McGinn Draft Series - Part 4: G/C

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The Georgia Bulldogs were one decision away from having their entire offensive line drafted by NFL teams next month.

Tackle Earnest Greene, a two-year starter, elected to stay in school after an injury-shortened third season. If he had declared, scouts projected him as a third-or-fourth round draft choice.

With Greene back in school, the Bulldogs still figure to have four interior players drafted. The list includes center Jared Wilson, guards Tate Ratledge and Dylan Fairchild and guard-tackle Xavier Truss.

Four drafted O-linemen is a haul even for Georgia, which along with Michigan has had the most offensive linemen drafted in the last five years. Four of the Bulldogs’ 11 selections have been in the first round whereas just one of Michigan’s 11 landed in Round 1.

Over the years Georgia wasn’t known as a fertile producing ground for the big uglies. Wisconsin, Iowa and a few others were. In the decade from 2010-’19, the Bulldogs had just eight drafted.

Kirby Smart’s first four seasons in Athens sent three offensive linemen to the draft.

Sam Pittman, Smart’s first O-line coach, helped recruit and develop the unit into one of the nation’s best. After Pittman became coach at Arkansas in early 2020, Matt Lake coached the Bulldogs’ offensive line for two seasons before Stacy Searels took over in 2022.

The three-man draft class of 2020 included first-rounders Andrew Thomas (No. 4) and Isaiah Wilson (No. 29). The two-man draft classes in each of the last four years included first-rounders Broderick Jones (No. 14, 2023) and Amarius Mims (No. 18, 2024).

“One thing I give credit to for any player from Georgia is they get coached hard and they practice hard all year,” a Southeast area scout said. “You go to a Tuesday or a Wednesday practice in October in Athens and they’re all going good on good run to the ground. Guys gotta be tough to play there.”

GUARDS

1. TYLER BOOKER, Alabama (6-4 ½, 326, 5.34, 1): Third-year junior. “He’s a pretty safe bet to be the first guard,” one scout said. “He has the most solid foundation. Now he may be a little bit more of a gap-scheme than a run-off-the-ball wide-zone type. He’s a big body. Real big personality. He’s very much liked at the school. He’s been paid a lot of money. There’s some maturity there.” Rotated at both guards in 2022 before starting 25 games at left guard in 2023-’24. Last season, one of his starts came at left tackle. “Giant human being,” said a second scout.

“Heavy-handed, flexible, strong, smart, good athlete. Not a great puller or second-level guy but he’s a really good in-line player, run and pass. He’d be our starting right guard yesterday. Guards typically don’t go in the first round but he will. He could play some right tackle in some power schemes.” Five-star recruit from New Haven, Conn., and IMG Academy. “A guard like this, you could take him (first round),” said a third scout. “He’s not super talented or dynamic in any way but he’s big, moves well enough, plays on his feet, good football intelligence, he works. He’ll be good.” Arms were 34 ½ inches, size 11-inch hands were the largest at the position. “I don’t know if he’ll be a solid starter but I don’t think you’ll miss on him,” said a fourth scout. “I have him in the second round but you’ve got to find 32 and he may be one of those 32.” Tested poorly. Vertical jump (27 inches), broad jump (7-10) and bench-press reps (21) were the worst at the position.

2. JONAH SAVAIINAEA, Arizona (6-4, 324, 4.99, 1-2): Three-year starter at right tackle. “He feels like a guard all day long,” said one scout. “He’s so big and square. His foot quickness and overall athleticism on the edge will be a concern for a lot of teams. You put him in there just as a 335-pound mauling guard, you might end up getting a really good player.” Third-year junior with 36 starts. “He’s a borderline first-rounder,” a second scout said. “He was a right tackle and he’ll play right tackle or guard. He also was their emergency left tackle and wasn’t bad doing it. There’s something to this guy. This guy’s really powerful and will start for somebody. The way he ran and worked out, he might slip into the first.” Besides a sub-5 40, he mustered a 29-inch vertical jump and an 8-10 broad jump. “At the Senior Bowl he played some guard and looked more natural there,” a third scout said. “When you got him too far out in space he didn’t play with his length. He’s a big, agile guy. He’s got anchor strength. He can bend. I like the athlete and the mover a little better than the complete football player.” Arms were 33 7/8, hands were 10 ¼. “I moved him inside but I just don’t think he’s very good,” said a fourth scout. “Slow feet, barely gets in the way. Not an athlete by any stretch. He struggles on the edges in pass pro because he doesn’t move his feet or adjust well enough. His only chance is as a big guard.” Three-star recruit from American Samoa. Played as a prep in Honolulu.

