Bob McGinn Draft Series- OT's
TACKLES
1. FRANCIS MAUIGOA, Miami (6-5 ½, 328, 5.14, 1): Third-year junior. “I liked Will Campbell but I’d have to say this guy’s better than Will Campbell,” one scout said. “He’s not that (Hall of Famer Willie Roaf) but he’ll be an All-Pro type. He looks like a guard but he moves like a tackle. He’s got feel, balance, and he can bend. He positions guys really well. He’s an instant starter.”
The last four Hurricane tackles taken in the first round — Ereck Flowers (No. 9, 2015), Vernon Carey (No. 19, 2004), Bryant McKenzie (No. 7, 2002) and Leon Searcy (No. 11, 1992) — all started at least 100 NFL games. “He has less questions about him than the others,” said another scout who ranked him atop the pack. “He is a big man. He can stop people. He’s a little more patient than (Monroe) Freeling.” Born in American Samoa, he moved to Florida and became a 5-star recruit out of IMG Academy. “He’s either a right tackle or a guard,” said a third scout. “Big power player. I see him more as a guard. He definitely can be a starting tackle but he’s a Pro Bowl guard. He just doesn’t have quite the agility outside on the NFL level. I’d take him over (Penn State’s Vega) Ioane as a guard.” Arms were 33 ¼ inches, hands were 10 5/8 inches. His short shuttle of 4.59 paced the group. “A freaky, rare-sized tackle that isn’t the agile athlete that (Spencer) Fano and (Caleb) Lomu are,” a fourth scout said. “But in the run game, that’s where you see his power. He’s just more powerful in-line than the other (top) guys. He can move people off the ball. His deficiencies show maybe in pass pro dealing with some of these athletic, twitchy guys. He’s definitely a starter, but when you’re comparing him to the others he doesn’t have that lateral agility. But he can get out and run on pulls and getting to the second level. He’s probably a little heavier than anybody would like him.” Made all 42 starts at RT from 2023-‘25. “Usually the O-line coaches will tell you to make sure he’s a dancing bear and can pass protect and I’ll teach them how to run block,” a fifth scout said. “He’s a deceptive athlete who they’ll love to get their hands on and work on hand placement and consistency. He’ll be a solid starter at the beginning but by the end of the (first) year you’ll be enamored with him as your starter at left tackle or right.” From Ili’ili, American Samoa.
2. SPENCER FANO, Utah (6-5 ½, 312, 4.92, 1): Third-year junior with 24 starts at RT in 2024-’25 and 11 starts at LT in 2023. “In this era of football I like Fano the best because he could at least be a left tackle potentially,” said one scout. “He’s got shorter arms (32 1/8) but he’s got good feet. I think he’ll be able to do it.” His arm length was the shortest of the top 20 tackles. “My concern last year with Will Campbell was he was a little bit short-armed (32 5/8),” a second scout said. “He wasn’t 34, 35 (inches) like some of these guys. I really do think, if you watch throughout the season and especially in the Super Bowl, you could see where that showed up. People are intrigued by Fano the athlete. He’s got a nice frame. He’s got some Rashawn Slater to his game. He’s really athletic and a great technician. But that worried me as well (because) Rashawn’s had a lot of durability issues.” Fano’s 7.34 clocking led the tackles in the short shuttle. His hand size (9 inches) tied for the smallest among the top 20. “He doesn’t have really good length but he’s a great athlete,” a third scout said. “Utah ran a lot of plays where they’d walk down a wideout and pull a tackle out front. He just destroyed people in his path. Or run the quick screen to the wideout and he’d run out there and block the DB and run down the field with the running back. His best blocks are down blocks where he can just maul the guy. He’s not the size of Penei Sewell (6-5, 331, 5.09, 33 ¼ arms). Sewell is built like a brick.” Named Polynesian College Football Player of the Year in 2025. “Against Texas Tech there were a couple times when he gave up his edges early in the play,” a fourth scout said. “But he has the footwork to recover. I think he’s a better foot athlete than Will Campbell. I honestly don’t think that’s much of a concern. Light on his feet. He can mirror in pass pro. Not like a powerful, uproot, road-grader type but he can generate power by being on the move. He’s not weak. It’s more of a stalemate to a gradual win. He’s a top-15 pick.” Four of his uncles played in the NFL. “He’s just kind of average at everything,” a fifth scout said. “Doesn’t have top strength or top movement or feet. Inconsistent with production. He moved around better at the combine than I saw on tape but that’s drill work. He’s got a quirky-type personality.” From Spanish Fork, Utah.
