
Jared Wilson scouting report and highlight reel: What did the Patriots get in the Georgia center?
Position:
Offensive lineman |
College:
Georgia |
Height:
6-3 |
Weight:
310 lbs.
Get to know Wilson:
A four-star center recruit and one of the top-level prospects at his position coming out of high school, Wilson landed on one of the strongest squads in the SEC when he committed to Georgia. He wasn't a full-time starter until his junior season in 2024 but became an All-SEC talent who declared after only one year with the starting five. He played in 13 of 14 games in 2023 but missed the Orange Bowl win over Florida State.
Strengths:
Shows a lot of life blocking in motion. ... Wields heavy hands and smooth movement, a combination of traits that raises his profile with evaluators. ... Can add more muscle and weight if necessary. ... Good potential ceiling given ability and relative inexperience. ... Keeps his hands engaged with a defender, keeping a steady course. ... Redirects with intention and avoids sloppy, reactive tactics to gain movement. ... Creates clear and wide running lanes. ... Can move a player around the arc. ... Enough athleticism to limit concerns. ... Could be considered at guard in the right scheme despite average arm length.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Weaknesses:
Not fully developed at the position and started only one season. ... Limited arm length causes difficult projection to guard in most schemes. ... Recovers well athletically but does not reset his hands quickly enough and can lose battles simply through lack of engagement. ... Snap release could be a little more dialed in. ... Sluggish with initial hand movement, a habit he could quickly remove with reps and refinement. ... Loses ground easily on tandem blocks. ... Needs to work on gaining and maintaining leverage and anchor if he wants to take on NFL nose tackles.
Advertisement
Jared Wilson highlights
Advertisement
More scouting reports
Katie McInerney can be reached at

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
3 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Legendary lineages: Have the Panthers' joined South Florida's sports dynasties from the past?
For South Florida sports fans, few moments are as iconic as Don Shula hoisted above his undefeated 1972 Dolphins, LeBron James and the Big Three delivering back-to-back titles to the Miami Heat in a dramatic Game 7 run in 2013, or the underdog Miami Hurricanes stunning Nebraska in the 1984 Orange Bowl. Now — a new moment emerges, as the Florida Panthers claw their way into this legendary lineage. With a third straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final, the Florida Panthers are crashing the conversation of South Florida's greatest sports runs. What was once unthinkable in Sunrise is now undeniable: the Cats are chasing history. For lifelong Panthers fans, it's been a long time coming. Florida's meteoric rise to being one of the standard bearers of the National Hockey League is something few could have foreseen. Before general manager Bill Zito took over ahead of the 2020-21 season, Florida was in the midst of a 23-year drought without winning a playoff series and had made the postseason just five times total in that span. 'They broke everything down and started from scratch,' Dana Ross said to the Miami Herald before Thursday's Game 1 Watch Party at Amerant Bank Arena. Ross said she's been a fan of the team for 31 years, and her family were original season-ticket holders back in 1993. 'Most teams don't ever experience this,' They do in South Florida. The Miami Herald takes a look at these past South Florida sports dynasties, and what the 2023 to 2025 Panthers have done to join the ranks. Miami Dolphins No football franchise has been able to do what the early 1970s Miami Dolphins accomplished — from 1971 to 1973, the Dolphins went to three straight championship games, went undefeated in '72 and won back-to-back Super Bowls. For revered Dolphins guard Larry Little, he believes the team of the early '70s had not only the best three-year run in South Florida professional sports history, but in all of athletics. 'I know the Heat did something great, I know what the Panthers are doing now will be something great but when you lose only five games in three years, I don't think that can be comparable to anything,' Little said. 'We lost three games in 71. We were undefeated in '72. In '73, we lost two games. That's a great run for anyone.' The pressure, he continued, was different back then in a professional athletics landscape that looks entirely different from the one in the Sunshine State today. In the early '70s, the Dolphins happened to be not just the only show in South Florida but in the entire state itself. There was no Heat, no Panthers, no Buccaneers, no Magic, no Jaguars. Although the team itself didn't necessarily think about that at the time, it made their run that much sweeter. 'We were the only game in the whole state,' Little said, later adding that 'we were the only team that people could really identify with during that time.' The recipe to success, another Dolphins linebacker Larry Ball said, is all about the perfect storm: off-the-charts talent, an unrelentingly focused mind-set, and dedicated management. But, 'continuity' is also key. For a winning season to become a generational run, you've got to keep the pedal to the medal. With NFL salary caps and free agents, it's almost impossible in today's day and age. For the 2025 season, the hard cap for the league is $279.2 million per team. 'As you win more, all of a sudden you can't afford all the players you have, so you're gonna lose some players,' Ball said. 