Jeremiah Trotter NFL Draft Overview
Height: 6’0
Weight: 228 lbs
Age: 21 years old
Arm: 31 1/2″
Hand: 9 1/4″
3 cone drill: 7.13 seconds
20-yard shuttle: 4.4 seconds
Bench Press: 21 reps
You know you are getting old when your favorite football players growing up have kids entering the NFL Draft. The best thing is Jeremiah Trotter Jr is pretty darn good. Like his dad, Jeremiah Trotter Sr, who was a monster, Trotter Jr plays Linebacker and is a force on defense. He was a four-star recruit and number 44 overall recruit out of Philadelphia, then committed to Clemson University. The NFL Legacy was an all-American multiple times and amassed 202 tackles and 29.5 tackles for loss. He also added 13 sacks, 13 pass breakups, three forced fumbles, and four interceptions throughout his career at Clemson. Will Jeremiah Trotter Jr NFL bloodline and college greatness translate to NFL Stardom? Let’s dig into the film.
Jeremiah Trotter Player Evaluation
Trotter’s Strengths
- He learned from Elite NFL Bloodlines and Football IQ from his father being around the NFL game.
- He has very good sideline-to-sideline speed, good vertical speed, and the explosiveness to cover ground throughout the field.
- Good defensive feel in zone coverage. He squashes short routes with his speed and carries defenders up the field.
- Playmaker with excellent ball skills. They had four ints in college and numerous times; he bats pass down at the line of scrimmage and in coverage.
- He plays with tremendous force and attitude when coming downhill and as a Blitzer, which allows him to have elite scheme versatility.
- Good at slipping blocks, making linemen and TES whiff, and making the play.
- A true General in the middle. Clemson’s complex scheme gets his defense lined up, and he is an excellent tackler in the box.
Trotter’s Weakness
- He is undersized for the position, at sub 230 pounds. This limits his scheme versatility to maybe only a Will LB role, which won’t be as effective.
- He can get swallowed by offensive linemen at the point of attack if he does not come full force downhill.
- Although great at slipping blocks, at the NFL level, there are bigger, more athletic offensive linemen who can keep up with him athletically.
- He can miss tackles in space by lunging and flying toward the ball carrier instead of breaking down.
Projection: Second Round Pick
NFL Comparison: Patrick Queen
Best Fits: Dallas Cowboys, Philadelphia Eagles, and Atlanta Falcons.