3. DONOVAN JACKSON, Ohio State (6-3 ½, 315, no 40, 2): Five-star recruit in 2021 rated as the No. 1 guard in the U.S. and the No. 1 player in Texas. “He’s good, man, he’s good,” said one scout. “I couldn’t believe it when he went out there and played tackle and really held his own. I have him as a second-round pick as a left tackle and a Pro Bowl player as a guard. He can do it all. He’s going to start Day 1 and play a long time. He would survive at left tackle; I don’t think he would thrive. He’ll thrive as a guard.” Experienced starter at left guard moved to left tackle down the stretch in 2024 after Josh Simmons suffered a season-ending knee injury and the Buckeyes’ second option didn’t reach fruition. “He’s one of the best run blockers I’ve seen in a long, long time,” another scout said. “I wouldn’t say pancake but he can drive you off the line of scrimmage. He’ll stick and stay with you. Latch onto you. I’m not saying he’s a Hall of Famer but you don’t see guys run block like he does. I’d take him as a guard late one.” Arms were 33 ½, hands were 9 7/8. “More of a third-rounder,” a third scout said. “In-line player only. He’s a power-scheme guy. He’s tough and physical, uses his length well, smart, got good power. He’s like really slue-footed. Kind of a clunky mover, and I thought he was on the ground way too much. He’s good enough to be a starter but he’s not a wow guy.” From Bellaire, Texas.

4. TATE RATLEDGE, Georgia (6-6 ½, 312, 4.98, 3): His father, Dean, played at Tennessee Tech in the mid-1970s and had a brief stint in the NFL. “High football intelligence, son of a coach,” one scout said. “He was important to them from a locker-room perspective and the mentality that he is as a true talent. Even when he was banged up this year he was such an important part of that offensive line. He does have a real nasty streak. I just thought he was a below-average athlete, a phone-booth brawler. Has stiffness and balance issues. If he didn’t have the mullet and attracted all the cameras and attention I doubt … he’s a good, solid player who will be drafted as a backup guard only.” Missed five games with an ankle injury in 2024. Three-year starter at right guard. “He’s a tackle’s body,” a second scout said. “Has the size and length to play outside but he’s never done it. Played a lot of ball. Good length, good mobility, good ability to absorb. Got a good personality, seems to be well-liked in the Georgia locker room. His issue will be he had some type of lower leg injury every year of his career. Availability is job security. If you’re not available it’s a little outta sight, outta mind. Fourth-fifth round type. But he has the upside to be a really good pick if he can stay healthy.” Short-armed (32 ¼). Hands were 10 3/8. “He’s in that bucket with Ben Cleveland and (Ben) Powers,” said a third scout. “He’s just OK. He’s a gap-scheme guard. I would take him fourth or fifth round. Some scouts thought more about the mullet than the knee bend.” Athletic test numbers were top-notch: vertical jump of 32, broad jump of 9-5, 7.38 in the 3-cone and 25 reps on the bench. “I thought he was going to be better,” said a fourth scout. “He’s not that good. He’s a giant. That’s what you’re drafting.” Four-star recruit from Rome, Ga., where he also participated in basketball and track.

5. DYLAN FAIRCHILD, Georgia (6-5, 325, no 40, 3): Fourth-year junior, two-year starter. “Like this guy,” one scout said. “Wrestler in his background. Played on the defensive line. Still on the come with his understanding of the nuance of the position. Good athlete, great balance and body control, good foot quicks when you get him on the move. Liked his strength. Good hand-fighting ability in a short area. Lot of positives with this kid. Early Day 3, maybe he sneaks up into the third round. At the end of the day he’s still that guard only, which is a little bit devalued.” Arms were 33, hands were 10. “Really tough, blue-collar type worker,” a second scout said. “Does a good job protecting the cylinder in pass protection. Has enough mobility to get out there and block at the second level. Good zone stuff. Georgia kid, so he’s going to be really tough. He’s quality depth value. Maybe not start right away but he could be a really good No. 2 that could ascend to a (starter). Ratledge is bigger.” Four-star recruit from Cumming, Ga. “He’s a one-position only guy,” a third scout said. “Can’t play center, can’t play tackle. He’s about a third-rounder.”

