The New York Giants are among several teams that met the Texas Center Jake Majors from the University of Texas during his professional day, according to Justin Melo of the Draft Network.
.@Texasfootball C Jake Majors is a football-IQ player raised in the NFL 2025 draft.
Pro meetings: #Cowboys,, #Belles,, #Saints,, #Gigents,, #Texans,, #Patriots. # Commands Meeting on zoom.@Jakob_majors on @Thedraftnetwork::https://t.co/saiba7t8re
– Justin M (@justinm_nfl) April 1, 2025
The majors were greeted as a technician with a football IQ outside The-Chart. Majors Project profile NFLWritten by Lance Zierlein, quotes an unnamed AFC national scout which says that the majors can “make protective adjustments on the fly like an NFL veteran”.
The majors of 6 feet 3 inches and 315 pounds, who played all his university shots at the center, ended his five -year career for the Longhorns, where he obtained a 98.5 Passe -blocking efficiency assessment. He only granted three bags in his career and no bag of bags went in his last two seasons.
The interests of the giants for the majors, who projects as a perspective of day 3, is interesting because only two years ago, they selected John Michael Schmitz in the second round to be likely their long -term starter in the center.
Although Schmitz was not a colossal disappointment, there are several concerns concerning the film he made in two seasons, which can be described as “average”.
Schmitz’s game lacked physics and negotiation. He had a hard time sliding in Pass Pro and acquiring a blocking position with his leg play lower than average, and he had trouble keeping the ground regularly against the plated in the nose of the league and staying on his feet.
Add to these two consecutive years of having to face the injuries which prevented him from the matches, and it seems that Schmitz never strikes his ceiling.
Pro Football Focus ranked Schmitz as the 56th global center on 65. Schmitz was also classified as the 56th center for blocking passes, but the 20th center classified as a race blockage.
This does not mean that the giants intend to switch from Schmitz as a starter, but maybe they could seek to add a young perspective to the mixture, given the veterans they already have who can play the post (Greg Van Roten and Austin Schlottmann) are not long-term options.
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