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znModeratorThe Los Angeles Rams are selecting Oklahoma State safety Jason Taylor II with the 234th pick in the 2023 NFL Draft.
Taylor was a semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award with 99 tackles, seven deflections and six picks in 2022. A late-round steal.
— Jon Walker (@ByJonWalker) April 29, 2023
znModeratorJASON TAYLOR II | Oklahoma State 5115 | 204 lbs. | 5SR Oklahoma City, Okla. (Carl Albert) 12/30/1999 (age 23.33) #25
BACKGROUND: Jason Taylor II, who has two sisters, was born and raised in Oklahoma City and started playing football at age 7. He wanted to follow in the footsteps of his father (Jason), who played defensive line at FCS Langston. Tragically, his father was shot and killed outside of an Oklahoma City convenience store on New Year’s Eve (December 2007), a day after Taylor’s eighth birthday. The family moved to Midwest City, Okla., when Taylor was in middle school, and he attended Carl Albert High School where was a four-year varsity letterman on offense (wide receiver) and defense (safety). As a junior, he helped Carl Albert to a 13-1 record and the 2016 5A state championship with 72 tackles and four interceptions. As a senior, Taylor led the program to a second-straight state championship with a 14-0 record in 2017. He finished his final season with nine interceptions on defense and 42 catches for 796 yards and 14 touchdowns on offense, earning first team all-state and district MVP honors. Taylor also lettered in basketball. A three-star recruit, Taylor was the No. 59 safety in the 2018 class and the No. 14 recruit in Oklahoma. He received offers from Memphis and Tulsa, but he had his eyes on Stillwater once Oklahoma State offered him a scholarship. Taylor committed to head coach Mike Gundy prior to his junior season. His older sister (Ja’Lynn) played college volleyball at Langston in 2017. Taylor accepted his invitation to the 2023 NFLPA Collegiate Bowl and was also a late callup to the Senior Bowl.
YEAR (GP/GS) TKLS TFL SACK FF PD INT NOTES
2018: (3/0) 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 Redshirted
2019: (13/1) 16 1.0 0.0 0 0 0
2020: (11/0) 12 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 85-yard FR TD; 48-yard onside KR TD
2021: (14/13) 48 6.5 2.5 1 6 2 Honorable Mention All-Big 12; 85-yard INT TD; Blocked FG
2022: (13/13) 99 3.5 0.0 0 13 6 First Team All-Big 12; Led team in tackles, PD; Led Big 12 in INTs
Total: (54/27) 175 11.0 2.5 1 19 8HT WT ARM HAND WING 40-YD 20-YD 10-YD VJ BJ SS 3C BP
COMBINE 5115 204 32 10 78 1/4 4.50 2.55 1.49 43 10’9” – – 14 (no shuttle or 3-cone – choice)
PRO DAY 5114 203 32 1/8 9 3/8 77 3/4 – – – – – 4.20 7.16 – (stood on Combine testing)STRENGTHS: Well-built with good length for his size … aggressive working from the top down versus both the pass and run … plays with functional range and lower body explosion (43-inch vertical was second among all combine prospects) … above-average instincts from the post or box … anticipates well and trusts his vision to decisively break on crossers/in-breakers … balances his eyeline between quarterback and route mid-motion … accounted for 19 passes defended and eight interceptions over the past two seasons … didn’t commit a penalty in college … fills inside/outside run lanes with conviction … faces up the ball carrier and drives through his target as a tackler … offers a ton of experience on special teams (536 snaps) … tape got better and better each season.
WEAKNESSES: Follows the eyes of the quarterback to the ball, and savvy passers will know how to use it against him … will take the cheese and false step, creating open windows … inconsistent deep-third tracking, and the ball can get over the top of him as a single-high defender … lacks elite long speed to hold up in mirror-andmatch man coverage versus the slot … inconsistencies as a tackler show at times … must improve his footwork and fundamentals in the open field … doesn’t always play through blockers with his eyes and can get stuck at the point of attack.
SUMMARY: A two-year starter at Oklahoma State, Taylor was a field safety in former defensive coordinator Derek Mason’s scheme. His play and production improved each season in Stillwater, and he created big plays with eight interceptions the past two seasons and three career touchdowns (two defensive, one special teams). Though he makes some missteps in man-to-man, Taylor offers athletic range and ball skills from the post/deep half and has outstanding eyes from depth to read and track the football. He can run the alley and takes fast angles to the ball carrier, but he needs to stay controlled with his finishing fundamentals. Overall, Taylor needs to clean up his overaggressive tendencies, but he displays above-average instincts and play urgency to the football. He projects best as a post safety in the NFL with core special teams ability.
