Mock Draft
1/27/25
18 min read
2025 NFL Mock Draft: Updated Predictions For Every First-Round Pick
And then there were two! The NFL's season has come down to the final game. But amid the backdrop of a championship game, the rest of the NFL is all-in on the beginning stages of the pre-draft process. The East/West Shrine Bowl is underway in Dallas, and the Reese's Senior Bowl kicks off practices on Tuesday in Mobile, Alabama. Some of the country's best are vying for positioning in the draft order and hope the added exposure of an All-Star game can help them find the footing they need.
With the 2024 season entering the final page of its final chapter, we are officially set for the offseason frenzy to kick into high gear. What could the 2025 NFL Draft look like in April? This scenario explores what if the first few teams decide to bypass quarterbacks with the top overall choices.
Latest Top 100 Big Board Rankings
2025 NFL Mock Draft: Round 1
Latest update: January 27, 2025
Abdul Carter
LB Penn State
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 252 lbs
- Age:
- —
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 1
- Team
- Tennessee Titans
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Tennessee Titans | 3-14 | .522 | QB, WR, EDGE |
What if...Chad Brinker is trying to tell us something? "You can't pass up on a generational talent...we won't do that." The quote shook the status quo of early 2025 NFL Draft projections with the idea that Tennessee, despite landing the No. 1 overall pick, may not be a lock for a quarterback. What if this team lands Sam Darnold in free agency? What if they secure Kirk Cousins at a discount? What if they trade for veteran quarterback Derek Carr from the Saints in a rebuild? If the Titans will get creative at quarterback, this team's options at No. 1 open up the multi-verse. If they intend to take a special player, few are hotter right now than Penn State pass rush star Abdul Carter.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl | ff |
---|---|---|---|
51 | 12 | 10 | 2 |
Scouting Overview
Penn State Nittany Lions linebacker Abdul Carter is one of the most fascinating prospects eligible for the 2025 NFL Draft. Carter has electric traits as a pass rusher and a different gear on the edge that will allow him to threaten pass rush sets with dynamic speed or explosive power.
He’s a standout disruption talent who has provided ample optimism amid his transition to playing full-time on the edge after several years at stack linebacker. He’s got the violent hands, flexibility, and twitch necessary to find an early role at the pro level. However, he likely needs an implementation and development plan to ensure he lives up to the rare multifaceted talent he’s capable of becoming.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Absolutely electric second gear as a pass rusher will explode out of a hesitation rush to turn the corner or develop power
- Versatility upside is obvious, and has the potential to serve as a true position-fluid player week by week
- Offers good body control and agility in close quarters to collect, corner, and rally to the football
Negatives
- Run-defending skills are generally behind his abilities as a pass rusher — both off the ball and on the edge
- Sorely lacking in block deconstruction and identification skills, which could be a barrier to early playing time outside of long & late downs
- Should not be considered a universal prospect; he’s not dummy-proof, and unimaginative and disorganized defensive schemes could fail his NFL development
Background
Carter is from Philadelphia, PA, and played his high school football for La Salle College HS. As a prep recruit, Carter earned a 4-star recruiting ranking (247 Sports) as a two-time All-State selection. Carter also participated in the Big 33 Classic before enrolling at Penn State as the latest in the Nittany Lions’ proud lineage of talented linebackers. Carter chose PSU over South Carolina, LSU, Kentucky, Michigan, USC, and others.
As a true freshman, Carter suited up for 13 games and started in six of them — posting 6.5 sacks and 10.5 tackles for loss during the 2022 season. Those marks were among the best in the country for true freshman defenders. Carter’s passing down production did not grow as a sophomore despite assuming a full-time starting role on the Nittany Lions defense. Still, his role expanded and allowed him to collect First-Team All-Big Ten honors for his efforts in 2023.
Carter undertook a positional transition ahead of the 2024 season, transitioning from an off-ball hybrid linebacker to a more permanent edge presence to rush the passer on the line of scrimmage. After a slow first month of the season, Carter’s presence rushing the passer exploded as Penn State reached conference play, and he has lived up to his reputation as a player with supreme pass-rushing potential.
Tale Of The Tape
Carter has the potential to be a terror of a pass rusher on the edge. This is a smooth, effortless mover with explosive qualities and violent finishing capabilities. Carter’s versatility is apparent upon reviewing his college tape, adding exciting appeal to the prospect of what he could someday be at the pro level — but it is worth noting that life in the NFL in such roles would be dramatically different and also harder to replicate. And it is that which makes Carter such a compelling draft profile.
The case for drafting Carter lies in his value in the passing game. He’s a former stack linebacker who now lives on the edge, and in both roles, he’s proven to have a killer instinct for rushing the quarterback. Whether he’s pressing interior gaps from a mugged-up alignment or attacking off the edge, Carter possesses the short-area acceleration to win real estate and leverage on blocks.
Carter’s rushes are turbocharged. His instant acceleration in second reaction movements presents a high degree of difficulty for blockers and might be his best overall quality. He has a variety of hand counters on the edge, and this element of his game is unfolding before our very eyes.
Carter’s primary winner off the edge is a rip-and-dip combination paired with speed, but he can also flash across the face and has shown some viability with an inside spin counter as well. He is more of a body positioning and angles rusher than a technical rusher, as you’d expect for someone who was used to pressuring interior gaps prior to this season. The seamless way he’s adjusted to a different launch point and landmark sets a floor as a rush specialist.
However, the work on early downs currently presents a developmental curve that pro teams must be comfortable with. Carter was not a consistent run defender while working off the ball at Penn State, nor has he played enough to have the needed point-of-attack consistency in the run game while working on the edge.
As a stack backer, Carter played most consistently as a scrape player despite having the ideal build of a fill player. His eagerness to drive and trigger gaps against the run was hit or miss, and when he did, his fill angles and negotiation of blocks had room for improvement. His play processing of the run and play-action pass in these opportunities did not illustrate a ready-made NFL player.
In 2024, on the edge, Carter created negative players with his first-step quickness, but teams willing to run volume at him in the run game with tight ends or pullers can create creases as he struggles to leverage his gap.
The hand power and length to be impactful in this phase of the game are present in his game but not anywhere consistent enough to be a reliable down-by-down defender. He loses pad level and leverage when unblocked initially at the point, providing a large surface area for blockers to attach to. His anchor, when pressed with horizontal contact, is irregular, and pullers, lead blockers, or double teams, as a result, can gouge him.
Ancillary roles for Carter could include some zone drops in simulated pressure packages. He’s been charged with playing in space during his early seasons. While the tackling and instincts moving backward don’t provide a future full-time pathway, he’s athletic enough and well enough versed in dropping to effectively reach a hook landmark and take away a hot throw based on a pressure look.
The challenge is going to be finding a home for him on running downs. Carter’s assimilation to a defense is likely to be a gradual one but considering how fresh he is in his current role, there’s little reason to doubt he cannot unlock these phases of his game.
He’s got the physical attributes to do it all — it is more a matter of developing a feel for run combinations and block-shedding reflexes in linear hand-to-hand combat.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Carter projects best as a designated pass rusher early in his career. With his stature and frame, he will be best served living on the edge at the next level. His rushing instincts are obvious and should yield wonderful results, even early on, making him an obvious candidate for a designated pass rusher.
His full-time role on early downs must be earned with more development in block deconstruction, point-of-attack leveraging, and play diagnosis. Penetration schemes can lean more into his athletic profile and charge him with creating havoc in the backfield.
Will Campbell
IOL LSU
- Height:
- 6' 6"
- Weight:
- 323 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 2
- Team
- Cleveland Browns
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Cleveland Browns | 3-14 | .536 | QB, OT, DT |
Cleveland is another team in the quarterback market but has some loose ends that may prove difficult to tie together and justify a top draft choice in a shaky QB market. This team's foundation has deteriorated over the past two seasons—the Browns have been known for stout offensive line play and a strong running game. The 2025 offseason threatens both. If the Browns also choose to bypass the quarterback market for a veteran, securing a position-flexible mauler in the trenches feels very "Cleveland."
2024 Stats
G |
---|
12 |
Scouting Overview
LSU Tigers offensive lineman Will Campbell has been a standout left tackle for the Tigers program but likely faces a more favorable projection to the interior in the NFL. Campbell’s density, foot speed, and movement at the point of attack would be more isolated as positive variables in his game, with bumpers on either side of him up front, mitigating some of the pass set framing and length concerns that litter his film at left tackle.
Campbell is tough and possesses a ton of natural strength throughout his game. If charged with playing in close quarters in protection, he has a chance to be a tone-setting presence up front. Any team would be well within their rights to test him at tackle first if preferred.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Effective total-body power that can be applied in both the pass & run game
- Surprisingly light feet for a player of his build
- Three-year starter who is held in high regard for his leadership abilities
Negatives
- Can struggle with framing of speed rushes off the edge
- Overactive base in pass sets that creates narrow feet and soft angles for rushers
- Modest length further impacts his projection to play offensive tackle
Background
Campbell is from Monroe, LA, and played his high school football at Neville HS. He was a standout prospect who earned a 4-star recruiting ranking (247 Sports) and was one of the most highly sought-after players in the country.
Campbell earned offers from the expected powerhouse programs like Alabama, Georgia, Notre Dame, Oregon, Penn State, Tennessee, Texas, USC, Florida State, and more — but the allure of playing for the home state Tigers proved to be too much. Before his enrollment, Campbell was a participant in the 2022 Under Armour All-American Game.
Campbell became a starter the moment he set foot on the campus. He’s manned the left tackle spot for the Tigers for three seasons now, earning Second-Team All-SEC honors as a true freshman and First-Team All-SEC honors during his sophomore season in 2023. Campbell will have completed three seasons of play before his 21st birthday, which is likely to be an attractive added layer to his evaluation. He’ll turn 21 on Jan. 6, 2025.
Tale Of The Tape
Campbell is a powerful presence along the line of scrimmage. He boasts a dense frame and some notable power throughout his punches, anchor, and leg drive to offer a consistent identity as a football player. He blends that physicality with some pleasant mobility — particularly through the lens of an interior offensive lineman. He’s got light feet, some good acceleration to the second level, and enough lateral mobility to create stretch and space at the point of attack on outside concepts.
Campbell does come with some uncertainty if he lands on the interior at the next level after playing three seasons as a starter at left tackle. However, the warts in his game should be significantly diluted if he’s playing with bumpers around him on either side.
Campbell gets attached to double-teams well and creates vertical push with consistency and effectiveness. Equally important are his late disengagement skills and nimble ability to uncover and challenge a second-level defender who is shooting into a gap to try to fill space. This makes him a preferred option to run behind on the ground, and his mass, frame, and foot speed should allow this to be a translatable staple of his game.
Campbell’s length is sufficient for play at left tackle in the NFL, but his framing and base inconsistencies compound the need to further amplify a potential move inside. Vertical sets can struggle to hit the needed depth vs. speed, forcing Campbell’s base to break down in pursuit of speed rushes off the edge. In these instances, Campbell can be isolated and beaten back across his face as defenders take advantage of the lack of balance and extra room as he flips his hips to the sideline to chase first contact.
Rushers that can convert speed to power with NFL speed, at times, successfully forcing him into an anchor vs. power — but he can be slow to re-engage his feet in these instances, and savvy rushers can, in turn, attack his post-leg and work back across his face for inside pressure. These issues were notable on the South Carolina and Texas A&M game tapes from 2024.
However, when you look at his film through the lens of an interior player, where the upfield urgency in pass sets is less common, and the lateral stress is reduced by extra bodies to leverage to frame-blocks, Campbell’s questions seem more like inconveniences towards a pathway to ideal positional value and less like barriers to being an impactful NFL starter on an offensive line.
He showcases good range on the backside of plays, and the angles of cutting off a linebacker will be more accommodating inside. Add in the reduced athleticism of his landmarks and opponents on the A-level of the defense inside, and this feels like an ideal fit.
Hand usage will determine just how good Campbell will be in the NFL straight away, as he has a ton of power in his punch and great grip strength that sometimes simply comes up empty on a stun punch. Again, a hypothetical transition inside would reduce the challenges of lining that stun up in space, and Campbell has the wide frame needed to ensure he’s not giving up a free gap.
Furthermore, he has the functional strength and effective lateral agility to slide and flatten before re-securing a fit. One of Campbell’s other warts is a habit of leaning into his fits with secure hands. He will need to be mindful of this to ensure he’s not snatched off his base as savvy defensive linemen attack his center of gravity.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Campbell appears to be a scheme-versatile option on the interior. He has the lateral mobility and foot speed to play zone schemes and the power and vertical push to be a strong presence on an interior run-heavy scheme.
His angles are reduced for pass protection in this scenario as well, where his firm anchor can set a consistent depth of the pocket for his quarterback.
Cam Ward
QB Miami (FL)
- Height:
- 6' 2"
- Weight:
- 223 lbs
- Age:
- 22
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 3
- Team
- New York Giants
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
New York Giants | 3-14 | .554 | QB, WR, OT, S |
The Giants lack the same fluidity as teams in Cleveland, with red tape around their quarterback situation, and in Tennessee, with a new regime in charge. New York has NO options and the best free agent option, Sam Darnold, has already tried life in the Big Apple — it didn't go well. Add in New York's shaky outlook with Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen on the hot seat, and their best chance at securing a longer opportunity is committing to a young quarterback who looks to be a viable long-term option as a rookie. Ward has the best tools of the top-tier quarterbacks, and his playmaking mentality would be a welcome departure from the Daniel Jones era.
2024 Stats
Pass YDs | Pass TDs | Ints | Rush YDs | Rush TDs |
---|---|---|---|---|
4313 | 39 | 7 | 204 | 4 |
Scouting Overview
Miami Hurricanes quarterback Cameron Ward is an explosive passer who has the ceiling to be an impact starter at the pro level. He possesses the arm strength, arm elasticity, and mobility within the pocket to be a headache to defend against. He can slide out of harm’s way and rip throws into tight windows down the field for back-breaking conversions against a defense.
His greatest gift is also his greatest curse, however. Ward is, at times, erratic and unpredictable in his execution of the offense. He is a big-game hunter who craves to push the ball down the field and take shots for big plays, even at the expense of easier completions and larger throwing windows on early downs. NFL coaching will need to help him find the right balance in his game. He showed growth in this area from 2023 to 2024 but still put his team in too many precarious situations due to carelessness with the football and sacks taken outside of structure.
Ward isn’t necessarily a rhythm passer, but he offers a concise whip of a throwing motion and can snap the ball out of his hands quickly and generate velocity. From clean pockets, Ward showcases touch and precision accuracy to set his receivers up for explosive plays after the catch.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Eccentric creativity as a passer affords him unique problem-solving skills outside of structure
- Possesses the NFL arm talent to hit nearly any throw from a slew of arm slots and release angles
- Slippery within the pocket to make a first-arriving rusher miss and buy extra time for routes to develop
Negatives
- Consistency of play execution is irregular due to a big-play-hunting mentality
- Gunslinger who has never seen a throw he couldn’t make
- Lacks the athleticism to ideally match his style of play and escapability to extend plays
Background
Ward’s path to the NFL is a road less traveled. Ward, who will be a 23-year-old rookie in 2025, was born in West Columbia, TX, and played his high school football for Columbia HS. Columbia ran a Wing-T offense, leaving Ward underexposed as a recruit coming out of high school and with limited attempts across his career as a starting quarterback. As a result, Ward received next to little attention as a recruit and ultimately committed to play at Incarnate Word — the only program to offer him a scholarship.
Ward exploded on the scene during his 2020 spring season at Incarnate Word as a true freshman. Ward led the FCS in passing touchdowns (24) that spring en route to winning the Jerry Rice Award for the best freshman in all of FCS. His second season at Incarnate Ward saw him named the Southland Conference’s Offensive Player of the Year thanks to 4,648 passing yards and 47 touchdowns. With his reputation developed, Ward entered the transfer portal for the first time ahead of the 2022 college football season and committed to Washington State. Ward was followed by his favorite receiving target from UIW as well as Eric Morris, who was the OC for Ward’s two seasons at the FCS level.
Morris softened Ward’s transition to the FBS level, and Ward enjoyed two successful but inconsistent seasons at Washington State before reassessing his situation ahead of his final year of eligibility. Ward initially entered the transfer portal again, then declared for the 2024 NFL Draft. Before the final deadline, he reentered the portal, withdrew his declaration, and committed to the University of Miami — where things went to a whole new level.
Ward’s reputation as a dynamic passer was met with a signature win early in the year against Florida against the Gators and several come-from-behind victories amid a 9-0 start, the Canes’ first since 2017. Miami lost two of their final three, however — including a collapse against Georgia Tech in the kind of moments Ward had thrived in all season when playing from behind.
The losses cost the Canes a spot in the ACC Championship game and, ultimately, a place in the 12-team college football playoff. Ward was named a finalist for the 2024 Heisman Trophy, named a First-Team AP All-American and won the Davey O’Brien Award for his play in his fifth and final season of eligibility.
Tale Of The Tape
Ward has a beautiful mind for the game. His ability to identify aggressive windows is matched only by his willingness to push the physical limits of his skill set to create big plays up and down the field. And in the game of developing quarterbacks, you’d much rather have to find a way to reel someone in than have them try to find their edge — and Ward’s edge is bold and, many times, brilliant.
It leads to some high-variance outcomes as a passer that will be frustrating to live with and work out of his system. However, Ward is the kind of unique passer who is still behind many of his colleagues thanks to his modest passing career in high school.
Despite being a five-year starter at the college level, Ward appears to have plenty of growth potential for two reasons: he played for Eric Morris for his first three seasons of college play before Morris was hired for the North Texas gig in 2023, and Ward spreading his wings to leave the nest and leap to Miami in 2024. So, his exposure to more robust schemes has been limited. So, too, has his throwing volume until the past few years.
For example, Shedeur Sanders attempted 1,238 pass attempts as a prep player at Trinity HS. Ward’s entire high school career, plus his first two seasons at Incarnate Word, totaled less than 1,200 attempts.
He profiles as a player who will require bold coaching and patience to pull the best of him out. He’s got natural ball-handling skills and offers a dynamic variety of flash fakes and play actions to fool defenders with his back to the defense. The ability to quickly catch and shoot the ball out into the flats and do so while throwing around free runners off the edge makes him a dangerous screen executor as well.
These are the kinds of elements of Ward’s game that should be leaned upon more than usual early in his pro career. Encouraging him to let his pass catchers do the work for him and be more of a point guard and less of a shot-taker will help bring his game to equilibrium.
As a passer, he can make all the throws. He’s got a twitchy release that generates a ton of spin on the ball, and he’s got a slingshot feel to his delivery that allows him to whip throws in tight spaces without being fully able to get his body into the throw. The reliance on this ability can get him in trouble at times, as it creates accuracy spray and denies him precision passing in congested areas and a tight pocket.
If you’re willing to take the good with the bad, he’ll make some throws that others wouldn’t even try. There’s an ability to drive field outs and double moves up the sideline that will force wide defenders to stay vigilant in their zone spacing or else risk getting beat for big plays up the sideline. This trickle-down effect will impact and negate teams’ ability to crowd the middle of the field and congest certain areas — leaving everything a little more open to access.
Ward’s arm strength and head movements show his ability to move and defeat zone coverage defenders. He’ll drop his arm slot and whip a throw around an underneath defender or, conversely, stand tall and pull the string to drop a ball with touch overtop of the second level of the defense as the geometry of his release point and route path necessitates. He’s got few physical limitations as a pure passer.
Ward pairs these abilities with an innate feel of pressure. Nothing feels hurried or too quick for him when he’s forced off his spot, and Ward does a nice job of keeping his eyes down the field to allow receivers to uncover from defenders and work to space. He’s hit a number of big home runs this year while sliding away from a free runner and attacking grass downfield — even when flushed to his left and forced to drive a throw.
He did this for scores against Florida and Louisville this year. His twitch in these instances is good but not great, and he tends to habitually lean on this ability too often for what will be replicable in the pros. More dynamic players on the edge will make him pay for going to the well too often.
Ward’s processing of play concepts and reading out the defense is capable, but it feels like he scorns the progression order at times when sitting on individual matchups or looking to drive the ball down the field. The instances in which Ward plays within himself and when disciplined are when he is at his best — but the trust he puts in his ability to create will rear up too often and lead to unnecessary sacks or turnover-worthy throws. He threw nearly identical interceptions rolling and throwing late off his back foot across the middle, a troubling reinforcement that he’s got unflappable confidence — at times to a fault.
Ward is well regarded as a leader and should have no problem assimilating himself to his football team, as he did with the Miami Hurricanes and Washington State Cougars throughout his college career. He has an alpha mentality and confidence at the line of scrimmage — his teammates appear to feed off of it.
In all, Ward has a powerful and dynamic arm, good but not great accuracy, a sudden release, sufficient mobility, and the bravado necessary to lead. His NFL coaches will be charged with taming some of his wildest tendencies to ensure his impact starter qualities can shine without being canceled out by his own ambition.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Ward should be considered a high-ceiling starter at the NFL level. He’s a physically gifted passer with dynamic arm talent and the ability to win outside of structure when the play design breaks down. His discipline as a passer, however, needs added investment and nurturing to find and embrace easy plays to keep his unit on schedule.
As he matures, his ideal fit feels like a Bruce Arians-style vertical passing offense that cuts the ball loose and encourages the quarterback to aggressively attack defenses into voids further down the field. Of
Mason Graham
DL Michigan
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 320 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 4
- Team
- New England Patriots
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
New England Patriots | 4-13 | .471 | WR, OT, EDGE |
New England's identity under Mike Vrabel will feel familiar. The Patriot Way appears to live on in Foxborough and Vrabel's defensive background looms large with the team's direction this offseason. The team needs to get more physical and talented in the trenches on both sides of the ball. Mason Graham, paired with a healthy Christian Barmore, would give New England a powerhouse duo to serve as the engine of their defense under Vrabel.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl |
---|---|---|
41 | 3.5 | 4 |
Scouting Overview
Michigan Wolverines DL Mason Graham is a scheme-transcendent talent who can afford value to any and all defensive ideologies. Graham is a stout point-of-attack defender who can win with leverage, hands, instincts, or first-step quickness and penetration.