'You gotta replace them with players who can fill the void and play at the same level, which is very difficult. That's why three, four year runs are just really phenomenal.' Of course, a winning mind-set is also a crucial component of success. Both Little and Ball noted a focused, 'no mistakes' attitude for the team. 'It takes belief, believing in one another and every time you go out on that field, no matter who that opponent is, you have a chance to win that football game,' Little said. Miami Hurricanes For years, Miami was a football-firstof town. The Miami Hurricanes were one of college football's biggest powerhouses in the late 1980s and into the early 1990s, winning three national championships in a span of five years — 1987, 1989 and 1991 — and went a nearly flawless 56-4 in that span. Only two other teams since have claimed at least three national titles in a five-year span — Alabama (2009, 2011, 2012) and Nebraska (1994, 1995, 1997). Miami's half-decade run of dominance spanned its final four years as an independent and their first as a member of the Big East. The Hurricanes had 13 players earn All-America honors in that span and had 43 players from those five teams selected in the NFL Draft, including eight first-round picks — Bennie Blades and Michael Irvin in 1988, Bill Hawkins and Cleveland Gary in 1989, Cortez Kennedy in 1990, Russell Maryland and Randal Hill in 1991 and Leon Searcy in 1992. They went a perfect 12-0 in 1987 under Jimmy Johnson, outscoring opponents by an average of 20.75 points and beating six ranked opponents, capped off by a 20-14 win over then-No. 1 Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl to secure the national championship. After going 11-1 and finishing No. 2 nationally in 1988 in their final season under Johnson, their lone loss that season being a 31-30 defeat at Notre Dame, the Hurricanes reclaimed their championship form under coach Dennis Erickson. They went 11-1 again in 1989 and claimed the national title after a 33-25 win over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl. Miami went 10-2 in 1990 and ended the season ranked No. 3 in its final season as an independent before joining the Big East. In their first season affiliated with a conference, the Hurricanes went a perfect 12-0, wrapping the season with their third national championship in a five-year span following a 22-0 win over No. 11 Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. The Miami Heat Few runs in NBA history can match the sheer dominance and spectacle of the Miami Heat's Big 3 era from 2010 to 2013 — a stretch that delivered three straight Finals appearances, two championships, and a cultural tidal wave that reshaped the league. With LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh at the helm, the Heat were an unstoppable force, racking up a 170-60 record across those three regular seasons — a blistering .739 winning percentage. The pinnacle came in 2012-13, when Miami stormed to a 66-16 finish, the best mark in franchise history and one of the top 20 regular seasons ever recorded in the NBA. Just as Little and Ball said for their run some 40 years earlier across town, the difficulty in sustaining a long championship run over multiple seasons comes down to player mentality, team member and Miami Heat point guard Mario Chalmers said to the Herald. 'Your mind-set – you got to be ready for everybody's best shot every night you step on the court and you just got to be able to give it your all,' Chalmers said. Among the Heat's crowning achievements during these memorable three seasons came in the form of an incredible 27-game winning streak during the 2012-13 regular season. This went down as the third-longest regular-season winning streak in NBA history. But what's difficult, Chalmers said, isn't necessarily staying at the top, but striking the perfect balance to get there. 'It's harder to get to the first [championship] just because you're still trying to put all the ingredients together to learn how to get there,' he said. 'And then once you get there, you know what it takes to get there and keep going there and be successful in those moments.' The Heat lost to the Dallas Mavericks in the 2011 NBA Finals to begin this run, but bounced back to win back-to-back NBA titles in 2012 and 2013. They went 46-21 in the playoffs during these three seasons. 'If you're not prepared for it, you're going to miss the moment.' The Panthers' Bid Since the National Hockey League's expansion in 1967–68, only seven teams have reached three or more consecutive Stanley Cup Finals: the St. Louis Blues (1968–70), Philadelphia Flyers (1974–76), Montreal Canadiens (1976–79), New York Islanders (1980–84), Edmonton Oilers (1983–85), Tampa Bay Lightning (2020–22), and now the Panthers. Among them, Florida is the only team to do so after playing a full 82-game regular season in all three years, as Tampa Bay's first two seasons were shortened by the COVID-19 pandemic. By the time the Stanley Cup Final ends, the Panthers will have played anywhere from 312 to 315 games, breaking the record of 309 games over a three-season span, originally set by Dallas in the 1997-98 through 1999-2000 seasons and matched by Detroit in the 2006-07 through 2008-09 seasons. For the Panthers, their success has much to do with their management — the team knows it, and the fans know it. 