
Quinn Ewers Scouting Report
Perhaps Ewers’ greatest strength is his pocket presence and ability to remain calm as he maneuvers within the pocket. He does not panic and abandon his protection prematurely. Instead, as if he has eyes all around his head, he waits for the play to develop as he progresses through his reads and only scrambles outside of the pocket if he senses pressure.

Josh Conerly Jr. Scouting Report
Josh Conerly Jr. has had the dream development. He has progressed from a 5-Star recruit into one of the best tackles in the draft as a junior. His progression every year leads to the sign that he is not done developing and has an extremely high ceiling.

Deone Walker Scouting Report
Deone Walker is a massive interior defensive lineman with high athletic upside. His ability to clog multiple rushing lanes at once will be extremely valuable while his pass rushing ability on the interior will provide for a dynamic skillset in the NFL.

Kevin Winston Jr. Scouting Report
Kevin Winston Jr. can play all over the field because of the physicality that he brings to every play. He is an excellent tackler as a defensive back, which makes him the perfect safety to line up close to the box in dime packages. Winston has exceptional length that he uses as both a tackler and in coverage.

Michael Wilson Scouting Report
Wilson has reliable hands and displays good process when making a catch. Wilson stays in stride when tracking down the football and shows the late hands when receiving the ball. On top of his physicality, Wilson can also win with speed and footwork.

Byron Young Scouting Report
Young doesn’t take a single play off and plays with a high motor that simply never stops. At the combine, Young clocked in at a 4.43 40-yard dash. This time put him in the 99th percentile for his position. Young provides speed that is not coachable and there is a lot of potential to use it both in the pass rush and in run defense.

Rakim Jarrett Scouting Report
Rakim Jarrett is a dynamic playmaker that has a variety of different roles in the Terrapins’ offense. Jarrett is heavily involved in the pre-snap motion that is so intertwined within the offense. Jarrett does not have a true and solidified role within the Maryland offense.

Henry Bainivalu Scouting Report
Bainivalu controls and utilizes his weight very well and builds himself a nice anchor when he gets his feet set. He works well with his linemates when it comes to combo blocks and zone running schemes. Bainivalu is an experienced and poised player on the interior and he shows that experience in the way he is able to handle different defensive looks and adjust on the fly.

Jaelyn Duncan Scouting Report
. Duncan is able to move in any direction at a high speed to target defenders downfield or help with assignments at the line of scrimmage. Duncan also plays on a Maryland Terps offense that is extremely versatile and scheme transcendent, which has given him a variety of different experiences in his college career.

Mike Morris Scouting Report
Mike Morris is a bigger edge rusher that offers the versatility to move all over the defensive line. He has shown the ability to provide high-level play at both the 3-tech as well as the edge. Morris brings a lot of energy to the line of scrimmage and is extremely relentless when it comes to chasing down the quarterback.

Dylan Horton Scouting Report
Horton has put up great pass rushing production, this past season he totaled 10.5 sacks. Horton has a large bag of pass rushing moves that he uses on a consistent basis. He has noticeable bend and flexibility off the edge that he shows off when pulling off a spin move or any other eye-popping pass rushing rep.

Adetomiwa Adebawore Scouting Report
. Adebawore has no problem with using strength to win and overpower linemen. When defending the run, he does well to control gaps and is not over eager to get into the backfield. He controls the gaps and does not give runners a free lane to break into the open field.

Christopher Smith Scouting Report
Smith was deployed at the traditional roaming safety position, lined up in the box as a linebacker, covering receivers or tight ends in the slot, and off the edge blitzing to rush into the backfield. When deployed in the slot or in the box, Smith does well to shed blockers in the second level in order to get to the ball.

Kei’Trel Clark Scouting Report
Playing on the inside lines him up across from those smaller and quicker slot receivers that Clark can keep up with. Clark has no problem handling or containing speed from a wide receiver. He has great instincts when sticking to a receiver’s hip. He is fluid when it comes to transitioning from the backpedal.

Kenny McIntosh Scouting Report
He has the size to be a forceful runner between the tackles, but he also has the speed and agility to make plays outside of the hash marks and up the field. McIntosh is as good as it gets in terms of a pass-catching running back prospect.

Keion White Scouting Report
Keion White has versatility on the line, Georgia Tech consistently moved him around depending on the matchup. He lined up anywhere from the run-stuffing 1-technique, to all the way on the edge at the 5-technique. White’s history at different positions shows in his game, he is naturally an insanely athletic player.

Gervon Dexter Sr. Scouting Report
Dexter mainly lined up as a 3-tech while sprinkling in some snaps on the edge in Florida’s 4-3 defense, but can also potentially be a 1-tech at the next level. On the rare occasion that Dexter had a 1-on-1 matchup, he was able to win those battles more often than not. However, Dexter often dealt with either a double team or at least a chip block from a running back or tight end.

Xavier Hutchinson Scouting Report
Hutchinson has consistent hands and an ability to come down with heavily contested catches. He has excellent body control to stay balanced through contact and absorb that contact with the ball in his hands.

Zach Harrison Scouting Report
Harrison is a big, hand-in-the-dirt defensive end on that Ohio State line. The size that he possesses does not slow Harrison down, though. Zach Harrison was once clocked in on a 40-yard dash at 4.47 seconds, which is just incredible for any defensive end.

Jayden Reed Scouting Report
Reed is involved in pre-snap motion where he can be used at the mesh point to take a handoff or even run the occasional jet sweep. He has consistent and reliable hands, rarely dropping the ball. The offense flows through Reed and his ability to make a play with the ball in his hands.