He has a pass rusher, he showcases a variety of ways to attack interior pass sets and figures to continue to develop as a budding disruptor in the pass game. Teams looking for a high floor, high ceiling tone setter on the interior will undoubtedly be drawn to his consistent teach tape in the middle.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Plays with heavy, violent, and dynamic hands to deconstruct blocks
- Refined football instincts, which have been apparent since his freshman season
- Expanding pallet as a pass rusher gives him a continued ceiling to tap into and justify lofty draft status
Negatives
- Is more of a disruptor than a finisher currently as a pass rusher
- Consistency of pad level can, at times, betray his point of attack anchor
- Length appears to be sufficient — which narrows the margin for error with hand usage to ensure control of blocks
Background
Graham was born in Los Angeles, CA, and played his high school football at Servite HS in Anaheim. There, he was featured on both sides of the football as a defensive lineman and an offensive tackle. Graham was also a standout heavyweight wrestler.
His football achievements were modest prior to a dominant senior season, in which he logged 14 sacks. Graham entered his final season at Servite with just one Power 5 offer, from Oregon State. However, that breakout senior season included being named the LA Times HS Football Player of the Year and a spike in offers. Graham would go on to commit to Michigan shortly after taking a visit.
Graham cracked the rotation for the Wolverines quickly as a true freshman in 2022. He played in 14 games and was named a Freshman All-American by Pro Football Focus. His sophomore season saw a jump in both production and snaps — his usage went up nearly 50 percent.
Graham would go on to be named First-Team All-Big Ten, Second-Team All-American, and the Defensive MVP of the 2024 Rose Bowl for his efforts in helping Michigan win the National Championship. Graham’s reputation was, at this point, well-established. He entered the 2024 college football season as a consensus Top-10 prospect for the 2025 NFL Draft.
Tale Of The Tape
What a delight Mason Graham is to watch play in the trenches. He’s nimble, fluid, and powerful.
You see the instincts kick into high gear often — offering the picture of a player who “gets it.” He doesn’t have all the prototype physical attributes, but as a late bloomer coming out of high school, you can see that growth coming from fundamentals, technique, and football IQ. That, plus a hot motor and enough athleticism? He’s got something to offer everyone.
Graham shined early in his career as a rotational player, but you could have easily justified him taking all early downs with his ability to play the run. He’s got a compact punch and a naturally compact frame — some will allude to his stature as a negative, but I think it actually plays in his favor in two ways against the run: how he leverages blocks and a center of gravity that affords him sudden change of direction skills. Graham is built compact, but much of his mass lives in his hips and legs. He isn’t a top-heavy belly bumper in the middle that offers zero gravitational pull in the middle.
Graham’s hands will jolt and create knockback at the point of attack. He’s frequently playing on the plus side of the line of scrimmage. This aids his angles when looking to laterally play off of blocks or crash into a gap. He’s quick to accelerate out of a static anchor at the point of attack as well, which pairs with those heavy hands to give him a big area of influence at the point of attack to process the play and attack the football.
I’m impressed with his finishing ability despite not having a massive wingspan. Graham doesn’t often let opportunities in his general vicinity run by him and get onto the second level, even if he’s only challenging the ball carrier from the side with an angle as compared to fully uncovering in the hole.
As a pass rusher, Graham has shown some steady growth, and I believe he has his best days ahead of him. He’s quick out the blocks to stress sets and has developed an effective arm-over move to cross-face after inviting the guard to set him outside. Graham shows sufficient lower body flexibility and mobility in these reps to accelerate at an angle out of the counter and into the face of the quarterback.
Offensive linemen who patiently wait him out and force him to commit to half a man will then be challenged with power. You can beat him to first contact if you’re a longer blocker, and in those instances, this is where Graham needs to grow and evolve his game. He’ll try to rip through contact and turn the corner but lacks the dynamic athleticism in these reps to consistently stress the outside shoulder and turn the corner to the target. As a result, you’ll get disruption reps without a finish.
Graham’s burst comes with an expiration date. Plays that get deeper into the rep or quarterbacks that successfully flush off the spot and roll outside the pocket can stave off his charges. I wish he had the juice for longer to try and chase some of those plays down. It isn’t for a lack of effort, but the quick-twitch element of his game only stands out in close quarters.
Additionally, pad discipline is a phase for more consistency. Despite his natural leverage, linemen who can get onto his breast plate or root him out with a double team can raise his shoulders and generate some push off his spot. Graham typically has the recovery skills to split the double, but it comes at the expense of valuable real estate at the point of attack.
Graham has played up and down the defensive line, and teams should have no qualms about playing him at a 1T, a 3T, or as a 4i. He’s got the hand usage to handle all of these roles. Although, you’re watering down his potential impact if you consistently play him in the A-gaps.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Graham has alignment and scheme versatility, which should help see him quickly off the board in April. He’s a capable A-gap defender but shines in the B-gap, where he can stack guards and read blocks before attacking either upfield or scrape laterally in pursuit of outside runs.
Teams that run games inside will reap the benefits of his low build and could potentially free up more penetration production as a rusher. Graham is growing in that area, but he's not as developed as he is in the run game. Still, this is a Day 1 NFL starter.
Travis Hunter
DB Colorado
- Height:
- 6' 1"
- Weight:
- 185 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 5
- Team
- Jacksonville Jaguars
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Jacksonville Jaguars | 4-13 | .478 | OG, EDGE, LB, CB |
Jacksonville eventually got their man by hiring Liam Coen — although it didn't come without some drama. Thankfully for the Jaguars, the decision to move on from Trent Baalke was enough to seal the deal. The move opens Jacksonville up for more potential directions with their No. 5 overall selections versus the norms Baalke has become known for. Coen should bring some excitement to the organization. So, too, would Hunter as a viable two-way star who can change the game in many ways.
2024 Stats
Ints | tkl | pbu | ff |
---|---|---|---|
4 | 39 | 7 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
Colorado Buffaloes athlete Travis Hunter is a team-builder’s dream. Hunter has shown elite abilities on both sides of the football, and his instincts and athleticism offer him a seemingly unlimited ceiling at the NFL level.
Teams that desire a run-after-catch threat in the passing game could target him as a wide receiver capable of lining up all over the formation. Teams looking for an impact zone defender on the outside with ball-hawking capabilities could target him as a lockdown starter outside.
Hunter has some of the most eye-popping plays in coverage you’ll see in this year’s class — illustrating rare instincts despite splitting his time equally on either side of the ball. The term generational is often abused in the scouting space, but Hunter is the type of player we haven’t seen in decades.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Elite football instincts in all phases; he is a surreal playmaker on both sides of the football
- Tremendous stamina, as evidenced by his ability to play non-stop in a high-elevation environment like Boulder.
- Elite fluidity, flexibility, and short-area explosiveness in space
Negatives
- Time on task at either position leaves room for refinement and growth at either position, receiver or cornerback
- Does not have the biggest frame, and functional play strength is not a hallmark skill
- Has suffered injuries in each of his three seasons at the collegiate level — it is worth monitoring workload and usage long-term
Background
Travis Hunter played his high school football at Collins Hill HS in Suwanee, Georgia. There, he cemented his status as a Georgia HS football legend, breaking the state record for receiving touchdowns (48) while playing cornerback and wide receiver.
Hunter earned the status of the No. 1 recruit in the country as a 5-star prize (247 Sports) before committing to Jackson State and head coach Deion Sanders. Hunter went down in history as a recruit as well, becoming the highest-ranked recruit to commit to an HBCU program.
During his lone season at Jackson State, Hunter played both ways and was named a finalist for the Jerry Rice Award as a true freshman. He also collected SWAC Freshman of the Year and Second-Team All-SWAC honors despite missing four games due to injury.
With Coach Sanders taking the Colorado head coaching position, Hunter partook in the exodus of talent from Jackson State to Colorado, quickly establishing himself on the FBS level as a rare two-way talent. He missed an additional three and a half games on account of a lacerated liver suffered on a crushing blow taken against Colorado State.
Despite the missed time, Hunter played more snaps from scrimmage than any other FBS player in 2023, thanks to serving as a full-time wide receiver and cornerback. He was awarded First-Team All-American honors and became the eighth player to receive consensus All-American honors while also scoring Academic All-American status. Hunter was also named the 2023 Paul Hornung Award for the country’s most versatile player.
Tale Of The Tape
There are blue-chip prospects, and then there is this.
Travis Hunter is a rarity as a legitimate two-way option for the NFL. From a performance perspective, I firmly believe his best outlook lies on the defensive side of football. However, each franchise will have different criteria for traits at either position, and I can foresee a split among NFL franchises as to where to implement Hunter. The underlying commonality is that this is a player who has elite abilities to offer every team—it’s just a matter of where.
Hunter is a rare mover in space; his foot speed, hip fluidity, and body control allow him to showcase elite change of direction ability both with the ball in his hands as a receiver and playing as an off-corner in coverage. The center of gravity is always under control, allowing Hunter to move with the utmost efficiency when he’s got his angles right. There’s short-area burst, long speed, and lower-body explosion to elevate and go along with that agility, making him a dynamic athlete in all phases.
At cornerback, it is easy to be blown away by his wide field of vision and anticipation for attacking targets in zone. The ability to leverage multiple routes is amplified by his dynamic transitional quickness, which allows him to squeeze multiple layers of throws on a single rep and get to footballs that almost any other player wouldn’t.
Hunter is an elite defender in zone coverage and has shown growth in his man coverage ability in 2024. The ability to play dominating press coverage won’t be aided by overwhelming strength and power, but Hunter has fluid hips and enough length to dissuade clean releases at a high level in the NFL. He needs to be wary of overplay in the contact window but can keep faith in his recovery speed if he’s challenged vertically and stacked early in the rep.
Positioning is where Hunter has the most room to gain ground at the position and become a more impactful player with consistency. He’s physically unlimited in the prospects of off-man, zone match, press, true country zone, and everything in between. However, Hunter’s positioning, footwork, and hand placement should be considered easy fixes if he invests his time in this side of the ball.
If Hunter is charged with playing at wide receiver, his early impact should be expected to manifest with the ball in his hands. He is “blink and you’ll miss him” quick with his cuts and can slither through traffic to get out into open space.
Hunter is savvy with his eyes and hips at the catch point to set up defenders for a missed tackle challenge and create room to run as well. He’s developed excellent chemistry with QB Shedeur Sanders, who can unlock Hunter’s body control with back shoulder throws and high-point opportunities against man coverage in the scramble drill.
Like at cornerback, the growth looms largest at the line of scrimmage, where Hunter could further build out his package of releases against different looks and coverages to set himself up for more success at the top of routes and help him better cultivate separation on a snap by snap basis.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Dealer’s choice. Hunter has the instincts to play on either side of the ball or even both. I do believe his ceiling as a player is higher at cornerback, where his length, ball skills, catching ability, fluidity, instincts, and short-area quickness combine for a genuinely generational type of talent.
Shedeur Sanders
QB Colorado
- Height:
- 6' 2"
- Weight:
- 215 lbs
- Age:
- 22
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 6
- Team
- Las Vegas Raiders
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Las Vegas Raiders | 4-13 | .540 | QB, RB, WR, DT, LB |
Las Vegas's quarterback situation is going into its third year without a resolution. Getting the opportunity to secure a quarterback to pair with new head coach Pete Carroll would go a long way in fortifying a team identity and rebuilding the program's culture. Carroll is the perfect coach to connect with Sanders and help him realize his potential as a quarterback, thanks to his personality and willingness to not put too much on the quarterback's plate.
2024 Stats
Pass YDs | Pass TDs | Ints | Rush YDs | Rush TDs |
---|---|---|---|---|
4134 | 37 | 10 | -50 | 4 |
Scouting Overview
Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Shedeur Sanders is a smooth operator at the quarterback position. He pairs a sharp mind for the game with baseline starter physical traits and plus accuracy as a passer. He won't win the beauty pageant among quarterbacks for most enticing tools, but his family background in the game is obvious when observing how he instinctively processes the field of play.
He’s a capable progression passer with natural second-reaction instincts, plus ball-handling skills, and the needed toughness to win from the pocket in the NFL. Sanders’ toughness might be his most impressive quality — he will take massive hits while allowing plays to develop behind some porous offensive line play.
It all adds up to the final product of a player who appears capable of winning as a traditional passer at the NFL level, although his ceiling may be somewhat dependent on the quality of the cast around him.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Smooth, concise delivery to quickly snap throws after making a decision on where to deliver the football
- Big-play minded passer who illustrates supreme trust in his targets to make plays when isolating 1-on-1 opportunities downfield
- Tough as nails — will stand in against pressure and deliver in dirty pockets to allow routes to develop
Negatives
- Does not have the athletic profile of an impactful scrambler — although he does meet baseline mobility needs
- Has a sufficient arm on drive-throw opportunities but lacks the arm strength to access all areas of the field late in progressions or off-script
- Will take too many avoidable sacks when looking to extend plays and get outside of play structure
Background
Shedeur Sanders is the son of NFL legend and Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders. He was born in Tyler, TX, and played his high school football for Trinity Christian HS in Cedar Hill. As the quarterback at Trinity, Sanders starred as a 4-year starter for the program, posting monster numbers of an excess of 12,600 career passing yards and 166 touchdowns. Shedeur was rated as a 3-star recruit leaving Trinity Christian and committed originally to FAU before flipping to Jackson State to play for his father.
Sanders made his debut during the 2021 college season as the starting quarterback for Jackson State and won the Jerry Rice Award for the best freshman player in FCS. He is the first player from an HBCU program to win the award. Sanders’ encore in 2022 saw him win the SWAC Offensive Player of the Year award and the Deacon Jones Trophy for the best HBCU talent in the country.
After the 2022 season, Deion was hired as the head coach at Colorado, and Shedeur quickly followed. Upon his arrival, he was named the team’s starting quarterback and has been a central figure in Colorado’s revival as a program. Sanders faded down the stretch during his junior season after a hot start but returned for a final season of eligibility in 2024 and put together his best season to date.
Tale Of The Tape
Shedeur Sanders projects as a traditional pocket passer for the NFL level. He’s a rhythm passer with good touch, baseline mobility, and excellent field vision as a player. The Colorado offensive system has exposed him to a myriad of throws at all three levels of the field, and he appears to have the necessary arm strength to hit them all in structure. Sanders has good anticipation, accuracy, and a knack for coming up big in big moments.
The family pedigree assures that the moment and stage that comes with being a starting quarterback in the NFL won’t be too much for Sanders, who has become one of the faces of the NIL era of college football. The stresses and rigors of a leadership position are immense. Sanders’ growth in this capacity from Year 1 to Year 2 at Colorado should offer plenty of encouragement that he will energize his teammates with his confidence at the next level, too.
Sanders has a wide field of vision and processes defensive leverage effectively, allowing him to find space and anticipation completions on time to set up his receivers after the catch. He has illustrated the ability to layer the football over the middle of the field and throw to spots where his receivers can run through the catch point.
These reps are most impactful in muddy pockets and under duress — Sanders shows a great sense of how much time his passing clock has before expiration and will allow his receivers to work to open space down the field when extra pressure is brought to compromise numbers on the back end.
This isn’t to say that Sanders is without flaws, particularly when negotiating pressure. It is easy to like and appreciate the sense of the pocket he possesses; Sanders showcases a good natural feel for peripheral pressure and does have some slipperiness to him to find escape hatches and force a broken angle when he gets off his spot.
However, from this point, some added discipline and jurisdiction would go a long way. Many of his turnover-worthy plays and interceptions have come from off-platform or adjusted arm slot throws, where his lack of ability to drive the ball naturally without his full release can allow late passes to be undercut or cause him to float and overshoot passes he would otherwise drive into windows.
Furthermore, he takes sacks at a higher rate than you would like when pressured. Sanders has checked in over 20 percent pressure-to-sack ratio in each of his two seasons at Colorado, an indication that his ability to find escape hatches isn’t being followed through with avoiding minus plays.
This is a trait of many big-play passers, but Sanders is at his best when he identifies blitzes and gets the ball out to replace them or throws in rhythm, as opposed to working outside of structure.
Sanders should be considered a “what you see is what you get” player with pressure. He’s been exposed to about as much of it as any college quarterback during the last two seasons. He’s seen triple-digit third downs under pressure since his arrival at Colorado, and his figures are fairly modest.
Putting him into an environment that encourages quick release time and decisive decision-making is the ticket to limiting the arm talent restrictions that can pop up in his game when forced to drive tight window throws without getting his whole body into the throw.
Sanders shines in one of the great areas of the field to measure these qualities: the red zone. Among college passers with at least 500 total pass attempts since the start of the 2023 season, Sanders ranks in the top three in all FBS passers in passer efficiency and completion percentage in the red area, where spacing is more restrictive and creates more urgency to quickly process the field.
Sanders illustrates some nifty ball handling skills, showcasing the ability to sell jet touch passes or, alternatively, shovel the ball out to a slide across the formation if under duress and looking to quickly get an eligible the ball without an orthodox throw.
With that said, he’s generally more effective without play-action passing. Some of this is compounded by the Colorado running game and a lack of consistency in this phase of the program’s offense. But Sanders has been a more consistent and impactful passer when afforded the opportunity to keep his eyes on the defense post-snap as compared to having to diagnose a changing picture post-snap by turning his back to the defense and then needing to re-acclimate his landmarks.
Teams that are less reliant on play-action and allow the quarterback to process are a better immediate fit — although there’s reason to believe Sanders could thrive with a heavier focus on play-action in time.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Shedeur Sanders projects best into a timing-based offense that optimizes his field vision as a passer and his ability to deliver accurate passes on time. When in rhythm, Sanders makes it look easy on the gridiron and can pick apart defenses methodically.
An offensive system that leans into that ability while encouraging him to mitigate some of his outside-of-structure moments stands the best chance to produce a quality starting quarterback. This is an NFL starter, likely on Day 1.
Tetairoa McMillan
WR Arizona
- Height:
- 6' 5"
- Weight:
- 212 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 7
- Team
- New York Jets
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
New York Jets | 5-12 | .495 | DT, CB, S, QB |
The Jets have secured their new direction — another defensive-minded coach is set to take the reins in Aaron Glenn. Glenn saw firsthand what a physical mentality can bring to a franchise, and with Aaron Rodgers & Davante Adams' future in flux, the Jets may be a team in offensive transition. A big, physical receiver like Tet McMillan could go a long way in helping to provide the Jets with a physical identity.
2024 Stats
rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|
84 | 1319 | 1319 | 8 |
Scouting Overview
Arizona Wildcats wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan has a prototypical X-receiver skill set for the passing game. He’s physical at the catch point, long, and difficult to play through with his length and catch radius.
McMillan has the kind of hands that a quarterback will come to love. He’s effortless with how he plucks the ball away from his frame, vacuums in passes quickly, and converts into a run-after-the-catch athlete. McMillan is a successful target in all three levels of the field, too.
This boosts his outlook for immediate impact, although he does have room for growth in his release package vs. press and his route savvy to create extra separation. Teams that run a lot of 3x1 with isolation on the back side should have an eye toward McMillan’s game, particularly if they are more of a vertical-oriented passing attack.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Arrogant hands
- Three-level threat in the passing game thanks to a variety of skills
- Massive catch radius and strong ball skills at the catch point
Negatives
- Room for growth in release package vs. press
- Is typically not an active & involved member in the run scheme as a blocker
- Created separation against man coverage illustrated room for route mastery
Background
McMillan was born in Waimanalo, HI, and moved to California with his family when he was an adolescent. He played his high school football at Servite HS in Anaheim, CA. He was a 3-sport standout with the program, playing football, basketball, and volleyball thanks to his height and length.
On the gridiron, McMillan rolled in the accolades. He was Gatorade’s 2021 National Football Player of the Year finalist, the California State Player of the Year in 2022, and was invited to play in the 2022 All-Amiercan Bowl and the 2022 Polynesian Bowl while recording more than 2,600 yards and 34 touchdowns as a highly coveted recruit.
McMillan was ranked as a high 4-star recruit (247 Sports) and pulled offers from programs like Oregon, Arizona State, Miami, LSU, Colorado, Penn State, Texas, Notre Dame, USC, and more before committing to Arizona.
McMillan became the highest-ranked recruit to commit to the program. His arrival coincided with that of his quarterback, Noah Fifita. The two played high school football together at Servite, and both enrolled at Arizona together. McMillan set a program record for most receiving yards by a true freshman in franchise history (702) in 12 games and eight starts with the program in 2022.
He was a permanent fixture in the starting lineup by 2023, posting monster numbers with a dominant showing — his 1,402 yards and 10 scores challenged program records. He was granted Second-Team All-PAC 12 for his performance.
McMillan then started his 2024 season off with a bang amid high expectations as a consensus first-round prospect, breaking the program record for receiving yards in a game (304) in the season-opener.
Tale Of The Tape
McMillan has the traits that you’d expect to find for a dominating presence at wide receiver. It is easy to fall in love with the profile of a receiver with the size and stature to win physically on the outside but simultaneously offer smoothness and wiggle to create with the ball in his hands. The Wildcats have fed McMillan the football since his arrival on campus, and his consistent production is a testament to these qualities.
McMillan is a catch-point monster who makes it extremely difficult to undercut his targets. Not only does his size offer him leverage as the ball arrives, but his length and confidence in his hands further steepen the angle a defender must take to play the ball in the air relative to once it’s into his frame.
And if McMillan gets hands on the ball, forget about it. He’s got great strength to squeeze the ball and ensure there’s no punch out late in the process of the catch. If granted space, he’s still confident in how he plucks the football before converting up the field — he logged single-digit drops across his first 300+ targets with the program and carried a drop percentage in college of approximately five percent.
There’s not really a change in his effectiveness relative to his orientation as a route runner, either. Whether he’s working over the shoulder on downfield targets, peeling back late for a back shoulder throw, sitting down with hitches against free access, or running horizontally across the middle with pace. The hands are easy.
That variety of usage is worth shouting out, too. He has predominantly been a volume route runner with go balls and hitches — they make up approximately 40 percent of his career routes at Arizona. However, there’s healthy variance and balance among crosses, slants, digs, out routes, and posts to compliment his core usage. It affords him opportunities to all three levels as a target.
Make no mistake, this is not a perfect player — although he has the tools to be a well-rounded target to justify featuring. McMillan is more successful playing through contact down the field and often was granted respect at the line of scrimmage with his size and vertical speed, which is good but not NFL jaw-dropping.
He’ll run plenty fine to alleviate concerns about whether or not he can stack vertically in the pro game. However, the lack of consistency in seeing press coverage yielded some interruptions getting through the initial route stem when he did catch contact, and corners that he simply couldn’t physically overwhelm did offer some stickiness in man coverage. His successful target rate is about 10 percent lower vs. Cover 1 than it is against Cover 3, which are the two most prominent coverages he’s seen across his three seasons with Arizona.