6. EMERY JONES, Louisiana State (6-5, 315, no 40, 3): Described by LSU coach Brian Kelly as a player that “makes good choices, good decisions. He is so reliable, and that goes to his background, his family and his high school.” Third-year junior manned right tackle. “He could be (a starter) at right tackle and/or guard,” one scout said. “There’s some reps you would say, ‘Wow, he looks even better than (Will) Campbell.’ Then as soon as you get that out of your mouth the next rep he looks 10 times worse than Campbell. His technique’s all over the map. He’s got no consistency whatsoever. But he is a big body, he is a good kid. He’ll end up being about a third-rounder and he’ll probably be a starter in another year or two. He’s got some ugly football to work through.” Made his first start in Game 3 of his freshman season, the first of his 36 straight starts at right tackle. Arms were 34 ¼, hands were 10 ¾. “A raw guy,” said a second scout. “If he’s a really good athlete, he’d have a chance. But he’s raw and he’s not a good athlete. He’s just a mess. His technique is bad. His instincts are off. He’s always on the ground and gets beat. Plays upright in the run game and falls off (blocks). In pass pro they just run by him all the time and he can’t adjust. Doesn’t set very well. I moved him to guard.” Standout prep basketball player in Baton Rouge, La.

7. JALEN RIVERS, Miami (6-5 ½, 319, 5.36, 3-4): Starting left guard when healthy for much of 2021-’22, starting left tackle when healthy in 2023-’24. “Great character, tons of versatility throughout his career,” one scout said. “He’s an athlete. He’s long. They moved him around so much so he still hasn’t reached his ceiling. More of an early-to-midday Day 3 pick. He’ll probably be a third or fourth tackle you cross-train at guard. He’s so smart and versatile. Still a little bit raw in a lot of his game.” Underwent knee surgery after three games of the ’21 season before going down again in late ’22. Missed five more games with another unspecified injury in ’24. “Didn’t have the best week at the Senior Bowl,” said a second scout. “He got edged and overpowered a little bit. Nonetheless, he’s a mature guy and a multi-year starter. He’s most comfortable at left guard. He has shown he can play Power 5 football at tackle and do a good enough job. The Senior Bowl knocked him down a little bit. I see him more third or fourth round, maybe even fifth.” Arms were 34 7/8, the longest of the leading guards, and hands were 10. “He was just OK at the combine and on tape,” a third scout said. “The value is he played both left tackle and left guard so he’s got some position flex.” Won a state championship in the shot put and played basketball as a prep in Jacksonville.

8. ANTHONY BELTON, North Carolina State (6-6, 336, 5.28, 3-4): Four-year player with 33 starts at left tackle. “He’s talented enough and has the sheer size and production history to be a Day 2 pick,” one scout said. “Probably third round. He was a left tackle his whole career but I think he’s more of a natural guard. I don’t think he has the speed to match up with elite edge defenders. His body type reminded me of JC Lathon of Alabama but a little bit sloppier. A guy that just blots out the sun when he walks by. Good kid but has some growing up to do with his nutrition: just looking at the body type. Has the rare size to engulf defenders. He has some physicality on initial contact. There’s a lack of consistent dominance and finishing for a guy that’s this big. Maybe because he’s always been a big kid that’s tried not to hurt people too much. I think you have a hard time coaching that into somebody if they don’t have it already. Liked his patience in pass pro, but in the Clemson game he self-destructed. People will try to pick him apart on some of his bad games. When it starts to go bad it really goes downhill.” Spent two years at Georgia Military Academy but one of the two seasons was wiped out by Covid. “He’s as talented as they come,” said a second scout. “He could be a franchise left tackle. He’s just a character concern in terms of his overall competes and toughness and urgency and weight issues and some laziness. He’s big, long arms, light on his feet. He can play (either) tackle, and he can play guard. That kid’s really gifted. It’s just you’ll always want more out of him. Plenty of guys like this that have concerns go in the second round. You don’t find big people that are that talented.” Arms were 33 7/8, hands were 10 ¼. “Lazy and not super aggressive,” a third scout said. “Probably fourth or fifth round.” Nicknamed “Escalade.” From Tallahassee, Fla.

