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Domonique Orange NFL Draft Profile
Main Photo: [] Imagn Images

Overview

Domonique Orange has been one of the most steady and dependable interior defenders in the Big 12 over the past four seasons. A Kansas City native who committed to Iowa State and never wavered, Orange’s loyalty and long-term development in Ames speak volumes about his character and trust within the program.

At 6-foot-3 and 325 pounds, “Big Citrus” is built to control the middle of the defensive front. He isn’t flashy, and his sack totals won’t jump off the stat sheet, but his ability to anchor, absorb double teams, and muddy the interior run game makes him a valuable piece for NFL teams seeking toughness and stability inside.

Through 50 career games and 24 starts, Orange developed from rotational freshman to full-time contributor and team leader — earning All-Big 12 honors and national recognition along the way.

Height: 6’3”
Weight: 322 lbs
Class: Senior
Hometown: Kansas City, Missouri
High School: North Kansas City
Projection: Late Day 2 – Early Day 3

College Career

Career Totals and Accolades:

  • 66 tackles
  • 7.0 TFL
  • 1.0 sack
  • 13 QB hurries
  • 2 pass breakups
  • Bednarik National Player of the Week (vs. Iowa)
  • Senior Bowl & NFL Combine invite
  • Named to Bruce Feldman’s “Freaks List”

    Orange carries his weight well with a dense lower half and broad frame. His 34-inch vertical and elite weight-room numbers (450 bench, 650 squat, 365 clean) highlight explosive lower-body power despite average straight-line speed.

    Scouting Report

    Strengths

    Elite Anchor vs. Run
    Orange is extremely difficult to move one-on-one. He plays with natural leverage and has the core strength to sit down against double teams.

    First-Step Reaction Quickness
    His snap anticipation allows him to disrupt zone schemes and avoid being reached by lateral blockers.

    Upper-Body Power
    Orange shocks blockers with heavy hands and can jolt centers backward on contact.

    Gap Integrity
    When disciplined, he controls A-gaps effectively and forces runners to redirect.

    Motor & Consistency
    Four-year contributor. Durable. Improved snap count significantly as a senior.

    Football IQ
    Recognizes blocking schemes quickly and adjusts mid-rep. His awareness against Iowa — dominating a Rimington Trophy-winning center — showcased his processing speed.

    Weaknesses

    Limited Pass Rush Production
    Only one career sack. Primarily wins with power; lacks refined counters.

    Inconsistent Hand Usage vs. Double Teams
    Can allow his pads to rise and get displaced if his technique slips.

    Lateral Agility
    Average change-of-direction ability. Not built for extended pursuit.

    Ceiling Concerns
    Projects more as a run-down specialist than a three-down interior disruptor.

    Scheme Fit & NFL Projection

    Orange projects best as:

    • A true 0- or 1-tech nose tackle in a 3-4 front
    • A rotational early-down interior defender in a 4-3 scheme

    He thrives in systems that prioritize:

    • Two-gapping
    • Physical run defense
    • Interior stability over splash plays

    His value comes on early downs, short yardage, and against run-heavy offenses. While he may never be a high-volume pass rusher, he offers dependable rotational snaps (15–30 per game) and interior toughness that defensive coordinators trust.

    The Last Word on Domonique Orange

    Domonique Orange isn’t built to be a flashy, stat-sheet interior rusher. He’s built to control the middle of the defense. His game mirrors players like McKinnley Jackson, Siaki Ika, and Jayden Peevy, sturdy, powerful interior defenders whose value comes from anchoring, absorbing double teams, and forcing offenses to adjust their run plans.

    A four-year contributor who stayed loyal to Iowa State throughout the transfer portal era, Orange’s maturity and consistency stand out. Academic All-Big 12 honors and multiple Commissioner’s Honor Roll selections reflect the discipline and work ethic coaches value at the next level.

    As a Kansas City native who has followed Orange since his high school career, his development has been steady and intentional. He has improved his snap load, conditioning, and technical discipline each season.

    Orange may never be a high-volume sack producer, but his floor is reliable. In a scheme that uses the  0- or 1-technique, he can become a dependable rotational anchor who wins early downs and gives defensive coordinators interior stability.

    He won’t dominate headlines on draft night. But he’ll make a roster and stick.

    This article first appeared on Last Word On Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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