Adoree Jackson

WR/KR, CB · Southern California
With all due respect to Michigan's Heisman Trophy finalist Jabrill Peppers, after serving primarily as a cornerback but also seeing time at wide receiver and as the Trojans' primary kick and punt returner the past three seasons, Jackson was arguably the most versatile and exciting player in the country. His head coach at USC, Clay Helton, likes to refer to Jackson as Superman. It is easy to see why. Jackson was honored with the Thorpe Award as the nation's top defensive back as a junior, showing a penchant for creating big plays. He recorded five interceptions (among 16 passes defensed) and two forced fumbles in 2016 to go along with a very respectable 55 tackles. For as good as he was in coverage, Jackson was arguably even better as a returner and even on offense, scoring four times on returns (two off punts, two off kickoffs) and leading the Trojans with an average of 94.6 all-purpose yards per game. As a true sophomore in 2015, Jackson was named a finalist for the Paul Hornung Award for his multi-threat ability. In 2015, Jackson was named First Team All-Pac-12 at cornerback (35 tackles, eight PBUs, and an interception he returned for a touchdown) and Second Team at returner (941 combined yards, two touchdowns) by league coaches, while catching 27 passes for 414 yards (and two touchdowns) and even running seven times for 36 yards. Not surprisingly, Jackson was named the Trojans MVP following the season. Of course, by banquet time, the do-everything Jackson had already moved on to another sport - track - where he successfully defended his title as the conference's elite long-jumper (25'-11.5") and finished second (to Arizona State's Reggie Lewis) in the 100-meter dash with a time of 10.44 seconds -- .04 faster than Oregon's Olympian Devon Allen. Like Allen, Jackson pursued his Olympic dreams, skipping spring practices in 2015 to compete in the NCAA championships. Unfortunately, he failed to qualify for Team USA in his two events, the long jump (where he finished fifth) and in the 4x100 relay (fourth). As one would expect for any athlete this gifted, Jackson signed with the Trojans amid great fanfare. He was a consensus All-American prep, standing out on the gridiron, track and even the basketball court at Serra High School in Gardena, Calif. after growing up in Illinois. It didn't take Jackson long to establish himself as a three-way threat for the Trojans. Overall in 2014, Jackson appeared in all 13 games, starting 10 times at cornerback and concurrently at wide receiver vs. Notre Dame. He earned Pac-12 Defensive Freshman of the Year based on his 49 tackles (including four for losses), 10 deflections, 1 forced fumble and 1 fumble recovery. Jackson also caught 10 passes for 138 yards (13.8 avg) with three touchdowns and rushed once (five yards). Some of his most dynamic plays came on special teams, where he returned 23 kickoffs for 684 yards (29.7 avg) and two scores. Jackson is a remarkable athlete. That much is obvious. That said, he will likely make his most immediate impact as a returner as he remains reliant upon his incredible speed in coverage. For all of the big plays Jackson made defensively, he surrendered plenty as well, including seven passing touchdowns in 2016, alone.