9. WYATT MILUM, West Virginia (6-6 ½, 313, 5.30, 3-4): Made 43 starts at both tackles in a four-year career. “Second-round pick,” one scout said. “Great kid. Needs a little more anchor strength. Good enough feet. Not a left tackle; definitely a right tackle. He’s better than the tackle (Colton McKivitz) that came out of there a couple years ago (fifth round, 2020) and he’s better than the center (Zach Frazier, second round, 2024) that went to Pittsburgh.” Shortest arms (32 1/8) of the top nine guards. Hands were 10 ¼. “He’s a solid Day 3 pick,” a second scout said. “There will be some questions about his arm length. Some people think he’ll be a better guard than tackle.” From Kenova, W.Va. “He’s nasty, tough, physical,” said a third scout. “Eat-****-and-die kind of guy. Bad athlete. Rickety, on the ground all the time. It didn’t help that he was playing left tackle. He’s barely draftable. He’ll probably make it somewhere but he’s not very good.”

10. JACKSON SLATER, Sacramento State (6-3, 311, 5.02, 4): Four-year starter at left guard with a pair of starts at left tackle in the 2022 FCS playoffs. “He’s a really experienced player and had a really good Senior Bowl week,” one scout said. “He needed to show he could handle bigger, stronger guys in the draft, not just the Big Sky-level competition. He is sturdy, consistent and plays on great angles with great hand placement. Where he gets in trouble is the lack of arm length. That’s his biggest concern because if he’s not excellent with his hand placement he can’t recover against longer inside guys. At the Senior Bowl, he had to short-set everybody in one-on-one’s because of his length. He’s got to quick-set you, get his hands on and then use his upper-body and grip strength to sustain that block. He’ll be a really good pro.” Shortest arms (32 1/8) of the leading guards. Hands were 10. “He ran fast at the combine,” a second scout said. “I think third day.” From Bellevue, Wash., where he was a four-sport athlete.


THE NEXT FIVE


Ajani Cornelius, Oregon (6-4 ½, 312, no 40)
Said one scout: “The Big Ten Championship Game (against Penn State) was probably his worst game of the year, which is not good. He opted out of the Senior Bowl and all combine drills. That was disappointing. He played way better in 2023. He was just not good in pass protection. It was anchor strength, it was body control, it was hand placement.”

Miles Frazier, Louisiana State (6-5 ½, 317, 5.29)
Said one scout: “People got hot on him at the Senior Bowl because he played right tackle and guard. I think the (NFL line) coaches at the Senior Bowl liked him so he’ll probably get drafted. I didn’t think he was special. At all.”

Connor Colby, Iowa (6-5 ½, 309, 5.10)
Said one scout: “Four-year starter. He can get off the ball with quickness and attack blocks. Plays to the whistle and looks to finish and torque defenders. Above average lateral slide and anchor. Smart, competitive and played multiple positions. He’ll go Day 3 and stick on a team and could eventually work his way in as a starter.”

Joshua Gray, Oregon State (6-5, 300, 5.09)
Said one scout: “Had an excellent 2023 at tackle but then slid inside to guard (in 2024) and had a really bad year. Things happened too quickly for him. He wasn’t as strong as he showed on the edge. He did not look like a very good athlete.”

Chase Lundt, Connecticut (6-7 ½, 304, no 40)
Said one scout: “He’s a better player than a traits guy. Great kid. Just not real talented but he’s got pretty good size, he’s tough as (bleep), he’s really smart. He may roster as one of the last linemen because he can probably play right tackle and guard.”
 
