Score | Overall |
90 | 14 |
Position | Day |
1 | 1 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
90 | 1 | 1 | 14 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Weight: | 256 lbs |
Hands: | 9.5 | Arms: | 31.75 |
40 YD Dash: | DNP | 10 YD Split: | DNP |
Vertical: | DNP | Broad: | DNP |
Shuttle: | -- | Cone: | DNP |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 9.5 | 40 YD Dash: | DNP |
Weight: | 256 lbs | Arms: | 31.75 | 10 YD Split: | DNP |
Broad: | DNP | Cone: | DNP | ||
Vertical: | DNP | Shuttle: | -- |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 9.5 | 40 YD Dash: | DNP | Broad: | DNP | Cone: | DNP |
Weight: | 256 lbs | Arms: | 31.75 | 10 YD Split: | DNP | Vertical: | DNP | Shuttle: | -- |
Big Ten Tight End of the Year (2024)
Mackey Award Winner (2024)
4-time Academic All-Big Ten
First-team All-American (2024)
First-team All-Big Ten (2024)
Prototype size profile with run-game impact. Warren is nearly 6’6" and 260 pounds. In comparison to the recent highly drafted TEs, Warren is a monster. He plays like one too, and brings the smoke in the run game. You could argue he makes as big an impact in the run game at the next level as he does in the passing game. Warren is a scary sight as an in-line blocker at the point of attack. Put on the tape from the College Football Playoff, and you will see him latch and drive multiple EDGE defenders 20+ yards upfield. He is a finisher.
Tenacious, multi-faceted offensive weapon. Warren is very explosive for his size. Because he is so high-cut and is a long-strider, his speed is unsuspecting. He can get on the toes of a deep safety in the blink of an eye, making him a seam-busting threat. He also has multi-alignment versatility. He can play out of the slot, out wide, inline, or in the backfield. He is a mismatch weapon because DBs just can’t contend with his size and strength, while he will destroy LBs tasked with covering him. The cherry on top is his ability to handle designed touch opportunities. He had over 300 yards rushing and 4 TDs this past season at Penn State as a wildcat QB. Do not overlook this part of his profile. With the "tush push" landing in almost every team's playbook, Warren has a significant rushing upside in an offense, and teams that don’t want to risk their quarterbacks can easily swap them for Warren.
Extraordinary ball skills and body control. If Warren gets a step or leverage advantage on whoever is covering him, that is basically the end of the rep. He will wall them off, and unless help arrives, he will win the rep and catch the football. Warren brings Gronkian contested catch ability that should make him a 10+ TD candidate every season. He is a red-zone easy button.
Dynamic RAC ability. Warren has an intense play style that showcases his strength. He has a little George Kittle to his game in this regard. He has a knack for finding space and can easily shrug off tacklers in the open field. He has a shocking amount of wiggle as well that will leave defenders grasping at air.
Warren is a dynamic two-way tight-end prospect who offers as much in the run game as in the passing game. He showed reliable hands as a senior, and an uncanny ability to dominate amid crowds. If there was a spectrum of play-style between Rob Gronkowski and George Kittle, Warren falls somewhere on that spectrum. Officially he scores as a top-12 player for me in the class and should come off the board in the first half of round 1.
Score | Overall |
89.3 | 15 |
Position | Day |
2 | 1 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
89.3 | 2 | 1 | 15 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Weight: | 248 lbs |
Hands: | 10 | Arms: | 32.75 |
40 YD Dash: | DNP | 10 YD Split: | DNP |
Vertical: | DNP | Broad: | DNP |
Shuttle: | -- | Cone: | DNP |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 10 | 40 YD Dash: | DNP |
Weight: | 248 lbs | Arms: | 32.75 | 10 YD Split: | DNP |
Broad: | DNP | Cone: | DNP | ||
Vertical: | DNP | Shuttle: | -- |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 10 | 40 YD Dash: | DNP | Broad: | DNP | Cone: | DNP |
Weight: | 248 lbs | Arms: | 32.75 | 10 YD Split: | DNP | Vertical: | DNP | Shuttle: | -- |
Second-Team All-American (2024)
Second-Team All-Big Ten (2023, 2024)
Mackey Award finalist (2024)
Academic All-Big Ten (2024)
Michigan’s single-season record holder for catches by a tight end (56)
Huge target with excellent movement skills. Loveland has a massive frame. He is long and provides an incredible catch radius for his quarterbacks. He has a ton of juice in his body and change-of-direction skills.
