Rousseau Scouting Report

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From Daniel Jeremiah at nfl network

We're all familiar with the phrase "love at first sight." Well, that's what happened when I studied my first tape of Gregory Rousseau. He possesses all of the traits and skills I look for in a pass rusher. He jumps off the screen. I'm usually very cautious when I evaluate players over the summer. Not this time. To borrow a line from one of my favorite sports movies, he had me at hello. Here's my scouting report on the Miami Hurricanes' redshirt sophomore.

Height, weight: 6-foot-7, 253 pounds (school measurements).

2019 statistics: 54 tackles (34 solo), 19.5 for loss, 15.5 sacks, one pass defensed, two forced fumbles, one fumble recovery.

Game tape watched: Virginia Tech (Oct. 5, 2019), Florida State (Nov. 2, 2019), Duke (Nov. 30, 2019).

What I liked: If I had to limit my evaluation to a two-word description, it would be consistently dominant. Rousseau was clearly the best player on the field in all three of the games I studied. He lines up all over the defensive front, playing on the edge (occasionally standing up), at 3-technique (edge of the guard) or even head up over the center on obvious passing downs. He can win with his speed/quickness in every one of those alignments and his hands are very polished. He's extremely long and does a nice job pressing out blocks before escaping to create pressure.

Against the run, Rousseau rarely allows blockers to get into his chest and he easily sets the edge. He gives tremendous effort from the back side and closes ground in a hurry. He has tremendous awareness to locate the ball and work through multiple blocks if necessary. He destroys tight ends. Rousseau has the ability to generate immediate knockback to reset the line of scrimmage.

Where he needs to improve: There are some occasions where he's too narrow and stalls on his bull rush. He's fine if he lowers his pads, but he will struggle if he's too upright. Rousseau has the frame to add more weight and I believe doing so will help him become even more dominant against both the pass and running game. The only other negative is the fact that he's only had one year of production after suffering an ankle injury his first year at Miami. If he can stay healthy, I believe he'll post another spectacular season and that concern will be eliminated.

Biggest takeaway: Rousseau didn't play on the defensive line until his senior year of high school. So, if you want to have some fun, look up the Hudl highlights from his junior year of high school. He played wide receiver and safety. He looks like Kevin Durant catching the ball down the field! That said, it's amazing that he's so polished as a pass rusher at this early point in his career.
He can win in so many different ways. He has an effective push-pull move, he uses a swipe-rip move and he can generate speed to power (SEE: Duke game). He's also very comfortable and effective working inside against interior offensive linemen. He rarely gets bounced around and bullied by guys that outweigh him by 50-plus pounds. I was very impressed.

He reminds me of: The player the Vikings' Danielle Hunter has become at the NFL level. Rousseau is much more polished and productive than Hunter was at LSU. However, Hunter has developed into one of the league's premier pass rushers since entering the league in 2015. Rousseau has a comparable build/frame and they are similar athletes on the field. Both players annihilate tight ends and have the ability to convert speed to power off the edge. I believe Rousseau has even more upside at the next level. He has the tools to emerge as a perennial All-Pro player.

 
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From Daniel Jeremiah at nfl network

We're all familiar with the phrase "love at first sight." Well, that's what happened when I studied my first tape of Gregory Rousseau. He possesses all of the traits and skills I look for in a pass rusher. He jumps off the screen. I'm usually very cautious when I evaluate players over the summer. Not this time. To borrow a line from one of my favorite sports movies, he had me at hello. Here's my scouting report on the Miami Hurricanes' redshirt sophomore.

Height, weight: 6-foot-7, 253 pounds (school measurements).

2019 statistics: 54 tackles (34 solo), 19.5 for loss, 15.5 sacks, one pass defensed, two forced fumbles, one fumble recovery.

Game tape watched: Virginia Tech (Oct. 5, 2019), Florida State (Nov. 2, 2019), Duke (Nov. 30, 2019).

What I liked: If I had to limit my evaluation to a two-word description, it would be consistently dominant. Rousseau was clearly the best player on the field in all three of the games I studied. He lines up all over the defensive front, playing on the edge (occasionally standing up), at 3-technique (edge of the guard) or even head up over the center on obvious passing downs. He can win with his speed/quickness in every one of those alignments and his hands are very polished. He's extremely long and does a nice job pressing out blocks before escaping to create pressure.

Against the run, Rousseau rarely allows blockers to get into his chest and he easily sets the edge. He gives tremendous effort from the back side and closes ground in a hurry. He has tremendous awareness to locate the ball and work through multiple blocks if necessary. He destroys tight ends. Rousseau has the ability to generate immediate knockback to reset the line of scrimmage.

Where he needs to improve: There are some occasions where he's too narrow and stalls on his bull rush. He's fine if he lowers his pads, but he will struggle if he's too upright. Rousseau has the frame to add more weight and I believe doing so will help him become even more dominant against both the pass and running game. The only other negative is the fact that he's only had one year of production after suffering an ankle injury his first year at Miami. If he can stay healthy, I believe he'll post another spectacular season and that concern will be eliminated.