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CENTERS

1. GREY ZABEL, North Dakota State (6-6, 312, no 40, 1-2): Played on FCS national championship teams in 2021 and 2024. “He’s what you would expect from North Dakota State: tough, physical, friggin’ blue-collar brawler,” said one scout. “Very smart. Instincts and reactions are very good. Played pretty good on the move. Good bender. At the Senior Bowl, the practices were better than the game. Real-deal interview. Loved the interview. He’s probably a great fourth-round pick. If somebody buys too much into the dude he might end up in the third.” Started 16 games at left tackle in 2024 after starting at every other position besides center in a five-year career. NFL scouts from each team voted him the overall practice player of the week in Mobile. Impressed personnel people by how effective he was playing some center during the week. “He’ll probably be a starting guard or center but he could get you out of a game at tackle,” said a second scout. “There’s real value there. The Senior Bowl has had a good run of small-school offensive linemen. Terron Armstead, the Hobart kid (Ali Marpet), (Cody) Mauch, (Quinn) Meinerz. But why he’s going (high) is because people are trying to make him a center.” Mauch played alongside Zabel from 2020-’22 before being drafted by the Buccaneers in 2023 (second round). “I gave Mauch the same grade,” said a third scout. “I think Cody was better in the run game because he could get out in space and run a little faster. I liked Grey a little more in the pass. The way they finish — Grey models his game after Cody’s. My only hangup with Grey is the length.” Arms were just 32. Hands were 9 ½. “He’s not exactly the measurements you want,” a fourth scout said. “Little bit short-armed. This kid can play center but I think he’s better off at guard. Tough, powerful, can move his feet, OK in space, can mirror and adjust. The last two guys out of there the last three years (wide receiver Christian Watson, Mauch) are starters. He’ll play a long time.” His vertical jump (36 ½) led the offensive linemen at the combine. Bench press of 26. “He’s all right,” said a fifth scout. “Does a little bit of everything OK. Nothing too exciting. He’s not a first-rounder at all. He’ll start.” Three-sport athlete from Pierre, S.D., where as a left-handed pitcher he threw in the 90’s on the radar gun.

2. JARED WILSON, Georgia (6-3, 311, 4.89, 2-3): Three-star recruit as a guard before moving to center and backing up Sedrick Van Pran until capturing the job this season. “He’s early Day 3, maybe getting into the third round,” one scout said. “Probably a good sixth offensive lineman in the NFL who can have a twin backup (role) for the three interior spots. Good character, good athlete, natural knee bender. Plays with great leverage. Like his foot quicks. Well-coached down there. It’s all good, just nothing outstanding. When you get up on him physically he’s not very imposing, and that shows up on tape in his limitations in core strength and power.” Longest arms (32 3/8) and largest hands (10 ¼) of the leading centers. “He’s a junior,” said a second scout. “He goes back as a senior and he’d probably be a first-rounder. But since he’s coming out and it’s a heavy tackle draft he might go (late first round). If not, he’ll go in the second. I don’t think there’s really any issues here.” Played soccer growing up in Winston-Salem, N.C. “Early third round maybe,” said a third scout. “He’s in the ballpark of starting for like the bottom seven teams in the league. If you need a center and a smart guy that can do both zone and gap scheme he can do it. Got all the intangibles you want in a center. Shows the ability to move people at the point in the power run game. He’s also really good pulling out there and getting in space.”

3. ELI COX, Kentucky (6-4, 302, 5.03, 4-5): Over six seasons he started 47 of 56 games, including 35 at center and 12 at right guard. “He was not as good as (Luke) Fortner from Kentucky who went in the third round to Jacksonville (in 2022) but better than Drake Jackson, who ended up being a UDFA (undrafted free agent),” one scout said. “Cox is a third-day guy but he’s an underrated athlete. He’s a better athlete than what he really shows on tape. He’ll make it.” Arms were 31, hands were 9 ¼. Vertical jump of 32. Voted a two-time captain by teammates. Elected chair of the SEC Football Leadership Council twice (2023, 2024). Graduated in 2022, married in January 2024. Three-star recruit from Nicholasville, Ky.

4. JONAH MONHEIM, Southern Cal (6-4, 302, no 40, 5-6): Started 21 games at right tackle in 2021-’22, 12 games at left tackle in ’23 and 12 games at center in ’24. “He’s just average,” said one scout. “But, in a very poor class, it was a smart move to move to center because he had played guard and tackle in the past. He has short arms but he moves to center and he’s at the Senior Bowl. I thought he was just a guy.” Arms were 30 1/8, shortest of the top seven centers. Hands were 9 1/4. “Imagine him playing (left) tackle with that (arm length) and that’s what he was doing in the Pac-12,” said a second scout. “He had never played center but they had talked about him always doing that. I don’t think he’s a starter. He has all the makings of an eighth depth guy you suit up on Sunday because he can play all three positions.” Earned extensive academic honors. From Moorpark, Calif. “Guys that stay in the way and compete and are smart and tough and all that definitely have a chance to make a team,” a third scout said. “Numbers kind of get thrown out the window as long as they meet the bare minimum.”