Preeminent pass-catching weapon. Loveland would step into the NFL today as one of the better route-running tight ends in the league. Despite the long legs, he has the flexibility and loose hips to sink and explode at the break point. His routes are snappy and demonstrative. He can sell his vertical breaks very well. He is a mismatch weapon, no matter who draws him in coverage. Against LBs, he can route them and run away from them. Against safeties, he has the size and just enough strength to win the battle at the top of the stem. He is incredibly comfortable catching the ball in traffic and has some jaw-droppers on his tape.
Experience as a blocker in a pro-style scheme. The Wolverine offense utilizes pro run concepts and blocking responsibilities. Loveland has experience in both 11 personnel and 12 personnel as a big-slot, inline, or wing player. He has experience blocking at the point of attack in outside zone, or blocking in space as the split-man in zone schemes or as a puller in counter. The reps weren’t always clean, but there shouldn’t be much an NFL playbook can throw at him that he won’t know what to do with.
Play strength as a blocker is suspect. Loveland has a lot of room to grow as a blocker. His athleticism helps locate and latch on to moving targets, but against bigger defensive linemen or linebackers, he can get absolutely manhandled at the point of attack.
Has not been an effective player after the catch. Loveland doesn’t have much creativity with the ball in his hands. He doesn’t always run to daylight and doesn’t make guys miss. In the modern NFL, with the checkdown/dump-off heavy workload most tight ends get, this is a blindspot in his game.
Teams looking for the next Sam LaPorta should look no further. Loveland is a huge, uber-athletic, route-running phenom who can have a pass-game run through him. Loveland is a high-level separator and has excellent ball skills to pair. His hands are as reliable as they come, and he is very comfortable working in congested areas. He has a lot of work to do to maximize his impact as a three-down player, but he is just good enough in the run game to become a day 1 starter in the NFL. Officially he scores as a top-12 player in the class, and I view him as the best receiving tight end available.
Score | Overall |
86.2 | 34 |
Position | Day |
3 | 2 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
86.2 | 3 | 2 | 34 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Weight: | 250 lbs |
Hands: | 10 | Arms: | 33 |
40 YD Dash: | DNP | 10 YD Split: | DNP |
Vertical: | DNP | Broad: | DNP |
Shuttle: | -- | Cone: | DNP |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 10 | 40 YD Dash: | DNP |
Weight: | 250 lbs | Arms: | 33 | 10 YD Split: | DNP |
Broad: | DNP | Cone: | DNP | ||
Vertical: | DNP | Shuttle: | -- |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 10 | 40 YD Dash: | DNP | Broad: | DNP | Cone: | DNP |
Weight: | 250 lbs | Arms: | 33 | 10 YD Split: | DNP | Vertical: | DNP | Shuttle: | -- |
Second-Team All-ACC (2024)
Former consensus 4-star prospect
Averaged 16.8 yards per reception in 2024 and had 7 touchdown catches
Played significant time as a freshman before getting injured in 2022 and 2023
Freak athlete. For my money, Arroyo is the best athlete at tight end in the class. I know we didn’t get a Combine workout from him, but the GPS numbers I have on him show at the very least he has the best get-off and long speed. You can see it on film in the route running and in the open field. On the linear tree, he just runs away from guys easily. He was devastating on deep over routes. In the open field, he has won several foot races against SEC and ACC cornerbacks. Athleticism matters more for tight ends than any other position in the NFL.
Good, developing route runner. For how little experience Arroyo has on the field, he already possesses some incredible route-running chops and is only getting better. His ability to get into breaks at full speed, collect his weight, sink his hips, and explode into a harsh angle route on a dime is special. He is an easy separator, and when asked to run in/out breaking routes, he demonstrated excellent quickness. He also has the requisite "wiggle" in his stem to avoid contact and disruption. Against zone coverages, he has eagle-eye vision and an uncanny ability to uncover and give his QB a window.