This isn’t to say that McMillan can’t win vs. man coverage, but the nuance of routes to beat man coverage outside is an area of his game that I would consider to have room for growth. He can be more creative and deceptive at the top of the break for more separation. Additionally, he could do more to win leverage early in the rep if facing disruption in the contact window, especially with how big and physical he has shown to be capable of being.
That same core concept of playing to his size can be applied in the run game. There are some energy conservation efforts with the Arizona offense and backside opportunities that you understand why McMillan isn’t always involved in the run core.
Still, when runs carry his direction, the effort, the sustainability of blocks, and the frequency of getting down into the box on linebackers and safeties were fairly irregular. I would consider this to be a missing link in his game that can further expand his capability of being a centerpiece of an offense.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
McMillan has so, so much potential. Teams looking to work the ball down the field will find his ball-tracking ability, catch radius, and ability to win vertically attractive, and this does feel like his most immediate impact to success.
As he develops more as a route runner, McMillan could become a featured centerpiece of a passing offense — although that development feels like it could unfold across his first few seasons. He should still be considered a Day 1 starter coming into the league.
Will Johnson
DB Michigan
- Height:
- 6' 2"
- Weight:
- 202 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 8
- Team
- Carolina Panthers
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Carolina Panthers | 5-12 | .498 | WR, DT, EDGE, CB, S |
Carolina's needs could easily have swung to wide receiver had McMillan made it to their slot. Instead, Carolina can use this pick to focus on righting the ship for a defense that struggled greatly in 2024. Many things did not go right for the Panthers' defense last season, and the depth chart offers no shortage of upgrade opportunities. The best-player available approach with Will Johnson could be the kind of pick that changes the unit's identity. Had Johnson not battled injuries this season, he likely wouldn't have made it to No. 8 overall.
2024 Stats
Ints | tkl | pbu |
---|---|---|
2 | 19 | 2 |
Scouting Overview
Michigan cornerback Will Johnson is an elite prospect with the instincts and physicality to be a marquee perimeter cornerback at the NFL level. His eye discipline is wonderful and pairs with a massive sphere of influence in coverage and a jarring, striking ability to create big plays in the passing game.
This isn’t a player you’ll need to worry about lighting a fire under, and his competitive nature gives him the feel of an alpha coverage player who will match wits with opposing WR1s for defenses that want to play matchups in the secondary.
A top-of-the-first-round player, Johnson has the ability to transform a secondary with the domino effect his presence will bring to a cornerback depth chart.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Top-tier coverage instincts and route combination recognition skills
- Ideal stature, physicality, and length to play on the perimeter in the NFL in press coverage and in run support
- Coverage versatility makes him a potential high-end starter for any coverage scheme and defense
Negatives
- Sufficient in-space tackler who experienced missed tackle regression in 2024
- Height and frame can be a limiting factor for sharp transitional quickness in off-coverage
- Aggressive hands can, at times, create excess contact downfield and tempt officials to make calls
Background
Will Johnson was born in Detroit, MI, and played high school football at Grosse Point South HS. Johnson was a two-way superstar for the program, playing on offense, defense, and special teams.
His monster production helped yield All-State honors and a 5-star recruiting ranking (247 Sports) as one of the most coveted prospects in the entire country. Johnson garnered interest from national powerhouses like Texas, Ohio State, and USC but ultimately chose to become a second-generation Wolverine.
Johnson’s father, Deon, played corner for the Michigan program in the 1990s, and Will followed in his father’s footsteps when he enrolled during the winter 2022 semester for strength and conditioning work.
By the fall, Johnson was a true freshman starter and a budding star for the dominant Wolverines’ defense. He collected Freshman All-American honors in 2022, First-Team All-American honors in 2023, and was named the defensive MVP of Michigan’s National Championship victory against the Washington Huskies.
Tale Of The Tape
It doesn’t take long to find Will Johnson on the tape. He’s a prototype build at cornerback who moves well for a player of his stature. His vision and anticipation open the door for contested throws that few will make, including jumping short route combinations in zone from depth.
Thanks to his length and linear explosiveness, Johnson can convert those opportunities into ball production and has reaped the benefits with a number of pick-sixes throughout his career. His wingspan is a massive asset to the player he is in coverage, both on the body of receivers at the catch point and when attacking the angle of the throw to go for the takeaway.
His play at Michigan is complemented by discipline in all phases. This isn’t a ball-hawking defender that doesn’t bring value on running downs. He’s big and long, and it's difficult to wall off or block him on the perimeter. Johnson offers good eye discipline and feel for developing blocks, quickly stepping up to play, and setting a hard edge in run support.
He’s generally been a reliable tackler in this phase as well — although his missed tackle rate has shown some regression from prior seasons. In all, he should be considered a reliable option when playing support in addition to his coverage duties.
Thanks to his functional strength, he does well altering releases and compressing throwing windows throughout the contact area. When he gets attached to receivers and rides them through that space, he can be guilty of grabbing too long to disrupt the timing of these routes. He has the needed athleticism and length to trust himself more in these instances and avoid tempting officials with extra contact that could draw a flag.
He’s loose enough through the hips to flip and carry vertically — although he doesn’t necessarily have the best immediate speed in transition. This includes when he’s charged with triggering from out of the pedal. Johnson is much more impactful and explosive from flat-footed reads, so allowing him to play from some depth is a good way to keep him rooted to the ground and ready to flash and react.
He does an excellent job of spacing multiple routes, utilizing his transitional ability, instincts, and length to play multiple routes simultaneously. He’s not the most quick-footed corner, but he covers his flaws with a high football IQ.
Johnson can play press, off-man, and zone. He’s a technician who offers physicality and ball skills alike, making him one of the most complete defenders eligible for the 2025 NFL Draft. Expect him to take some time before fully blossoming against NFL talent, but the splash plays should show up early for Johnson in coverage, even against pristine competition.
He can be a perennial Pro Bowl talent and one of the best players at his position by the end of his rookie contract.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Will Johnson is a scheme transcendent talent with the versatility to play in press, off-man, or zone coverage. His impact with ball production is most prominent when playing with vision through to the quarterback, offering his instincts and route combination feel a chance to shine.
His high hips can best be mitigated with opportunities in press. He affords usage solutions for all of the critiques in his game and should be a key starter from the jump in the NFL.
Shemar Stewart
DL Texas A&M
- Height:
- 6' 6"
- Weight:
- 290 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 9
- Team
- New Orleans Saints
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
New Orleans Saints | 5-12 | .505 | EDGE, CB, DT |
The Saints struggle to find the right fit for their head coaching position. The team saw Joe Brady withdraw his name after Aaron Glenn chose the Jets instead. But regardless of who takes the role, the Saints are a team that needs to get back to basics. The trench depth has suffered due to cap restraints and aging veterans — and few players are more physically talented in this year's class than Texas A&M's Shemar Stewart. This is a supersized elite athlete with ample upside.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl | ff |
---|---|---|---|
28 | 1.5 | 3 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
Texas A&M Aggies defensive lineman Shemar Stewart is an athletic freak who fits the mold of a “prototype” end for the NFL. He’s got a tremendous combination of length, power, first-step explosive power, and short-area agility.
Stewart is an impactful run defender who plays on the plus side of the line of scrimmage and creates uneven levels along the front, allowing him to peel off blocks and make tackles on the ball carrier. His pass rush prowess is still developing, but Stewart has illustrated the ability to counter tackles in a number of ways.
If he can refine his pass rush plan and lean more into the power elements of his game, he could be a Pro Bowl-caliber talent by the end of his rookie contract.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Possesses elite length and hand power to create knockback at the point of attack
- Highly proficient in run defense and block construction skills to make plays in the run game
- High ceiling as a developmental pass rusher, but appears to be still scratching the surface of his potential after just turning 21 years old in November 2024
Negatives
- Consistency rushing the passer can be hit or miss; he has an array of counters, but using the right ones at the right time indicates growth needed in his rush plan
- Leverage and pad-level limitations will exist without great discipline thanks to his long frame
- Has left production on the field by coming into tackle challenges out of control
Background
Stewart hails from South Florida; he was born in Miami and raised in Miramar. He played his high school football for Monsignor Pace HS in Miami Gardens, where he quickly became a prized football recruit in one of the nation’s hotbeds for talent.
He was rated as a 5-star recruit (247 Sports) and showcased elite physical abilities and traits — leading to a top-10 overall ranking in the recruiting class of 2022. Stewart garnered interest from SEC powerhouses, the University of Miami, and more before ultimately committing to Texas A&M.
Stewart played in all 12 games as a true freshman in 2022, starting half of them. In 2023, he was named the team’s most improved defensive player at the end-of-season banquet and stepped into a starting role for the Aggies in 2024.
Tale Of The Tape
Shemar Stewart has all the makings of a monster on the edge. He’s already improved by leaps and bounds in certain phases of the game, and there’s little reason to believe he can’t fill out the remaining holes in his on-field product based on his physical gifts.
You simply cannot coach the blend of length, explosiveness, power, and fluidity. Finding it all in one place, like with Stewart, is usually only reserved for one or two guys in a draft class.
It is easy to love the way he flashes his length and separation skills at the point of attack. He’s got heavy hands that create jolt and knockback on the shoulder pads of opposing blockers, and a well-placed inside hand can stunt all momentum from an opposing lineman at the point of attack. When he can leverage his hips and press to extend, he’s almost impossible to gain control of unless you’re willing to commit a second blocker to his gap to box him in. Stewart showcases a good feel for the angles of blocks and will fight through pressure to challenge ball carriers while in high-traffic areas.
Stewart does possess the first-step explosiveness necessary to win as a crash defender collapsing across the face of a blocker; he has had success chasing down run plays as a backside defender when winning across the face of a tight end.
As the playside player, teams looking to wham, trap, or kick him can be tested with angles. He has successfully worked to the point of attack and nearly taken the ball off the mesh point on more than one occasion in these instances. Stewart does appear to win here in spite of some first-step inefficiencies. He appears to have room to improve his preload and weight distribution in his stance to further spring out of the blocks and avoid false steps.
His explosiveness is much more impactful in linear releases and shallow angles. Still, he does have enough short-area agility and fluidity to turn and corner much better than you would expect for a player of this stature. Flexibility is not a hallmark trait of Stewart’s game, however.
His high-cut frame requires discipline on his base to play with bent hinges and sit down on his hips. He can be guilty of playing high once engaged in tackles to peek for the ball carrier, giving up some leverage, or losing his control of the point.
As a pass rusher, Stewart has illustrated the ability to execute a number of pass-rush counters. He's got a long arm and speed-to-power ability to collapse tackles and compress the pocket. He put LSU OT Will Campbell on skates on more than one occasion during the team’s matchup this season.
Stewart has good acceleration and lean through his twist games as well. He leans well through the A-gap while taking a tight angle to ensure OL exchanges aren’t able to recover from the pick. Stewart has illustrated a cross-chop and some additional counters as well, but the timing and efficiency of these counters are still somewhat irregular. Getting a better sense of when to call upon which counters can help him shed tackles with more consistency and, just as importantly, quicker.
Stewart has been close to a lot of extra production but has been a half-step off the pace of the release of a pass or the shuffle of a quarterback in the pocket.
Even some of his opportunities to come clean have come up empty due to a lack of balance and control at the tackle point. He’s got a hefty career missed tackle rate, and if he’s going to be able to fulfill his potential, he will need to be more controlled coming through his open-area tackle challenges.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Shemar Stewart projects as a developmental impact starter at the NFL level. With his current prowess as a run defender and gap control player, he affords a team an immediate role with a seemingly immeasurable ceiling if he grows as a pass rusher.
Because he can defend the run, he should be considered a viable Day 1 starter, particularly as a 5-tech end who plays overtop of tackles and utilizes his length to stack the point of attack.
Kelvin Banks Jr.
OT Texas
- Height:
- 6' 4"
- Weight:
- 320 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 10
- Team
- Chicago Bears
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Chicago Bears | 5-12 | .554 | OT, OG, EDGE |
Chicago's quest for the right blend of talent around Caleb Williams is underway. Ben Johnson takes control of the offense (and the team), and his departure from Detroit underscores the big difference between the two teams. The Lions prioritized trenches with every opportunity they were afforded. Chicago has been actively adding to its line depth chart thanks to GM Ryan Poles, but the team has not yet hit on enough pieces. Kelvin Banks Jr. would be a logical addition, bringing power, athleticism, and versatility to the group.
2024 Stats
G |
---|
15 |
Scouting Overview
Texas Longhorns offensive tackle Kelvin Banks Jr. projects as a starting left tackle at the NFL level. Banks Jr. possesses the dynamic movement skills and the frame to play tackle, provided he continues to refine his hands and showcase better sustainability on his blocks.
His athleticism is evident out of his stance and out in space, affording him a large range as a blocker. Banks Jr.’s feet are crisp and disciplined in his pass sets, building a strong foundation for his game. However, his ability to maximize his hands leaves him too often falling off of blocks or overextending to lean and apply more strain — compromising his base and vulnerable vs. savvy defenders who know how to manipulate balance.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Will create consistent initial point-of-attack movement thanks to dynamic athleticism
- Possesses desired agility out of his stance to be well positioned against all kinds of angles in pass protection
- Shows patience and trust in space to connect on blocks out by the numbers or up on the second level
Negatives
- Habitual leaner in pass protection who is prone to overextending when latching grip
- Grip strength and sustained fit with hands is erratic, leading to blocks breaking down in close quarters
- Plays with a sufficient gravitational pull, but longer-armed defenders have tested him
Background
Banks Jr. is from Humble, TX, and played high school football at Summer Creek HS. There, Banks Jr. was named All-District four times and rolled in honors for his play. He was named a high school All-American, selected to play in the 2022 Under Armour All-America Game, and ranked as a 5-star recruit by 247 Sports.
He had offers to essentially every major program and initially committed to Oregon to play for Coach Mario Cristobal before Cristobal left to take the Miami job. Banks Jr. would go on to de-commit from Oregon and enroll at the University of Texas as a member of the recruiting class of 2022.
Banks Jr. joined the Longhorns program in July and was named the team’s starting left tackle at the start of his true freshman season. He’s been a cornerstone player on the line for the Longhorns ever since, starting every game across his first three seasons until the 2024 SEC Championship Game against Georgia.
He’d started 37 career contests before missing his first start — all before he turned 21. Collegiate honors for Banks Jr. include Big 12 Offensive Lineman of the Year as a freshman, Second Team All-Big 12 as a freshman, First Team All-Big 12 as a sophomore, and Second Team All-American in 2023.
Tale Of The Tape
Banks Jr. has all of the tools necessary to be a quality starter at left tackle at the NFL level. The movement skills clearly pop off the screen in the way that Banks Jr. can beat slashing defenders to the spot or drive out of the blocks and attack defenders aggressively. The key to Banks Jr.’s game will, in many ways, be balance.
How Banks Jr. improves his blocking posture with his hands latched will improve his literal balance and allow him to maintain his fit on defenders for more extended periods of time. How often he is allowed to attack and emulate run-blocking reps to keep opposing pass rushers off balance can weigh heavily in how graceful his pro transition is and keep him on schedule as an early player.
There are a lot of likable elements to his game. As a run blocker, Banks Jr. shows the pop out of his stance and the foot speed to collect movement and reset the point of attack. This goes for his vertical releases on double teams and solo blocks or when working zone tracks that require stretch laterally.
Banks Jr. creates ample push on down blocks with angles to create wash and soft edges for his backs and pullers/split flow add-ons to the point. When he’s charged with climbing and blocking in space, Banks Jr. shows good foot speed and patience to align himself with flow overtop to the football and possesses the second gear necessary to close ground and get onto the toes of a linebacker.
Banks Jr. can be guilty of lunging when his eyes get too big or ambitious, but trusting his own range and the back’s ability to cut off his leverage will help mitigate the lost reps where he’s unattached in space.
As a pass protector, Banks Jr.’s athleticism shines as he drives for depth in his pass sets. He is comfortable expanding vs. wide angles or driving for depth against speed rushers up the field. It isn’t often that he loses a race to the peak of the arc, and he possesses the foot quickness, wide hips, and dynamic lower half to ensure he can temper his pace and cadence accordingly.
However, some first strike and contact irregularities will require refinement to protect him from occasionally coming up empty and having to flip and convert to recovery mode. Banks Jr. carries his hands low, and his outside hand placement can sometimes land with wide variance. These strikes allow precise rushers to work into his chest and attempt to bull or long-arm him.
Banks Jr. will too often latch and lean, seemingly trying to create more width once engaged instead of simply sitting down on his hips and trusting his lower body power to engage and do the work. Some further lower-body strength development could be required for him to fully engage and trust his posterior chain on these latch and squad reps.
Banks has also been flagged a dozen times in the last two seasons, illustrating the need for more discipline. Given his lapses with balance and attempts to sustain blocks with what is at times inconsistent grip strength, keeping his feet active to stay mirrored on the frame of a defender and not allowing for any chest separation will be an important area of focus while locked up with a defender.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Banks Jr. is not a finished product, but his athleticism and frame are likely going to warrant opportunities to play early.
This is an impressive player with movement skills to become an impactful starter, although he would benefit early in his development from a scheme that invokes a number of the same elements as the one he plays with at Texas — a high volume of play-action reps and screens. These keep Banks Jr. aggressive in playing forward into blocks and leaning more heavily on his more appealing traits.
Armand Membou
OT Missouri
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 314 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 11
- Team
- San Francisco 49ers
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
San Francisco 49ers | 6-11 | .564 | OT, OG, EDGE, DT, CB |
Membou is one of the hottest names in the draft space right now. He's a natural right tackle who offers movement in the run game, effective grip strength, and length in pass protection, and many theorize he is positionally flexible to play inside at guard if needed. For the 49ers, there's an opportunity to invest in a group that's sorely lacking when Trent Williams isn't on the field and potentially prep for his eventual departure. He'd be an immediate upgrade over Colton McKivitz.
2024 Stats
G |
---|
12 |
Scouting Overview
Missouri Tigers offensive lineman Armand Membou is a powerful presence in the trenches and has the potential to be a starting talent at tackle or guard. Membou is a multi-year starter at right tackle in the SEC and handled the rigors plenty well.
He possesses a punishing, powerful demeanor in the run game. Membou has enough foot speed and length to play on the perimeter in the right scheme, and his anchor is stout when he’s sitting up on his hips. But his floor and ceiling will likely be higher on the interior, where the fringes of his blocking radius will be insulated, and he’ll be less stressed with speed off the edge.
He’s capable of tremendous leg drive, a heavy punch, and the ability to create and sustain displacement at the point of attack, making him a legit asset from the jump in the run game. Membou’s NFL home is fluid and ultimately may depend on scheme and team fit.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Showcases strong leg drive and ability to sustain power & movement in the run game
- Illustrates impressive body control to peel off his momentum and greet defenders trying to run under his blocks or across his face
- Scheme and position versatility thanks to a blend of dense frame, light feet, and strong functional athleticism
Negatives
- Punch placement at times concedes soft outside edge and will force him into late recovery mode
- Can be guilty of leaning once, latching his hands in both drive blocks and pass protection while mirroring — leaving him vulnerable to snatches
- Inconsistent release angles leave him with steep landmarks at times that are difficult to overcome
Background
Membou is from Lee’s Summit, MO, and played high school football for Lee’s Summit HS. There, he was ranked as a 4-star recruit as a guard and generated significant interest from a slew of offensive line factory programs, including Iowa, Oregon, and Arkansas.
He ultimately committed to stay in his home state and play for Missouri as a member of the recruiting class of 2022. Membou would quickly find his way onto the field as a true freshman — collecting more than 300 snaps at right tackle and nearly an additional 100 more as a jumbo tight end.
Membou found his way into the starting lineup full-time in 2023, again at right tackle, and has been a staple in the trenches for the Tigers ever since. He was named Second Team All-SEC in 2024 for his play and declared for the 2025 NFL Draft with one remaining year of eligibility in early December of 2024.
Tale Of The Tape
This is an easy player to like. In an NFL world where light boxes are conceded but pass rushes are fierce, finding an offensive lineman who can generate movement at the point of attack and simultaneously mirror in space can be hard. Talents like that can be at a premium, and Membou looks poised to cash in. His play at right tackle over the past three seasons at Missouri paints the picture of a graceful but powerful presence who has held up well against all kinds of body types and styles of edge defenders.
His athleticism out of the blocks will appeal to zone schemes. He is capable of exploding out of his stance and putting pressure on defensive linemen while stressing linebackers with lateral flow. Membou delivers jarring blows in these angular blocks and can create knockback with heavy punches. His foot action through contact is persistent, and you see easy power application through his lower half to continue to play through the body of the defender and not be geared down to a stalemate.
Membou has plenty of second-level ability thanks to that quickness and frame, but his body control really unlocks his ability as a space blocker. Be it on outside zone tracks or as a puller working outside, he’s capable of unlocking his hips to quickly get width and then gear down and peel his body back to defenders who try to take the easy way out and run underneath his angle to try to attack the ball carrier.
He’s created some big-time collisions on back seven defenders out by the numbers in these instances and, on more than one occasion, converted latching his hands into riding a defender down into the grass.
In pass protection, Membou has enough range in his pass sets to negate speed off the edge and successfully steepens angles with his wide frame. He isn’t the most fleet of foot, and raw speed can force him to overextend at the point of first contact to try to set his hands eagerly — this yields some deconstruction of his center of gravity and leaves his pads extended out overtop of his knees.
Not many rushers he faced were well equipped to make him pay, but NFL rushers with dynamic speed-to-power ability will be a different kind of threat. Membou showcases a powerful punch but would benefit from more variety in his hand flashes to bait rushers into a premature rush counter. He can be patient to a fault and let a rusher attack his outside half before converting to reactivate around the corner.
Playing Membou on the edge leaves him susceptible to his strike timing consistency and habit of leaning, producing whiffs and empty-handed reps in pass protection. By putting him inside where his angles are reduced, and his ability to leave his frame in front of a defender is amplified, you can cut down on some of the risk involved with his game.
You can also allow him to be more aggressive getting set up on his base and can provide a more direct path to his run game displacement producing explosive plays on the ground. This is a tackle prospect with conditions and considerations — and a slam dunk regardless of scheme or surrounding personnel if allowed to play inside at guard.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Membou has an NFL starter projection at tackle and would be a good power tackle in an inside zone scheme. But given his blend of athleticism and power at his size, he feels like a potential Pro Bowl guard. I believe his ceiling and floor are both higher at guard.
