who would make sense for the Patriots, including another one from the University of Washington: Denzel Boston.

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Hard facts

Name: Denzel Boston

Position: Wide receiver

School: Washington (RS Jr.)

Opening day age: 22 (12/6/2003)

Measurements: 6’3 1/2”, 212 lbs, 32” arm length, 9 3/4” hand size, 6.80s 3-cone drill, 4.28s short shuttle, 37 1/2” vertical jump, N/A Relative Athletic Score

Experience

Colleges: Washington (2022-25)

Career statistics: 43 games (26 starts) | 1,540 offensive snaps, 269 special teams snaps | 204 targets, 132 catches (64.7%), 1,781 receiving yards (13.5/catch), 20 TDs, 5 drops | 1 carry, 2 yards, 1 TD | 2-for-2 passing, 15 yards (7.5/pass), 1 TD | 25 punt returns, 212 yards (8.5/return), 1 TD, 2 muffed punts | 6 special teams tackles | 2 penalties (incl. 0 declined/offset)

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Accolades: Third-team All-Big Ten (2025), Honorable mention All-Big Ten (2024), Academic All-Big Ten (2025)

Born in Boise as the youngest of four brothers, Boston played high school football at Emerald Ridge in Puyallup, WA, and later joined the University of Washington as a three-star recruit. After playing only four games during his redshirt freshman campaign, and also seeing limited action in his second season — he was on a depth chart that featured Rome Odunze, Jalen McMillan and the aforementioned Ja’Lynn Polk — he took on a starting role in 2024 and quickly made his impact felt.

Over his two seasons as a starter for the Huskies, Boston caught 125 passes for 1,715 yards and 20 touchdowns. He also ran back a punt 75 yards for another touchdown, and threw a 12-yard TD. For his on-field exploits, he was twice honored with All-Big Ten recognition. He decided to forgo his final year of eligibility to enter the NFL Draft.

Draft profile

Projected round: 1-2 | Consensus big board: No. 30 | Patriots meeting: N/A

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Strengths: A tall wide receiver with a large catch radius and big hands, Boston looks like he was built in the X-receiver factory. He releases fluidly off the line when given space but also is powerful enough to counter jam attempts in man. Considering his size runs some impressively crisp routes; a long strider, he breaks with a purpose particularly on in-breaking routes and also can go through double and stutter moves without losing steam. At the catch point, he has shown a reliable pair of mitts — he had a drop rate of just 2.5% in college — as well as proper physicality, body control and concentration to be a contested catch receiver and box out defensive backs.

Despite his stature, Boston is not a one-dimensional receiver. He was mostly used on the perimeter and is comfortable playing the X, but also has had some encouraging moments as a Z or aligned in the backfield. When he gets the ball in his hands, he is a physical player who also is able to break tackles and gain extra yards. Without the ball, he is a willing blocker in the run game and therefore capable to be used on all three downs.

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