The best defensive propsects for San Francisco’s scheme

I, a 35-year-old man, have neglected my family and other responsibilities over the last few months to spend time with guys in college.

Few things in sports are as interesting or as engrossing to me as the NFL Draft, so night after night (starting well before the Niners’ run to the Super Bowl), I’ve popped on some college football and gone to work, evaluating the class of 2024.

Unlike past classes, it’s a great crop that proved well worth the time.

Now, I could give you all a list of every prospect, but there are enough of those lists. How about I send you the CliffNotes instead?

Here are my favorite prospects on defense for the 49ers in this upcoming draft, broken down into early (top 50), middle (top 150), and late picks:

Defensive End

Early: Darius Robinson – Missouri

The Niners need someone who can play at 5-technique (lined up off the tackle’s outside shoulder) if their Wide-Nine defensive front is going to work. That’s what Arik Armstead (and paid as) before the Niners moved him to defensive tackle, and the team’s run defense suffered.

Robinson provides an answer here, as he can play every technique on the line at a high level. He’s massive at 6-foot-5 and 285 pounds but can move like a much smaller man. Slide him inside or outside and he’ll win, and his strength and ability to control blockers will be a welcome addition to a line that has become too agility-based in recent seasons.

Middle: Brennan Jackson – Washington State

He’s not terribly fun to watch, but he plays with a relentless motor, has solid size (even if that includes shorter arms), and is a tactician. He’ll set an edge and hold it, something the 49ers’ strong-side defensive ends did not do in 2023. In a class full of projects and projections, Jackson is a professional.

Late: Trajan Jeffcoat – Arkansas

His knock in the SEC was that he didn’t play with a consistent motor — that he’d flash greatness and then fade away. Well, seeing as he’d be a late-round pick, no one will be putting him on the field for all three downs, so a lacking motor doesn’t seem like a concern to me. I choose to focus on what Jeffcoat can do, which is win reps off the edge and slide inside in one-gap pass-rush downs. That’s something the 49ers could use.

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