GRADE: 4th-5th Round
znModeratorHi guys so I was supposed to die in 2018 and I am still kicking somewhat. As long as they get over that F them picks I think think this is a good start
Hello Jim! Glad you’re with us and stopped in to say hi.
I am so busy today trying to keep up with all the picks, and post updates on them.
znModeratorThe Rams with a really strong 5th-round capping it off with Puka Nacua. Good size that he utilizes well in combat catch situations. His best trait is what he can do after the catch. Love the YAC: pic.twitter.com/6o2rsSBqWH
— Bobby Football (@Rob__Paul) April 29, 2023
znModeratorTre Tomlinson is a great value pick!
Good athlete outside of his size which Rams don't care about. Brings good speed, versatility, and ball skills. Good depth player early on!
74.5% athletic match to Nikell Robey-Coleman pic.twitter.com/F52J3BpYMq
— Blaine Grisak (@bgrisakTST) April 29, 2023
znModeratorJourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigueThe Rams special teams coaches basically were on the road all spring. Chase Blackburn went to Wingate pro day and took Evans out to dinner. Evans said he could have taken him to McDonalds for all he cared, that’s how excited he was. “I’d start walking (to LA) right now.”
znModeratorWe have a punter!
The Rams took Ethan Evans out of Wingate University here in the 7th round https://t.co/fazNaiH7SN
— Cameron DaSilva (@camdasilva) April 29, 2023
znModeratorNFL Draft Diamonds@DraftDiamondsEthan Evans headed to the Rams!! Hula Bowl standout and beast from Wingate! Special player selected by Rams
znModerator
znModeratorZach Evans introducing himself pic.twitter.com/PnVTnp5CwQ
— Rams Brothers (@RamsBrothers) April 29, 2023
znModeratorThe LA Rams just STOLE TCU’s Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson in Round 6 😳pic.twitter.com/wKcyEB14De
— Jack Caporuscio (@Caporuscio_Jack) April 29, 2023
znModeratorRams select RB Zach Evans after trading up 37 spots to No. 215 https://t.co/an1BHsmesx
— Rams Wire (@TheRamsWire) April 29, 2023
znModeratorKoll_0ne@Koll_0neTre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson while small is physical and sticky in coverage. Not afraid of contact. He’s a nickel ONLY to me. My comp is Rams fan favorite Nickell Robey-Coleman
znModeratorZACH EVANS | Ole Miss 5111 | 202 lbs. | 3JR Houston, Texas (North Shore) 5/30/2001 (age 21.91) #6
BACKGROUND: Zachary “Zach” Evans, who is the youngest of five boys, was raised northeast of downtown Houston by his mother (Antoinette). He followed in the footsteps of his older brothers and started playing football in elementary school and emerged as an up-and-coming star in middle school. Evans enrolled at Galena Park North Shore High School, where he was a four-year varsity letterman as a running back. He rushed for 1,483 yards and 27 touchdowns as a sophomore and was recognized as the District’s Newcomer of the Year. As a junior, Evans led North Shore to a 15-0 record and No. 1 ranking nationally, including the 2018 6A state championship. He finished his junior year with 1,784 rushing yards and 29 touchdowns and was named the National Player of the Year. Evans again helped North Shore to the 6A state title in 2019, although he was suspended for the championship game (third game he missed as a senior because of suspension). He finished his senior year with 1,600 rushing yards (12.6 yards per carry) and 20 touchdowns, earning first team All-American and All-State honors. Evans earned MVP honors at the Under Armor All-American Game. He finished his prep career with 4,867 rushing yards and 76 touchdowns. A five-star recruit, Evans was the No. 2 running back in the 2020 recruiting class (behind Bijan Robinson) and the No. 1 recruit in Texas. He ranked No. 16 overall
nationally and was the highest-ranked running back from Texas since Adrian Peterson at one point during his recruitment. As a freshman, he received his first scholarship offer from LSU, which had recently signed another North Shore product K’Lavon Chaisson. Shortly after, the recruiting floodgates opened, and Evans was offered a full ride from almost every national program. During his senior season, he announced four finalists: Alabama, Georgia, LSU and Texas A&M. Evans signed with Georgia during the early signing period but planned to wait until the All-American Game to reveal his choice. But he delayed the announcement, and Georgia released him from his letter of intent in