Although teams drafting him are well within their rights to let him play outside first or if a need persists for their respective line at tackle. Expect an NFL starter either way, but he feels like a universal scheme fit at guard who can develop into one of the best players in the league at that position.
Mykel Williams
DL Georgia
- Height:
- 6' 5"
- Weight:
- 265 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 12
- Team
- Dallas Cowboys
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Dallas Cowboys | 7-10 | .522 | WR, RB, OT, EDGE, IDL |
Dallas has several needs that need to be addressed. The offensive line may be in flux (again), the wide receiver room needs another threat and the life the team showed in the run game with Rico Dowdle is promising — but how trustworthy is it to plan on that group again? But don't sleep on the need on the edge, where Demarcus Lawrence and Chauncey Golston are expiring contracts and Sam Williams missed the whole season with a knee injury. Mykel Williams is a total freak of an athlete who boasts the power that should allow him to collapse tackles and create consistent disruption up front.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl | ff |
---|---|---|---|
16 | 5 | 4 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
Georgia Bulldogs edge defender Mykel Williams projects as an impact player at the NFL level. He’s been a valued piece of Georgia defense's defensive rotation for the past three years, illustrating elite physical ability.
There’s a surreal blend of length, power, and fluidity at his disposal. Williams is well versed in attacking gaps from all kinds of angles and release points thanks to the vast roles Georgia has asked him to fill, and he flashes the ability to in both the run and pass game.
Williams should be considered a possible featured player on the edge, but as he continues to refine his block diagnosis skill and his reactive counters, he’d benefit from a defensive scheme that boasts strategic rush plans and a lot of schemed pressure opportunities to attack mismatches in the front.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Hilarious amount of length and separation ability at his disposal to keep his frame clear for continued progress to the ball
- Surprising and easy power allows him to collapse the point of attack in the run game or soften edge angles as a pass rusher
- Really surprising fluidity and body control to contort and attack creases and gaps on twists, stunts, and games
Negatives
- Needs more consistency with his leverage, both with hand placement and his hinges & pad level
- Actual explosiveness and burst out of his stance are sufficient, but he lacks the elite pop that can win him reps consistently with speed
- Durability is in question due to notable injury history (high ankle injury in 2024 opener, foot surgery in spring of 2023)
Background
Williams was born in Columbus, GA, in June of 2004 and will be 20 years old on draft night. He played his high school football for Hardaway HS. Williams garnered significant interest on the recruiting circuit and was ranked as a 5-star recruit (247 Sports) and one of the top-5 recruits in the 2022 class. Initially having committed to USC, Williams flipped to Georgia before signing day and was the star player of the Bulldogs’ recruiting class.
It didn’t take long for Williams to find the field. He set career highs in pressures (33) and run stops (16) as a true freshman rotation piece for the eventual National Champions in 2022. He’s played between 375 and 410 snaps in each of his three seasons with the program and was twice named Second Team All-SEC (2023, 2024) despite dealing with a handful of injuries across the last two seasons.
Williams missed spring practices in 2023 due to foot surgery and then suffered a high ankle sprain in the 2024 season opener against Clemson, which cost him time in the first half of the season.
Tale Of The Tape
If you built a prototypical edge defender in a lab, he’d probably look something like Mykel Williams. There are all the uncoachable elements to his game. Williams has elite length, he offers easy and effortless power, and he illustrates the kind of slippery body control that will allow him to play at steep angles and suddenly clip through creases in the front.
The Bulldogs have embraced his freakish ability by unleashing him in a variety of different alignments and assignments — not overly dissimilar to the ways in which they used Travon Walker. Williams is a more silky, smooth, and fluid player, making him an even more intriguing talent when projecting him into an NFL pass rush room.
Playing time is one of the big marks on his resume. He has not eclipsed more than 425 snaps in any of his three seasons, and Williams has been on the field for a noted majority of pass rush opportunities in each season. Williams has nearly a 2:1 pass rush to run defense ratio for his entire career. The end result is a player that has dominant flashes with intermittent lapses and plenty of room to grow.
Williams’ ability to punch, extend, and stack blocks at the point of attack is exactly what you would want. His placement of hands, thanks in part to his long levers, can help him move forward with more precision to catch blockers tight in the chest. When he does, he’s effortless in his ability to extend and separate before laterally disconnecting from the block and progressing to the football.
Williams will bully tight ends because of his punch power and how quickly he can tap into force and functional power once engaged with blockers. Skill players don’t offer much value here.
As a pass rusher, Williams requires some patience and development but should still afford a team an impactful role early on. He is at his best when he’s parlaying off of blocks with heavy push/pulls or clubs. That same “easy power” shows up when converting a long-arm rush into the chest of tackles, and he’ll successfully compress angles and afford himself greater space to disconnect and disrupt the quarterback.
His length makes him a problem to account for even when he’s still engaged with blockers, and Williams can grab the quarterback or swipe at the ball through the frame of the tackle better than most. The Bulldogs’ pressure scheme unlocked a whole slew of opportunities as they ran rush stunts and games, many of which had Williams as a beneficiary.
Williams is easy to catch his momentum and accelerate through a tight crease while hugging corners into interior gaps — and even if Williams doesn’t get home, his wingspan creates a whole new problem for how to throw around his body and reach. Williams’ alignment versatility (he’s played everywhere from a 0 tech out to a 6) puts him in positions to be the looper or the pick setter.
Williams boasts a good tackle radius and powerful grip strength, so anyone running into his sphere of influence shouldn’t expect added yardage. He’s an impressive talent who also shows the ability to mirror and extend his frame for ball carriers while trying to break his pursuit angle.
Williams’ initial rush counters show variety but will need more precision to afford him more opportunities to finish pure edge rushes. He has good but not great get-off the ball and makes the most of his power to compensate for his modest ability to test vertical sets from tackles. Without that elite burst, hand usage will be the key.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Williams is a scheme-diverse talent who can align and release from tight alignments, wide 2-point stances, or as a traditional, even front end. His power and length make him a prominent presence on the edge, and there’s still plenty of room for refinement with his overall precision of hand usage and technique after playing less than 1,200 snaps across his three seasons.
This is a developmental starter who can fill a slew of assignments. His ceiling is best in a front that attacks protection schemes strategically with pressure packages and games to help create a variety of angles for Williams to penetrate the pocket.
Tyler Warren
TE Penn State
- Height:
- 6' 6"
- Weight:
- 261 lbs
- Age:
- —
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 13
- Team
- Miami Dolphins
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Miami Dolphins | 8-9 | .419 | OG, S, DT |
The focus this offseason with Miami lies on the offensive line, but don't be surprised if this team signs one or two starting capable guards in free agency. What you won't find in free agency? A supersized pass catcher who can play in-line and help evolve the Dolphins' offensive identity at tight end. There's plenty of speculation over the future of wide receiver Tyreek Hill in Miami. If the team and Hill part ways, Warren can partner with Jaylen Waddle and Jonnu Smith to give this team a more prominent but dangerous offensive identity.
2024 Stats
rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|
104 | 1233 | 1233 | 8 |
Scouting Overview
Penn State Nittany Lions tight end Tyler Warren projects as a multi-faceted player at the NFL level. Warren has been given a slew of assignments with a wide variety of shifts and motions, making him an attractive option for teams seeing a formation adjustor within their offense structure (the Shanahan schemes).
Warren can release from the backfield, in-line, or from the slot and is functionally capable of handling first—or second-level defenders when his blocking posture is refined—although he needs more consistency in this area of his game.
Warren exploded as a pass-game threat with Penn State’s new offensive scheme in 2024, illustrating a massive catch radius, strong hands, and a surreal contested catch ability down the field. This is a potential impact player in the pros.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Massive frame yields great results in 50/50 situations thanks to catch radius
- Surprisingly nimble and dynamic after the catch, earns added yardage by forcing missed tackles in space
- Functionally stout with a strong build that plays well on the edges of the core when sealing down or stepping up onto second-level defenders
Negatives
- Consistency of punch placement and sustainability of blocks on the edge needs added improvement
- Does not have ideal speed to bust defenses up the seam
- Route running yields separation with physicality at the top of the stem, but separation quickness is only sufficient
Background
Warren is from Mechanicsville, VA, and played high school football for Atlee HS. There, he starred as a multi-sport athlete, lettering in basketball (four times) and baseball (three times) in addition to being ranked as a 3-star recruit (247 Sports) in football.
He was named Atlee’s MVP during his high school career — posting more than 1,000 career passing yards and nearly 700 rushing yards, along with 24 total touchdowns as a senior. Warren was rated as a top-20 athlete recruit in Virginia before ultimately committing to Penn State as a member of the 2020 recruiting class.
Warren played in two games during the COVID-19 season in 2020, retaining his true freshman eligibility for the 2021 season. Warren logged three total touchdowns (2 rushing) in 13 games as a freshman in 2021, started three games in 2022 while playing in 12 contests, and assumed a starting role full-time in 2023. Warren was named Third-Team All-Big Ten in 2023 before exploding as a primary target for the Nittany Lions in his fifth and final season of eligibility in 2024. He finishes his Penn State career at No. 1 in career touchdowns by tight ends.
Tale Of The Tape
Warren is an impressive talent who, in some ways, expands beyond a traditional tight end role. Penn State has preserved some of the “athlete” elements of his game that go all the way back to high school, and teams that are looking for special packages or direct snap power run games may be tempted down the road to lean on these elements of Warren’s background.
However, his bread is buttered in the passing game as a pass catcher. Warren has tremendous hands. He’s imposing at the catch point and illustrates high-end ball skills to attack the football in the air and extend to greet the ball through contact. His concentration in these opportunities is outstanding, and he has a high hit rate on contested opportunities as a result.
He’s something of an accuracy eraser. Warren can reach back onto his back hip or go high on errant high throws in his general vicinity. The catch radius offers him the chance to become a quarterback’s best friend, particularly in pressure situations. He’s become as much for Drew Allar during the past two seasons.
Warren isn’t necessarily a big-time route runner who will cut up coverage defenders in man coverage. Still, he’ll bully you at the top of the route and create separation on hard-angled routes unless you’re playing him over the top in catch coverage with a heavy anchor. He has shown the ability to use savvy and bump defenders off his body.
Warren wins vertically down the sideline on go and fade routes while also showing the ability to find grass in the middle of the field on crossers. He has logged productive results in basic in and out routes off a short vertical stem, aided by Allar’s ability to push the ball to the perimeter. It is easy to appreciate how he ensures safe passage on these throws by extending to cut short the ball’s flight path.
Penn State has also manufactured touches for him both in the screen game and as a direct snap player to generate short-yardage push or single-back offensive looks.
As a blocker, Warren has ample potential. I have confidence in his pure strength, although its functional application is still hit or miss due to posture, punch placement, and center of gravity. Too often, he’ll come into blocks with high pads and hips, preventing him from applying force into contact and assuming control of the block. His hands lack the stickiness and grip strength necessary to sustain a high gravitational pull on the edge, and edge defenders can gear down his push and force hard corners to turn back into.
Warren shows good football IQ to handle a slew of shifts and motions into different release angles from the backfield or in the slot. He will need to continue developing a feel for his ability to line these blocks up at full speed.
Warren shows great balance in space, but his postural balance and center of gravity leaning into blocks can offer improvements by trusting his core power and lower half to do more of the work for him.
With the ball in his hands, Warren is creative, powerful, and has good vision. He anticipates open-field tackle challenges and can put some wiggle on or, alternatively, run a smaller defensive back over if they come passively into his track.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Tyler Warren projects as a starting ‘F’ tight end at the NFL level. He is at his best detached from the core and utilized as a blocker against safeties, linebackers, and corners. He’s a capable split-flow player and offers the necessary raw strength to play in line.
That said, his blocking posture, punch placement, and center of gravity need to show growth before he’s charged with playing as a ‘Y’ tight end with his hand in the dirt. In the meantime, Warren can thrive as an underneath zone buster and red zone target capable of creating added yardage with the ball in his hands. 12p and hybrid 21p teams will find his versatility overly attractive in their bid to generate mismatches on the field.
Malaki Starks
S Georgia
- Height:
- 6' 1"
- Weight:
- 205 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 14
- Team
- Indianapolis Colts
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Indianapolis Colts | 8-9 | .457 | TE, C, EDGE, S |
The Colts have plenty of youth on the defensive side of the ball, but finding someone to tie it all together feels like the final piece of the puzzle. Starks had a quiet year compared to his career standards at Georgia, but make no mistake—this versatile defensive piece can create all kinds of coverage riddles for opposing offenses. Starks' football IQ and versatility on the back end make for an exciting mix amid a group of big, athletic corners.
2024 Stats
Ints | tkl | pbu |
---|---|---|
1 | 84 | 2 |
Scouting Overview
Georgia Bulldogs safety Malaki Starks projects as a quality starter and potential franchise cornerstone for his NFL team. He’s been an impact player at Georgia since stepping onto the field as a true freshman in 2022, and Coach Kirby Smart’s defensive scheme will have him prepped for the nuance and detail required to be a splash player in the NFL.
The rigors of defensive coverage responsibilities will not be foreign to Starks, who has the versatility to play on either the second or third level of the defense and contribute as either a zone or man defender as needed based on coverage calls and pressure rotations. This is the best-tackling safety prospect to pass through the draft process since Brian Branch in 2023.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Supreme versatility on the back end to fulfill high post, deep half, robber, slot, or second-level assignments
- Very physical and reliable tackler who offers good angles and consistency in space as a last line of defense
- Has illustrated elite ball skills in coverage down the field while having to flip eyes back and locate the ball in flight
Negatives
- Positional value knock is one that creates a philosophical question for GMs relative to skill/ability and draft stock
- Not often asked to serve as a pressure player, leaving an incomplete element for secondary pressure-heavy schemes
- The ability to plaster routes from off-coverage is not a primary winning trait
Background
Starks (full name is William Malaki Starks) is from Jefferson, GA, and played his high school football for Jefferson HS. Starks was rated as a 5-star recruit (247 Sports) and played in the Under Armour All-American Game as the No. 1 ranked athlete in the country from his recruiting class.
Starks played on both sides of the ball, logging big numbers as a defender and offensive weapon. He is credited with 41 combined passing, rushing, and receiving touchdowns in addition to his defensive efforts. In addition to football, Starks was a state champion long jumper (23-7 with a personal best of 24-9) and ranked a 10.55s 100m in track and field while also playing basketball.
He enrolled at Georgia after choosing the Bulldogs over Clemson & Alabama and quickly assimilated into the defense as a starter. He finished third on the team in tackles while starting 14 of 15 contests for the Bulldogs en route to their second-consecutive National Championship. He has been a staple of the Georgia secondary ever since. He was named First-Team All-SEC and a consensus All-American in 2023.
Tale Of The Tape
The question for Starks is not necessarily what he can or cannot do; it is instead whether or not the versatility he affords is enough to transcend some of the traditional positional value dynamics that result in safeties sliding down draft boards despite being blue-chip talents. He is an awesome talent with no shortage of roles he’s capable of filling.
His football instincts are off the charts, and he constantly finds himself in positions to make plays on the football in coverage when quarterbacks look to take shots down the field. His ability to properly leverage multiple route landmarks and be in a position to make plays is one of his better abilities in coverage. Starks has the range to play high in the post and break on throws either across his face or outside the numbers to either side on the vertical plane.
Defenses that want to keep him more involved and play him closer to the football can successfully do so by charging him with aligning in the nickel, which Georgia has done with meaningful volume in each of his three seasons as a starter with the program. This can come out of nickel, but you could also get there with safety rotation out of base personnel to drop him from the depth and allow him to play forward in second-level zones in Cover-3 rotations from 2-high shells while inserting him into the run fit.
Starks is a supreme tackler with only a handful of missed tackle challenges in his entire career. He plays the run well as an aggressive fit player who quickly discards would-be blockers in the slot or tries to crack down and seal on his frame. Starks has very good confidence in his lateral mirror ability and his wrap-up skills. It isn’t often that you see anxious tackle posture or a poor form challenge in the open field.
When given man-to-man assignments, Starks’ sprinter speed shows up on vertical reps from the slot. He’s hauled in a number of incredible interceptions throughout his career on these opportunities. He is the rare safety in man coverage who you’d feel comfortable with leaving without vertical support overtop of him against wide receivers.
He’s more attractive in the soft press than he is playing authentically off coverage, where his hip transitions are not equal to that of a cornerback. When he can get hands-on in the contact window and become attached to receivers, he showcases the ability to disrupt the release and feel his way into the trail position to carry.
When Starks is playing off in zone coverage, his transitions laterally to trigger or downhill for routes in front of his face are bursty and sharp. Off of a flat-footed read, Starks has the necessary explosion to undercut a route and challenge the football.
Thanks to the Georgia defensive pipeline and Starks’ elite football instincts, this is an NFL-ready starter. His presence has the potential to totally shift the identity of an NFL secondary.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Starks is a scheme-transcendent talent. He can play in any defensive ideology and find success thanks to his high football acumen, tackling ability, coverage versatility, and range on the back end.
He should be considered an immediate starter and has the potential to be one of the best in the league at his position by the end of his rookie contract.
Kenneth Grant
DL Michigan
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 339 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 15
- Team
- Atlanta Falcons
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Atlanta Falcons | 8-9 | .519 | DT, C, CB, S |
Atlanta's future on defense appears to be in good hands with Raheem Morris. But the team faces an awkward intersection between a defensive coach instilling his scheme and a pair of interior defenders on the wrong side of 30 and approaching expiring contracts. Kenneth Grant is a mauler in the middle who can help flip the outlook on the interior. His ceiling as a pass rusher is added upside that makes him a worthy selection in this stratosphere of the draft.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl |
---|---|---|
32 | 3 | 3 |
Scouting Overview
Michigan Wolverines defensive tackle Kenneth Grant is a tight-quarters mauler who has the potential to serve a dominant role in the heart of an NFL defense. Grant has a compact, powerful frame and offers explosive hands to jolt and reset the point of attack.
He’s generally regarded as the “other” Michigan defensive tackle opposite Mason Graham — but this is a standalone talent in his own right. Grant has brilliant flashes of versatility and quickness as a pass rusher to bolster his upside. He can develop into a frequent splash player with the right coaching and supplementary players around him.
The floor is a key cog in base defenses, but Grant has shown growth across all phases of his game at Michigan, including in the volume of snaps he’s capable of taking. This trend should offer him early consideration thanks to his rare traits.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Prototypical anchor and power to reset the line of scrimmage and dominate centers to overwhelm the A-gaps
- Freakish athlete with rare movement skills for a player of his size and stature
- Range along the line of scrimmage allows him to stay overtop of blocks and in his gap fit
Negatives
- Pass rush profile shows flashes, but his passing down outlook is modest, and he’ll likely surrender reps to a more potent rusher
- Can be more consistent with cleanly deconstructing blocks to uncover and finish
- Has been documented as high as 360 pounds, keeping him in a range to maximize his 3-down impact may be a subplot of his career
Background
Grant is from Merrillville, IN, and played high school football for Merrillville HS. He was a two-way player on the offensive and defensive lines while also participating in track and field and competing in the shot put. Grant garnered significant interest at Merrillville, earning a 4-star recruiting ranking (247 Sports) while positing 6.5 sacks, 14.5 tackles for loss, and 8 blocked kicks.
He committed to Michigan in September of 2021 as a member of the recruiting class of 2022 and quickly found his footing with the program. Grant played in all 14 games as a true freshman in 2022, earning honors for defensive and special teams performances. He emerged as a starting talent in 2023, starting five games out of 15 total appearances and earning Second Team All-Big Ten honors for his efforts in Michigan’s National Championship season.
Grant returned to action in 2024 and set a career-high in snaps by the end of the regular season as a full-time starter.
Tale Of The Tape
Grant is a brick house of a human being who offers loads of explosive power in his game. It is impressive to watch him bull rush and collapse the pocket on opportunities in 1-on-1 assignments as a pass rusher, and it is equally impressive to see him create knockback at the point of attack.
Grant is a more refined run defender than he is as a pass rusher, but he offers flashes of brilliance in both phases, and his physical presence and frame ensure him what should be a relatively high floor as a run defender in the NFL.
You don’t, of course, draft run pluggers early in the draft. And that’s where Grant’s physical ability unlocks higher levels of his game and offers the promise of something more. Grant has a quick first step, surprising agility in short spaces, good redirection ability, and a handful of effective rush counters.
He’s at his best, winning with power, but thanks to his build and low center of gravity, there are change-of-direction skills you simply don’t expect to find in a player of this stature. He is nimble when redirecting across the face and showcases the ability to quickly dip into an adjacent gap when working the lock-peek-shed technique on the nose.
Grant’s moments of dominance don’t run as frequently as his teammate Mason Graham’s, but Grant is arguably a more physically gifted talent when accounting for his size. Grant will seemingly flip the switch at times, as he did against Ohio State (2024), and is capable of completely wrecking a game plan from the heart of the front. He has illustrated a rip and a swim move on the inside, and his heavy hands will allow him to create momentum for bull rushes and force quarterbacks off the spot as a pass rusher.
Grant will need to continue to master his craft with elite hand placement and refine his rush plan and second-reaction counter ability in order to unlock a significant ceiling as a pass rusher in the NFL. As is, he’s good for overwhelming centers and capable of successfully winning across the face if the center turns away, leaving him 1-on-1 with a guard.
His run defending ceiling is assured, thanks to his good ability to eat double teams. He isn’t easily moved, although he can be turned out at times through lateral pressure, and would benefit from staying vigilant in fighting pressure to ensure he doesn’t get walled off even if he’s held his point of attack.
Grant should have little issue locking out and pressing blockers on the interior when faced with vertical releases from offensive linemen and should be considered a reliable option early on to help keep linebackers clear. Grant has sufficient length to live in this world similarly in the NFL as he has at Michigan.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Grant projects best as an A-gap defender in the NFL. He has versatility in whether he’s playing in gap penetration or gap control fronts; he should be considered a transcendent option to play in odd or even fronts.
His ability to anchor and reset will be a valuable cog to any team’s run defense, and Grant should be afforded the opportunity to develop more as a pass rusher. I would keep his playing weight north of 320 and lean into his dominant power and natural athleticism at that stature; it is more than enough to win at the next level in the roles he’s filling at Michigan.
