Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › round 4 pick 117, after trade up Rams take RB
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Zooey.
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April 26, 2025 at 12:27 pm #156125
zn
ModeratorThe Rams traded up in the 2025 NFL Draft, moving from pick 127 to 117 in the fourth round. They sent their 127th and 190th overall picks to the Indianapolis Colts in exchange for the 117th pick
April 26, 2025 at 12:35 pm #156126Zooey
ModeratorI might not be here till after this pick so fill the thread in if you want
If you aren’t going to do your job, then I’m going to move back to the blue board.
April 26, 2025 at 1:02 pm #156129InvaderRam
Moderatorjarquez hunter. running back from auburn after a trade up.
April 26, 2025 at 1:39 pm #156130Billy_T
ParticipantHard to understand their overall strategy. But it doesn’t look like they’re drafting for need. Guessing it’s more like BPA, as they see it.
Hoping they can still find some late round gems at corner, tackle, and inside backer.
April 26, 2025 at 1:52 pm #156133zn
ModeratorCornell@gqscholar
Jarquez Hunter is a faster version of KW/Corum. Unfortunately, he fumbles like KW, too ๐
With that said, he is a breakaway back that the rams needed.Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
Think itโs safe to say the Rams wonโt go many years without taking at least one RB in the draft. Always adding thereโฆRams Bros.@RamsBrothers
Per ESPN Research, Rams’ 8-straight years drafting a running back is the longest active streak in the NFL and the longest streak by any team since Washington from 2011-2020.Bit of a coincidence that McVay was on that Washington staff. Can imagine many are pissed over this pick
April 26, 2025 at 1:56 pm #156134zn
ModeratorWarren Sharp@SharpFootball
new Rams RB Jarquez Hunter from Auburn was the Rams top rated offensive player on the board entering Day 3Les Sneed had an eye on him since fall.
After a zoom call before the draft with Sean McVay & Sneed, they immediately said:
“that’s our guy if he’s still there on day 3”
per Peter Schrager
April 26, 2025 at 1:59 pm #156136zn
ModeratorJourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
As a reminder for some comments I see, Snead and McVay have said they want to get an extension done with Williams. They also said in March they were apart on numbers. Translation is they have a number and will likely stick to it + keep adding to the position via draft per usual.April 26, 2025 at 2:00 pm #156137zn
ModeratorJarquez Hunter
Auburn, 4SRBACKGROUND: Jarquez (jar-KWEZ) Hunter, one of eight children, grew up on his family’s farm with his grandmother (Shelia Murrell, who played basketball at Jackson State), and mother (Kenyatta Ragsdale) in the small town of Philadelphia in central Mississippi. He also has a relationship with his father (Kenshay Hunter), who lives in Texas. Described as a “country boy,” Hunter played multiple sports throughout childhood, along with riding horses, fishing, hunting and riding four-wheelers. Hunter grew up idolizing Walter Payton and started playing football at age 6. He worked his way from a backup to be one of the top youth football players in the area. Hunter attended Neshoba Central High, where he was a four-year varsity letterman on the football team, playing on offense (running back) and defense (linebacker). His breakout season came as a sophomore, when he rushed for 1,986 yards on 231 carries (8.6 average) and 26 touchdowns, adding 81 tackles, eight sacks and two interceptions. As a junior, Hunter led Neshoba Central to a 10-win season and the 2019 regional title. He earned district MVP honors with 2,088 rushing yards (9.8 yards per carry) and 29 touchdowns, plus 234 receiving yards and a pair of touchdown grabs. He also had 72 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, seven sacks and four interceptions (three returned for touchdowns). As a senior, Hunter rushed for 1,687 yards and 22 touchdowns in just eight games, which earned him the 2020 5A Mr. Football award. He finished his prep career with 5,834 rushing yards and a state-record 93 touchdowns, breaking the previous mark of 92 held by former Oklahoma, USFL and NFL running back Marcus Dupree, who is Hunter’s distant cousin. Hunter’s 93 total touchdowns came in six different ways: rushing, receiving, fumble return, interception return, punt return and kick return. Hunter lettered in basketball and track at Neshoba Central and qualified for states as a sophomore with a personal best in the 100 meters of 11.04 seconds. As a senior, he also won the 5A powerlifting championship (198-pound weight class) with a 300-pound bench press, 576-pound squat and 575-pound deadlift. A three-star recruit, Hunter was the 43rd-ranked running back in the 2021 recruiting class and the No. 12 recruit in Mississippi. Following his breakout sophomore season, he received his first scholarship offer (Ole Miss) in February 2019. Several schools followed, including Louisville, Memphis, Mississippi State, Tennessee and Virginia. Hunter was considered an Ole Miss lean until Auburn, his favorite school from childhood because of Cam Newton, entered the mix late. Newly hired offensive line coach Will Friend, also a Neshoba Central alum, convinced the Tigers’ staff to offer Hunter a scholarship a few weeks before signing day. Hunter was the 10th-ranked recruit in former head coach Bryan Harsin’s first class at Auburn. He made the SEC Academic Honor Roll four straight seasons and graduated (in three years) with his degree in natural resource management (May 2024). He accepted his invitation to the 2025 Senior Bowl.