3. BLAKE MILLER, Clemson (6-6 ½, 318, 5.05, 1): Started 54 games over four seasons for a school record total of 3,778 snaps. “There’s nothing sexy,” one scout said. “Nothing that stands out where you go, ‘Oh, wow.’ All he does is play down in, down out with consistent technique. He plays lower than you think for his frame. He can stay down. Pretty efficient in both areas in terms of run blocking and pass blocking. Not a guy with elite feet. His feet aren’t sweet feet, so to speak. But he’s an ideal starting right tackle right off the bat.” Started both ways in high school, participated in track and also wrestled. “Now he’s not the prettiest player all the time but he’s solid and lined up in every game he ever played,” a second scout said. “He’s very reliable in that way. That counts for something. There’s a real strong belief that he’ll go first round at the end.” Despite years of team success Clemson has never had an offensive lineman drafted in the first round. Their second-round picks were Jackson Carman (2021), Dave Thompson (1971) and Harold Olson (1960). “He’ll get thrown down a lot because he’s a little tight in the hips,” a third scout said. “He’s tough. Not the strongest, but he works at it. Good in pass pro. His thing is he’s really, really quick and positions well. After that, sometimes he’s up and down just because he’s not super strong or a top athlete. Ideally, he’s in the second round, but probably will go one.” Arms were 34 ¼, hands were 9 ¾. His 32 reps on the bench press led the position. From Strongsville, Ohio.
4. KADYN PROCTOR, Alabama (6-6 ½, 358, 5.19, 1): Third-year junior, three-year starter at LT. “Like him,” one scout said. “Has a little bit of a younger game but he’s got some lift to him. If a guy’s 366 and 6-7, and he’s a dancing bear, the offensive line coaches can figure it out. I don’t know the wiring because there have been some Alabama tackles that have kind of **** the bed in the league. If it (mental) is not a glaring hole, I just think when the league’s O-line coaches will get their hands on this kid they’re going to be, like, ‘Wait a second. It’ll take you a minute to run around this guy, let alone if he can’t move.’ But he can (move).” The Crimson Tide has had eight tackles drafted in the first round in the past 25 years: Chris Samuels (2000), Andre Smith (2009), D.J. Fluker (2013), Jonah Williams (2019), Jedrick Wills (2020), Alex Leatherwood (2021), Evan Neal (2022) and JC Latham (2024). Samuels, with six, is the only one to receive Pro Bowl honors. All were selected within the first 17 picks. “I didn’t like Evan Neal and this guy is exactly the same,” a second scout said. “I wanted to like him, too. He has a little bit of movement for being so big. But the game against Auburn, he’s just standing around watching. He just teases you and, ultimately, disappoints. Big, good-looking dude but not physical, not a lot of grit. Stands around and watches.” Five-star recruit from Des Moines, Iowa. Played for coach Nick Saban as a freshman, then transferred to Iowa for two months before reentering the transfer portal and returning to Tuscaloosa and the new staff of coach Kalen DeBoer. “Had the transfer portal issue where he kind of quit on the team and was going back to Iowa and then he came crawling back and his teammates accepted him,” said a second scout. “Light on his feet. He can bend. He can move people. He can anchor. Talentwise, there’s no question who this kid is. But he has had weight issues over his