Ball skills and jump-ball ability. Arroyo has some nasty jump-ball wins in his resume but also makes a ton of quick adjustments to off-target balls while running full speed. It will be easy for him to earn his next quarterback's trust.
Committed blocker. Like most college tight ends, he will need some technical refinement in the NFL as a blocker. With that said, Arroyo has no problem getting in the mix and sticking his face in the fire. He enters blocks with great pad level and times an explosive punch very well. He wrecked backside force defenders as the split man on split-zone runs and has quite a few "finishes" as a blocker.
Positional/alignment versatility. Arroyo has the size and athleticism to line up all over the formation. He can play inline, in the slot, or out wide. He has played wing in 12/13 personnel packages and even has reps lining up as a fullback.
Arroyo is one of the most mysterious prospects in recent memory. He has the physical traits, athleticism, and developed skills to be a first-round player, but lacks anything close to the requisite tape to show for it. Tight end is probably the one position you can look the other way on the raw production profile in favor of traits. There is a long history of world-beaters coming out of absolutely nowhere at the tight-end position. Rob Gronkowski, who was also injured for two whole seasons, had just 47 catches in his final year of college after 28 the year before. Travis Kelce had just 59 career receptions in college, Jimmy Graham just 17. Antonio Gates didn’t have a single college reception. Darren Waller’s college career season high in receptions was just 26. It is a position dominated by athleticism. Arroyo has that. Officially he checks in as my TE3 and scores as a top-40 player overall.
Score | Overall |
85.4 | 38 |
Position | Day |
4 | 2 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
85.4 | 4 | 2 | 38 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Weight: | 251 lbs |
Hands: | 10 | Arms: | 32.25 |
40 YD Dash: | -- | 10 YD Split: | -- |
Vertical: | -- | Broad: | -- |
Shuttle: | -- | Cone: | -- |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 10 | 40 YD Dash: | -- |
Weight: | 251 lbs | Arms: | 32.25 | 10 YD Split: | -- |
Broad: | -- | Cone: | -- | ||
Vertical: | -- | Shuttle: | -- |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 10 | 40 YD Dash: | -- | Broad: | -- | Cone: | -- |
Weight: | 251 lbs | Arms: | 32.25 | 10 YD Split: | -- | Vertical: | -- | Shuttle: | -- |
Son of Hall of Famer Jason Taylor
Freshman All-SEC (2022)
SEC Academic Honor Roll (2023)
Third-Team All-SEC (2024)
First 100 reception, 1,000 yard tight end in LSU history
Record holder for catches and yards for TE at LSU
New prototype size and athletic profile. Taylor is a big target with adequate length. He is an exceptional athlete with good explosiveness and elite change-of-direction skills for the position. His acceleration at his size is mouth-watering.
Plus route runner. Taylor is still a work in progress as a route runner but there is more than enough to work with right now. He has flexible hips and ankles, and his gait is well-controlled, allowing him to quickly collect and explode into hard-breaking routes completely leaving linebackers in the dust. He excels on the vertical tree as a seam-stretcher or on deep crossers that give him run-away opportunities.
Excellent blocker in space. Taylor is highly effective in working to the second level against linebackers and safeties in the run game. He has the foot speed to reach almost any target and has the frame to completely wall off and wash out pursuing defenders. He also has a highlight reel of devastating blocks as a lead on screen plays. His pass-pro ability got significantly better in 2024 and has a lot of quality reps 1v1 against SEC pass-rushers.
Big, strong hands with the ability to track and adjust. Taylor’s hands got progressively better throughout his college career. He had a drop rate of under 2% in 2024, which is fantastic. He has no problems sorting out traffic and finding the ball in a crowd and is virtually undisturbed by contact. He is hyper-effective at digging out severely underthrown balls and securing them before they hit the ground, often laying out to do so.
A+ production profile. Taylor’s raw stats might not seem like much, but putting them in context with LSU’s history at the tight end position is important. He leaves LSU as, statistically, the greatest tight end to ever wear the uniform.