Josh Simmons
OT Ohio State
- Height:
- 6' 5"
- Weight:
- 310 lbs
- Age:
- 22
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 16
- Team
- Arizona Cardinals
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Arizona Cardinals | 8-9 | .536 | WR, OG, DT, EDGE |
Arizona's offense sure can run the ball. But both guards, Evan Brown, and Will Hernandez, are set to test the market, and the long-term outlook of Jonah Williams is modest, at best. The Cardinals can take advantage of Josh Simmons' slide due to a knee injury and add him to their ranks for an exciting addition across from (or next to) Paris Johnson Jr. Simmons was a right tackle at San Diego State before flipping sides at Ohio State. Many feel he's another player who could also project inside to guard if needed.
2024 Stats
G |
---|
6 |
Scouting Overview
Ohio State Buckeyes offensive tackle Josh Simmons projects as a potential cornerstone offensive tackle at the NFL level. He has a wonderful blend of foot speed, functional movement skills, active hands, and balance that allow him to flash major ability in all phases of the position.
Simmons’ lateral mobility shines in the run game, where he can work backside cutoff to free his guard or alternatively expand rapidly to create expansion on a front-side defender. He’s well built and offers the necessary hand power and leverage to sit down power rushers and combat all kinds of body types at the NFL level as well.
Unfortunately, Simmons suffered a season-ending knee injury against the Oregon Ducks in October that required surgery. This left the biggest red mark on his resume, not as any potential physical ability but instead as a medical check that every team will need to do their homework on.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Elite foot speed provides foundation for success in all phases of the position
- Very good body control and flexibility through frame allow him to unlock play strength at all angles and directions
- Refined pass protector with strong framing on the perimeter vs. speed and integrity of his inside gap
Negatives
- Coming off season-ending knee surgery in October, every team will have their work to do with medicals
- Was a completely different player in 2024, having turned the corner as a player — but had just a 6-game season and missed all of OSU’s games against the best competition
- 25 credited penalties between 2022 and 2023 seasons, split between San Diego State and Ohio State
Background
Simmons is from San Diego, CA, and played high school football for Madison HS & Helix HS. As a recruit, Simmons played on both sides of the ball and was a highly coveted offensive guard prospect who earned a 4-star recruiting ranking (247 Sports). He collected offers from several of the major programs, including Georgia, Michigan, Ohio State, Oregon, Penn State, and others — but ultimately chose to stay home and attend San Diego State University to start his college career.
Simmons redshirted as a true freshman in 2021 and assumed a starting role for the Aztecs as a redshirt freshman — starting 13 games at right tackle and logging nearly 800 snaps for the season. At the end of that season, Simmons announced he was entering the transfer portal and ultimately landed on Ohio State as his next home.
He flipped from right to left tackle for the Buckeyes and immediately assumed a starting role on their offensive line in 2023 — a job he held in 2024 while experiencing a massive leap in his game. The upward trajectory of his game is hard to ignore, although Simmons’ season came to an abrupt halt with a season-ending knee injury against the Oregon Ducks. He underwent surgery shortly after. Despite missing half the season, Simmons was named Third Team All-Big Ten for his play, and he declared for the 2025 NFL Draft in December.
Tale Of The Tape
Simmons is physically capable of executing a wide variety of concepts. His zone run work at the point of attack shows grace on his tracks, effective power, and strength to create displacement and sustainability thanks to grip strength and balance. His vertical run game work showcases a lot of ground force applied up through his frame to create jolt and knock a lineman’s pads back at first contact.
His pass protection work best showcases his athletic ability. Simmons will attack set points and is highly confident in his reactive athleticism to flash and close space after a rusher declares himself to a track to the quarterback.
Simmons’ natural ability was evident based on his first season of left tackle tape at Ohio State in 2023, but the technical refinements he was able to implement over the course of the 2023/2024 offseason are eye-popping and promise a pro-ready player who has the tools to be an impact starter.
Simmons showcases active and independent hands — not only from one another but also from his feet. He has strike variety on the edge and his play-side punch placement is typically on-point, allowing him to secure blocks and set the hook before seeking to wall off a defender.
When defensive linemen look to swim across his face or push upfield for momentum, Simmons is quick to convert and drive his feet. This allows him to rapidly counter with momentum and wash his man out of the picture altogether.
Simmons has great gravitational pull as a blocker, both on the edge and on the second level. His body control, length and balance give defenders no easy outs to play around him; they are instead forced to try to play through his frame in pursuit and engage in hand-to-hand combat to try to break leverage.
Simmons is savvy in these instances and will implement false hand flashes with a quick reset, chops to snatch a defender off their set, or simply implement a firm grip to latch and sustain. When he’s in close quarters and faced with gap exchanges and twists, Simmons does well to ride through the first defender and deliver him effectively to his guard before resetting hands to re-frame.
This is the kind of athlete that you can get ambitious with for assignments in space. Do you want to leave a dynamic speed rusher 1-on-1 on the edge for a deep drop and shot play? Simmons has the ability to execute it.
If you’re looking to run crack toss and push the tackle up through the C-gap to a stack backer on the front side? Simmons has the ability to execute it. Looking to free up numbers on the front side but need someone to cut off the backside 3T? Simmons can do that, too. This isn’t just a reliable pass protector; he's a weapon on the front and a potential math changer for the spacing of the field.
We were robbed of some big-time prospect showcases this season on account of Josh Simmons’ season-ending knee injury. Ohio State’s late-season matchups vs. Penn State (Abdul Carter) and Tennessee (James Pearce Jr.) could have potentially served as catapults to push Simmons into top-5 overall pick territory — the tape is that good.
As is, he’ll serve as a potential massive steal based on the performance we did get from him this season with an injury tag. And, to be fair to Simmons, his three-year trajectory as a starter is undeniable. He’s been blessed with a lot of natural ability and has been harnessing it more and more effectively each season. If you’re comfortable with the medicals here, Simmons has Pro Bowl potential.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Simmons should be regarded as a universal scheme fit at offensive tackle at the NFL level. He has the physical ability to thrive in just about any concept or scheme, thanks to dynamic athleticism, agility, and power. He’d do just fine in a traditional drop-back offense with a pocket passer.
He has the anchor and mirror skills to attach rushers in space early on and hold his blocks, too. Provided he’s healthy, he should certainly be among an NFL franchise’s best five and starting as a rookie.
Josh Conerly Jr.
OT Oregon
- Height:
- 6' 4"
- Weight:
- 315 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 17
- Team
- Cincinnati Bengals
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Cincinnati Bengals | 9-8 | .478 | WR, OT, OG, DT, CB |
The Bengals, simply put, can't afford to let Joe Burrow keep taking hits the way he has been. Some of that falls on Burrow himself but the team faces greater pressure to get the protection unit right with their style of play and Burrow's mentality as a passer. Josh Conerly is one of the big risers of the 2024 college season, and he'd be a potential upgrade over Orlando Brown Jr. in protection or an immediate upgrade opportunity in the short term over Alex Cappa or Cordell Volson/Cody Ford.
2024 Stats
G |
---|
14 |
Scouting Overview
Oregon Ducks offensive tackle Josh Conerly Jr. is a physically gifted offensive lineman with dynamic movement skills that will serve him well at the NFL level. He has been a two-year starter at left tackle for the Ducks and has been proficient in the run and the passing game.
His length and punch offer him good bite on the edges, and his foot speed shines as a trait that he can hang his hat on in his pass-set framing and in the run game. Conerly Jr. is athletic enough to pull and attack on the edges of the defense in crack toss & pin, and pull concepts while also showcasing the mobility to climb up to the second level and attack.
He can be more controlled in these instances to maximize his blocks, and he could likely use some additional overall strength and power to his game to help unlock additional pathways to consistent success. But he’s still growing and improving as a player — the sky is the limit here.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Ideal length and movement skills offer him an impressive gravitational pull at OT
- Has the hip mobility and foot speed to play in space as a lead blocker or second-level threat in the run game
- Firm punch and dynamic base offer him an effective anchor in pass protection
Negatives
- Hand placement consistency at times requires extra work to establish inside hand fit
- Could use more upper body strength to sustain his blocks and control at the fringes of his reach
- Consistency of point of attack movement on the first level
Background
Conerly Jr. was one of the country’s most prized recruits coming out of Seattle, WA. He played his high school football at Rainier Beach HS in Seattle and was a standout basketball player in addition to his status as a prized offensive tackle recruit.
Conerly Jr. was awarded the Anthony Muñoz Award for the nation’s best high school lineman in 2021 and was rated as a 5-star recruit (247 Sports) while receiving invitations to the All-American Bowl and the Polynesian Bowl. His recruitment as a top-10 overall recruit in the country (247 Sports) saw him collect interest from programs like Michigan, USC, Miami, Alabama, Oklahoma, LSU, Penn State, and Texas, in addition to the Oregon Ducks.
Conerly Jr. appeared in 13 games as a true freshman in 2022, serving as a 6th offensive lineman at times for Oregon before assuming a starting role for the program in 2023. As a true sophomore, he led the program in offensive snaps and was Honorable Mention All-PAC 12.
He returned to the lineup in 2024 and helped the Ducks storm their way through an undefeated regular season and the No. 1 seed in the 2024/2025 College Football Playoff. He was named First Team All-Big Ten and First Team All-American for his play.
Tale Of The Tape
Conerly Jr. is an easy prospect to like when you watch him move. He’s built dense through the core and trunk, thanks to his 6-foot-4 frame but still boasts plenty of length to project well to tackle at the NFL level.
His athleticism will be his greatest asset early on as he continues to refine the technical portions of his game, but he appears to have already established healthy techniques in a number of ways. Conerly Jr. showcases good posture and balance in protection, illustrating active and sudden feet that allow him to mirror effectively on the edges of the pocket. Conerly Jr. balances this confidence in his movement skills with the effective extension of his reach — he steepens angles with his length and illustrates the ability to sync his punches effectively as rushers try to work into a hip-to-hip position.
Conerly Jr. has the necessary body mass to drop his hips and anchor — although the timeliness of these efforts is an area where he can show some growth. He is someone primarily responsible for setting the width of the pocket, and rushers that can successfully get into his frame or under his pads can prompt him to be squeezed on vertical sets and then compressed to cut down angles to the quarterback.
These issues arise most with rushers who have start/stop suddenness and can threaten him on either path through the first three steps — but so long as Conerly Jr. catches the rush in cadence with his own feet, he has the ability to redirect and steer the rush to the outside.
It is easy to appreciate how explosive Conerly Jr. can be out of the blocks, and as a result, he is likely to be popular with the Shanahan scheme offenses. The point of emphasis is that being explosive out of the stance and creating horizontal stretch will put him in the most positions to be successful and lean toward his best traits.
Although, this is still a proficient true pass set player who will be tested only by diverse and disciplined rushers. However, the opportunity to take this skill set and drop it into an aggressive front scheme that puts mobility and athleticism at a premium will be hard for many to pass up.
In the run game, Conerly Jr. has good pop and, thanks to his length, is quick to gain control of the front side of runs. He isn’t a true mauler, but he will claim space with his quickness, punch pop, and length. Once he’s established a preferred fit, he is effective with sealing a crease for his runner and has the movement skills necessary to mirror on the edge and wall off a defender.
As a space blocker, Conerly Jr. illustrates the body control and gravitational pull necessary to force defenders to bubble or play passively ahead of first contact. He is capable of pulling and wrapping to climb to a front-side backer, he can get outside and mirror to attack a defensive back in the alley, or he can climb up through the C gap and get on top of a linebacker before they are able to run over the top. On the backside, Conerly Jr. showcases the necessary mobility to cut off 3-techs and or attack 30-alignment LBs.
The Ducks have asked him to club and release into space in the screen game, and the timing of these reps has often felt hit or miss. At times, he feels as though he’s working into space without the same confidence of a landmark that he would otherwise have on outside-run concepts.
This is a loose mover with fluid hips, quick feet, good initial punch power, and the mirror skills necessary to sustain fits, even if he currently is missing the raw power that would make him a dominant force on the edge.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Conerly Jr. projects best as a starter in an outside zone scheme at the NFL level. His ability to move laterally and explode out of the blocks will be welcomed into that kind of system and lessen the degree of raw power he’ll need to apply to opposing defenders.
An aggressive front that can lean into play action as a counterpunch to the zone tracks of the linemen can help optimize Conerly Jr.’s athletic profile. He should be considered a viable early starter at the pro level.
Jalon Walker
LB Georgia
- Height:
- 6' 2"
- Weight:
- 245 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 18
- Team
- Seattle Seahawks
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Seattle Seahawks | 10-7 | .498 | OG, C, LB, S |
Seattle's defensive scheme under Mike MacDonald is a tailor-made fit for Jalon Walker's NFL projection. Walker is best at rushing the passer and dropping into shallow zones, particularly off the edge. Standing him up next to Leonard Williams, DreMont Jones, and others would give the team's edge rush room a whole new feel with his explosive power and burst.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl |
---|---|---|
55 | 6.5 | 3 |
Scouting Overview
Georgia Bulldogs linebacker Jalon Walker has a number of pathways to playing time. He’s a viable stack linebacker on early downs who has illustrated excellent pass-rush capabilities from both an off-ball alignment and on the edge of the defense.
Walker is built thick, has heavy hands, and booming pads that create good block deconstruction opportunities in the heart of the box. He’s got excellent linear burst and effective lateral redirection ability to pick his way through traffic and pursue the football. Walker exploded on the scene this year as a featured weapon for the Bulldogs as a junior, which makes his potential long-term outlook all that much more exciting given his instincts relative to the room he still has to grow.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- An ultimate versatility weapon on the second level of the defense — brings run defending, pass rush ability & QB spy ability
- Explosive burst and sideline-to-sideline range when triggering in pursuit
- Heavy hands help jolt and deconstruct blocks in close-quarters combat
Negatives
- Ability to play zone coverage and provide real value on these reps is minimal relative to his rush value
- Unlikely to be an attractive man-to-man coverage option on early downs
- Entered 2024 with less than 300 career snaps on defense — sample size is relatively small for assured translation to the NFL
Background
Walker played his high school football at Salisbury HS in North Carolina and is the son of a coach. Walker’s father, Curtis, has been the head coach of Catawba College for more than a decade and has previously served as the defensive coordinator for Coastal Carolina.
Jalon was a multi-sport athlete at Salisbury, playing football, basketball, and track & field. On the gridiron, Walker was awarded the 2021 Gatorade North Carolina Player of the Year award and participated in the 2022 Under Armour All-American Game as a 4-star (247 Sports) standout linebacker.
Walker’s first two seasons at Georgia were in a rotational role. He was a core special teamer during his true freshman season in 2022 and enjoyed a productive CFB Playoff run as a rotational defensive weapon. His sophomore season in 2023 saw him play in 14 games; he led the team in sacks (5.0) despite being a rotational player before assuming a more regular role for the Bulldogs entering the 2024 season.
Tale Of The Tape
Walker is a search-and-destroy heat-seeking missile for the Georgia Bulldogs. Their defensive scheme tasks him with lining up on the edge to rush or dropping down to play shallow spy vs. mobile passers and clean up any loose pockets.
His burst, range, and length are present, which allows him to cut off most QB rollouts and scrambles before they capture valuable real estate on the edge. This role comes at the expense of an added designated rusher or an added defender in space on the back end, which is something each NFL team, considering Walker’s usage, needs to individually account for. As a result, I am not sure this is a universal prospect — not every team will be able to maximize his potential.
Those teams who can are the ones willing to let him play a blend of traditional stack backer as a MIKE and as a SAM in under fronts. These roles allow Walker to fill gaps between the tackles or set the edge and use his power and heavy hands to deconstruct blocks. Walker has the first-step explosiveness to trigger against double teams and get down into the LOS from off the ball — he has the core strength and balance to run through lateral challenges and rip clean to uncover and challenge the football.
On the edge, he has enough length to stack blocks with his inside hand and turn runs back into defensive pursuit. Walker can stack or spill pulling guards and turnout blocks from tackles alike, but never mind what he’s capable of offering against skill players trying to pin and seal him on the perimeter. The variety of on/off the ball early down work opens the door for a team with depth at either linebacker or with a big safety to play personnel matchups along the front.
As a pass rusher, Walker shows some incredible instincts and variety when rushing the passer off the edge. He can win inside, win with speed, and he’s low enough to convert speed to power and agile enough to duck across the face after selling an outside charge.
These opportunities are complemented by acceleration skills and explosiveness to flash and react late to a changing landmark from the quarterback. He’s got great vision on the edge and anticipation of when a quarterback is going to drift to space. Walker is equally dangerous dropping down from the second level. Defenses can change his arrival point and create extra pre-snap work for the offensive line and opposing quarterback in order to account for him and where he’s attacking the front.
Walker is capable of shallow zone drops underneath and can tackle generic hook/curl drops from a traditional off-ball role. However, he doesn’t have the same fluidity moving backward in drops as he does moving forward or rushing, nor does he have an appealing profile for man-to-man coverage against backs or tight ends. His static agility and change of direction skills lack the same appeal and dynamic ability as what he offers when he’s playing downhill.
In all, this is a young talent who offers splendid flashes of football instincts despite not turning 21 years old until February of 2025. He’s got tremendous growth potential, as he’s only now taking full-time snaps as a part of the Bulldogs defense.
However, his father's coaching background pops off the tape with his feel for the game. So long as his NFL team leans into what he can do on and off the ball and doesn’t expect him to be a cookie-cutter player in the league, he should develop into an impact starter with disruptive ability. If I had to choose only one role, I would give him opportunities on the edge before playing him as an exclusive stack backer.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Jalon Walker projects best into a multiple-front scheme that tasks their linebackers with a vast menu of responsibilities. This is a three-down player with unique value on early downs as a stack defender and on passing downs as a pass rush weapon — similar to the likes of Zach Baun and Andrew Van Ginkel.
This is not the kind of player that would fit well in vanilla schemes or in a singular role, so creative play callers or defensive depth charts with a number of versatile defensive talents to create overlap and confusion will go a long way in unlocking the best version of him.
Shavon Revel
DB East Carolina
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 193 lbs
- Age:
- 22
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 19
- Team
- Tampa Bay Buccaneers
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 10-7 | .502 | WR, EDGE, LB, CB |
Tampa Bay is another team that simply loves long, physical corners. A healthy 2024 campaign likely sees Shavon Revel off the board by the time Tampa comes on the clock here, but a knee injury shut his season down in September. Revel has the kind of elite length and physicality that Jason Licht and company have gravitated towards forever — and it still feels like he's just scratching the surface of how good he can be.
2024 Stats
Ints | tkl | pbu |
---|---|---|
2 | 8 | 2 |
Scouting Overview
East Carolina cornerback Shavon Revel Jr. is an absolute dog. This is an uber-physical cornerback who dictates terms in every phase of the position — be that as a run support player on the edge, a tackler at the catch point in rally opportunities to the football, or playing press coverage or at the catch point.
Revel Jr. has the length, transitional quickness, and long-speed blend to be an alpha cornerback at the NFL level. He is coming off of an ACL tear suffered in practice for the Pirates in September of 2024, but provided the medicals check out, should be considered not just one of the top cornerback prospects eligible for the 2025 NFL Draft but one of the top defensive talents on the board period.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Prototypical stature and length to play press coverage and disrupt the catch point of receivers
- Has elite recovery and straight-line speed — illustrates ideal closing burst and second-gear
- Whopping tackler who provides jarring hits and consistent finishes
Negatives
- Coming off of an ACL tear in September of 2024
- Level of competition did not see Revel Jr. draw many high-level wide receivers at ECU
- Can be guilty of playing overly physical and grabby in coverage; flagged 11 total times in under 900 snaps at ECU
Background
Shavon Revel Jr. hails from Winston-Salem, NC, and played his high school football for a pair of programs in the state of North Carolina. A two-way player, Revel Jr. played his first three seasons of high school football for Reynolds HS before transferring to Reagan HS for his final prep season. He also lettered in track and field.
Revel Jr. was a 3-star recruit (247 Sports) but ultimately enrolled at the JUCO program Louisburg College for his true freshman and true sophomore seasons.
While playing at Louisburg, Revel Jr. famously worked shifts at an Amazon Warehouse to help make ends meet before driving overnight to partake in a prospect camp at ECU. With a 4.40s 40-yard dash and an 11-foot standing broad jump, Revel Jr. blew them out of the water.
Without much delay, Revel Jr. was offered a scholarship from the Pirates under the condition that he got his grades up. He obliged and quickly went on to be one of the most promising cornerback prospects in college football.
A torn ACL suffered in a “freak injury” at practice cost Revel Jr. most of his 2024 college season; he played in just three games on the year.
Tale of The Tape
Revel Jr. is one of the most tantalizing prospects in the 2025 NFL Draft. The physical ability is electric in every application on the field. He moves faster than everyone else, he strikes harder than other defensive backs in tackle situations, and his ball skills yield ample ball production.
This is a player that feels like a future star in the pros.
Revel Jr. plays a bully brand of football on the perimeter. He’s got elite length and stature and offers heavy hands in press coverage. Revel Jr. has illustrated fluid hips to flip and open in transition out of the contact window, plus the ability to drop his hips and trigger with little delay when he’s playing overtop of quick game.
In press, his grip strength and upper-body strength allow him to ride receivers and funnel their releases, pinning them into favorable coverage leverage. Punch placement and timing can, of course, be refined. There are times when he struggles to let go through the contact window and will tempt officials to flag him for excessive contact or holding.
He frequently finds winning real estate at the catch point when playing in phase and will successfully attack the football in the air on such reps. If he had better hands, he’d likely have double or triple the career interceptions he posted at East Carolina.
He’s a hypercompetitive player not just in press coverage or at the catch point but also in run support. I love how he sticks his foot in the ground and attacks the edges. His size, burst, and length make him difficult to set hands-on as a skill player trying to pin or block him for outside runs, and he actually finishes tackles through blocking contact with impressive effectiveness as well. He’s an explosive striker with good length, which allows him to finish these opportunities and keep minimal yards after contact on the edge.
Revel Jr.’s competitiveness expands to some “dirty work” opportunities that will afford him more pathways to seeing the field as a young, unproven professional player. He played nearly 150 snaps on special teams at East Carolina, including a full gambit of roles on kickoff, kickoff return, punt, and punt return during his first season with the program.
From then on, he was utilized exclusively on field goal block teams, and his length contributed to multiple blocked kicks. Even if Revel Jr. ascends toward his ceiling as an NFL player, selectively giving him reps in the NFL should be taken into consideration.
Anticipation of route combinations and targets seemed to be an area of growth for Revel Jr. in 2024 before his season was unfortunately cut short by a torn ACL in practice after just three games. However, the sense of aggressiveness he offered in attacking breaks in front of his face put him in a position to undercut a number of throws going back to 2023 as well — offering several near misses of additional turnover opportunities.