Biggest takeaway: Rousseau didn't play on the defensive line until his senior year of high school. So, if you want to have some fun, look up the Hudl highlights from his junior year of high school. He played wide receiver and safety. He looks like Kevin Durant catching the ball down the field! That said, it's amazing that he's so polished as a pass rusher at this early point in his career.
He can win in so many different ways. He has an effective push-pull move, he uses a swipe-rip move and he can generate speed to power (SEE: Duke game). He's also very comfortable and effective working inside against interior offensive linemen. He rarely gets bounced around and bullied by guys that outweigh him by 50-plus pounds. I was very impressed.

He reminds me of: The player the Vikings' Danielle Hunter has become at the NFL level. Rousseau is much more polished and productive than Hunter was at LSU. However, Hunter has developed into one of the league's premier pass rushers since entering the league in 2015. Rousseau has a comparable build/frame and they are similar athletes on the field. Both players annihilate tight ends and have the ability to convert speed to power off the edge. I believe Rousseau has even more upside at the next level. He has the tools to emerge as a perennial All-Pro player.

Reading this made me think of The Mad Stork. Home Rousseau can become as menacing as Ted was. Can't remember Ted's exact measurable but 6'7" about 260 sounds right and had bear sixe vise grips for hands. If Greg turns out anything like Ted, is will be terror at next level. Back in Ted's day you sat one and played 3 so today players usually come out much younger.
 
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Reading this made me think of The Mad Stork. Home Rousseau can become as menacing as Ted was. Can't remember Ted's exact measurable but 6'7" about 260 sounds right and had bear sixe vise grips for hands. If Greg turns out anything like Ted, is will be terror at next level. Back in Ted's day you sat one and played 3 so today players usually come out much younger.

Both played their high school ball in Hialeah.
 
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I love Rousseau but having Phillips rotate with he and Roche at DE is a waste of our resources.

DE Roche / DT Silvera / DT Rousseau / DE Phillips

Get your best players on the field. Period. End of story.
No doubt on passing downs those 3 DE’s will be on the field together with whichever DT eats up the most blocks.

And if not, then Blake Baker needs to be even more gone than he already should be.
 
Some of those comments reflect pretty favorable on coach Stroud (sorry Paranos). He took a highschool safety/wr and turned him into a complete lineman able to play effectively from multiple positions in three years.

I expected the report to talk more about size and athleticism with the need to improve his technique in the NFL but it sounds like Rosseau is already fairly polished and has good fundamentals.
 
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No doubt on passing downs those 3 DE’s will be on the field together with whichever DT eats up the most blocks.

And if not, then Blake Baker needs to be even more gone than he already should be.

I'm talking at least 50% of the time....Rousseau should play 50% of his snaps at DT with Phillips next to him.
Rousseau is absolutely strong enough and his length is useful anywhere along the DL.
Phillips, Rousseau and Roche on the field together is a nightmare for opposing offenses.

William Joseph
Baraka Atkins
Allen Bailey

Each moved from DE to DT and flourished. It's been done before.
 
Some of those comments reflect pretty favorable on coach Stroud (sorry Paranos). He took a highschool safety/wr and turned him into a complete lineman able to play effectively from multiple positions in three years.

I expected the report to talk more about size and athleticism with the need to improve his technique in the NFL but it sounds like Rosseau is already fairly polished and has good fundamentals.
I think he still has a bit to go when it comes to technique and polish. But, the rest has looked the same since Fall of his True Frosh year. He looks like a freakish sea monster on the edge. It's rare to have that kind of arm length combined with his relentless motor. He saved a few big plays last year from sheer hustle. You then add good balance and feet and you have a top prospect. As an edge rusher, the technique and polish will continue to develop. He'll also be seen as a guy who can slide inside in certain packages, so not the typical pure Edge like Bosa or Young.
 
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I'm talking at least 50% of the time....Rousseau should play 50% of his snaps at DT with Phillips next to him.
Rousseau is absolutely strong enough and his length is useful anywhere along the DL.
Phillips, Rousseau and Roche on the field together is a nightmare for opposing offenses.

William Joseph
Baraka Atkins
Allen Bailey

Each moved from DE to DT and flourished. It's been done before.
I see what you’re saying. Idk if he’s got the size to CONSISTENTLY play the 3-T for 30 snaps a game but I do hope they at least try it out.
 
if he adds good weight I see another Calais Campbell. Maybe not quite as powerful but certainly as long and difficult to deal with.
 
I love Rousseau but having Phillips rotate with he and Roche at DE is a waste of our resources.

DE Roche / DT Silvera / DT Rousseau / DE Phillips

Get your best players on the field. Period. End of story.
Are you sniffing glue? Maybe we go with that lineup on 3rd and long but no way do we move Rousseau inside.
 
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