career. The intelligence is not great. At the end of the day, O-linemen that are big, smart and tough are the guys that play. The guys that are super talented and maybe not that smart and have weight issues and the work ethic doesn’t match to the talent are the ones you worry about. He’s how you want to draw them up physically but it gives you a little pause with who he is.” Was committed to the Hawkeyes out of high school before flipping to the Tide on national signing day. Also participated in basketball and track. “Big, massive athlete,” said a third scout. “You cannot deny the physical ability but just a lot of hype, a lot of recognition early on. He’s going to go probably in the 20’s but it’s embarrassing. He should be in the top five, top six. He’s more athletic than my top two guys (Fano, Mauigoa) but the top two guys produce consistently. He didn’t. Will he play? Yes. Are you going to be satisfied with him? Probably not. Alabama never really was.” Arms were 33 3/8, hands were 9 ¾. “He’s overrated,” a fourth scout said. “Slow feet. Kind of an oozer. Slow twitch, not a good athlete for pass protection. He’s got to be a right tackle or a guard. But he’s a massive guy and sometimes that’s all you need, especially at guard.” Added a fifth scout: “I don’t know if he has the grit to play guard but he could. He does not dominant consistently. Depends which tape you watch. He’s gifted, though. He’s just a mountain of a man with great feet. He gets lazy sometimes.”
5. MONROE FREELING, Georgia (6-7 ½, 317, 4.98, 1): Third-year junior backed up in 2023, started four games in late 2024 and assumed the LT job in 2025. “You can tell he hasn’t started a ton but every game he got better and better,” one scout said. “He’s got what we call s**t in his neck. He’s got a little more physicality than some of these guys for a younger guy that hasn’t played a bunch. He’s that kind of kid that’s gonna walk in there and be, like, ‘Nothing’s going to be too big. I’m going to learn this job and take this job and make it my own.’ He strikes me as having that kind of play personality. He’s athletic enough. He just needs to continue to develop that man strength. He’s going to play left tackle and play it really, really well.” Had the largest hands (10 ¾) and tied for the longest broad jump (9-7) of the top 20 tackles. “He’s really talented,” a second scout said. “But he has some issues core strength-wise, hand placement, all that stuff.” Four-star recruit from Charleston, S.C. “He’s big, he’s long and he’s got great feet,” said a third scout. “Kind of like a Kolton Miller type. For a guy that’s (inexperienced) he sees things really well. I didn’t see any big holes in his game at all other than being a one-year starter. He’s so big with a wide base. He can change directions. Plays aggressive. He gets overaggressive sometimes but we can work with that. He’s bigger and longer than Fano. Just the body of work is a lot smaller.” Arms were 34 ¾. The Bulldogs have had five first-round tackles in the past eight years: Isaiah Wynn (2018), Isaiah Wilson (2020), Andrew Thomas (2020), Broderick Jones (2023) and Amarius Mims (2024). “Looks thin,” a fourth scout said. “He’s got some initial movement and quickness. He’s just so weak. He’s off with his technique. He kind of falls around a lot. Gets smashed to the ground. You see some athletic stuff there but he’s just a long ways away. I can’t see first round.” Played high-school basketball, averaging 2.3 points and 2.5 rebounds.