YEAR (GP/GS) CAR YDS AVG TD REC YDS AVG TD NOTES
2021: (13/2) 89 593 6.66 3 12 61 5.08 1 SEC All-Freshman; enrolled July 2021
2022: (12/1) 104 668 6.42 7 17 224 13.18 2 20-yard passing TD
2023: (12/12) 159 909 5.72 7 18 118 6.56 0 Led team in rushing; missed the season opener (suspension)
2024: (12/12) 187 1,201 6.42 8 21 155 7.38 1 First Team All-SEC; led team in rushing
Total: (49/27) 539 3,371 6.25 25 68 558 8.21 4STRENGTHS:
โ Densely built with bricks and mortar
โ Teammates tell tales of his legendary weight-room work ethic (squatted 600 pounds as freshman)
โ Led SEC with 6.4 yards per carry in 2024
โ Terrific run balance to drop pads and keep feet through contact
โ Defenders better finish him to the ground, because he won’t surrender easily
โ Hits burst button when given a lane
โ Ability to slash angles leads to chunk runs (42 carries of 10 yards or more sixth most in the FBS in 2024)
โ Caught ball well as a screen target
โ Regular on kickoff coverage all four seasons (10 career tackles on special teams)
โ Also has experience returning kicks โ averaged 20.7 yards per return (25 attempts for 517 yards)
โ Rushing production improved each of his four seasonsWEAKNESSES:
โ Inconsistent vision working through all the smoke at line of scrimmage
โ More likely to barrel into first-level bodies than show patience for developing holes
โ Setting up moves at second level isn’t natural for him
โ Struggles to quickly regain speed after being slowed down
โ Fumbled three times on 187 carries in 2024
โ Missed assignments in pass pro and communication needs to be better
โ Has projectable frame as blocker, but blitzing linebackers can give him the shake
โ Scouts say there are “no concerns” about his character, but Hunter was briefly suspended from the team during 2023 offseasonSUMMARY: A two-year starter at Auburn, Hunter was the featured back in head coach Hugh Freeze’s RPO-leaning offense. After backing up Tank Bigsby for two seasons, he led the Tigers in rushing as a junior and senior and left the Plains fourth on the school’s all-time rushing list (behind Bo Jackson, Cadillac Williams and James Brooks). A weight-room demon and state champion powerlifter in high school, Hunter has a cut-up physique, and his physical, balanced run style makes him a chore to tackle (ranked No. 2 in the FBS with 36.6 percent of his 2024 carries resulted in a first down or touchdown). He isn’t the most creative or elusive runner at the line of scrimmage or in space, but he keeps his legs pumping to carry tacklers draped on his back. Overall, Hunter’s vision and tempo tend to run hot and cold, but he is a hammerhead with downhill burst to run through holes and into contact without gearing down. Along with his hungry run style, his impact on special teams will separate him on an NFL depth chart.
GRADE: 3rd-4th round
April 26, 2025 at 2:04 pm #156138zn
ModeratorTerrific run balance to drop pads and keep feet through contact
There’s other things to like about this guy, but that right there–contact balance–is a very strong component of McVay/Snead Rams RB drafting.
I mean, you know, you have to have decent contact balance to even be a running back. But Rams picks at RB all have this at an exceptional level.
April 26, 2025 at 2:08 pm #156139zn
ModeratorApril 26, 2025 at 2:10 pm #156140zn
ModeratorApril 26, 2025 at 2:18 pm #156141zn
ModeratorAdam GrosbardAdamGrosbard
Per PFF, new Rams RB Jarquez Hunter averaged 4.1 yards *after contact* per carry in 2024April 26, 2025 at 2:32 pm #156147Zooey
ModeratorRams Bros.@RamsBrothers
Per ESPN Research, Ramsโ 8-straight years drafting a running back is the longest active streak in the NFL and the longest streak by any team since Washington from 2011-2020.Bit of a coincidence that McVay was on that Washington staff. Can imagine many are pissed over this pick
I took it for granted that they would get a RB. Don’t know why anybody would be pissed. I like Kyren, but as productive as he has been (especially for his draft position), he isn’t Gurley, Jackson, Faulk, Bettis, Dickerson. And he has been hurt, and nearing the end of his contract. I would have been surprised if they didn’t draft a RB in a draft class deep with good ones.
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