The 2026 NFL offseason is here and that means it’s time for mock drafts, draft profiles and everything that goes with them. So without further ado, here’s one of many Draft Profiles for the 2025 NFL draft.
HT: 6’3
WT: 240 lbs
Accolades:
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First-team All-Big 12 (2025)
Video:
Pros:
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Explosive First Step: Height’s explosive first step allows him to immediately win around the edge, putting tackles in recovery mode and creating opportunities for pressure or sacks.
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Advanced Hand Usage: He showcases advanced hand techniques with multiple counters, including swipe, rip, and spin moves, keeping blockers guessing and off balance.
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High Motor: Height has a relentless pursuit angle, resulting in backside cleanup tackles and disrupted rushing lanes downfield.
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Rare Coverage Ability: He’s comfortable dropping into zones and carrying tight ends vertically, showcasing rare coverage skills for an edge rusher.
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Natural Bend: Despite average length, Height has a natural bend around the edge, flattening to the quarterback while maintaining balance.
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Smart Processing: He quickly processes blocking schemes, finding the ball carrier through traffic with urgency and decisiveness.
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Physical Finisher: Height accelerates through contact, driving his legs and finishing with authority when he arrives at the ball carrier.
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Adaptable Experience: His experience against top competition across multiple conferences shows adaptability to different offensive styles and tempo variations.
Cons:
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Size Limitations: At 240 pounds, Height struggles against offensive tackles who get clean hands on him, often getting stone-walled and having trouble disengaging.
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Run Defense Consistency: He sometimes chases splash plays, getting washed down the line or caught inside when trying to knife gaps aggressively, which affects his run defense consistency.
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Tackling Technique: Height’s tackling technique can break down in space, leading to high misses against shifty backs in open field opportunities.
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Lack of Functional Length: He struggles with stack-and-shed techniques, unable to hold his point against double teams and getting moved off his spot.
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Predictable Pass Rush: When speed doesn’t work, Height’s pass rush plan can become predictable, lacking power conversion moves or counter rushes to keep tackles honest.
Summary:
Height’s combo of pass rush production and legit coverage skills is a major selling point – that’s rare for edge rushers, especially at this level. He needs an NFL strength program to add 10-15 pounds of functional mass without losing his explosiveness, plus coaching on run fits and finishing tackles. But he’s got the foundation to be a rotational edge, providing 400-500 snaps as a rookie and growing into a starter by year three. Bust risk is if the weight doesn’t come or tackling doesn’t improve. But his versatility makes him worth the investment.