Here is where USC’s top prospects stand ahead of the NFL Scouting Combine
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — Drake Jackson can’t tell you why he couldn’t put on weight at USC. But as hard as the Trojans’ top edge rusher tried last season, stuffing himself every moment he could, the extra meals never seemed to stick. By the end of the season, Jackson measured in at a mere 238 pounds, far lighter than he — or NFL scouts — were hoping.
So when his training for the NFL scouting combine began at Exos in the offseason, adding weight was a top priority. Now, with nothing else to do but train, the pounds piled up.
“This is what I was trying to do at SC,” Jackson said. “I couldn’t gain a pound to save my life. Got here, then got humongous.”
It’s not an exaggeration. Weighing in at nearly 270 pounds ahead of this week’s combine, the hulking Jackson barely fit inside the frame of a Zoom conversation he had with The Times last week. Muscles bulged in every direction.
He never matched that total again over two more seasons. But with the extra weight on his frame, Jackson is sure he won’t have any problem proving himself at the combine.
Forty pounds heavier, he said, “I still feel like a freak, you know?”
How convinced scouts are by that transformation should become clear this week.
“Just can’t wait to go put on a show, man,” Jackson said.
The potential top receiver in the draft won’t work out in Indianapolis while he continues to recover from the ankle injury that ended his final season at USC. But London told reporters Wednesday that he plans to take part in USC’s Pro Day later this month.
That showcase will be crucial for London as NFL scouts suss out questions, not only about the All-American wideout’s ankle, but also his speed and ability to separate. A 40 time in the 4.5 range could go a long way to ensuring London is selected near the top of the draft.
He’s trending in that direction right now, as teams have finally turned to his tremendous film from last season, when he caught 88 passes for 1,084 yards and seven touchdowns in eight games while leading all of college football in contested catches. Some prognosticators have already slotted London inside the draft’s top 10, in front of other top wideouts like Ohio State’s Garrett Wilson and Alabama’s Jameson Williams.
RB Keaontay Ingram
When Ingram first heard that Lincoln Riley had been hired as USC’s coach, he admits he seriously considered coming back for another season in the Trojans backfield.
Ingram met with Riley, who tried to sell him on a workhorse role that would ask him to line up all over the field.
“That’s a role I’ve been looking for since I’ve been in college football,” Ingram said. “It was a pretty good talk. But like I told him, I’ll be 23 playing running back next year. Sometimes, you have to make a business decision.”
How that decision works out in the upcoming draft will depend in part on the impression Ingram leaves this week in Indianapolis. There’s no guarantee that he’ll be drafted, but after a strong showing in the Shrine Bowl, Ingram is confident he can capitalize.
“The combine is going to help me dramatically,” Ingram said.
Once seen as early-round prospects, both of USC’s starting corners from last season will have plenty to prove through the draft process.
Neither lived up to their full potential while playing in Los Angeles, but both have skill sets and measurables that suggest they could find their way with the right NFL team. Those tools should be on display this week.
For Steele, his size — at 6 feet 1, 190 pounds — and physicality should help get him drafted in the later rounds. But there will be questions to answer about his penchant for penalties.
Taylor-Stuart’s stock is less certain, but his straight-line speed should turn some heads this week. Don’t be surprised if he tests among the fastest defensive backs at the combine.
latimes.com
_________