2022 NFL draft scouting report: Washington CB Trent McDuffie
Washington CB Trent McDuffie
5-foot-10
193 pounds
Yahoo Sports' 2022 NFL draft grade
6.48 — possible first-rounder; possible immediate starter
TL;DR scouting report
Compact-framed, highly competitive corner with very good speed, ball skills and man-coverage ability to compete readily vs. more physically gifted receivers
The skinny
A 4-star Rivals recruit as an "athlete," McDuffie spurned Alabama, Michigan, Notre Dame and other big programs to commit to the Huskies. Starting 11 of 13 games as a true freshman, he had one interception, two forced fumbles and three recoveries. Over his next two seasons, McDuffie rose to second-team all-conference in 2020 and first team in 2021, finishing his career with two INTs, 10 passes defended and three forced fumbles. He declared early for the 2022 NFL draft.
Upside
Highly competitive athlete — maintained focus and intensity through team's struggles in 2021
Infectious play style, gritty toughness can inspire teammates
Plus run defender despite size, unafraid to come crashing downhill
Sticky man-coverage ability to hang with shifty, fast receivers
Seldom allows receivers to cross his face without resistance
Maintains good leverage and body positioning in coverage — rarely gets undressed
Consistent fundamentals in coverage — lots of clean tape
Good long speed (4.44 40) and makeup speed to recover
Quick trigger to strike at the catch point and disrupt at catch point
Can hold his own in traffic
Top-shelf coverage instincts
Very disciplined in coverage — only four penalties in nearly 1,700 career defensive snaps
Has blitz potential
Allowed only 22 catches (on 44 targets) for 163 yards, 0 TDs past two seasons, per PFF
Limits receivers' YAC ability by sticking in their hip pockets
Very good tackler in space
Still young with upside and room for development — just turned 21 years old
Product of Huskies program that has funneled DB talent readily to NFL
Film junkie — said to consume hours of tape during the season
Possible safety conversion project if length issues crop up at corner
Willing special teamer
Downside
Sub-30-inch arms — well below preferred threshold for many teams
Might be a slot only for some systems
Played mostly left corner last two seasons; inexperienced in slot, on right side
Limited ball production — two INTs, 10 PDs over three seasons on 100 career targets
No INTs over final 12 games
Not built to battle with big-framed, long-levered receivers all game
Played in one of the more talented secondaries in the country
Seldom singled up with elite WR talent past two seasons
Only ran 40-yard dash at combine; full athletic profile unknown but lacks elite physical traits
Best-suited destination
McDuffie has the talent, mental approach, toughness and competitiveness to be a Day 1 starter in the NFL, but his fit will be interesting. Some teams will peg him as a nickel corner because of his length. But there will be some teams that could let him do what he does best and play outside, provided he's not matched up with longer, more physical wideouts. McDuffie should contribute readily early in his career and develop into a starter shortly.
Did you know
McDuffie never wore No. 22 before coming to Washington. But upon arriving at UW, that numbered jersey hung in his locker — the same number that his late brother, Tyler, wore. McDuffie also wears a chain and has a tattoo with 22 to honor his brother, who died when McDuffie was in eighth grade.
Player comp
We could see McDuffie developing into a Casey Hayward Jr. type of prospect, one who starts his career playing inside but eventually settles in as an outside corner. McDuffie also could develop into a Quandre Diggs or Devin McCourty type of safety if a team wanted to convert him.
Expected draft range
First-round pick