This is one of the more dynamic athletes in the class, and hopefully, the September ACL tear will not have any negative effects on him moving forward.
Teams must vet and find comfort in his medical status, although his timeline for a pro day and athletic testing should be secondary to his recovery window to ensure he’s ready for football activities as soon as possible while at 100 percent.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Revel Jr. projects as a starting perimeter cornerback at the next level — and a quality starter. His physicality would be well unleashed in a scheme unafraid of playing press coverage. His ball skills have flashed in occurrences of playing man coverage with his back to the quarterback or, alternatively, in zone coverage.
Colston Loveland
TE Michigan
- Height:
- 6' 5"
- Weight:
- 245 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 20
- Team
- Denver Broncos
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Denver Broncos | 10-7 | .502 | WR, TE, DT |
The Broncos are a team that experienced a major leap in 2024. Sean Payton's vision for this team is coming to life, but the arms race is no joke. The Raiders have added Pete Carroll to make this perhaps the most accomplished coaching division in all of football — so the players will need to do some heavy lifting as teams look to separate from one another. Denver's tight end room was nonexistent in the passing game; that can change with the addition of a pass-catching weapon at the position like Colston Loveland.
2024 Stats
rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|
56 | 582 | 582 | 5 |
Scouting Overview
Michigan Wolverines tight end Colston Loveland projects as a high-volume pass catcher at the tight end position. He’s bogged down in a run-heavy offense at Michigan, but the resume of route running, ball skills, contested catch ability, and body control speak for themselves.
This is a natural receiver who should be regarded as more of a big slot than a true in-line player, but the continued evolution of NFL offenses will find ample value in a player with this frame and pass-catching capability.
Loveland beats a variety of coverages to a variety of areas of the field, making him a diverse pass-catching weapon who can assimilate into most NFL offenses. Utilizing 12 personnel heavily is likely the best way to help create mismatches by allowing him to be the formation adjuster rather than a traditional ‘Y’.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Highly impressive ball skills and body control to extend and contort his frame to adjust to errant passes
- Explosive enough to get up the seam quickly and attack second-level voids in the middle or subsequently run away from closing defenders after the catch
- Experience flexing out or playing within the core — the developmental leap to the NFL game should be less than many of his peers
Negatives
- Effectiveness as a positional blocker limits his ceiling as an 11p presence at the TE position
- Lacks the appeal to play as a hand-in-dirt player, which qualifies his versatility
- Irregular pad level and leverage at the point of attack
Background
Loveland was born in Goldendale, WA, and grew up in Bliss, ID. There, he was a multi-sport athlete for Gooding HS, starring on the hardwood and the gridiron. As a prep football player, Loveland was a 2-way star for Gooding — he played linebacker and tight end and was rated as a 4-star recruit at tight end. Amid posting more than 3,000 career receiving yards at Gooding, Loveland rolled in major offers from across the country — including Alabama, LSU, Auburn, Utah, and, of course, Michigan.
Loveland committed to and enrolled at Michigan before appearing in 14 games as a true freshman in 2022. He would go on to assume a starting role for the Wolverines during their run to the National Championship in 2023. Loveland started 12 out of 15 games during that season and saw his receiving profile expand with future first-round draft choice J.J. McCarthy running the offense. He was named First-Team All-Big Ten.
Tale Of The Tape
Loveland is a passing weapon first and foremost. Don’t let the frame fool you — this is a big-bodied threat who can win over the middle, down the field, and on out-breaking patterns to the sideline. The versatility of the usage is impressive and transcends the spotty quarterback play that plagued Michigan amid the departure of Jim Harbaugh and J.J. McCarthy ahead of 2024.
I love his hands and how he attacks the football in the air. He’s got a monster catch radius and maximizes it with loose shoulders and torso mobility to extend and play the ball away from his body. That, along with the density of his frame, makes him a challenging player to play through at the catch point and disrupt the catch.
Loveland can play all over the formation. He splits his time across in-line reps and working from the slot but has taken a modest amount of reps as a perimeter eligible as well. Teams that look to bake in pre-snap coverage will find this ability from Loveland to be quite useful, and he’s shown the ability to run routes in this space, too. It is easy to appreciate how he uses his size to play through contact in the contact window and at the top of the route. He’s a handful for defensive backs to disrupt and does well to extend and create separation in these opportunities. He isn’t egregious about it but has leaned into the art of jarring defenders for an extra step of separation.
Loveland works well against zone coverage, too. On routes designed to gear down, he showcases a good understanding of zone leverage and where he needs to squat to make himself available to the quarterback. On scramble drill opportunities, he has worked hard to get to the sideline and, on some occasions, will turn up the field and get behind undisciplined eyes. He scored a long touchdown this way in 2023.
All of these elements mix with strong work on the vertical plane. Delayed shallow crosses that leak upfield, seam routes from in-line or the slot, and fade targets put on the back shoulder are all elements of the passing game he has flashed a high-level ability to win. The versatility of the way he wins as a receiver should be a cause for optimism that he will have something to contribute to most NFL offenses in a certain role.
The ceiling for Loveland as a player is likely to be rooted in how much buy-in teams will have in the ancillary elements of the position. If Loveland can take off here, you may be finding a truly rare mismatch personnel buster. He’s been used extremely sparingly in pass protection.
Given his receiving prowess, that is understandable. It shouldn’t be on his menu as a young NFL player. His punch power, weight distribution, and framing all need significant investment. This extends to the work he offers in line in the run game as well. The mind is willing, and the body has enough physical ability to offer upside. However, if an 11-personnel team drafts Loveland and banks on him being pro-ready as an in-line player who handles climbs to linebackers and works double teams to capture vertical push or proficient skills capturing the edge against NFL defenders, they have another thing coming.
Teams that run inside zone and crack toss as preferred concepts could get some value out of Loveland as a fitting player from the slot. I do believe he’ll have a lot of net positive contributions from reduced slot alignments as compared to a hand in the dirt ‘Y’.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Colston Loveland projects as a mismatch flex tight end for an NFL passing offense. Teams that use hybrid 12p will be best positioned to implement him in the slot or off the ball as a motion player — where he can help change the numbers in the run game to the formational strength, be better positioned to play as a blocker from the slot and draw slot defenders or linebackers in his pass routes and use his height/weight/speed to his advantage. He may be a complementary player early in his career but figures to be a starter by Year 3.
Ashton Jeanty
RB Boise State
- Height:
- 5' 9"
- Weight:
- 215 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 21
- Team
- Pittsburgh Steelers
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Pittsburgh Steelers | 10-7 | .502 | QB, WR, CB |
The Steelers' DNA is well established. This team embraces a physical brand of football, and under Mike Tomlin, they will want to play smash-mouth football and run the ball. Najee Harris is set to hit free agency this offseason after four years and nearly 1,300 touches from scrimmage. Resigning him would not be a bad idea, but spending on a running back is always controversial. Instead, Pittsburgh could take advantage of the slide experienced by Ashton Jeanty here to get a fresh workhorse behind their revamped offensive line courtesy of recent draft classes.
2024 Stats
Rush | Rush YDs | ypc | Rush TDs | rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
374 | 2601 | 7 | 29 | 23 | 138 | 138 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
Jeanty is undoubtedly one of the best players eligible for the 2025 NFL Draft when you disregard positional value. This highly productive running back creates a ton of added value to his touches thanks to an elite ability to create yards after contact and is capable of hitting home run carries through traffic.
Jeanty showcases top-tier vision and contact balance while offering a sufficient skill set on passing downs, making him a viable option for any kind of offensive system, be it outside zone or gap-principled.
Most importantly, his well-rounded resume should allow him to offer the kind of snap usage that will be required to justify a selection in the 1st-round of the 2025 NFL Draft.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Elite contact balance and pad level for added yards after contact
- Terrific vision to make subtle adjustments on his rushing track and maintain momentum
- Patience pressing the line of scrimmage to force defenders to declare into gaps
Negatives
- Room for growth in pass protection consistency
- Very good but not elite breakaway speed
- 2023 ball security was an issue (five fumbles on plays from scrimmage)
Background
Jeanty was born in Jacksonville, Florida, and played high school football at Lone Star High School (Texas). His military family took him to many places before he landed in Boise, including a three-year stint overseas in Italy prior to his enrollment at Lone Star HS.
At Lone Star HS, he was rated as a 4-star recruit (247 Sports) while playing as a 3-sport athlete (football, track & field, and basketball). By his senior season, Jeanty had logged significant playing time on both sides of the ball as a safety, linebacker, and wide receiver before being given the primary running back role. He obliged by scoring 41 total touchdowns. Jeanty finished his high school career with less than 400 career touches.
In addition to Boise State, Jeanty received offers from programs such as Kansas, Cal, and all three service academies.
Jeanty has no documented significant injuries on his resume.
Tale of The Tape
Jeanty is a throwback to prior generations of NFL running backs — he’s a “do it all” threat that a team could easily justify 300+ touches for on an annual basis. The game appears to move in slow motion for Jeanty, who illustrates the kind of elite vision in the box and when stretching the point of attack with perimeter runs that allow him to manipulate defenders and create creases in the running game. Jeanty pairs that vision with strong patience and precise feet.
On zone runs, Jeanty is highly skilled in pressing to the heels of his blockers before declaring himself into a gap, trusting his ability to reignite his forward burst and waiting out linebackers to force them to choose whether they will attempt to run under blockers or scrape over the top before Jeanty cuts against their path.
He is decisive with his cuts and puts faith in his feet, adjusting on steep angles or, alternatively, making slight adjustments out of the mesh point to redirect away from penetration and hit gaps quickly if a crease is present. Those feet stay active in traffic to create additional push and sustain his leg drive.
Jeanty's compact frame naturally offers him leverage at first contact. It makes him a difficult player to get underneath when he’s coming downhill. Still, he also showcases anticipation of hits and braces for contact to make his strike window even smaller and more difficult for defenders to sync up.
Those who would opt to cut him down low in the open field have been made to look silly on more than one occasion, as Jeanty has a nasty hurdle move that allows him to clear smaller defenders in the secondary who know they can’t thump pads with him 1-on-1.
When Jeanty hits the open field, he illustrates the necessary burst to break angles in space and convert those opportunities into long-run touchdowns. He has been caught from behind occasionally, but player tracking data has suggested he's capable of breaking into speeds of up to 21mph in a live-game setting — plenty of acceleration and long speed for the next level.
Jeanty’s passing game skill set is impressive, as well. His former high school pedigree as a slot receiver is apparent with his ball skills—he makes good adjustments to the football and showcases comfortable hands. Boise used him into the flats as an early progression, aligned him on the boundary, and ran perimeter screens with him. They've also tried to get Jeanty the football in more traditional running back screen reps.
Pass protection is still a work in progress, but his dense frame and appetite for contact are attractive elements that have allowed him to aggressively stick his nose into second-level pressures and wash defenders into traffic to keep throwing lanes open and the pocket intact. His consistency, particularly in larger areas of space, to square up rushers is an area of improvement to focus on. That said, I believe he is functional in this capacity now, and it should not be a barrier to playing time early in his career.
Jeanty showed growth in ball security during his second season as the primary runner in 2024, but he did have six credited fumbles in 2023 despite playing in just 12 games. One such play came on an onside kick scrum, but the other five were all fumbles on plays from scrimmage in which Jeanty was fighting for extra yardage. Ball security can be a non-linear issue, so continued focus in this phase as a physical, after-contact runner is absolutely a point of focus.
Overall, Jeanty’s explosiveness in short spaces, his vision and patience as a ball carrier, his physicality as a runner in all phases, and his capability to contribute in all phases of the offense should have him well-primed to be the top running back from the 2025 class and offer him the opportunity to be a featured centerpiece of an NFL offense for years to come.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Primary ball carrier in a run-diverse offense. This is a universal prospect who offers the ability to win between the tackles, outside the numbers, and in the passing game.
Matthew Golden
WR Texas
- Height:
- 6' 0"
- Weight:
- 195 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 22
- Team
- Los Angeles Chargers
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Los Angeles Chargers | 11-6 | .467 | WR, TE, C, DT |
The Chargers need some lightning to go with all of that thunder. This physical offense helped turn the tide in Year One under Harbaugh, but there's little question that the team's lack of wide receiver help lingers as a big need. Landing Matthew Golden to complement Ladd McConkey gives the Chargers an explosive run-after-catch threat and vertical option to go with McConkey's excellent slot profile.
2024 Stats
rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|
58 | 987 | 987 | 9 |
Scouting Overview
Texas Longhorns wide receiver Matthew Golden is an explosive pass catcher who boasts versatility in how he can impact a passing game. The Texas offense unleashed a downfield weapon that accentuated his burst off the line of scrimmage — but his inside/outside versatility sets the stage for a player who can win from the slot with separation quickness and in underneath targets as well.
Golden illustrates excellent body control and contortion skills at the catch point, unlocking his frame to adjust to throws of all angles and making him a high-percentage target when he’s given opportunities despite coverage that may be working back into his frame. Golden was an impactful contested catch target in 2024 despite not having the biggest frame and boasting significant separation skills. He’s got a little something for everyone.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Excellent route-running and ability to create separation at the top of routes with salesmanship and hard breaks
- Bounce and elevation skills are present to explode into high-point opportunities
- Illustrates very good ball-tracking skills down the field and reacts late to prevent defensive adjustments at the catch point
Negatives
- Not an overly creative run after catch target
- Some frustrating drops that are put onto his frame despite his notable catch radius
- Modest run blocking profile to serve as an asset on running downs
Background
Golden is from Houston, TX, and played high school football for Klein Cain HS. There, he was a standout football recruit who also competed in track & field. Golden triple-jumped 21.85 and ran a 10.93s 100m but was a 4-star prep recruit (247 Sports) who was awarded Special Teams Player of the Year honors as a junior and All-State honors as a senior. Golden garnered interest from a slew of programs but ultimately decided to stay local and committed to the Houston Cougars.
Golden played two seasons in Houston, appearing in 20 games on offense (17 starts) and showcasing a nose for the end zone (13 touchdowns). He also handled kickoff return duties and ran two scores back. A foot injury in 2023 cost him the final three games of the season. Golden then entered the transfer portal as a 4-star transfer (247 Sports) and enrolled at Texas.
He started all 15 games for the Longhorns in 2024 and was a featured player in the offense. At the end of the season, Golden declared for the 2025 NFL Draft and bypassed his final season of college eligibility.
Tale Of The Tape
Golden is an impressive breakout talent on the big stage — proving that his production at Houston was not just a byproduct of the level of competition. In the SEC, Golden posted a number of career bests and did so by creating impressive amounts of space in his routes.
Golden can win against press or soft-catch coverage thanks to his initial quickness, foot speed, and awareness of how his body can help to create separation at the top of the route. Golden runs an impressive variety of routes and does well to sell false breaks on his stem.
Golden was more of a screen and vertical receiver early in his career at Houston playing under Dana Holgerson — meeting the traditional Air Raid route distribution. More than 50 percent of Golden’s total routes as a freshman in 2022 were exclusively go balls and hitches. At Texas, the route distribution on such patterns was down to 34 percent. It’s still an area where he wins, thanks in large part to his ability to stack off the line and the physicality he offers with a defender in trail, but his development in this regard is exciting.
Golden will snap off the stem with hard angles and does well on his middle-of-the-field targets to hug his landmarks; this is a disciplined player who will not drift up the field aimlessly and open the window for triggering zone defenders to cut his routes and beat him to the football.
Golden may be a separator, but he has great elevation skills, very good hand-eye coordination, and just enough physicality at the catch point to be successful when the quarterback pulls him back into contact. That happened at Texas often — as Golden had as many contested catch opportunities in 2024 as he did in his prior two seasons combined. Golden won on back-shoulder targets and underthrown fades in the end zone.
His hands are good enough to pluck and attack the football away from his frame, and his drop rate was cut in half from the prior season at Houston. His total resume boasts some warts in this regard with drops and will be something to watch. Still, he was a space and RAC target at Houston and then a more down-the-field target and big-play weapon at Texas, so hopefully, the volume component can draw more consistency regarding concentration and drops.
In the run game, Golden is not a notable factor. He has been assigned intermittently with sealing on crack toss but otherwise is typically running tagged routes on run concepts or split wide and running the perimeter corner off the line of scrimmage. Golden shows sufficient grip strength and functional strength, but the effort and strain level need to be much better for him to be dropped into the slot and attack safeties, linebackers, and nickel corners. This does loom as an incomplete element of his profile and may cut down on his favorability as a true moveable asset at all times and in all down and distances.
In addition to his offensive role, Golden has served for three seasons on the kickoff team after notable prep honors in this regard. He averaged more than 25 yards per return across his three seasons and ran two scores back for Houston in 2023. There’s special team value here that can bolster his value even further if he does not claim a share of wide receiver snaps early in his career.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Golden projects as an impact starter at the NFL level. He may not be a dominant featured player in an NFL passing game, but in today’s world of multiple 100+ target pass catchers in NFL offenses, Golden has the route running, catch point, and downfield ability to justify such a workload.
He’s a scheme-diverse talent and will appeal to every NFL offense’s passing game. Golden would benefit from playing predominantly on the perimeter to avoid run/pass tells and allow him to run off coverage instead of being a primary player attacking the core.
Trey Amos
DB Mississippi
- Height:
- 6' 1"
- Weight:
- 190 lbs
- Age:
- 22
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 23
- Team
- Green Bay Packers
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Green Bay Packers | 11-6 | .533 | EDGE, C, CB |
Green Bay is a team that needs help at some of the premium defensive positions. The edge room and cornerback room both loom as big questions — especially given the uncertainty around the future of cornerback Jaire Alexander. With Green Bay looking promising with their new safety talent, getting perimeter coverage players could help this team serve as a more legitimate contender in 2025 and beyond. Few cornerbacks are more physical and combative in this year's class than Trey Amos, who broke out in a big way in his only season with the Rebels.
2024 Stats
Ints | tkl | pbu | ff |
---|---|---|---|
3 | 52 | 10 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
Ole Miss Rebels cornerback Trey Amos is a well-traveled prospect who has spent time with three separate programs across the past three seasons. Stops in Louisiana, Alabama, and Ole Miss have afforded Amos a variety of coverage roles and responsibilities. He’s taken on more man assignments in his two seasons in the SEC and has the makings of an impactful man-to-man cover corner. He’s long, lean, and physical.
Amos picks up the ball well in flight from the trail position and showcases desirable length and body control to extend and bat away the football. He was among the country’s best secondary defenders in forced incompletions in 2024, and as a player with multiple scheme/coach exposures, he appears to have the coverage instincts necessary to contribute to his new team fairly quickly.
He also pops in some of the ancillary areas of the position, including showing a likable taste for run support — which will only boost his value when he’s assigned to playing half-turn deep thirds or hard flats in zone.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Has very good length and implements it with good impact in press coverage at at the catch point to extend for the football
- Natural ball skills have yielded good ball production as a confident defender in isolation on the perimeter
- Shows a desired appetite as a run support defender to play hard edges in support
Negatives
- Illustrates good but not great top-end straight-line speed to protect against vertical shots in isolated coverage on the perimeter
- Inconsistent as a tackler — both in head-up scenarios and as a pursuit/rally defender away from the football
- Can be overly aggressive both with his hands and his eyes; he is eager to make plays but will benefit from discipline
Background
Amos has been around the block. He was a two-way player for Catholic HS in New Iberia, LA. There, he played quarterback and cornerback in addition to being the 2A Louisiana State Champion in the Long Jump (22-9 ¾). He was rated as a 3-star athlete (247 Sports). Amos received modest interest on the recruiting scene and enrolled at Louisiana. He played three seasons with the Ragin’ Cajuns program, playing in 34 contests with the team before entering into the transfer portal ahead of the 2023 season and transferring to Alabama.
Amos played less than 350 defensive snaps for the Crimson Tide in 2023, and so Amos once again hit the transfer portal, this time landing with Ole Miss for his fifth season of college play. He finally found the breakout season he was looking for and was named First Team All-SEC for his 2024 performance.
Tale Of The Tape
Amos physically looks like an NFL cornerback, and he plays like one, too. This is a talent who offers above-average transitional burst despite being built like the modern prototype at cornerback. He’s a big player who can successfully attack and punch up in weight class against big receivers, thanks to his length, feet, and functional strength.
Amos does well as a disruptor in coverage in the contact window and a zone defender charged with playing with his eyes in the backfield. His coverage versatility, at his stature, makes him an exciting player.
In man coverage, Amos has the ability to catch routes and uproot the route stem before flipping his hips and transitioning into the trail position to carry receivers vertically up the field. From the trail, he boasts the necessary length to extend and interrupt the catch radius of receivers on deep shots down the field. He can be prone and vulnerable to hard-angled routes breaking inside if he’s not attached to the body or playing inside leverage, as his reactive athleticism here showcases some of the high hips of his frame and, by extension, longer strides that need an extra step to flash and recover.
It is easy to like his press technique and foot speed at the line of scrimmage — but in the event that he whiffs or comes up empty with his jam, he has sufficient but not elite recovery speed to work back into the frame of the receiver on vertical patterns.
In zone coverage, Amos illustrates an aggressive demeanor. It can, at times, get him into trouble and could allow quarterbacks to manipulate his leverage and be moved out of position with good pass protection. This includes potential stutter go’s and sluggos on the outside when playing in quarters or Cover 3. Amos is at his best playing in half-turn and carrying receivers up the field with eyes in the backfield. He illustrates surprising quickness to collect and redirect downhill in either run support or against in-breakers and comebacks while playing overtop as a capped defender in zone.
When the ball is in the air, Amos shows the desired ability to take proper angles to cut off the throw underneath or, alternatively, play through the body of receivers at the catch point. His length allows him to play through receivers, but he’ll need to be mindful of how he implements his hands to attack receivers and win the last bit of space to extend and greet the ball. His physicality, if mistimed or extended from his frame, can be interpreted as excessive contact.
Amos’s ball production shined in an Ole Miss defense in 2024 that had a disruptive defensive front. Teams that can play coverage with an organic rush to test opposing quarterbacks’ precision down the field and in tight windows will likely afford Amos, with his top-shelf length, eager eyes, and surprising transitions, the opportunity to hunt the ball and serve as a potential ballhawk at the NFL level.
