TRANSCRIPT: Keion White Press Conference 7/25
HOME > Patriots Blog > Patriots Transcripts
Here’s what Patriots defensive end Keion White had to say as he spoke to reporters on July 25, 2025:
On how things are going for him and how he feels coming into this season:
“It’s going pretty well so far. I feel like you don’t really know things until the pads really come on and you start playing real football, though. So we just still take it day by day. I think we’re sharp on defense and knowing where we need to go, which is always a good thing, especially this early on when you’re messing up. Well, not messing up and everything like that, that’s a good sign. But again, you’ll really know on Monday.”
On what it’s like having Terrell Williams back:
“T brings a competitiveness to the room. He always wants to dominate. He doesn’t really care if you have the pads on or not. He doesn’t want you to look like you’re soft, and I respect that.”
On how nice it is to see Christian Barmore come back looking like the old Christian Barmore:
“We all know B is good, so the biggest thing for me is just making sure he’s coming back safely. I know in the training room, they’re taking his time, coming back and everything like that, because when he gets back, he’s going to be Barmore. But as long as he can stay back, that’s the real key.”
On the fact this defense has been described as more attacking and if he’s excited about being able to get upfield a little more this year:
“Yeah, definitely. Leading with violence is always my type of style. So whenever I can do that and not read as much, that’s definitely beneficial for me.”
On what has gone into building chemistry and making sure their communication is on point:
“Just repetition. Building a relationship with the person next to you is big. Whether you do games, whether you don’t do games, you always need chemistry with the guy next to you and the guy across from you because we say this on a D-line, ‘four equals one.’ If one person is messing up and not where he needs to be, then we all look bad. And vice versa. If we all are doing good, it doesn’t matter really who got the sack. It means it matters, did we get the sack? That’s really a big thing.”
On if he has the freedom to, if he sees a certain look, to do something, or if that’s more something for the coaches:
“Right now, we’re working into it, letting the coaches feel it out. But we have a say in the room of what do we like, what do we see, especially having an older guys like Harold in the room, KC, Milton. So, we always have a voice at the end of the day. T gets the final say on things, so I don’t really have a problem with that.”
On working relationships, what it’s been like playing for Mike Vrabel so far early on here:
“Yeah. I mean, my biggest working relationship is whether we’re winning or losing. So that’s big for me. And then you just go from there. So is he a good coach? And how can he make me better? And that’s the biggest relationship I have. Everything else will take care of itself, later down the road.”
On if this has the potential to be the most talented defensive line he’s played with:
“I think every line has the potential to be anything they want to be. It doesn’t really matter. I don’t really care about potential. I care about what do you do? And I operate in doings and don’ts. And so we haven’t done anything yet, so therefore, we aren’t anything yet.”
When it comes to Vrabel, he said the biggest thing for him is he a good coach and is he going to help you guys win, and if he’s still trying to figure that out, and what he thinks of him as a coach:
“I think he’s a pretty good coach.”
Why?
“Because he helps me get better.”
On the fact Vrabel said when they have conversations, “There’s not a lot of fluff there. It’s all business,” and what those conversations are like and what they might be discussing:
“Technique and how to get better, for real. Just what do I need to do on the field? What does he see? What do I see? And how to improve on that.”
On the fact that he mentioned not being soft when the pads aren’t on and what that looks like:
“From a defensive standpoint, I don’t want the offense to get one yard. And anything more than that is a loss. And that’s what dominant defenses look like. And that should be the expectation. Yeah, are they going to get yards on plays? But I feel like the standard should be negative yards every play.”
On when he wakes up Monday morning what that feeling is like for a guy who loves the game:
“I hope they run the ball every play. That’s it.”
(EDITOR’S NOTE: This transcript was done based on the available footage and is subject to typographical errors. If you spot anything, please let me know in the comments below.)





From our archive - this week all-time:
April 2 - April 17 (Through 26yrs)
Join 2,000+ fans getting exclusive stats, analysis, and insights delivered straight to their inbox every week. Never miss a play.