Recent Leighton Vander Esch Notes
Leighton Vander Esch
in our view
Frankly, if there was a "Breakout Player of the Year" award in college football, Vander Esch would have won it in 2017. Sure, there is risk involved whenever investing an early round selection in a player with just one dominant season, especially given the questionable competition Vander Esch faced in the Mountain West. The tape doesn't lie, though. Vander Esch offers a prototypical blend of size, strength and athleticism for linebacker and is an instinctive, physical player with the range and reliable open-field tackling ability to warrant at least top 50 consideration and perhaps even a first round pick.
strengths
Looks the part of a modern day NFL linebacker with a strapping, well-built frame including broad shoulders, long arms, a tapered middle and good overall weight distribution. Shows very good key and diagnosis skills, frequenting taking steps towards the direction of the play even before the snap. Shows aggression, as well as good body control and strong technique in taking on, alternately using his length and powerful hands to initiate the contract and disengage quickly or turning his frame to offer just a shoulder (thereby leaving little target for blockers to hit) and sliding off to get in on the tackle of the ball-carrier. A very reliable open-field tackler, using his long arms to trip up ball-carriers seemingly out of his grasp and using textbook hit-life-drive technique to stop even talented runners in their tracks (San Diego State-2017). Impressive agility, body control and speed for a man of his size. Slides well laterally and shows the easy hip turn and smooth acceleration to change directions for coverage duties or when avoiding would-be blockers on the blitz... Basketball (and experience on offense) shows in his comfort boxing out would-be receivers and turning pass breakups into interceptions, with three takeaways on just six career passes defensed. Voted a team captain in 2017... -- Rob Rang 1/7/2018
compares to
2018 Hall of Fame finalist Brian Urlacher, Bears - It might seem presumptuous to compare Vander Esch - essentially a one-year wonder - to Urlacher, who recorded an eye-popping 1,229 tackles and 41.5 sacks over his 13 NFL seasons, all in Chicago. There are some eerie similarities between the two, however, not the least of which are their similar sizes, athleticism, physical tackling and small-school backgrounds. It is worth remembering that prior to earning the No. 9 overall pick in 2000, the 6-4, 258 pound Urlacher also fell off the recruiting radar after playing eight-man football in high school and played his college ball at New Mexico before
weaknesses
Possesses relatively long legs for an inside linebacker, which leaves him vulnerable to cut-blocks, an area that he could improve with greater awareness and technique to sprawl and use his length to defeat them. While generally showing impressive body control for his size, Vander Esch can get greedy, getting too far over his skis and lunging at ball-carriers, rather than breaking down. Needs to show greater variance as a pass rusher, relying upon his length, physicality and agility to physically beat blocks but showing little technique. Comes with legitimate one-year wonder and level of competition questions. Missed seven games in 2016 due to an undisclosed injury which teams may need to investigate at the Combine. Hails from a small rural town and may struggle acclimating to larger media market. - Rob Rang 1/7/2018
Played football, basketball and track and field at Salmon River High School
helped team to 1A Division II state titles in both football and basketball as a junior and senior
averaged 29.4 points and 11.1 rebounds per game as a senior on the basketball team
named IdahoSports.com Student-Athlete of the Year in 2014
All-Idaho 1A Division II Player of the Year
played quarterback and middle linebacker
in 2013 completed 60.8 percent of his passes (121-for-199) for 2,155 yards and 28 touchdowns with just one interception
also carried 157 times for 1,565 yards and 34 touchdowns
on defense he made 131 tackles (85 solo) with five interceptions, five fumble recoveries and four defensive touchdowns
played for head coach Charlie Shepherd.
2017
defensive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TFL | QB HUR | TOT | TD | PD | SACKS | SOLO |
8.5 | 1.0 | 141.0 | 0.0 | 4.0 | 4.0 | 91.0 |
interceptions | |||
---|---|---|---|
TD | AVG | YDS | INT |
0.0 | 15.7 | 47.0 | 3.0 |
2016
defensive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TFL | QB HUR | TOT | TD | PD | SACKS | SOLO |
3.5 | 0.0 | 27.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.0 | 23.0 |
interceptions | |||
---|---|---|---|
TD | AVG | YDS | INT |
0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.0 |
2015
rushing | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
YPC | TD | YDS | CAR | LONG |
10.0 | 0.0 | 10.0 | 1.0 | 10.0 |
Physical Attributes:
Proj Rd: | 1.0 |
Height: | 6-4 |
Weight: | 256.0 |
Forty: | 4.65 |
Arm: | 33 7/8 |
Hand: | 09 3/4 |
Wingspan: | -- |
Pro Day Results:
Cone: | -- |
Bench: | -- |
Shuttle: | -- |
10: | -- |
20: | -- |
40: | -- |
BJ: | -- |
VJ: | -- |
Combine Results:
Cone: | 6.88 |
Bench: | 20.0 |
Shuttle: | 4.15 |
10: | 1.56 |
20: | 2.59 |
40: | 4.62 |
BJ: | 10'04" |
VJ: | 39 1/2 |