January. Evans reopened his recruitment and was reportedly considering LSU, Ole Miss, Tennessee and Texas A&M. But national signing day came and went without Evans choosing a school. A few months later in May 2020, Evans enrolled at TCU, which surprised everyone who tracked his roller coaster recruitment. He was not only the highest-ranked recruit in the Horned Frogs’ 2020 class (one spot ahead of wide receiver Quentin Johnston), but he was highest-ranked recruit in the history of the program (TCU’s first five-star signee). After two seasons in Fort Worth, Evans elected to enter the transfer portal and resurfaced at Ole Miss for the 2022 season. His father figure growing up was his grandfather (Albert), who passed away in September 2018. Evans elected to skip his senior season and enter the 2023 NFL Draft.YEAR (GP/GS) CAR YDS AVG TD REC YDS AVG TD NOTES
2020: (9/3) 54 418 7.7 4 8 76 9.5 0 TCU; Started the final three games
2021: (6/5) 92 648 7.0 5 10 130 13.0 1 TCU; Led team in rushing; Missed six games (turf toe)
2022: (12/8) 144 936 6.5 9 12 119 9.9 1 Ole Miss; Missed one game (hip)
Total: (27/16) 290 2,002 6.9 18 30 325 10.8 2HT WT ARM HAND WING 40-YD 20-YD 10-YD VJ BJ SS 3C BP
COMBINE 5111 202 31 5/8 10 1/4 78 1/2 – – – – – – – – (no workout – left hamstring)
PRO DAY 5111 208 31 1/4 10 1/8 76 7/8 4.50 2.57 1.57 33 1/2 10’1” 4.25 6.89 – (no bench press – choice)STRENGTHS: Sleek, balanced runner with an athletic build … displays the lower body explosiveness to nimbly burst in any direction … matches his vision with his onestep acceleration to clear holes and speed away from the crowd … skillfully weaves through traffic and shows a natural understanding of run angles … at his best on pitch/toss plays that get him on an outside track … shows a breakaway gear to distance himself from the crowd … inconsistent push-the-pile power but builds up speed, lowers his pads and barrels through contact at the second and third levels … uses a physical stiff-arm to fend off tacklers … catches the ball well on the move and should excel in the screen/swing game … wasn’t overused in college, logging only 320 offensive touches … consistently created chunk plays (averaged nearly 7.0 yards per carry and 11.0 yards per catch over his three-year career).
WEAKNESSES: Upright runner with inconsistent pad level … undeveloped patience and block reading between the tackles … occasionally runs with blinders and will miss some backside opportunities … his legs lose life at contact as an inside runner … makes some curious second-level decisions and needs to do a better job settling his feet to set up open-field cuts … true pass protection reps were rare on film and unproven as a blocker … will run before securing throws (five drops on 43 career targets) … wasn’t a return man in college and has minimal special teams experience … the character and medical vetting process will be imperative … he was suspended twice as a senior in high school for “violating team rules” and missed three games, including the 2019 state championship game … battled several injuries the past two seasons: missed six of the final seven games as a sophomore with a turf toe injury (October 2021); missed one game as a junior with a hip injury (September 2022); knocked out of the Alabama game with a concussion (November 2022); sidelined for the NFL Scouting Combine with a left hamstring injury (March 2023).
SUMMARY: A one-year starter at Ole Miss, Evans shared the workload with SEC Freshman of the Year Quinshon Judkins in head coach Lane Kiffin’s RPO-based scheme. His carries and rushing production increased each of his three college seasons, although he accounted for only 23.5 percent of the Rebels’ carries in 2022. With his explosive one-cut skills, Evans has fantastic feet to give defenders the slip and excels with an outside track, using his acceleration to win the corner, out-angle pursuit and weave through the defense. His all-gas run style can be effective (22.9 percent of his carries in 2022 resulted in a 10-plus-yard gain), but he would also benefit with improved patience to better set-up blocks and force missed tackles. Overall, Evans has some baggage and a few undeveloped areas on his NFL résumé, but there is no denying his burst and balance to create explosive plays in different ways. A boom-or-bust prospect, he has the athletic talent to be a dynamic change-of-pace option and offers RB1 potential for an NFL offense.
