Eliot Wolf (born March 21, 1982) is an American football executive who is the director of scouting and the de facto general manager for the New England Patriots of the National Football League (NFL).
Wolf was born on March 21, 1982, in Oakland, California.
2000
He graduated from Notre Dame Academy in Green Bay, Wisconsin, in 2000 and from the University of Miami in 2003.
Wolf's father, Ron Wolf, was general manager of the Packers.
2004
Wolf joined the Packers as a pro personnel assistant in 2004.
2008
He became assistant director of pro personnel in 2008 and assistant director of player personnel in 2011 before advancing to director of pro personnel in 2012.
2010
He previously served in the Green Bay Packers' scouting department for 14 years before working as an assistant general manager with the Cleveland Browns in the late 2010s.
2015
On January 2, 2015, Wolf was promoted to director of player personnel.
2016
A year later, on March 21, 2016, Wolf was promoted to director-football operations.
In April 2016, Bob McGinn of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Brian Manzullo of the Detroit Free Press reported that Wolf was a candidate for the vacant Detroit Lions general manager position, but the Packers denied the Lions' request to interview him.
Following the final regular season game of the 2016 season the San Francisco 49ers fired general manager Trent Baalke, prompting sportswriter Ian Rapoport to highlight Wolf as a potential new general manager of the team.
2017
On January 3, 2017, Tom Pelissero of USA Today reported that the 49ers would interview Wolf for the general manager position.
2018
Wolf left the Packers and was hired as the assistant general manager under John Dorsey with the Cleveland Browns in 2018.
2019
He left the Browns following the 2019 season and joined the New England Patriots as a scouting consultant the following year.
He was promoted to director of scouting with the Patriots in 2022 and became the de facto general manager following the departure of longtime head coach Bill Belichick in 2024.