Patrick Peterson

CB, FS/KR · LSU
Peterson entered the 2010 season hoping to establish himself as the top cornerback in the country. In winning the Bednarik Award as the nation's best defender, the Thorpe Award as the nation's best defensive back and being named the SEC's Defensive and Special Teams MVPs, he may have proven himself to be the nation's best player at any position. Voted the USA Today Defensive Player of the Year in 2007, Peterson could have signed with any program in the country. He proved well worth the hype, becoming a rare freshman standout with the Tigers, playing in 13 games and registering 41 tackles, three passes broken up and an interception. Peterson started the 10th game of the Tigers' season in 2008 (Troy) and hasn't left the starting lineup in LSU's 28 games since. Peterson emerged as a star in his second season, registering 52 tackles (including 43 solos), 15 passes broken up and two interceptions in earning first-team All-SEC and second-team All-American honors. He was even better his junior season, seeing his tackle numbers drop (36) only because opponents learned to stay away from his side of the field. He turned more of his passes defensed (10) into interceptions (four) and was allowed for the first time to participate as a punt and kick returner in 2010. Not surprisingly, Peterson demonstrated standout ability in this area as well, ranking fourth in the SEC in all-purpose yardage (116.9 yards per game) despite not playing a single down on offense. Peterson returned 26 punts for 418 yards (a 16.08-yard average) and two touchdowns and returned 29 kickoffs for a school-record 851 yards and a 29.3-yard average. Having proven himself to be a shutdown corner and dynamic returner against SEC competition, Peterson rates as one of the elite prospects of the 2011 draft. In fact, some view Peterson as the draft's top player. He's likely to earn a top five selection and could challenge former Ohio State star Shawn Springs (drafted No. 3 overall by Seattle in 1997) as the highest drafted cornerback in modern league history.