GRADE: 3rd-4th Round
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znModeratorCameron DaSilva@camdasilvaTre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson was targeted 81 (!!!) times last season and allowed just 28 receptions for 365 yards 34.6% completion rate. Led all CBs with 21 forced incompletions..Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigueTre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson (Rams pick No. 182) was Dane Brugler’s No. 19 CB. “Tomlinson’s size will immediately remove him from several draft boards, but his competitive nature and twitchy athleticism give him a legitimate chance.” Inside CB depth.
znModeratorHere's what the Rams are getting in App State OLB Nick Hampton, who could end up being a Day 3 steal as a pure pass rusher https://t.co/IW0Ee0z45O
— Cameron DaSilva (@camdasilva) April 29, 2023
znModeratorJourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigueRams get their backup QB at No. 128, and it’s Stetson Bennett. Staff is pretty high on Bennett – offense and defense. Applause from upstairs as the pick is announced!
znModeratorWarren McClendon Jr.
Prospect Info
COLLEGE GeorgiaHEIGHT 6’ 4’’WEIGHT 306 lbsARM 34 1/2’’HAND 10’’..Player Bio.McClendon’s uncle, Willie, set the Georgia rushing record in 1978 (1,312 yards) before Heisman Trophy winner Herschel Walker came along to break it. Willie also backed up Walter Payton with the Chicago Bears for four years. Warren’s cousin, Bryan, was a receiver at Georgia and interim coach between the departure of Mark Richt and hiring of Kirby Smart. McClendon played both tackle spots and center at Brunswick High School in Georgia, earning first-team all-state honors as a senior. The four-star recruit redshirted in 2019, playing in four games as a reserve, and then started nine of 10 appearances at right tackle in 2020. He started all 15 games for the national champions in 2021 and then earned first-team All-SEC accolades in 2022 as the repeat champs’ starter at right tackle in 13 of 14 appearances. McClendon was injured in the January 15 car wreck that claimed the lives of Georgia offensive lineman Devin Willock and Georgia recruiting analyst Chandler LeCroy. McClendon, a passenger in the fatal car crash, required stitches to the head. — by Chad Reuter.AnalysisBy Lance Zierlein.Overview.
A three-year starter and two-time national champion, McClendon has been a hardworking team leader at Georgia. His intangibles, however, are countered by a lack of ideal size, length and athleticism as either a tackle or a guard. McClendon needs to get stronger and will always have issues finding success too far away from home base, but he works to the whistle and has enough pass protection savvy for multi-positional consideration as a backup..Strengths- Plays with consistent effort and toughness.
- Might offer three-position flexibility.
- High football IQ and knows where he needs to be.
- Squeezes into teammate’s hip on double teams.
- Works hard to keep pass rusher in front of him.
- Plays with ready hands and an efficient punch.
- Solid anchor drop to reinforce the pocket.
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Weaknesses- Can’t count on quickness or power as an advantage.
- Plays with tall pads and narrow base.
- Defenders able to slip away from sustain tries.
- Sluggish feet limit his overall range.
- Change of direction in space is lacking.
- Gets beaten to his pass punch by length.
- Galloping heel-clicker in slides to meet speed.