Lacks physicality as a route runner. Taylor runs routes as if he expects to crush every coverage defender with pure athleticism — which he can absolutely do against linebackers. However, bigger safeties who can run can ruin his day, as they can keep coverage tight and play physically through the stem. Taylor almost allows them to disrupt the timing and route breaks. I would love to see him use his God-given size to his advantage and learn how to wall off defenders in chase mode.
Needs to get stronger at the POA as a blocker. Taylor enters blocks against bigger defenders with inconsistent leverage and unnecessary forward lean. He can get caught lunging with his hands too wide, making him easily displaced or outright beaten.
Missing YAC element. Taylor did not produce much as a runner with the ball in his hands. Considering the number of dump-off opportunities he got at LSU, you would like to see him learn to transition from catch to run sooner and use his athleticism in the open field a smidge more.
Taylor hits the NFL coming from an elite bloodline, and I traditionally love betting on guys who were basically born and bred to play in the NFL. That said, his game speaks for itself and is worthy of the vote of confidence on merit alone. He brings size and athleticism to the table and can be a complete mismatch weapon in the passing game. He definitely needs some development as an inline blocker, but the sum of parts here is very good. Though Taylor checks in as my TE4, he still ranks inside my top 40 players overall, given this rare TE class.
Score | Overall |
82.3 | 63 |
Position | Day |
5 | 2 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
82.3 | 5 | 2 | 63 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Weight: | 247 lbs |
Hands: | 9.25 | Arms: | 32.875 |
40 YD Dash: | 4.63 | 10 YD Split: | 1.55 |
Vertical: | 39 | Broad: | 122 |
Shuttle: | 4.35 | Cone: | DNP |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 9.25 | 40 YD Dash: | 4.63 |
Weight: | 247 lbs | Arms: | 32.875 | 10 YD Split: | 1.55 |
Broad: | 122 | Cone: | DNP | ||
Vertical: | 39 | Shuttle: | 4.35 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 9.25 | 40 YD Dash: | 4.63 | Broad: | 122 | Cone: | DNP |
Weight: | 247 lbs | Arms: | 32.875 | 10 YD Split: | 1.55 | Vertical: | 39 | Shuttle: | 4.35 |
All-Big Ten Third Team (2024)
All Pac-12 First Team (2023)
Played in all but two games (illness) in his four-year college career
Finished as Oregon’s all-time leader in receptions and receiving touchdowns
Tied the Oregon single-season record for receptions by a TE (43 receptions)
Ran a 4.63s 40 yard dash (1st among TEs in 2025)
39-inch vertical at the Combine (1st among TEs)
Size, length, and athleticism. Ferguson has a fantastic physical profile for an NFL tight end. Checking these boxes is vital to projecting NFL success, as, athleticism matters more for tight ends than perhaps any other position.
Big-time catch radius and body control for the position. He has ball skills that are reminiscent of Jimmy Graham. Ferguson can play above the rim with the best of them. His explosive leaping ability and length, combined with his tracking ability, means it's pretty hard to get a football in the air he can’t get to. He is an instant red-zone threat and someone who should dominate the middle of the field when congested.
Big-time competitor after the catch. Ferguson definitely isn’t going to juke a defender out, but he will drop his shoulder and bull his way through some traffic. He is a feisty runner. He transitions to run quickly after the catch and immediately starts battling to move the chains.
Good baseline as a run blocker. He has the length to win the early leverage battle against his targets, which allows him to run his feet through and roll his hips to sustain his block. He also has the vision to locate second-level defenders and the foot speed to get to them – he is especially good at digging out linebackers and safeties when coming from a slot alignment. He has some work to do, but he is ahead of schedule as a blocker.
Alignment versatility. Ferguson ran more of his routes from the slot than he did when in line. This is a feature of his game that should stick in the NFL. He can be deployed similarly to Trey McBride or Jonnu Smith.
Gets way out over his skis when lined up in line as a run blocker. Despite his length, Ferguson has a bad tendency to enter his blocks with his head way out over his feet and lunging at his target. This significantly reduces his play strength at the point of attack and makes him easy to shed.
Inexperienced running NFL route tree. Ferguson did most of his damage exclusively on screens, check downs, over routes, and seams. He has the movement skills to develop into a route-running mismatch weapon, but it's just not there yet. He is in more of a Tucker Kraft usage pattern right now.