As a run support player, Amos shows the desired bounce out of flat-footed reads from depth to step up and beat blocks on the edge. He’s a sufficient level tackler but can be prone to dropping his eyes to try to create big contact on the edge and, in space on the edge, this can be a troublesome habit. As a wrap-up tackler, he has the length and functional strength to finish these opportunities sufficiently.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Amos projects as an NFL starting perimeter cornerback. He will need to be vigilant about his hands and how physically he plays the catch point, but teams that desire a deep third corner in Cover 3 or a press-heavy man defender can both find starting roles for a player of his stature and skill set.
Amos should be considered an early candidate to start and be drafted accordingly.
T.J. Sanders
DL South Carolina
- Height:
- 6' 4"
- Weight:
- 290 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 24
- Team
- Minnesota Vikings
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Minnesota Vikings | 14-3 | .474 | DT, CB, OG, RB |
Minnesota appears to have another year of Brian Flores calling the defense on deck. With that in mind, the team would benefit from more dynamic, young talent for Flores's aggressive pressure scheme. TJ Sanders is one of the most disruptive interior talents in this year's class. Putting him in positions to play in a loaded front or base looks like a complement to Harrison Phillips, giving Minnesota another dangerous weapon to force mistakes from opposing quarterbacks.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl |
---|---|---|
47 | 4 | 2 |
Scouting Overview
South Carolina Gamecocks defensive tackle T.J. Sanders projects as an attacking interior defender for the NFL level. There appears to be a developmental foundation for a more complete role and profile with time — he has enough length and enough punch power to align overtop of blockers and stack the point if he can be more consistent with his anchor, block recognition skills, and hand placement.
As is, he’s an absolute savage rushing the passer who should bolster an NFL team’s sub-package rush group from the jump. Sanders has played more than 150 snaps apiece in the A-gap and head-up over tackles, showing the ability to win from all kinds of angles thanks to his first step, lateral quickness, active hands, and ability to turn tight corners.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Potent first step explosiveness and second gear to dart across the face or shoot gaps
- Has very strong lower body flexibility and cornering skills to squeeze through tight creases and peel to the quarterback
- Illustrates a number of rush counters with his hands at first contact to further amplify his quickness through the contact window
Negatives
- Somewhat undersized talent who can get engulfed by double teams or disciplined pad level at the point of attack
- Lacks ideal raw upper-body power for block deconstruction when stacking the point
- Overall, block recognition skills in neutral down rate can be more consistent
Background
Sanders (full name is Tanaeri J. Sanders) is from Marion, SC, and played high school football for Marion HS. There, he was also a standout basketball player who earned All-State honors as a junior. On the gridiron, Sanders was a 3-star recruit (247 Sports) as a strong-side defensive end and also played tight end for Marion. Sanders committed to South Carolina over programs like Tennessee, NC State, West Virginia, Virginia Tech, and Duke.
He redshirted his true freshman season in 2021 after seeing action in two games. He appeared in 12 contests in 2022 before collecting program accolades in the spring of 2023 — signifying a breakout on the way. Sanders was awarded the Rex Enright Defensive Player of the Spring that year and went on to collect seven starts in 12 games, leading the team in sacks (4.5) and tackles for loss (9.5) in the process.
Sanders played in all 13 games for the Gamecocks as a redshirt junior in 2024 and was named Second Team All-SEC for his play. He declared after the end of the 2024 season and bypassed his final season of eligibility.
Tale Of The Tape
Sanders has the ability to become a disruptor for his NFL home. This is a quick but proportionately dense interior defender who sports a quick get-off out of the blocks, violent and active hands at first contact, and pleasant lower body flexibility to carry speed through the corners when rushing the passer. Sanders is not an incomplete player with his run vs. pass defending resume — but the pass rush skill set is what he’s likely to be coveted for and sets the ceiling for his evaluation.
This is a player who has shown a variety of ways to get after the quarterback. He’s got a nifty inside scissors and swipe counter to cross face against the center when protection pushes his way, he’s capable of coiling and exploding through gaps with effective quickness, and he can, on occasion, convert speed to power and collapse a center or guard back and compress the pocket. He is slippery through contact thanks to some looseness in his shoulders and does well on twists and stunts to probe and feel creases to pop through and create discomfort for the quarterback.
Sanders’ hands are best when countering punches at first contact. But he does show sturdy punch power, the ability to press back a set of pads, and the ability to hold his own when everything clicks into place. He has the lateral mobility and enough upper-body strength to press and fall off a block to mirror a cut by the ball carrier. However, he lacks the general knockback and dominant power at the point of attack to hold double teams and/or reset the line of scrimmage consistently.
This may prompt him to eventually collect reps as an odd front end on early downs, but that is more of a projection element of his game than unleashing his athleticism as a pass rusher from all kinds of angles. He has enough acceleration and lower-body power to run pick stunts as the wall setter. He possesses enough grace and balance to pinball off the blocker if he’s not captured with hands and parlay that momentum into a crease toward the quarterback.
Sanders’ pad level is generally sufficient, but he’s not condensed enough to be immune to poor pad level and losing leverage. These instances, which spring up vs. vertical drive blocks or when a slide protection variation stymies his initial rush, can kill his momentum and neutralize him. Keeping his feet churning can help him sustain momentum through prolonged contact more efficiently and ensure he can play his way back into the action in high traffic.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Sanders projects best as a penetration pass-rush specialist early in his career. He does have enough length to develop his game into an every-down defender for a multiple-front scheme, but his most direct pathway to playing time as a rookie will be as an interior designated pass rusher.
He can align on the nose in rush situations but would be best served attacking the B-gap from 3T and 4i alignments.
Emeka Egbuka
WR Ohio State
- Height:
- 6' 1"
- Weight:
- 205 lbs
- Age:
- 22
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 25
- Team
- Houston Texans
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Houston Texans | 10-7 | .481 | WR, OG, DT |
Houston's loaded wide receiver room did not survive the 2024 season. The Stefon Diggs gamble did not pay off and young receiver Tank Dell suffered an ugly season-ending injury for the second consecutive season. Pairing Egbuka with his former college quarterback would give this passing game some extra juice and fast track the chemistry between CJ Stroud and a new addition to the wide receiver room.
2024 Stats
rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|
81 | 1011 | 1011 | 10 |
Scouting Overview
Ohio State Buckeyes WR Emeka Egbuka is a well-built, smooth slot receiver who offers reliable hands and toughness at the catch point.
Egbuka should be considered an underneath, chain-moving option at the NFL level who can provide value in 11p-heavy offenses. The Shanahan scheme and all of its branches across the league will likely find ample value in Egbuka’s game on targets that attack the middle of the field.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Reliable hands that pop at the catch point
- Smooth body control to contort to the ball
- YAC demon with comfort in the middle of the field
Negatives
- Unlikely to offer vertical value at the NFL level
- Underwhelming blocking presence for a dense slot receiver
- Less success stacking defenders on the perimeter
Background
Egbuka was born in DuPont, Washington, and played his high school football for Steilacoom HS in Washington. There, he earned a 5-star recruitment ranking (247 Sports) and was listed as a top-10 overall recruit in the country and the nation’s No. 1 wide receiver while posting 61 total touchdowns in his high school career.
After the COVID-19 pandemic pushed Steilacoom’s 2020 season to the spring of 2021, Egbuka bypassed his senior season and became an early enrollee at Ohio State before becoming a productive member of the Buckeyes’ wide receiver corp as a true freshman via special teams.
As a sophomore, Egbuka posted his first career 1,000-yard season for Ohio State while catching passes from now-Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud. For his efforts that season, he was named Second-Team All-Big Ten. Egbuka’s junior season was injury-marred, and he disclosed he underwent a tightrope procedure for an ankle injury suffered that season. In all, he missed three games as a junior before returning for his senior season in 2024.
Tale Of THe Tape
The first thing that stands out about Egbuka is his proficiency, which allows him to transition from a pass catcher to a threat with the football in his hands. Egbuka has good instincts to feel and attack space with the ball in his hands on underneath targets.
He is capable of creating chunk plays with his initial burst and vision after the catch. This player thrives when given space to operate and has historically thrived as a slot option, where releases into routes are more free access, and he can attack his route stems based on leverage from nickel defenders, safeties, and linebackers.
Egbuka can also play through soft tackle challenges. He’s not a lightweight receiver and plays tough if defenders aren’t capable of squaring on his frame in the open field. It is easy to appreciate how he plucks and attacks the football to ensure he’s optimizing space at the catch point, preventing defenders from coming through his body to contest the throw.
Egbuka shows good concentration on targets through traffic, seeing the ball into his hands and willing to brace for contact at the hit. This quality is complemented by how he contorts his frame back to the football on throws that force him to flip his hips late in the stem.
This is a receiver with a strong track record with his hands, but it was notable that a handful of his few career drops have come on targets to his back hip. That and the occasional rep of taking his eyes off the football too early were the primary contributors to his infrequent drops throughout his college career.
Egbuka has been given opportunities to play on the outside, but he is much more successful working from the slot. I did not see the same success breaking across the face of defensive backs or stacking defenders vertically while playing on the outside and having coverage leverage the sideline against him. As such, I do believe he’ll be best served as predominantly an inside target at the next level.
From a route-running perspective, he’s frequently impactful on hitches, shallow crosses, slants, and out patterns. He’ll convert first and second-window targets into in-stride foot races. It is easy to appreciate how he will get on top of the toes of defenders before getting into his cuts — he understands the value of closing space and attacking defenders to force defensive positioning before breaking and looking for the football.
He does have room to grow with being a more impactful all-around player. I would love to see some more fire on running downs, particularly given that he is a thicker slot option. He clearly has the pop in his hands and contact balance to dictate terms and claim real estate against defensive backs playing as an apex defender.
More often than not, Egbuka was charged with playing out RPO routes or serving as a decoy on obvious running situations or short-yardage reps. He can take his game to the next level with more dynamic play away from the football, and he has the physical skill set to do it.
Egbuka can bring special teams value if needed. He’s an experienced kick returner who played that role primarily as a freshman in 2021. He averaged nearly 30 yards per return, and thanks to his smooth cuts and field vision, I could see him adjusting well to the dynamic kickoff rules in the NFL.
This is a player with good receiving instincts and ball-tracking capabilities. Timing-based offenses can maximize his run-after-catch capabilities, and pinpoint accurate quarterbacks should help maximize his catch radius and offer him opportunities to use his ball skills and body control to target away from defenders when he is targeted in tight coverage.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Primary slot receiver for a West Coast offense. Egbuka is primarily a passing game weapon with room to grow in the complementary areas of the position.
Aireontae Ersery
OT Minnesota
- Height:
- 6' 6"
- Weight:
- 330 lbs
- Age:
- —
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 26
- Team
- Los Angeles Rams
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Los Angeles Rams | 10-7 | .505 | OT, WR, LB, EDGE |
The Rams invested big-time into getting physical on the offensive line last offseason. But the job isn't quite finished — the left tackle spot looms as a position in flux. With a power tackle like Aireontae Ersery, the Rams can assemble a mauling front that can uproot and displace even the best defensive lines.
2024 Stats
G |
---|
12 |
Scouting Overview
Minnesota Golden Gophers offensive tackle Aireontae Ersery boasts an impressive athletic profile in a prototypical frame for playing the position at the NFL level. Ersery is a three-year starter at Minnesota and comes with plenty of proof of concept of playing a physical brand of football that is easy to appreciate.
His skills pop in the run game and allow large voids in the front for his backs to attack confidently. Given his prototypical frame, Ersery offers significant gravitational pull for first-level defenders and enough influence to create second-level disruption when he looks to climb.
His pass protection work lingers as the big point of emphasis moving forward — a team that can get him up to speed with the technique and framing on an island in protection could reap big rewards.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Very good linear explosiveness and ability to create movement in vertical run game; both in solo and double team reps
- Prototypical frame and length create steep angles for pass rushers when well-framed on the edge
- Showcases necessary lateral range to stay attached in zone run scheme
Negatives
- Balance and center of gravity in space can be compromised, leaving him vulnerable to inside counters
- Foot speed in pass sets is sufficient but leaves less room for error against explosive speed off the edge
- Hand placement and timing will need continued development for optimal stun
Background
Ersery hails from Kansas City, MO, and played high school football at Ruskin HS. While at Ruskin, Ersery also partook in track & field as a shot put, discus, and javelin thrower and did not start playing organized football until his junior year of high school.
Despite his rawness and late start to the game, he was rated as a 3-star recruit (247 Sports) before committing to Minnesota for the 2020 college football season. Ersery played in one game during the COVID-19-shortened 2020 season, which did not impact his eligibility. He then redshirted in 2021 after playing in one game against Northwestern and assumed a starting tackle role for the Gophers in 2022.
He’s been a staple of the Gophers offensive line ever since, manning the left tackle position for the last three years. It is worth noting his true freshman appearance in 2020 came with more than 70 snaps at right tackle, so he does appear to have multi-position flex available to him as he preps for the NFL.
Tale Of The Tape
Ersery will hit all of the benchmarks of an NFL starting tackle — the question is simply how high the floor is and how achievable the ceiling is.
Ersery is dynamic as a raw athlete. He’s got an explosive first step when firing off the ball, effective lateral mobility, and good core strength to eat power rushes despite having a larger frame at 6-foot-6 and 330 pounds. The blend of size and athletic ability will move the needle for offensive coaches — he’s got the uncoachables.
Given his late start to the game as a high school junior, it is understandable to see some of the warts that still exist in his game despite three years of starting experience. His hand usage lingers as an area where he is generally getting by with his length and raw punch power. Ersery’s hand strikes can be late at times and yield some added leverage from rushers despite his wingspan and area of influence.
Ersery’s ability to flash and run rushers past the peak of the pocket can make up for the late hands. Still, NFL rushers figure to add a new level of challenge, given some can convert power into late hands and simply run through a soft angle off his outside shoulder.
The punch power is very good when he does time up his protection stun and when he’s firing off the ball. He’s at his best playing forward and attacking out of his stance. He’s not quite as dynamic in short-area lateral situations or mirror reps compared to firing vertically off the ball.
Still, he has enough to play backside cutoff or work front side and create expansion at the point of attack in outside run concepts, too. That affords him some universal appeal, but teams that want to get the most leg-work out of him in the run game will feature him playing downhill.
Ersery gets off double teams well and has a large area of influence at the second level, leaving linebackers with a business decision to bubble and run over the top while giving ground or alternatively gambling and running underneath his leverage to try to make the play.
Ersery’s athletic profile features a lot of pop, but I don’t necessarily see the most fluid and loose frame on the edge. It sometimes impacts his recovery ability, both in protection when he allows a defender to stress his set and when he catches upfield penetration in the run game.
He has sufficient hinges, but his hips, ankles, and knees aren’t standout traits like his linear power and explosiveness. This means he will need to refine several angle and hand usage fundamentals to ensure he’s got the margin for error needed to be a successful starter.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Ersery projects best to a play-action-heavy scheme at the NFL level. He’s a developmental starter with all the tools needed to be a quality starter. However, his technical refinement and snap-to-snap consistency, particularly in pass protection, loom as an area of necessary growth.
Playing in a PA-heavy scheme would allow him to paint a similar picture for defenders in run and pass reps, helping reduce the stress he’d take with vertical or angular pass sets until he can develop this phase of his game.
James Pearce Jr.
LB Tennessee
- Height:
- 6' 5"
- Weight:
- 243 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 27
- Team
- Baltimore Ravens
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Baltimore Ravens | 12-5 | .529 | OT, WR, OG |
Baltimore, in this scenario, does what they seemingly always do. The Ravens let the board fall to them and reap the rewards with an explosive pass-rush talent in James Pearce. This is an ideal landing spot for a talent like Pearce, who has undeniable ability as a speed rusher but would benefit from rounding out his resume as a pass rusher. Baltimore has a strong track record of developing talent on the edge and has veterans in place that would prevent him from playing situationally before he's ready.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl | ff |
---|---|---|---|
31 | 7.5 | 6 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
The James Pearce Jr. profile is one we’ve seen before — long, explosive, and dominant cornering ability to get to the quarterback. Pearce Jr. isn’t a perfect prospect, and I’m not sure he’s a scheme-transcendent talent, although he could be if he can sustain his explosiveness and bend while adding some significant mass to his frame.
However, these traits don’t just get drafted early, and they usually transition quite well in obvious passing situations. He can flash like lightning, flow like water, and is one of the most persistent and productive pass rushers in the entire country. Put him on the field on third and mediums and longer, and he should find himself in an impactful role while he rounds out the warts in his game.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Elite explosiveness off the line of scrimmage to pressure angles of offensive tackles and create space
- Possesses elite bend and lower body flexibility to carry speed through steep angles and corner effectively
- Showcases top-notch length and extension ability to long-arm and create separation for block disengagement
Negatives
- Functional strength and raw power is a question due to lean frame and lack of mass
- High-cut defender whose ability to play at the point of attack will always be something of a question
- Ability to convert speed to power and reduce angles needs work to offer a fully complete pass rush profile
Background
Pearce Jr. is from Charlotte, NC, and played his high school football at Julius L Chambers HS. There, he was a highly regarded, albeit undersized, pass-rush recruit rated as a 4-star prospect (247 Sports). Pearce Jr. was a closely contested recruit who garnered nearly 20 offers, choosing the Volunteers over South Carolina after posting 14.5 sacks as a senior.
As a true freshman at Tennessee, Pearce Jr. played in all 13 games while playing sparingly. His breakout campaign came in 2023 as a true sophomore — earning First Team All-SEC honors for Tennessee while posting 10 sacks and 14.5 tackles for a loss.
This production came despite starting just three games and playing in every game. His encore season in 2024 was equally impressive; Pearce Jr. led the SEC in pressures (52) through the end of the regular season and helped the Volunteers punch their ticket to the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff.
Tale Of The Tape
Pearce Jr. is an elite speed rusher — just don’t miscast him as just a speed rusher. There’s a pleasant amount of variety in the ways in which Pearce Jr. wins in getting to the quarterback, which will set him up for an early NFL role.
He boasts a number of rush counters and is an effective rush planner who can identify early opportunities against heavy feet or oversets to take corrective pathways into the backfield through his first two steps of the rush. It isn’t just the ability to overwhelm and overtake tackles on the edge that pops; it’s his reactive quickness and recognition of how he’s being framed that allows him to be such a dominant presence rushing the quarterback.
The elite traits, however, give him an area to hang his hat early in his development. He has elite length, bend, and burst. His ability to turn tight corners and flatten at the top of the rush is a critical element of his game, as it allows him more margin to work into a hip-to-hip relationship with tackles and his influence attacking the frame of the quarterback while engaged with rushers is larger than most because of his reach and body control.
This pairs well not just for rushes off the edge but also makes him a dangerous presence in opportunities to run twists and stunts that could potentially turn him loose on interior gaps. Pearce Jr. has the ability to carry speed through tight angles, and the secondary acceleration makes him someone who will close throwing windows with suddenness.
Pearce Jr. still has opportunities to refine his game. He’s logged less than 600 career pass rush opportunities across three seasons in college, and many of his wins have come courtesy of his movement skills. With that in mind, the precision of how he uses his hands can become more consistent and make him even more devastating as a rusher.
His chops, at times, are mistimed, and his placement on speed-to-power conversions doesn’t always get the meat of the tackle. Pearce Jr. has the mobility to drop his hips on these reps to try to gain leverage and play up and through the chest of tackles, but his raw power will gather more teeth if he can put some added mass onto his frame.
This is always a dangerous proposition for speed rushers — balancing the prospect of adding mass but not neutering what a player does best. Pearce Jr. can play at his current weight, but to be a high-volume snap taker, he would likely benefit from an added 10-15 pounds on his frame to help his ability to play with more power and boost his presence at the point of attack to hold up against the run.
His block recognition skills in more passive reps are a work in progress, and his upper-body strength and power to press linemen off his frame are currently limited.
The run defending questions could be mitigated in a wide-9 system that encourages backfield penetration and lean into his strengths as an athlete. But in a perfect world, he’ll be afforded pass-rush snaps early and allowed to further develop his hand usage, leverage, and block recognition throughout the early windows of his pro career in order to earn more snaps.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Pearce Jr. projects as a star pass rusher at the NFL level. However, his early play in the NFL could be somewhat limited, restricting him to a designated pass rush role as a rookie or second-year player.
Still, assuming he continues to refine his ability to deconstruct blocks while further filling out his frame, there’s no reason that this cannot be a double-digit sack artist who plays a majority of downs in the NFL. Pearce Jr. can realistically play as a hand-in-the-dirt end, ideally from wider alignments, or play as a rush linebacker who releases from a 2-point stance.
Tyler Booker
IOL Alabama
- Height:
- 6' 5"
- Weight:
- 325 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 28
- Team
- Detroit Lions
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Detroit Lions | 15-2 | .516 | WR, OG, DT, CB |
The Lions boast a strong reputation for their offensive line but are facing the outlook of potential change at both spots. Kevin Zeitler is an expiring contract and was the better of the team's two starting guards — Graham Glasgow signed a 3-year deal last offseason and struggled in 2024. Amid all of the changes in Detroit with coaching upheaval, staying true to the DNA of the team will help ease the transition — and that makes a mauling guard like Tyler Booker a perfect fit.
2024 Stats
G |
---|
13 |
Scouting Overview
Alabama Crimson Tide offensive guard Tyler Booker projects as a powerful starter at the NFL level. His raw mass is impressive, and the power in his hands allows him to shine as a tone-setting presence on the interior.
Booker shines on inside run concepts, both as a puller and on vertical releases, to generate movement at the point of attack. Booker can solo 4i and 3-tech alignments and create wash to blow open holes in the running game. As a pass protector, he has tackle length and influence to go with a heavy anchor thanks to ideal weight distribution throughout his trunk and core.
He can continue to grow and develop with the nuances of pass protection and passing off rushers with his linemates to avoid leaky protection and take the next step with his game. In all, this two-year starter has a notable ceiling for a team ready to invest in power for their interior front.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Has heavy, heavy hands that create a lot of jolt and movement with first strikes
- Very difficult to play through with power rushes on account of his mass and center of gravity
- Produces very good movement in the run game once attached to A-level defenders
Negatives
- Lateral mobility and range on outside run concepts leave him exposed to LBs running overtop of his climb to second-level
- Struggles with consistency in passing off twists and stunts to sustain pocket
- Does not have the most dynamic foot speed to mirror in isolation versus speed
Background
Booker arrived in Tuscaloosa from the IMG Academy by way of New Haven, CT. Booker was ranked as a prized 4-star recruit (247 Sports) and one of the top overall offensive line recruits in the country. At IMG Academy, he played right tackle on the same line as future Alabama teammate JC Latham. Offering NFL bloodlines courtesy of his uncle Ulish (Pittsburgh Steelers, 2005-2006), Booker looks every bit the part of an NFL offensive lineman.
