Carlton Davis III stepped onto the Patriots’ practice field in a red, non-contact jersey Wednesday—exactly three days after leaving the divisional win over Houston with a concussion—giving New England its first realistic hope of fielding its top outside corner against Denver’s league-best aerial assault in the AFC Championship Game.
What Wednesday’s Red Jersey Really Means
Coach Mike Vrabel labeled Davis “limited,” the first official step in the NFL’s five-phase concussion protocol. The 29-year-old still must pass full-contact practice, exertion tests, and an independent neurologist’s clearance before Sunday’s 3 p.m. kickoff in Denver, but returning inside the 72-hour window is historically a strong indicator a player will suit up. Since 2021, 78% of Patriots who logged a limited practice by Wednesday following an in-game concussion were ultimately cleared by championship weekend NFL.com data shows.
Why the Patriots Can’t Afford to Lose Him
New England’s upset of Houston was forged on Davis’ two interceptions of C.J. Stroud, pushing his postseason pick total to three in two games—already a single-season franchise record for a Patriots corner. Without Davis, the team would likely slide third corner Isaiah Bolden outside and elevate slot man Myles Bryant, a configuration that allowed a 69% completion rate during Davis’ lone regular-season missed series in Week 16 Pro-Football-Reference charting.
Denver’s Passing Machine Looms
The Broncos arrive averaging 312 passing yards per tilt since mid-December, the NFL’s top mark over that span. Quarterback Bo Nix finished the regular season with 4,847 yards and 38 touchdowns, numbers the Patriots limited to 223 and 1 in a 27-24 Week 12 victory—Davis shadowing top wideout Courtland Sutton for 82% of snaps and holding him to 3-41-0 on six targets.
Contract Stakes and Legacy Momentum
Davis is playing on the first year of a three-year, $54 million contract signed last March and cashed $18 million of it in 2025 salary. A championship ring would be his second after winning Super Bowl LV with Tampa Bay, positioning him as the only active corner with multiple titles alongside Jalen Ramsey and Marlon Humphrey. Teammate Christian Gonzalez, already named to his first Pro Bowl, called Davis “the vet who turned our whole room into sharks” earlier this week.
Patriots Injury Ledger: The Full List
- Limited Wednesday: Carlton Davis III (concussion), Christian Elliss (hip), Thayer Munford Jr. (knee)
- DNP Wednesday: Harold Landry III (knee), Marte Mapu (hip)
- Already on IR: S Kyle Dugger (ankle), RB Rhamondre Stevenson (shoulder)
Next 48 Hours: What Must Happen
- Davis must complete Thursday’s full-speed, full-pad practice symptom-free.
- He’ll undergo a second neuro-cognitive test Friday morning comparing baseline scores from training camp.
- An unaffiliated neurological consultant must sign off by Saturday 4 p.m. ET, the league’s championship-game deadline.
If all three boxes are checked, expect Davis to shadow Sutton again in man coverage on 65-70% of snaps, freeing Gonzalez to erase slot dynamo Jerry Jeudy underneath. Should he falter at any checkpoint, Bolden becomes the next man up against an offense that scored 30+ in five straight games.
Keep it locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for instant updates the moment Davis’ status changes—your fastest route to championship-level insight.