znModeratorPUKA NACUA | BYU 6015 | 201 lbs. | 4SR Provo, Utah (Orem) 5/29/2001 (age 21.91) #12
BACKGROUND: Makea “Puka” (Poo-kuh) Nacua (Nah-koo-uh), who is one of six children, was born and raised in Las Vegas and started playing pee wee football at age 5. When Puka was in seventh grade in 2012, his father (Lionel) passed away at age 45 after a lifelong battle with diabetes. Nacua’s mother (Penina) moved the family to Provo, Utah, in 2013 to be closer to family. Nacua attended Orem High School, where he saw immediate varsity reps as a freshman wide receiver, posting 23 catches for 265 yards and two scores. As a sophomore, he registered 48 receptions for 977 yards and five touchdowns, earning honorable mention All-State honors. As a junior, Nacua led Orem to a 12-2 record and the 4A state championship, earning first team All-State honors with 87 catches for 1,692 yards and 24 touchdowns. As a senior, he set single-season school records with 103 catches for 2,336 yards and 26 touchdowns. Nacua led Orem to back-to-back 4A state titles, and he cleaned
up on the award circuit, including the 2018 Utah Gatorade Player of the Year, Utah’s Mr. Football and first team All-American. He finished his career with the Utah high school records for receptions (261), receiving yards (5,270) and receiving touchdowns (57). Nacua lettered in basketball and earned second team All-State honors as a junior. He also lettered in track and broke the 46-year-old state record in the long jump (23 feet 10.25 inches) to win the 4A state championship as a senior. Nacua finished his career with personal bests in the 100 meters (11.01) and 200 meters (22.38). A four-star recruit, Nacua was the No. 22 wide receiver in the 2019 recruiting class and the No. 1 recruit in Utah. With family ties at BYU and Utah, he received offers from both schools after his freshman year of high school. Nacua had his pick of just about any West Coast school and initially committed to USC the summer before his senior year. However, he kept his recruitment open and officially flipped to Washington on signing day, mostly because of his relationship with wide receiver coach Junior Adams (who helped develop current Rams receiver Cooper Kupp at Eastern Washington). After two seasons with the Huskies, Nacua decided to transfer to BYU in 2021 to be closer to his family, specifically his maternal grandmother, who had cancer. His older brother (Kai) played safety at BYU (2013-16) and went unselected in the 2017 NFL Draft but has played for six NFL teams over the past six seasons, most recently with the New York Jets in 2022. His older brother (Isaiah) was a defensive lineman at BYU (2014). His older brother (Samson) walked on and played five years as a wide receiver at Utah (2016-20) before transferring to BYU for his final season in 2021 (teammates with Puka). Nacua accepted his invitation to the 2023 Senior Bowl but suffered a concussion during the first practice and missed the rest of the week.YEAR (GP/GS) REC YDS AVG TD DROP NOTES
2019: (8/3) 7 168 24.0 2 1 Washington; Missed the final five games (broken foot)
2020: (3/0) 9 151 16.8 1 3 Washington; Led team in receiving; Missed one game (COVID)
2021: (12/7) 43 805 18.7 6 3 BYU; Led team in receiving yards, TDs; Missed one game (injury)
2022: (9/8) 48 625 13.0 5 3 BYU; Led team in receiving; 5 rushing TDs; Team captain; Missed four games (right ankle, hamstring)
Total: (32/18) 107 1,749 16.3 14 10HT WT ARM HAND WING 40-YD 20-YD 10-YD VJ BJ SS 3C BP
COMBINE 6015 201 31 1/2 9 1/2 74 7/8 – – – – – – – – (no workout – right toe)
PRO DAY 6016 210 32 9 5/8 75 1/2 4.56 2.64 1.62 33 10’1” 4.36 7.32 15STRENGTHS: Smooth athlete with quiet, controlled upfield strides … saw a high volume of screens and quick-throws to take advantage of his vision and toughness (five rushing touchdowns in 2022) … outstanding body control and feel when the ball is in the air, allowing him to adjust/high-point … catch timing and focus help him make grabs over defenders … doesn’t shrink from route contact and maintains his focus to secure contested catches (see 2022 Boise State tape) … displays crafty footwork mid-pattern to leverage defenders out of position or expose space in zone … voted a senior captain and has the pedigree of a competitor (NFL scout: “Our coaches are going to love this guy.”) … benefits from the “older brother” theory with three older brothers who played high-level college football.
WEAKNESSES: More quick than sudden and doesn’t have the top-end speed that scares defenses … the burst out of his breaks is average … occasionally false steps and exposes his chest vs. press coverage … can be baited into extra contact downfield … marginal experience on special teams coverages … NFL scouts have voiced concern about his durability as he battled numerous minor issues in his career … suffered a sprained right ankle in the 2022 season opener (September 2022) and missed the following two games; he also missed time after suffering a hamstring injury (September 2022); a broken foot in practice (October 2019) ended his freshman season and required surgery; pulled out of the Senior Bowl after one practice because of a concussion (January 2023); unable to test at the combine because of a right toe injury (March 2023).