Booker chose Alabama for college play over Georgia, Florida, and Ohio State. He played sparingly in 2022 as a freshman before earning a starting guard job in 2023. Booker earned First-Team All-SEC honors during his true sophomore season and resumed his position as a starter for the Crimson Tide in 2024. Booker started one game at tackle in 2024 in addition to his role at left guard.
Tale Of The Tape
Booker is a heavyweight offensive lineman who offers a ton of punch power and physicality at the point of attack. Teams looking for tone setters will gravitate towards his hulking frame, functional strength, and power through his hands.
He’s shown the ability to play tackle in a pinch, with one start there in 2024, but he should be considered an interior player who can swallow up defenders at the point of attack. Booker is capable of completely enveloping non-dynamic talents up front and offers the functional strength to still create push in 1-on-1 opportunities against big bodies inside.
Booker is a standout player with double teams — teams that run duo will undoubtedly love his ability to create space inside. He offers impressive leverage despite a taller frame for the interior and has the ability to roll through contact and explode into bodies. This aids his consistency in generating positive gains on the line of scrimmage, whether it comes in a double team or when absorbing a first-level defender on his own. Booker is sufficiently fluid when working off of doubles to fit onto the second-level linebacker. He achieves this despite modest foot speed and more than makes up for it with his wingspan and reach.
When he gets his hands fit on a defender, he’s usually effective in sustaining the block and sucking the defender into his immediate vicinity. His grip was not frequently broken in close-quarters combat.
Booker illustrates a desirable anchor in pass protection thanks to his leverage and how well he offsets head-up pass rush charges with his hands. This is not the player to go toe to toe with, and assume you’ll run straight through him to collapse the pocket.
His ability to mirror when facing a 3T on a short set is sufficient and protects him from getting hip to hip and being put into recovery mode in protection. His bigger issues protecting the quarterback come with uneven levels and late diagnosis of 2- and 3-man stunt games up front. He can be late to deliver a first-arriving rusher to his center or late to slide his feet after his eyes pick up a looper that is crossing back across his momentum. These issues are partially chemistry-related and, amid a new scheme in 2024 with the arrival of Coach Kalen DeBoer, are somewhat understandable.
Booker is athletic enough to play and reach some ambitious landmarks, but functional athleticism is not going to be a hallmark of his game. He’s shown the hip mobility to pull and kick the end in power or counter reps or, alternatively, get outside of pin blocks and try to lead his quarterback outside the numbers on some quarterback run designs.
His ability to climb uncovered to the second level is modest and faster. More instinctive linebackers could run over his area of influence and be uncovered playside on the second level.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Tyler Booker projects as an NFL starter for teams that look to create vertical movement in the run game. Booker’s athleticism doesn’t make him a universal player, but his length, power, and grip strength to sustain blocks at the fringes of his wingspan afford him a floor in pass protection that should get him on the field and see action early.
Despite his experience of intermittently playing at tackle, he should be considered a guard-exclusive talent in the pros, barring emergencies due to injuries along the line.
Luther Burden III
WR Missouri
- Height:
- 5' 11"
- Weight:
- 208 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 29
- Team
- Washington Commanders
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Washington Commanders | 12-5 | .436 | WR, EDGE, CB, S |
Thanks to Dan Quinn and young quarterback Jayden Daniels, Washington's future is bright. But if the Commanders are going to maximize their window with Daniels over the next few years, they'd be wise to make sure he has all the toys needed at his disposal to score points in bunches. Dyami Brown is on an expiring contract, and Luke McCaffrey is an unknown — so why not target a powerful, explosive, and compact RAC threat like Burden to play opposite Terry McLaurin?
2024 Stats
rec | recYd | ypr | recTD |
---|---|---|---|
61 | 676 | 676 | 6 |
Scouting Overview
Missouri Tigers wide receiver Luther Burden III is an electric weapon with the football in his hands. He was among the nation’s leaders in run-after-catch yardage during the 2023 season, which was his peak with the Tigers program.
Burden is primarily a slot receiver who will need added development to win and be featured on the outside. However, his ball skills and explosiveness make him a desirable addition who can win underneath and help generate explosives after the catch.
If he lands in an offense with various weapons, he can be a killer counterpunch to a defense’s efforts to take away featured players. I think Burden can, in time, become a featured weapon himself — but a number of the roles Missouri charged him with to manufacture touches leave him with ample room to grow into that kind of volume in an NFL passing game.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Electric run after catch threat capable of forcing missed tackles with explosive speed and functional strength
- Reliable hands catcher that showcases effective ball skills away from his frame to aggressively frame the ball
- Compact frame allows him to play with admirable physicality and good contact balance
Negatives
- Limited experience playing on the perimeter and likely relegated to slot role early in his career
- Granted a lot of free releases and schemed targets in the Missouri offense, will need refinement in both releases and routes to earn touches in progression
- Underwhelming blocker to aid the point of attack from the slot
Background
Burden is from East Saint Louis, IL, and played his high school at East Saint Louis HS. As a prep talent, Burden played football and basketball but quickly found momentum on the gridiron.
He was rated as a highly acclaimed 5-star recruit (247 Sports) who piled up accolades at East Saint Louis HS, including MaxPreps Player of the Year and an invitation to the 2022 Under Armour All-America Game as the No. 1 wide receiver recruit in the country.
Burden received more than three dozen offers before ultimately choosing Missouri over SEC powerhouses Alabama and Georgia — and becoming one of just a handful of 5-star recruits to commit to the program.
As a true freshman, Burden posted a rushing and receiving touchdown in his first career game and also posted a punt return score in the first month of the season; he finished the year with double-digit touchdowns in 2022. Burden exploded in 2023 as a true sophomore, finishing as a semi-finalist for the Biletnikoff while securing First-Team All-SEC and Second-Team All-American honors for the Tigers.
Tale Of The Tape
Luther Burden III is an electric offensive weapon that can add big-play ability to an NFL roster. The translatability of some of his usage will depend on the offensive play caller and the other tools at the roster’s disposal, but a group that has a variety of body types and weapons in the passing game will be well positioned to use Burden to the best of his ability as he acclimates to the pro game.
His instincts with the ball in his hand are top-tier, and he’s at his best in space. The open field vision he showcases as a ball carrier allows him to work to a crease effectively and break pursuit angles from secondary players as they rally to the football. Burden is super slippery at the catch point, too. He has good anticipation and body control out of the reception to feel where to break to maximize his yardage opportunities.
This feel and vision are complemented by an aggressive demeanor at the catch point; he’s not a body catcher who traps the ball on his chest and waits for the football to arrive. Instead, Burden will extend and attack the ball to buy himself more time to decide where to move with the ball.
Burden’s receiving profile is boosted by the frequency of his motion at the snap. Missouri will tuck him in split-flow action to get him out into the flat in play action for extra room to work, and on other occasions, see him carrying speed at the snap to aid his ability to get out into space. The Tigers also do a nice job of placing him in stack alignments to ensure free releases, and he’ll run off the vapor trails of the point before breaking out into the top of his stem.
As a route runner, Missouri has carved out several hyper-specific opportunities for him. He’s run some out & ups and stuff working down the field, but nearly 60 percent of his target opportunities have come on vertical fades & go’s, shallow & deep crosses, and wide receiver screens.
This, paired with his presnap mobility, has limited how much contact Burden has needed to negotiate while releasing off the line of scrimmage and simultaneously at the top of the route. Given these layers to his game, it is fair to expect that a vanilla scheme or static usage rate will require some patience from his NFL offense. Ideally, his next landing spot will embrace moving him around to the same degree Missouri does. If that’s the case, he can be an impactful player.
Outside of the passing game, Burden III has an impressive resume as a kick returner and should be afforded opportunities to be involved in the return game. He has the density to absorb hits on kick and punt returns and the vision and explosiveness to create a big play.
As a run game presence, you certainly like the frame and the physicality. That said, there’s a lack of intensity and gusto for blocking reps. As a primary slot option entering the league, ideally, there’s a fire lit under him in these reps, and he can discover the passion for aiding the run game. Such a development would make his playability in early downs much more digestible as he matures as a route runner.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Burden III projects best at the NFL level as a complementary weapon across his first few seasons. Offensive schemes that embrace interchangeability with alignment and role at wide receiver offer him the best forecast to being moved into pre-snap alignments that create touch opportunities for him.
Burden is not a ready-made route runner with a full tree, so his opportunities will need to be in a limited tree role and whatever designed touches a coach can create for him to quickly get the ball into his hands. Look for Burden III to win early in the league on the vertical plane and underneath vs. zone.
Nic Scourton
DL Texas A&M
- Height:
- 6' 4"
- Weight:
- 285 lbs
- Age:
- 2—
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 30
- Team
- Buffalo Bills
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Buffalo Bills | 13-4 | .467 | EDGE, S, WR |
The Bills are a team that appears likely to overhaul their pass rush unit this offseason. Von Miller may be a cap casualty, and the team could certainly upgrade over AJ Epenesa, who is on an expiring contract after 2025. Nic Scourton is a diverse talent who can play as a physical edge setter in run defense but also provide some refined pass rush ability with his array of counters. He did not explode this season as some expected after transferring into Texas A&M, but his versatility should be considered a strength and asset Buffalo could welcome on their edge.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl | ff |
---|---|---|---|
33 | 5 | 8 | 1 |
Scouting Overview
Texas A&M Aggies defensive lineman Nic Scourton projects as a power rusher at the NFL level. His ability to play on the opposing side of the line of scrimmage through contact pairs well with savvy hand counters to provide what should be a significant floor as an NFL talent.
Scourton’s NFL ceiling will likely be determined by either finding extra twitch and explosiveness in his athletic profile or continuing to refine the technical elements of his play. He doesn’t showcase overwhelming explosiveness, speed, or bend. As such, his consistency in logging wins is likely reliant on his precision with his counters, hands, and angles working off of blocks.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Wide variety of pass rush counters at his disposal. He offers an effective chop, rip, and inside spin move
- Illustrates good center of gravity thanks to dense, compact frame and athleticism to pinball through traffic
- Plays with a hot motor and good overall range on secondary effort reps
Negatives
- Lacks a dynamic first step to threaten the edge with consistency, forcing more of his rush wins to come via secondary counters
- Can be guilty of getting swallowed at the point of attack if he is not vigilant with his extension to keep his frame clean
- Can struggle to turn the corner once he’s reached the apex of his rush if he is still fighting through contact
Background
Scourton is from Bryan, TX, and played high school football at Bryan HS. There, he garnered interest as a 4-star recruit (247 Sports), generating interest on the gridiron while also playing basketball. Scourton played in the 2022 All-American Bowl to wrap his prep career ahead of his enrollment with the Purdue Boilermakers, where he spent his first two seasons of college ball. Scourton played in 10 games as a true freshman in 2022 — posting the most tackles by a freshman DL in the program since George Karlaftis.
Scourton led the Big Ten in sacks as a sophomore in 2023, posting 10 en route to being named Second-Team All-Big Ten. Ten sacks were the most by a Purdue player since Ryan Kerrigan posted 12.5 in 2010.
After the 2023 season, he entered the transfer portal and enrolled at Texas A&M as a 4-star transfer (247 Sports). Scourton, formerly known as Nic Caraway before changing his last name in honor of his father, will be 20 years old at the start of 2025 training camp and turns 21 just before the scheduled end of the preseason.
Tale Of The Tape
Scourton is a fascinating prospect who affords his future NFL team a diverse menu of pass rush counters and a couple of different pathways to success. At his current weight, he’d be best served playing with his hand in the dirt as a true end
However, he showcases good instinct and feel for blocks from a 2-point stance and has the length and hand power to still create jolt if pressing out of a 2-point stance. His NFL comparison, Melvin Ingram, is a great embodiment of the versatility that Scourton likely faces for his NFL role.
This is a power rusher, although his explosiveness to convert speed to power and bull tackles are qualities better described as “good” than a hallmark trait that he can hang his hat on at the NFL level. Given that he also has a “good” first step, it is fair to point out that he may be a player who lacks the hallmark physical trait to fall back on as a default winner for his pass rushes at the NFL level.
The good news for Scourton is that he already showcases versatility in how he attacks offensive tackles, depending on his opponent's pre-snap alignment, angle, and athleticism. This pass-rush IQ is a big piece of the puzzle for him living up to his potential as a quality starter in the NFL.
Scourton has illustrated the ability to win inside against oversets with a rip move, the ability to overtake the B-gap with an inside spin, and has flashed a long-arm to play with power and collapse the set of offensive tackles who are bailing to take away the outside edge.
More dynamic and longer tackles may be able to offset his long arm and speed to power in the NFL, so he will need to be vigilant and well-scouted in chops, lifts, and other secondary counters once his hands are set.
Scourton plays hard and offers a likable motor on second-effort plays. He can put himself back into position to make a play by peeling back and retracing his steps on the edge or by continuing to carry momentum across the pocket and giving chase to quarterbacks who get outside and on the move.
He is not the most fluid laterally, but thanks to his build, he offers a low center of gravity; he is not an awkward long-stepper with high hips. Stride length also helps him with his shallow adjustments of his attack of the pocket.
As a run defender, Scourton plays with good vision down the line of scrimmage to feel plays developing. He is capable of setting the edge and creating stalemates that force the back to bubble or bend back into pursuit. His deconstruction of blocks when playing static at the line of scrimmage lacks the same appeal as his ability to break down pass sets, and he would do himself favors by sitting down on his hips more to feel pressure and play off of it rather than processing play development.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Nic Scourton is ideally offered the opportunity to play as a hybrid defensive lineman who can help attack mismatches at the NFL level. Scourton has the creativity and enough power to apply his gifts as an impactful NFL starter — particularly as a pass rusher.
The perfect fit is with a creative defensive coordinator who has amoeba packages to move Scourton around as a rush threat.
Walter Nolen
DL Mississippi
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 305 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 31
- Team
- Philadelphia Eagles
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Philadelphia Eagles | 14-3 | .453 | EDGE, LB, OG |
Philadelphia is loaded full of big contracts and the team is set to see DL Milton Williams hit free agency this spring. If they are unable to secure a new deal, drafting Walter Nolen to take his reps would give the Eagles another disruptive interior presence on the front to help keep this team loaded with disruptive talent. Nolen is one of the most explosive interior players in the class and Howie loves to add his pass rushers in the draft.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl |
---|---|---|
44 | 6.5 | 8 |
Scouting Overview
Ole Miss Rebels defensive tackle Walter Nolen is a twitchy, fluid athlete who projects as an impact starter at the NFL level by the end of his rookie contract.
Nolen has tremendous physical gifts and will be best served attacking creases in the front, where his balance can allow him to press through lateral contact. His pass rush pallet will need expanding. He has illustrated a number of rush counters, but his refinement of his hands will be key to him living up to the best version of himself as a talent.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- A dynamic athlete with high levels of first-step explosiveness and fluidity
- Very good range as a rally defender along the line of scrimmage and can redirect laterally in upfield penetration
- Surprising change of direction quickness allows him to pop on twists and stunts
Negatives
- Consistency of hand counters as a pass rusher needs further development
- Ability to stack and deconstruct blocks in the run game is incomplete
- Production profile is a testament to his need to work on finishing skills — he’s active but missing production
Background
Walter Nolen is from Memphis, TN, and played his high school football for several programs across the country. Nolen played for Olive Branch HS in Mississippi, Saint Benedict in Tennessee, and Powell HS in Powell, TN, for his senior season.
There, he was a consensus 5-star recruit who rolled up major accolades and statistics — including 17 sacks and 33 tackles for loss at Powell. Nolen was named an Under Armour All-American for his play in 2022 before enrolling at Texas A&M and playing two seasons with the Aggies.
Nolen started four games while playing in 10 for the Aggies as a true freshman in 2022. He started another 10 games while playing in 12 in 2023. Nolen entered the transfer portal after his sophomore season and enrolled at Ole Miss to play with Lane Kiffin and a superbly gifted Rebels defensive front in 2024.
Tale Of The Tape
Nolen is a “bet high” prospect who is still in the process of learning how to put all of his tools and gifts together. He has the ability to wreak havoc on the interior and offers alignment versatility thanks to his movement skills. Still, without added development with his hands, his best fit at the pro level is to play a penetration role and avoid asking him to diagnose or read blocks passively at the point of attack.
Nolen has good punch power and the ability to create a push at the point of attack when taking on a blocker head-to-head, but his successes are more rooted in creating bubbles at the point of attack and less in an ability to press, utilize length, and deconstruct the block. As a result, he is at times prone to getting stuck on blocks, which negates the discomfort he is capable of creating with his twitch and ability to convert speed to power.
Opportunities to get him moving in space create much more success — be it as a gap shooter or via twists and stunts up front. Nolen redirects off of an initial stem quite well and is graceful in changing directions. A number of his tackles and plays at the point of attack have come with a late peel and redirect off of loops and retraces if he’s run past the initial landmark. Nolen has shown the ability to take angles tight in space, which is a good contrast to some of his irregular play when turning the corner as a pass rusher while engaged with a blocker.
Nolen’s pass-rush prowess with counters is limited. His consistent go-to beyond penetration efforts is a high swim move that he can effectively slip blocks with, thanks to his persistent push to play forward through tight spaces.
Some of Nolen’s issues as a player can simply be alleviated with more discipline with his pads. When he doesn’t get hip to hip with blockers quickly in reps, he will be tested on his ability to hold the point in the run game.
Encouraging him to keep his pads down and shoot to the mesh point without popping his head (and pads) up to peek for the football will help him maintain leverage more consistently and keep him in a power posture to apply all of his explosiveness into the ground.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Walter Nolen projects best as a penetration 3-tech at the NFL level. His first-step quickness, core strength, and center of gravity make him an attractive option to fire upfield and create chaos in the backfield.
There’s plenty of reason to buy in on Nolen developing in different style defenses, but his best role as a current product lies in getting through gaps and forcing reroutes of the quarterback and running backs off their track.
Tyleik Williams
DL Ohio State
- Height:
- 6' 3"
- Weight:
- 327 lbs
- Age:
- 21
- Round
- 1
- Pick Number
- 32
- Team
- Kansas City Chiefs
NFL Team Details
Team | Record | SOS | Team Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Kansas City Chiefs | 15-2 | .488 | WR, OG, DT, CB |
Kansas City needs to find future running mates for Chris Jones. Tyleik Williams is a more prominent run defender than he is a pass rusher but the Chiefs would benefit greatly from adding a stout anchor into the heart of their defense. Jones is currently the only tackle under contract, and his dominant presence would greatly benefit Williams as he transitions to the pros.
2024 Stats
tkl | sk | tfl |
---|---|---|
49 | 2.5 | 5 |
Scouting Overview
Ohio State Buckeyes defensive tackle Tyleik Williams is a player who, in the right environment, could see everything snap into place and become a draft steal. He’s obviously a gifted defender who showcases an understanding of the value of his hands and has an athletic foundation that offers him hope to find a consistent impact on passing downs.
However, Williams never really made “the leap” at Ohio State and will now be charged with regularly finding the best of himself at the NFL level. Williams is a disruptive run defender who offers a squatty build, effective length, and active hands.
2025 NFL Combine Results
TBD
Positives
- Showcases some very savvy hands for block deconstruction in the run game
- History of impressive explosiveness within the Ohio State S&C program
- Potential pass rush upside is present
Negatives
- Pass rush resume in 2024 does not offer excitement for NFL leap
- He has played at a number of different weights during his career between 290 and 320 — is he a 3T, or is he a 1T?
- Overall play consistency is still lacking
Background
Williams was born in Manassas, VA, and played his high school football for Unity Reed HS. There, he was ranked as a 4-star recruit for the 2021 recruiting class while receiving offers from a slew of national powers. Williams collected First-Team All-State honors and was selected to play in the Army All-America Bowl before enrolling early at Ohio State in the spring of 2021.
Williams made a splash as a true freshman in 2021, earning Freshman All-American honors while playing in 12 games for the Buckeyes. He logged snaps in 13 games as a sophomore in 2022 before collecting Second-Team All-Big Ten honors in 2023. Williams entered the 2024 season with 38 career games played and 12 career starts.
Tale Of The Tape
Williams is a stout run defender who has flashed the ability to take over periods of games for the Buckeyes. With a firm punch and good instincts for playing the point of attack, Williams feels like a high-floor player at a minimum at the NFL level. Although, the ultimate valuation he receives in the pre-draft process will likely be determined by the confidence of a team to help him reach his ceiling.
At his best, he’s got plus quickness and agility for a player of his stature and has flashed the ability to get into the backfield as a penetration run defender and pass rusher. His ability to stack blocks and process pressure before discarding blockers is capable of being disruptive between the tackles.
Williams has the density and strength to absorb contact in vertical releases and usually offers a strong recovery from first contact to gather and control the block. In these instances, he can parlay his hands with enough lateral mobility and agility to drop off a block and trace the back off of a cut into a gap in his vicinity.
As a pass rusher, he has surprising twitch for a player of his stature, and some of his older tape shows even more agility and burst — so a team will have to make a decision on a playing weight for Williams based on the role they envision him being best at. These opportunities always add variance to an evaluation if the playing weight committed to is not within the equilibrium of Williams’ natural weight, so this is a risk assessment each team will independently have to be comfortable with.
In 2024, he showed modest burst out of the blocks and did not frequently overtake gaps against slide protections, trying to overtake his rush with angles. He won more often with sliding off of blocks than moving targets and was more opportunistic with rushing landmarks than overtaking a setting guard in a half-man rush.
Williams does offer power, however. He can put smaller blockers on skates and walk a guard back into the lap of a static quarterback. His application of power is reliant on a good start out of the blocks, which is not always a constant in his game.
If Williams gets caught with his eyes up, he can stall his momentum and take away the burst he does have. The start-stop ability is not going to afford him a lot of rush recovery ability in the same way that he can laterally fall off a block, thanks to his hands slingshotting him off of a blocker.
Ideal Scheme Fit, Role
Williams projects best into an even front scheme as an A-gap defender. He has the penetration quickness to threaten the A-gap and the mass to hold anchor against the point of attack. His successes in deconstructing blocks will make him a valued run defender.
Williams has some upside as a pass rusher thanks to pleasant quickness for his stature, but he’s likely a rotational player early on run downs with a chance to further develop a pass rush prowess to command snaps down the line.