'When you have ownership that wants to win, you win, and we are lucky enough right now to have that,' season-ticket holder since 2007 Matt Swenson said to the Herald. Both GM Zito and chairman Vincent Viola have helped to turn the team around. When Zito joined the helm in 2020, he began working his front-office magic — retooling the Panthers' roster bit by bit and hiring Paul Maurice as head coach ahead of the 2022-23 season. All this tinkering eventually turned them into the juggernaut they are today. Only four players — captain Aleksander Barkov, top-pair defenseman Aaron Ekblad, star goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky, and third-line winger Eetu Luostarinen — remain from the pre-Bill Zito era. While the blockbuster trade for Matthew Tkachuk ahead of the 2022–23 season is often seen as the defining move of Zito's tenure, it's just one of many. He snagged Gustav Forsling off waivers, turning him into one of the league's top defensemen; signed Carter Verhaeghe after Tampa Bay let him go, then extended him twice; traded for key forwards Sam Reinhart and Sam Bennett; drafted Anton Lundell in the first round in 2021, who has since emerged as a premier young two-way center; and this season, added Brad Marchand and Seth Jones at the trade deadline to bolster an already loaded roster. 'In the market that we're in now, it's unheard of with the salary cap and the 82-game season,' said Swenson. And he's right — the Panthers are the first to reach the Stanley Cup finals for three consecutive years, playing an 82 game season and navigating the $88 million salary cap. And there's no telling when this might feasibly end. The Panthers have seven of their top nine forwards and four of their top six defensemen under contract after this season — with seven of those 11 under contract through at least the 2027-28 season. 'I'm ready for another parade!' Ross said. Miami Herald sportswriters C. Isaiah Smalls, Jordan McPherson and Anthony Chiang contributed to this report.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Former Iowa basketball assistant reportedly lands new role in SEC
Former Iowa basketball assistant reportedly lands new role in SEC Former Iowa basketball standout and recent Hawkeye assistant coach Matt Gatens is reportedly set for a new gig in the SEC. According to Justin Hokanson of Auburn Live win On3, Gatens is joining Bruce Pearl's staff at Auburn as the Tigers' general manager. Gatens would help oversee and influence transfer portal recruiting, high school recruiting, NIL requirements, scouting and roster strategy. Gatens' ties to Bruce Pearl and the Auburn program date back to his work as a graduate assistant with Auburn during the 2017-18 season when the Tigers won the SEC championship. Gatens' father, Mike Gatens, was a close friend of Pearl during Pearl's time as an assistant at Iowa from 1986-1992. The 35-year-old spent each of the past three seasons as an assistant coach on Fran McCaffery's staff. But, after McCaffery's dismissal, Gatens was not retained on staff by new Iowa head men's basketball coach Ben McCollum. Prior to his three seasons as an assistant coach in Iowa City, Gatens spent four seasons on Drake's coaching staff. Gatens served as director of operations his first two years at Drake before being elevated to an assistant coach in his last two seasons. The former Iowa Mr. Basketball and Gatorade Player of the Year as a senior at Iowa City High School, Gatens was a four-year starter for the Hawkeyes from 2009-12. His final two seasons were McCaffery's first two as Iowa's head coach. During Gatens' senior season, Iowa advanced to the NIT for its first postseason appearance under McCaffery and for its first postseason appearance in six seasons. Gatens was a two-time All-Big Ten selection, two-time team captain, two-time academic all-conference honoree, recipient of the 2012 Chris Street Award, and voted to the 2009 Big Ten All-Freshman team. Gatens amassed 1,635 points and 239 3-pointers ranking 10th and third, respectively, in Iowa history. In 128 career games, he averaged 12.8 points, 3.6 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.1 steals per contest. Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes and opinions. Follow Josh on X: @JoshOnREF
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Auburn star earns PGA Tour Card after sensational sophomore season
Although Auburn couldn't quite get over the hump to repeat as the National Champions this golf season, the Tigers best golfer, sophomore Jackson Koivun, ended his extraordinary season with a coveted piece of hardware. The two-time SEC Golfer of the Year finished in fourth place overall during the stroke play portion of the NCAA Championships, giving him more than enough points to surpass the 20 total needed to acquire a PGA Tour Card through the PGA Tour University Accelerated program. Advertisement The program, which is designed to award juniors who accumulate 20 points through played events during their first three years of college golf, was finished by Koivun in just two seasons. Now with immediate eligibility to play PGA Tour events, the 20-year-old could choose to end his Tigers career after just two short years if he opts to become a professional. But Koivun, who has vocally pronounced his love for the Plains in the past, recently told Golfweek he would delay defer his card until 2026, again stating "he loves Auburn" before stating how he believes college golf "is in such a good spot right now and it's going to continually prepare [him] for the PGA Tour." Koivun is now the third collegiate golfer to earn his PGA Card through the accelerated program. Alabama native and former Vanderbilt star Gordon Sargent and former Florida State golfer Luke Clanton are the only other golfers to successfully finish the program. Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter@TheRealBHauch This article originally appeared on Auburn Wire: Auburn star Jackson Koivun earns PGA Tour Card