#5 Tyus Bowser/OLB – 6'2/4 244

The Good

– Great body type, physically ripped, and has great length for his weight (33 inch arms)
– Uses frame to keep space between him and the blocker, able to disengage easier because of it
– Versatile skillset, high level of experience dropping into coverage, and routinely played with his hand up
– Does well in zone coverage, asked to spot drop mostly, but experience walling and rerouting receivers and competent doing so
– Fluid turn dropping, no stiffness and gets to his spot in a hurry
– Has go-to pass rush move (dip/rip)
– High-motor player, chases the ball, doesn't loaf

The Bad

– Question if he's a good enough athlete to consistently win the edge with speed
– Asked to one-gap a lot against the run, run defense/POA grade a bit incomplete
– Seems to lack counter move, will have to fill out repertoire
– Didn't get a lot of two-way gos as a pass rusher, dropped and moved around so often, limited pass rush chances
– Technique when converting speed to power needs work, planting off wrong foot and isn't getting push he should
– Statistically never had gaudy production


http://www.steelersdepot.com/2017/02/2017-nfl-draft-player-profiles-houston-olb-tyus-bowser/


Bowser is a curious case. Difficult to get a read on because he was used like an actual NFL linebacker. I don't see him as the top-level athlete as Bud Dupree but they're used very similarly in college. Bowser probably dropped into coverage more than anyone else in this year's class.


Watch him here as the LOLB drop in man coverage to cover the back on this wheel route, not getting caught up in the rub of this slant. Looks very fluid.




He has an above average punch and uses his length to win the POA against the run. Watch him snap the tight end's head back here.





He does need to work on his technique as a pass rusher and I'll admit that i don't think I could call him a "natural pass rusher." He's not quite on that level. But with some technique and refinement, he can still be a successful one. On this speed bull rush, he's planting off his inside foot and initiating contact instead of doing so off his outside foot. Saps him of his power and the right tackle easily handles him.

[ Edited by Phoenix49ers on Mar 12, 2017 at 4:30 PM ]