5. DREW KENDALL, Boston College (6-4, 306, 5.05, 6-7): Four-year player started 37 of 39 games at center in 2022-’24. “It’s all positive from the makeup,” said one scout. “He’s a center only without a lot of impressive traits. Maybe he gets drafted based more on pedigree as much as anything else.” His father, Pete (6-4 ½, 292, 5.11), was a first-round draft choice (No. 21) by Seattle in 1996 and started 188 games mostly at guard in a 13-year career. Pete scored 41 on the Wonderlic test; Drew has earned numerous academic honors. “You like his mentality,” said a second scout. “Pete Kendall’s kid, great kid. He’s got all that (bleep) going. He runs well in a straight line. I didn’t think he was a great lateral or change-direction mover for a light-in-the-*** guy. I’m surprised he came out. He probably came out because there are no centers. Kind of like a practice-squad guy. See if you can beef him up.” Arms were 31 ¾, hands were 9 5/8. From Norwell, Mass.


THE NEXT TWO


Jarrod Hufford, Iowa State (6-4, 322, 5.14)
Said one scout: “He has played (left) tackle, guard and center. I liked the versatility and experience (55 games, 47 starts). He was tough and rugged. He’s got size and he’s pretty powerful. Decent athlete. Maybe a starter down the road.”

Willie Lampkin, North Carolina (5-10 ½, 279, no 40)
Said one scout: “It’s a damn shame he’s so small. He plays like a first-round guard. If you get him on your team he could be a fullback like the Baltimore guy (Patrick Ricard). If he was three inches taller he’d be a first-rounder. Just an amazing little guy the way he plays. There’s no way he can play in the NFL.”
 
give me Donovan Jackon or Tyliek Williams at 44,I will take as many OSU guys as I can
 

CENTERS

1. GREY ZABEL, North Dakota State (6-6, 312, no 40, 1-2): Played on FCS national championship teams in 2021 and 2024. “He’s what you would expect from North Dakota State: tough, physical, friggin’ blue-collar brawler,” said one scout. “Very smart. Instincts and reactions are very good. Played pretty good on the move. Good bender. At the Senior Bowl, the practices were better than the game. Real-deal interview. Loved the interview. He’s probably a great fourth-round pick. If somebody buys too much into the dude he might end up in the third.” Started 16 games at left tackle in 2024 after starting at every other position besides center in a five-year career. NFL scouts from each team voted him the overall practice player of the week in Mobile. Impressed personnel people by how effective he was playing some center during the week. “He’ll probably be a starting guard or center but he could get you out of a game at tackle,” said a second scout. “There’s real value there. The Senior Bowl has had a good run of small-school offensive linemen. Terron Armstead, the Hobart kid (Ali Marpet), (Cody) Mauch, (Quinn) Meinerz. But why he’s going (high) is because people are trying to make him a center.” Mauch played alongside Zabel from 2020-’22 before being drafted by the Buccaneers in 2023 (second round). “I gave Mauch the same grade,” said a third scout. “I think Cody was better in the run game because he could get out in space and run a little faster. I liked Grey a little more in the pass. The way they finish — Grey models his game after Cody’s. My only hangup with Grey is the length.” Arms were just 32. Hands were 9 ½. “He’s not exactly the measurements you want,” a fourth scout said. “Little bit short-armed. This kid can play center but I think he’s better off at guard. Tough, powerful, can move his feet, OK in space, can mirror and adjust. The last two guys out of there the last three years (wide receiver Christian Watson, Mauch) are starters. He’ll play a long time.” His vertical jump (36 ½) led the offensive linemen at the combine. Bench press of 26. “He’s all right,” said a fifth scout. “Does a little bit of everything OK. Nothing too exciting. He’s not a first-rounder at all. He’ll start.” Three-sport athlete from Pierre, S.D., where as a left-handed pitcher he threw in the 90’s on the radar gun.

2. JARED WILSON, Georgia (6-3, 311, 4.89, 2-3): Three-star recruit as a guard before moving to center and backing up Sedrick Van Pran until capturing the job this season. “He’s early Day 3, maybe getting into the third round,” one scout said. “Probably a good sixth offensive lineman in the NFL who can have a twin backup (role) for the three interior spots. Good character, good athlete, natural knee bender. Plays with great leverage. Like his foot quicks. Well-coached down there. It’s all good, just nothing outstanding. When you get up on him physically he’s not very imposing, and that shows up on tape in his limitations in core strength and power.” Longest arms (32 3/8) and largest hands (10 ¼) of the leading centers. “He’s a junior,” said a second scout. “He goes back as a senior and he’d probably be a first-rounder. But since he’s coming out and it’s a heavy tackle draft he might go (late first round). If not, he’ll go in the second. I don’t think there’s really any issues here.” Played soccer growing up in Winston-Salem, N.C. “Early third round maybe,” said a third scout. “He’s in the ballpark of starting for like the bottom seven teams in the league. If you need a center and a smart guy that can do both zone and gap scheme he can do it. Got all the intangibles you want in a center. Shows the ability to move people at the point in the power run game. He’s also really good pulling out there and getting in space.”