Not strong at the catch point. A lot of Ferguson’s above-the-rim ability gets wasted by an inability to play through contact at the catch point. He is easily moved off the ball in contested situations and allows DBs to play through his hands. It’s also worth noting that Ferguson played the last two seasons with Bo Nix and Dillon Gabriel, two QBs who excel with ball placement and their ability to throw away from coverage.
Ferguson is a physically gifted tight end who offers big-time potential as a pass-catcher in the NFL. He can play both in line and line up in the slot. He has the juice to win deep and is excellent after the catch. Against zone, he has shown the ability to work into the soft spot and make himself available for his QB. He has tools to work with as a run-blocker, but overall, he needs to improve his technique and develop his play strength. In a regular tight end class, Ferguson would easily be a top-3 player at his position. In fact, he would have scored as my TE2 in last year's class behind just Brock Bowers. But in this loaded class, he could slip through the cracks. Officially, he scores as a day-2 player for me and could come off the board as soon as the late 2nd/early 3rd round.
Score | Overall |
79 | 86 |
Position | Day |
6 | 2 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
79 | 6 | 2 | 86 |
Height: | 6' 3" | Weight: | 241 lbs |
Hands: | 9.25 | Arms: | 32.25 |
40 YD Dash: | 4.71 | 10 YD Split: | 1.56 |
Vertical: | 34 | Broad: | 118 |
Shuttle: | 4.32 | Cone: | 6.97 |
Height: | 6' 3" | Hands: | 9.25 | 40 YD Dash: | 4.71 |
Weight: | 241 lbs | Arms: | 32.25 | 10 YD Split: | 1.56 |
Broad: | 118 | Cone: | 6.97 | ||
Vertical: | 34 | Shuttle: | 4.32 |
Height: | 6' 3" | Hands: | 9.25 | 40 YD Dash: | 4.71 | Broad: | 118 | Cone: | 6.97 |
Weight: | 241 lbs | Arms: | 32.25 | 10 YD Split: | 1.56 | Vertical: | 34 | Shuttle: | 4.32 |
Consensus All-American (2024)
First tight end in FBS history to be named Player of the Year for a conference
Led FBS in yards (1,555) and receptions (117) in 2024, both FBS records for tight ends
First-Team All-MAC (2024)
Highest graded single season in PFF history (2024, 96.1)
World-class production profile. Fannin Jr. arguably had the greatest individual college football season ever at the tight end position.
RAC ability. Fannin Jr. is as feisty as they come with the ball in his hands. He breaks a ton of tackles with both power/will and with a little wiggle and change of direction as well. His ability to rack up forced missed tackles remained true against top power-5 opponents as well.
Versatile move piece. Fannin Jr. did a majority of his damage from the slot at BGSU. He also lined up quite a bit as a wing or fullback. He will beat most linebackers in coverage and is at his best as an F-type TE in 12 personnel looks.
Great hands, ball tracking, and ball skills. When it comes to catching the football, Fannin Jr. is already a professional. His hands rarely fail him. With the way he was deployed at BGSU, he has more reps tracking vertical shots through traffic than you can imagine and always found a way to get under the football. He also shows off the ability to high-point and win jump balls or come down with overthrown footballs. He is a seam-stretcher and will unlock underneath routes for his teammates against two-high shells.
Linear route-tree specialist. He was highly effective on most routes on the linear track. He is explosive on slants and crossers and fights to earn space in his stems. Anything involving a break harsher than 45 degrees or double moves is not his cup of tea though.
Less than ideal measurables. Even the bulked-up version of Fannin Jr. we got at the Combine is still considered small for the position. The size concerns pose serious questions about where he will actually play in the NFL. In fact, during the week of practices down in Mobile, he didn’t take a single rep as an inline TE. He primarily worked out of the backfield or motioned out to the slot. The NFL may view him as an H-back/fullback hybrid type. Maybe a Kyle Juszczyk-type role is in the cards?
Average to below-average athlete for the position. Fannin Jr. is a highly limited athlete, and his testing at the Combine basically confirms what you see on tape. He is very tight-hipped and doesn’t have a lot of ankle mobility. His potential as a route runner and separator is very limited. He generally lacks explosiveness but does have some short-area quickness that makes him effective after the catch and on quick-hitting routes.