SUMMARY: A two-year starter at BYU, Nacua was an inside and outside receiver in offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick’s balanced scheme. A record-setting athlete in high school, he spent two seasons at Washington before transferring to Provo, where he led the Cougars in receiving as a junior and senior despite battling multiple injuries. With his body control and focus, Nacua can win one-on-one situations on the outside or provide an underneath target as a zone-beater. Though there aren’t questions about his ball skills, he might lack the pure speed that teams covet outside the numbers and the suddenness desired in the slot. Overall, Nacua needs to prove he can stay healthy and on the field at the next level, but he is smart, tough and athletic with the locked-in concentration that gives him a fighting chance to earn an NFL roster spot.
znModeratorHey @RamsNFL fans, @AsapPuka is a WEAPON!! pic.twitter.com/Yjwa9KADcF
— BYU FOOTBALL (@BYUfootball) April 29, 2023
znModeratorPuka Nacua blocking, jet sweeps, screens, getting things done pic.twitter.com/rM8znBOl5T
— RAMZILLA (@elitster) April 29, 2023
znModerator"Even though I've done as much as I've done … it seems to still go over others' heads. The Rams believed in me. So, I'm going to make sure that this pick right here is one of the greatest picks that they've ever had." Tre Tomlinson on the phone just now. https://t.co/MHxkkgENLX
— Jourdan Rodrigue (@JourdanRodrigue) April 29, 2023
znModeratorTRE TOMLINSON | TCU 5075 | 178 lbs. | 4SR Waco, Texas (Midway) 1/10/2001 (age 22.30) #1
BACKGROUND: Tre’Vius (Trey-vee-us) “Tre” Tomlinson (formerly Hodges-Tomlinson) grew up in Marlin (central Texas), where he started playing football at age 5, primarily as a running back. His family moved to Waco in middle school, and he attended Midway High School. A three-year letterman, Tomlinson played some wide receiver and also returned kicks, but his focus was at defensive back, playing cornerback, nickel and safety. As a junior, he accounted for 63 tackles, three interceptions and three touchdowns (fumble return, interception return and kickoff return). As a senior, Tomlinson was named first team All-District on defense with 85 tackles, two interceptions (both returned for touchdowns) and a blocked field goal. He led Midway to an 11-2 record and the 2018 playoff semifinals before falling to powerhouse Allen High. Tomlinson also lettered in track (sprints and relays) and set a personal best in the 100 meters (11.04). A three-star recruit, Tomlinson was the No. 113 safety in the 2019 recruiting class and the No. 175 recruit in Texas. He received his first offer from Texas State followed by Kansas State and his hometown Baylor. Tomlinson grew up dreaming of playing at TCU for Gary Patterson, but the Horned Frogs didn’t pull the trigger on an offer, and he appeared headed for Baylor. However, after a plea from his Hall of Fame uncle, Tomlinson received the TCU offer a few weeks before signing day and committed. His uncle (LaDainian Tomlinson) rushed for 5,263 yards at TCU and was a first-round pick (No. 5) in the 2001 NFL Draft by the San Diego Chargers. An 11- year NFL veteran, Tomlinson was a five-time Pro Bowler and inducted into both the College and Pro Football Hall of Fames. Tomlinson accepted his invitation to the 2023 East-West Shrine Bowl.
YEAR (GP/GS) TKLS TFL SACK FF PD INT NOTES
2019: (12/1) 8 0.0 0.0 0 1 0
2020: (10/10) 26 0.0 0.0 0 13 0 First Team All-Big 12; Led team in PD
2021: (12/12) 41 2.0 0.0 2 9 2 First Team All-Big 12; Led team in PD, INTs; 29-yard INT TD
2022: (15/15) 50 2.0 0.0 1 18 3 First Team All-American; Jim Thorpe Award; First Team All-Big 12; Led team in PD
Total: (49/38) 125 4.0 0.0 3 41 5HT WT ARM HAND WING 40-YD 20-YD 10-YD VJ BJ SS 3C BP
COMBINE 5075 178 29 8 5/8 70 1/2 4.41 2.48 1.47 39 11’0” – – 12 (no shuttle or 3-cone — choice)
PRO DAY 5076 181 30 3/8 8 1/8 71 – – – – – – – – (stood on Combine testing)STRENGTHS: Exceptional speed, agility and lower-body explosiveness … oily hips for sudden-twitch movements and directional change … displays short-area burst out of his pedal to jump routes … shows a developed feel for reading play indicators and breaks … eyes consistently lead him to passing windows … accounted for 40 passes defended in 37 games the past three seasons … gave up only two catches of 25-plus yards in 2022 (on 81 targets) … plays with the competitive toughness of a much bigger player, attacking blockers or ball carriers with a head of steam … missed tackles decreased each season at TCU … grew up training with his Hall of Fame uncle and developed a battled-tested mentality.