3. ELI COX, Kentucky (6-4, 302, 5.03, 4-5): Over six seasons he started 47 of 56 games, including 35 at center and 12 at right guard. “He was not as good as (Luke) Fortner from Kentucky who went in the third round to Jacksonville (in 2022) but better than Drake Jackson, who ended up being a UDFA (undrafted free agent),” one scout said. “Cox is a third-day guy but he’s an underrated athlete. He’s a better athlete than what he really shows on tape. He’ll make it.” Arms were 31, hands were 9 ¼. Vertical jump of 32. Voted a two-time captain by teammates. Elected chair of the SEC Football Leadership Council twice (2023, 2024). Graduated in 2022, married in January 2024. Three-star recruit from Nicholasville, Ky.

4. JONAH MONHEIM, Southern Cal (6-4, 302, no 40, 5-6): Started 21 games at right tackle in 2021-’22, 12 games at left tackle in ’23 and 12 games at center in ’24. “He’s just average,” said one scout. “But, in a very poor class, it was a smart move to move to center because he had played guard and tackle in the past. He has short arms but he moves to center and he’s at the Senior Bowl. I thought he was just a guy.” Arms were 30 1/8, shortest of the top seven centers. Hands were 9 1/4. “Imagine him playing (left) tackle with that (arm length) and that’s what he was doing in the Pac-12,” said a second scout. “He had never played center but they had talked about him always doing that. I don’t think he’s a starter. He has all the makings of an eighth depth guy you suit up on Sunday because he can play all three positions.” Earned extensive academic honors. From Moorpark, Calif. “Guys that stay in the way and compete and are smart and tough and all that definitely have a chance to make a team,” a third scout said. “Numbers kind of get thrown out the window as long as they meet the bare minimum.”

5. DREW KENDALL, Boston College (6-4, 306, 5.05, 6-7): Four-year player started 37 of 39 games at center in 2022-’24. “It’s all positive from the makeup,” said one scout. “He’s a center only without a lot of impressive traits. Maybe he gets drafted based more on pedigree as much as anything else.” His father, Pete (6-4 ½, 292, 5.11), was a first-round draft choice (No. 21) by Seattle in 1996 and started 188 games mostly at guard in a 13-year career. Pete scored 41 on the Wonderlic test; Drew has earned numerous academic honors. “You like his mentality,” said a second scout. “Pete Kendall’s kid, great kid. He’s got all that (bleep) going. He runs well in a straight line. I didn’t think he was a great lateral or change-direction mover for a light-in-the-*** guy. I’m surprised he came out. He probably came out because there are no centers. Kind of like a practice-squad guy. See if you can beef him up.” Arms were 31 ¾, hands were 9 5/8. From Norwell, Mass.


THE NEXT TWO


Jarrod Hufford, Iowa State (6-4, 322, 5.14)
Said one scout: “He has played (left) tackle, guard and center. I liked the versatility and experience (55 games, 47 starts). He was tough and rugged. He’s got size and he’s pretty powerful. Decent athlete. Maybe a starter down the road.”

Willie Lampkin, North Carolina (5-10 ½, 279, no 40)
Said one scout: “It’s a damn shame he’s so small. He plays like a first-round guard. If you get him on your team he could be a fullback like the Baltimore guy (Patrick Ricard). If he was three inches taller he’d be a first-rounder. Just an amazing little guy the way he plays. There’s no way he can play in the NFL.”
I get that "beauty is in the eye of the beholder " but it is funny to me how theres always one scout on every player who absolutely "hates" everything about the player and says he will never make it. Lol
 
Must a lot of short armed guys who are 6 foot 5 and over this year. BTW Willie Lampkin was supposedly handling Deone Walker with ease at the senior bowl this year.
 
I am not surprised to see Jackson Slater on the list of guards, although I do see him as a day 3 selection. I was impressed with him at the senior bowl practices. But I see him as a project, not a finished product.
 

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