Fannin is an enigma. We have a prospect with a highly limited toolbox who absolutely dominated at the college level — including against elite competition. The eye-popping production warrants extra attention in the draft despite some glaring red flags in the profile. It is worth noting he is one of the youngest players in the draft and will play his entire rookie season as a 21-year-old. The recent success of guys like Juwan Johnson might give teams confidence that there is a role for him. For me, he scores as a mid-to-late day-2 prospect.
Score | Overall |
73.8 | 128 |
Position | Day |
7 | 3 |
Score | Position | Day | Overall |
73.8 | 7 | 3 | 128 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Weight: | 241 lbs |
Hands: | 9.875 | Arms: | 32.75 |
40 YD Dash: | 4.84 | 10 YD Split: | 1.69 |
Vertical: | 30 | Broad: | DNP |
Shuttle: | -- | Cone: | 7.15 |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 9.875 | 40 YD Dash: | 4.84 |
Weight: | 241 lbs | Arms: | 32.75 | 10 YD Split: | 1.69 |
Broad: | DNP | Cone: | 7.15 | ||
Vertical: | 30 | Shuttle: | -- |
Height: | 6' 5" | Hands: | 9.875 | 40 YD Dash: | 4.84 | Broad: | DNP | Cone: | 7.15 |
Weight: | 241 lbs | Arms: | 32.75 | 10 YD Split: | 1.69 | Vertical: | 30 | Shuttle: | -- |
Mackey Award semifinalist (2024)
All-Big 12 Honorable Mention (2023)
Second-Team All-SEC (2024)
Academic All-SEC (2024)
Academic All-Big-12 (2022, 2023)
Ran an NFL route tree. The Texas offense has a lot of pro elements to it, and Helm got a lot of reps running a diverse tree — albeit on air, as he was almost never covered at the line. His route running did look fluid, with smooth breaks and transitions.
Excellent runner after the catch. Helm’s entire resume is YAC production. He forces missed tackles at a high level and transitions instantly from catch to run. He was aided heavily by a scheme that fed him wide-open catch and run opportunities, but you see the lateral quickness and contact balance to continue at the next level.
Pass-pro asset. Texas had a ton of confidence in Helm as an iso’’d up pass protector – both when lined up inline and as an underneath slide protector on heavy play-action pass concepts from under center.
Athletic profile of a corpse. Fortunately, there’s an excuse — Helm hurt his ankle on his first 40-yard dash attempt at the NFL Combine, which likely caused the rest of testing numbers to be poor. With that said, Helm doesn’t pop on tape like that of an elite athlete. The truth is likely somewhere in the middle.
Big-time issues in the run game as a blocker. Helm played with poor leverage and play strength and would get rag-dolled by bigger defensive ends. He also struggled blocking in space or climbing to the second level. He is a total work in progress in this regard.
Incomplete resume as a receiver. There is not a lot of tape of him beating coverage or working through congested areas to catch the ball. Watching his tape can make you feel like you're taking crazy pills, because he was wide open on almost every catch. This is the result of several things. One, he played under an excellent play-caller in Steve Sarkisian. who schemed a lot of open windows. Two, Helm did most of his damage as a dump-off/checkdown man. Three, when it's all said and done, he likely played with four Day 1 and 2 drafted receivers who pull a ton of coverage with them. This doesn’t necessarily mean that Helm can’t perform in congested areas or beat coverage… we just have never seen him do it.
In recent memory, short of a player having severe off-field issues, I can’t remember a player having a worse draft process than Helm. He entered the cycle with a lot of hype from the community, but his late pulling out of the Senior Bowl and horrendous showing at the Combine have left a lot of doubt in his game. The tape doesn’t answer many questions, either. His play style and usage remind me a lot of Dalton Schultz and Jake Ferguson, and if Helm grew as an in-line blocker in the run game, I could see him eventually getting that kind of role in the NFL. For now, he is likely a TE2 or TE3 who must contribute on special teams.
More Evaluations Coming Soon
The Fantasy Points Prospect Guide will be regularly updated as Brett Whitefield makes his way through more film.
Check back regularly for updates on both offensive and defensive players.