6. CALEB LOMU, Utah (6-6, 311, 5.01, 1-2): Assuming Spencer Fano is selected before him, Lomu could become Utah’s fourth-ever first-round tackle. The first two, both Pro Bowl players, were Jordan Gross (2003) and Garett Bolles (2017). “He’s a good athlete, too, but Spencer’s a notch above him,” one scout said. “Lomu has the prototypical size and length. He’s light, too. He has the bigger frame (than Fano). He has the traditional tackle body that you like. Not that he’s soft or anything but he just doesn’t finish with the same urgency. Fano has more strength and power than Lomu.” Third-year junior and two-year starter at LT. “He’s more of a finesse guy than Fano,” a second scout said. “Needs to gain some strength. The feet, the athlete, the body to work with – it’s all there. It may take him a while. I don’t think he’s a guy you can pencil in this year. Physically, there’s some things he needs to get better at and get stronger. I saw him get bull-rushed a couple times.” Arms were 33 5/8, hands were 9 ½. “Both of them are (finesse players),” a third scout said. “It’s the old coaching adage: is it that way, or did you allow it to happen? He’s a good athlete but I wouldn’t call him elite. It’s surprising that he would play there (left tackle) and Fano played right given that Fano’s probably a little better athlete. I like him. He’s the kind of guy that by the end of his first year he’ll be playing good, productive football. I just don’t think he’s a plug-and-play starter.” Four-star recruit from Gilbert, Ariz. Was born in Honolulu. “I think he’s the better of the two,” a fourth scout said. “He’s more athletic than Fano. His production is up and down. He’s not very strong. He gets stood up a lot. Good athlete, not a top athlete. But he’s going to play.” Managed 25 reps on the bench press. “He’s relatively small when you compare him to tackles that are playing,” said a fifth scout. “Just not a big man. I’m a little lower on him than Fano because he’s not a real gritty, edgy O-line mentality.”
7. MAX IHEANACHOR, Arizona State (6-6, 321, 4.90, 1-2): Born in Nigeria, moved to Compton, Calif., at age 13 and played football for the first time in 2022 at East Los Angeles Junior College. “Somebody on campus saw him and said, ‘Man, you need to check out the football team,’” one scout said. “He’s literally only played real football for maybe four years. His arrow is up. He’s got the feet. His deficiencies are all coachable and things he can (improve). Physically, he has first-round talent. He got better as the season went along this year. What he did against David Bailey and those Texas Tech ends put him on the map. You saw what he could do against a real NFL-type pass rusher. He just needs to play more.” Started five games for the Sun Devils in 2023 because of injury. Started at RT in 2024 and at LT in 2025, then played RT at the Senior Bowl. “Good for him if he went to the Senior Bowl like a job interview and took advantage of it,” said a second scout. “I call him a tease because he helped himself at the Senior Bowl but his film was so inconsistent. You saw an athletic dense body, physical at times. But my concerns with him were his instincts, and that leads into smarts. If you’re a little bit of a slow reactor then you can’t take advantage of your talent. I had a hard time with the film. ‘What happened here?’ He’ll go four or five plays and you’re, like, ‘What is this guy?’ You have to figure out if you like him, if you love him and if you’re nervous about him. Athletically and physically, I like him. He just has a hard time consistently putting it all together. Whether that’s mental or not toughness, I don’t know.” Arms were 33 7/8, hands were merely 9. “The more you watch him the more you fall in love with him,” a third scout said. “He’s not going to be a great pass blocker. He’s not the athlete that Fano is but he does a lot of good things. Down blocks. He can pull and get out in front better than you would think just watching him move around. He’s not an elite foot athlete but he can get in the way. He’s a second- or third-round pick. I’d take Lomu.” Shared the position lead in the broad jump at 9-7. “He’s new to football and he plays like it,” a fourth scout said. “These guys are always hit or miss and how long will it take and if he’ll get it. You can see the ability, the flashes but he just plays raw. You just don’t know the background, the learning, the work ethic, and whether you have confidence that’s going to develop. He’s off balance a lot. The hand placement’s wide. He doesn’t seem to pick things up quickly and visually. He is a classic Senior Bowl guy. Everything’s kind of dumbed down there. Those kind of guys shine. It’s easy. You don’t have to learn much. That’s why it isn’t (valuable). He’ll be a second-rounder. If you do all the background and the learning and the toughness, then you say, ‘All right, he’s worth a shot.’” Played basketball and soccer in high school.
