2021 NFL Draft Viewer's Guide For Track and Field Fans


The speed and jumping ability that made Andre Cisco a standout on the track served helped him become an All-American at safety for Syracuse.

Safety

Overall Rank Position Rank Name Position Height Weight College High School Track Events Scouts Inc. Grade
17 1 Trevon Moehrig S 6'0⅝" 202 TCU Smithson Valley (Tx.) 100m/200m/HJ/LJ 91
53 2 Richie Grant S 5'11⅝" 197 UCF Choctawhatchee (Fl.) 100m/200m/HJ/LJ 83
57 3 Jevon Holland S 6'1" 208 Oregon Bishop O'Dowd (Ca.) None 82
61 4 Andre Cisco S 6'0⅝" 216 Syracuse IMG Academy (Fl.) 100m/200m/LJ 81
90 5 Jamar Johnson S 6'1" 197 Indiana Riverview (Fl.) 200m/110mH/LJ/TJ 73
94 6 Richard LeCounte S 5'10½" 196 Georgia Liberty County (Ga.) HJ/TJ 72
101 7 Hamsah Nasirildeen S 6'3¼" 215 Florida State Concord (NC) None 71
119 8 Damar Hamilton S 6'0⅞" 200 Pitt Pittsburgh Central Catholic (Pa.) TJ 68
125 9 Trill Williams S 6'0⅜" 208 Syracuse Archbishop Stepinac (NY) 100m/JT 67
140 10 Caden Sterns S 5'11⅞" 202 Texas Cibolo Steele (Tx.) 200m 64
145 11 Ar'Darius Washington S 5'8¼" 176 TCU Evangel Christian Academy (La.) 200m/LJ 62
158 12 Tyree Gillespie S 5'11¾" 207 Missouri Vanguard (Fl.) 100m/200m/LJ 59
175 13 Joshuah Bledsoe S 5'11⅜" 204 Missouri Spring Dekaney (Tx.) 110mH/300mH 57
187 14 Jamien Sherwood S 6'1¾" 216 Auburn Jensen Beach (Fl.) 100m/200m 53
191 15 Shawn Davis S 5'10⅝" 202 Florida Miami Southridge (Fl.) 100m/200m 52
195 16 Paris Ford S 6'0⅝" 197 Pitt Steel Valley (Pa.) None 51
201 17 Divine Deablo S 6'3¼" 226 Virginia Tech Mount Tabor (NC) 200m/400m/LJ 50
205 18 JaCoby Stevens S 6'1⅛" 212 LSU Oakland (Tn.) LJ 49
208 19 Mark Webb S 6'1½" 207 Georgia Archbishop Wood (Pa.) None 48
212 20 Talanoa Hufanga S 6'0⅜" 199 USC Crescent Valley (Or.) 100m/200m/400m/HJ 46
214 21 Tyler Coyle S 6'0½" 209 Purdue Windsor (Ct.) 100m/200m/HJ/LJ 45
224 22 James Wiggins S 5'11¼" 209 Cincinnati South Dade (Fl.) 100m/HJ/LJ 42
233 23 Christian Uphoff S 6'2" 209 Illinois State Washington Community (Il.) None 40
265 24 Brady Breeze S 5'10½" 190 Oregon Central Catholic (Or.) None 35
274 25 Tre Norwood S 5'11⅝" 192 Oklahoma Northside (Ar.) 100m 34
283 26 Jordyn Peters S 6'0¾" 202 Auburn Muscle Shoals (Al.) 400m/HJ/LJ 33
293 27 Darrick Forrest S 5'11½" 206 Cincinnati Walnut Ridge (Oh.) 110mH/300mH/LJ 32
304 28 Aashari Crosswell S 6'0" 205 Arizona State Long Beach Poly (Ca.) None 31
350 29 Donovan Stiner S 6'1½" 205 Florida Houston Bellaire (Tx.) 110mH/300mH/TJ 30


Scout Inc.'s Grading Scale

90-100 Rare Prospect Player demonstrates rare abilities and can create game-impacting mismatches. A premier college player that has all the skill to take over a game and play at a championship level. Rates in the top 5 players in the nation at his position. A first round prospect.

80-89 Outstanding Prospect Player has abilities to create mismatches versus most opponents in the NFL. A feature player that has an impact on the outcome of the game. Cannot be shut down by a single player and plays on a consistent level. Rates in the top 10 at his position. A second round prospect.

70-79 Solid Prospect A standout at the college level close to being an elite player. No glaring weaknesses, will usually win individual matchups, does not dominate in every game, especially against the top players in the country. Usually rates in the top third of players at his position. A third round draft prospect.

60-69 Good Prospect A solid starter, but is overmatched versus the better players in the nation. His weaknesses will be exposed against top competition. Usually a prospect that is missing something from his game (e.g. good size and skills, lacks speed). Usually rates in the top half of the players at his position. A middle round draft choice.

50-59 Adequate Prospect Usually players that play at a high level in college, but lack some measurables or skills to play at that same level in the NFL. May be a developmental player or special teams/situational contributor. Usually rates in the second-third at his position. A fifth round draft choice.

20-49 Borderline Draft Prospect These are players that teams like something about, but certainly do not have the full package in terms of NFL talent. Teams will take chances on character players or developmental type athletes with this grade. These are often players that come from smaller schools or did not stand out at the college level. 'Diamonds in the rough.' Usually rate in the bottom third of players at his position. A late round draft choice or undrafted free agent.


Position Rankings

Overall | QB | RB | FB | WR | TE | OT | G | C

DE | DT | ILB | OLB | CB | S | K/P | LS