The New England Patriots added some experience to their safety room this offseason, signing both free agents Kevin Byard and Mike Brown to one-year contracts. However, they also added a rookie to the mix: Peter Manuma, who earned a spot on the team after a successful mid-May tryout.
Manuma naturally does not have the same cachet as Brown or especially Byard, but that does not mean the undrafted rookie cannot be a useful player for the team.
Hard facts
Name: Peter Manuma
Position: Safety
Jersey number: 34 (b)
Opening day age: 24 (7/7/2002)
Measurements: 6’0”, 205 lbs, 9 1/8” hand size, 30 3/4” arm length, 4.47s 40-yard dash, 7.01s 3-cone drill, 4.69s short shuttle, 35 1/2” vertical jump, 10’0” broad jump, 12 bench press reps, 7.02 Relative Athletic Score
Experience
NFL: New England Patriots (2026-) | College: Hawaii (2022-25)
Manuma played four years of varsity football at James Campbell High School in Ewa Beach, HI, lining up at running back, slotback, linebacker, cornerback and safety. Despite his positional flexibility, the three-star recruit received only two Division I scholarship offers. He eventually opted to stay in his home state, enrolling at the University of Hawaii rather than moving to Central Michigan.
Manuma went on to spend his entire college career with the Rainbow Warriors. He saw extensive action during that span, playing 3,138 combined snaps between defense and special teams. A valuable member of the team from his true freshman campaign on, he appeared in 49 games with 43 starts and finished his career with 280 tackles, five interceptions and three forced fumbles. He also earned honorable mention All-Mountain West recognition in each of his four seasons.
Even though his college career was fairly successful, Manuma did not hear his name called in the 2026 NFL Draft. The Patriots signed him to their roster following a rookie minicamp tryout.
Scouting report
Strengths: The 6-foot-0, 205-pound Manuma is decently built and combines his size with good straight-line speed and acceleration. He combines his natural speed with a quick processor and downhill trigger; he comes flying down from the second level with authority in run support. He also can play elsewhere in the lineup, though, and has the positional versatility to play both as a box safety and — in large part due to his range — a deep-lying free safety. Manuma additionally brings considerable experience, durability and leadership to the table.
Weaknesses: Manuma has an NFL-caliber frame overall, but he lacks the length and reach to consistently challenge bigger receivers at the catch point. In general, he is not the most agile player and better moving in a linear fashion, which leads to some uneven results in man-to-man coverage. His ball skills and ball production have been unremarkable over the last two seasons (1 forced fumble) and his tackling uneven throughout his career (15.6% missed tackle rate). He oftentimes takes overly aggressive angles and seemingly goes for a big hit rather than a sound form tackle.
2025 review
Stats: 13 games (13 starts) | 792 defensive snaps, 106 special teams snaps | 80 tackles, 16 missed tackles (16.7%), 2.5 TFL | 6 QB pressures (1 sack, 1 hit, 4 hurries) | 30 targets, 17 catches surrendered (56.7%), 409 yards, 6 TDs, 7 PBUs | 0 penalties
Season recap: Manuma’s junior year at Hawaii was of a high quality but also saw him miss three games due to injury. As a consequence, he opted to return to school for a fourth season. The decision was a good one considering that it helped him find an NFL home, albeit as an undrafted free agent.
Named a captain for a second straight year, Manuma started all 13 of the Rainbow Warriors’ games and finished as their most-used defender (his 792 defensive snaps were 72 more than the next player on the list) as well as their leader in tackles. He played a critical part in the team going 9-4 and winning the Hawaii Bowl.
That game, which was his final one in college, was a microcosm of his season: he was actively involved as a tackler, registering eight takedowns, and also broke up a pass. He did not register any turnovers in the 35-31 victory, but was a steady and reliable presence in the secondary. That pretty much sums up his 2025 campaign.
It might not have been the flashiest season and Manuma still had his issues such as four of 13 opposing quarterbacks posting a perfect passer rating (158.3) when targeting him. All in all, however, he managed to put an adequate and somewhat representative bow on his college career.
2026 preview
Position: Strong safety | Ability: Camp body/Practice squad candidate | Contract: Signed through 2028 (2029 RFA)
What will be his role? Manuma played multiple roles in college, but the Patriots could opt for a more specialized usage early on in his career. What might that look like? They might start building him up as a strong safety who aligns closer to the box, and only add further responsibilities down the line. He also is fairly certain to be used in a special teams role, with coordinator Jeremy Springer mentioning him as a candidate for the personal punt protector role.
What is his growth potential? While he is a solid overall athlete, Manuma has limitations that he will need to work around. Those limitations, however, might put a cap on his ceiling, at least as a defender. Special-teams wise, after all, he has the makings of a five-unit player if he can improve his tackling and get more disciplined with his attack angles.
Does he have positional versatility? Very much so. Manuma played all over the Rainbow Warriors’ secondary in his four seasons, and has extensive experience as a strong safety, free safety, off-ball linebacker and slot defender. He also has seen some semi-regular action in the kicking game, and despite only being used on two units in 2025 — punt return, field goal/extra point block — has the attributes to become a more versatile option on special teams.
What is his salary cap situation? Manuma joined the Patriots on a standard three-year UDFA deal following his tryout, and it comes with a $885,000 base salary that simultaneously functions as his cap number for the 2026 season. With no guarantees embedded into the contract and the salary not high enough to qualify for Top 51 status, he currently does not count against New England’s cap.
How safe is his roster spot? Just like most other undrafted free agents, Manuma also is facing an uphill battle to make the Patriots’ roster as a rookie. In order to do so, he will not just have to prove his value relative to fellow depth safeties Dell Pettus, Mike Brown and John Saunders Jr. but also in the kicking game. Only if he can do that can he be a serious part of the roster conversation.
Summary: Upon joining the Patriots, Manuma entered a safety room that very much has an established pecking order at the top. Kevin Byard and Craig Woodson are effectively locked into the starting roles, and the other backup competitors have an edge over the 23-year-old in terms of NFL experience. Manuma making up that deficit and others can happen, and his special teams outlook is certainly intriguing, but at the moment he looks more like a practice squad than a roster candidate.
What do you think about Peter Manuma heading into the 2026 season? Will he earn a spot on the roster? What will his role look like if he does? Please head down to the comment section to share your thoughts.
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