8. AUSTIN BARBER, Florida (6-7, 318, 5.13, 2-3): Spent five years in Gainesville, starting 38 of 50 games. “He’s a lot like Blake Miller,” said one scout. “Really tough, very physical. Not as long as I’d like. Sometimes he gets beat by long-arm moves where you can’t stop it at first and then they get you off your feet and get you light on your heels. He’s steady, efficient, smart. He’s going to figure out how to play.” Played at the Senior Bowl. “I don’t think he had as good an all-star week as he would have liked to have had,” the scout said. Arms were 33 1/8, hands were 9 5/8. “He can play on either side but preferably right tackle for me,” said the scout. “But he’s been a left tackle. He’s more like a fourth-round pick especially now that he struggled a little bit (in Mobile).” Four-time All-Southeastern Conference honors student. Played high-school basketball in Jacksonville, Fla.
9. CALEB TIERNAN, Northwestern (6-7 ½, 323, no 40, 2-3): Fifth-year senior. Redshirted in 2021, started five games at RT in 2022 and 38 games at LT from 2023-’25. “He’s smart and he’s tough,” said one scout. “Moves around OK. Can play on both sides. He probably will get taken higher than people think. I’m guessing third round but he could go higher than that. Not great in pass pro, but not bad. I don’t know if he’s strong enough for guard. I don’t think he played that heavy (323 at pro day).” Played four years of varsity basketball at Detroit Country Day High School. “He’s deceptively physical,” a second scout said. “There’s some good toughness in that kid. Little bit of a limited foot athlete. I love the frame but he tends to play to that 6-7 and gets a little high at times. He’ll struggle at times with power rush when he’s late with his hands. He’s got to develop some core strength. What you see is kind of what you get. I wrote him as a solid starter. I don’t know that there’s a ton of upside but steady and efficient. Not elite. Third round.” Arms were short (32 ¼), hands were small (9). Led the tackles in the vertical jump (35 ½). “Tall guys never have to bend, and when they do bend they bend at the waist,” a third scout said. “This guy can bend his knees. He had adequate punch and arm extension. He opens up the gate sometimes to the inside. Good at picking up the switches. Adequate stopping the bull. He can slide his feet. Good at hitting targets on screens.” From Livonia, Mich. “I didn’t like him,” a fourth scout said. “Gave him a backup grade. Mid-to-late rounds. He’s (big) but he just doesn’t play strong.”
10. MARKEL BELL, Miami (6-9, 348, 5.43, 2-3): Weighed close to 400 pounds before and during his two years at Holmes (Miss.) Community College before starting 21 of 28 games at left tackle for the Hurricanes. “He reminds me a little bit of Trent Brown (6-8 ½, 380, 5.26), who went in the seventh round (in 2015),” said one scout. “He had a lot of negatives but he was so damn big and he’s still in the league playing. Bell’s so damn big and he’s got decent enough feet. As soon as he gets his hands on people he wins. He’s so massive. He’s an intriguing guy. He’s more of a pass pro guy with upside. The run blocking … kind of lazy at times. He gets high and lumbers around. But when he wants to he can cave in a side. His thing is, you just stick him at right tackle and he’s got the pass pro and he’s massive. He’s got to go early. You can’t find guys like this. Tackle is the hardest position to find. That’s why the good ones fly off the board. He’s a piece of clay you can coach up.” Longest arms (36 3/8) at the position but merely 9-inch hands. “Some gap teams might like him,” a second scout said. “He is a giant. But he’s raw. But he can get in the way.” Ranked as the No. 4 JUCO prospect out of Holmes. “This guy is a monster,” a third scout said. “He is gigantic, and that’s his whole game. He can smother people in the run game. When he gets his arm extended he does everything really well but he’s so inconsistent at it. He slides good enough but if you redirect with quick stuff on him he’s gonna miss you. If he gets those damn arms on you, at his length, you can’t beat him. If the work ethic and mental are there he can play with the limitations he has. The hand size is weird.” From Cleveland, Miss. “He’s barely draftable,” said a fourth scout. Added a fifth scout: “He’s my eighth tackle and he’s more of a third-round pick. I think he can start in the league.”