WEAKNESSES: Substantially undersized with subpar height, weight and length … will struggle matching up versus long, high-pointing receivers in the NFL … receivers can power through his feisty coverage … super-aggressive play style leads him to early or mauling contact, giving officials no choice but to throw the flag … can be controlled by wide receiver blocks … throws his body around in run support, but often hits instead of wraps … ball carriers can step out of his tackle attempts because of his shorter arms and limited finishing strength … worked primarily on the outside and lacks ideal experience working versus the slot … stayed healthy in college, but durability could become an issue because of his size.
SUMMARY: A three-year starter at TCU, Tomlinson was an outside cornerback in defensive coordinator Joe Gillespie’s scheme. After leading the Horned Frogs in passes defended the past three years, he earned the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation’s top defensive back with a prolific senior season: 18 passes defended, 34.6 completion percentage when targeted. A big-time competitor beaming with confidence, Tomlinson is rabbit-quick with a decisive reactor to play sticky coverage and trigger routes. However, his lack of length drastically lowers his margin for error (in coverage and run support), and his aggressive mentality makes him a flag magnet (14 penalties in 2022). Overall, Tomlinson’s size will immediately remove him from several draft boards, but his competitive nature and twitchy athleticism give him a legitimate chance of winning over an NFL coaching staff and earning a meaningful role. He projects best inside as a nickel cornerback.
GRADE: 4th-5th Round
znModerator
znModeratorProspect Info
COLLEGE NebraskaHEIGHT 6’ 5’’WEIGHT 250 lbsARM 35 1/4’’HAND 10 3/4’’.40-Yard Dash 4.74 Seconds10-Yard Split 1.64 SecondsVertical Jump 33.5’’Broad Jump 9’ 10’’3-Cone Drill —20-Yd Shuttle 4.38 SecondsBench Press 21.Player Bio.Mathis matriculated from Manor High School in Texas to TCU for the 2018 season, redshirting his first year on campus while playing in four games as a reserve (four tackles). He started all 12 games as a sophomore (40 tackles, nine for loss with 2.5 sacks) and then garnered second-team All-Big 12 accolades in 2020 by tying for fifth in the FBS with nine sacks in 10 starts (among 14 tackles for loss and 46 total stops). Mathis was a second-team pick in 2021, as well, posting seven tackles for loss and tying for the team lead with four sacks among his 45 total stops. He also broke up three passes in 12 starts. He transferred to Nebraska for 2022 with long-time head coach Gary Patterson no longer at TCU, starting twice in 12 appearances (50 tackles, five for loss with 3.5 sacks, two pass breakups). — by Chad Reuter.AnalysisBy Lance Zierlein.Overview.
Mathis’ 2020 season put him on the map as an edge defender to look out for in the future, but he’s failed to hit those production markers since then. He has good size and outstanding length but needs more time in the weight room. He struggles against downhill running attacks but is a slippery tackler who can cast a wide net near his gaps. Mathis’ pressure and sack counts aren’t as high as they should be with his athletic ability and traits. If a team can get him to become a more skilled and attack-oriented rusher, it might find a prospect who outplays his draft slotting as a 3-4 rush linebacker..Strengths.- Four-year starter with outstanding traits.
- Arms like vines with enormous hands.
- Range to slide down the line and cut off back side.
- Short-area quickness to elude blockers when needed.
- Able to slither around traffic and make challenging tackles.
- Length to develop long-arm rush and counters off of it.
- Flashes agility to bend the edge and flatten tight on the track.
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Weaknesses.- Will need to get stronger.
- Struggles to press and separate when blocker finds his frame.
- Gets pushed around by tackles at the point of attack.
- Below-average hand usage in both phases of the game.
- Can be too passive in early stages of the rush.
- Needs to create a workable rush plan with a signature move.
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znModeratorSouth Carolina ➡️ Southern California
Welcome to LA, @davisallen17! pic.twitter.com/7ejAJXCCrz
— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) April 29, 2023
znModeratorAnother DAWG.
Welcome to LA, @wcmcclendonjr! pic.twitter.com/flqNY6xKsl
— Los Angeles Rams (@RamsNFL) April 29, 2023
znModeratorRams add one of the most underrated pass rushers in the class with Nick Hampton. Undersized but plays with his hair on fire. Uses his hands well too and has solid pass rush plan. Can dip and bend too. Dominated UNC: pic.twitter.com/zx1YYkdBFs
— Bobby Football (@Rob__Paul) April 29, 2023
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