11. JUDE BOWRY, Boston College (6-5, 315, 5.10, 3-4): Shared the position lead in the broad jump (9-7) and hand size (10 ¾). “If you took him on straight talent he’s a second-round pick,” one scout said. “He is a natural bender. He is super light on his feet. You say, ‘Yeah, that’s a left tackle right there.’ But the technique’s all over the place. There’s plays where he just short-circuits. Sometimes he’s able to recover because he’s so athletic but sometimes he just gets stuck in the mud.” Limited to 31 games over four seasons, including 21 starts at LT and two at RT, by a series of concussions and other injuries. Looked OK during the practices at the Senior Bowl but then gave up sacks to Duke’s Vincent Anthony and Western Michigan’s Nadame Tucker in the game. “He had a horrible Senior Bowl game,” a second scout said. “He gave up two sacks and some pressures. It was bad. I think he will drop, but he might be a good find late in the draft if he hasn’t lost his confidence.” Arms were 33 ¾. “I’m hanging onto my *** a little bit because I really liked him,” said a third scout not long after the Senior Bowl and after filing his report. “There was a reason he was at the Senior Bowl. He was a physical, aggressive guy. He finished people. What worries me is his confidence as well as his energy kind of dipped when he got beat a couple times. That bothered me. I’ve got to find out who he is. I’d go back to the film and fight for him. Off college tape he was a really good player.” Three-star recruit from Germantown, Md.
12. DAMETRIOUS CROWNOVER, Texas A&M (6-7, 319, 5.15, 3-4): Arrived in College Station as a 3-star tight end in 2021 before redshirting and moving to tackle. “It’s pretty damn close between him and Bell,” said one scout. “He has his strengths. He’s huge. He’s a little better athlete than Bell. He’s a low starter to begin with who can grow into being a (solid) starter. Fourth round.” Two-year starter at RT. Arms were 35 3/8, hands were 10. “He has the ability (to start),” a second said. “There’s not many guys walking the earth like that. He’s light on his feet. He’s got extremely long arms. The body’s not great. He was really late to football. He was a basketball player at a small high school so it might be a little big for him early. But the guy’s been productive in the SEC so that transition gives you encouragement that he’s able to make this next step. He’s a very, very nice kid but you saw him on tape actually bury people. I don’t know if he’s going to go super high just because there are some questions but he’s a massive, long, good athlete that I can see starting. If he’s handled all these interviews I would say back of the third or early fourth.” From Grandview, Texas.
THE NEXT FIVE
Drew Shelton, Penn State (6-5, 313, 5.19)
One scout said: “I have him at guard. He just fits there better. He could be a right tackle. He’s a starter in the league. He could start at guard because of his size and he’s got good feet and lateral range. His hand placement is average. He’s got to get better. I was disappointed in every single Penn State guy. He’s a second-third round type.”
J.C. Davis, Illinois (6-4 ½, 319, 5.13)
One scout said: “Yeah, he has the arm length (34 ¼). Good play strength, good arm length, adequate athlete. He can slide in protection. Has some trouble with speed to power. That’s what really got him. He gets real high in goal-line. Fifth-round type. He played left tackle but he’s a right tackle.”
Isaiah World, Oregon (6-5 ½, 323, no 40)
One scout said: “I really liked him but now he has an ACL (suffered Jan. 9 against Indiana). He’s athletic. I thought he was first part of the second round had he not gotten hurt.”
Diego Pounds, Mississippi (6-6, 328, 5.17)
One scout said: “He’s a massive man to try to move, and there’s a lot of area to try to run around. However, he is slow-footed and struggles with defenders who know how to use their speed. He will have a chance to get into the NFL and stick around a long time ala Dan Skipper.”
Nolan Rucci, Penn State (6-8 ½, 314, 5.45)
One scout said: “His dad (Todd) played in the league (starting guard, Patriots, 1993-’99) and was like a man’s man, a pro’s pro. So you know he’s been raised right. This is a big, long (34-inch arms) guy. He was up and down this year. It might take him a few years but eventually he becomes a really good swing tackle.”