Dallas Goedert

TE · South Dakota State
A three-year starter at South Dakota State, Goedert thrived in the Jackrabbit’s spread offense, splitting his time inline and detached, and was a mismatch vs. every defense he faced in the Missouri Valley Conference – he will be the first offensive player from South Dakota State to be drafted since 11-year veteran TE Steve Heiden in 1999 (third round, 69th overall to the San Diego Chargers). He is a big, physical athlete with the body control and footwork of a much smaller player, making himself available in his routes with his fluid adjustment skills. Goedert needs to improve his efficiency as a route runner and his blocking technique requires refinement, but his deficiencies as a blocker are based more on inexperience rather than inability (basically, he was too good of a receiving threat for the SDSU coaches to keep at the line of scrimmage). Overall, Goedert has the physical skill-set, dependable ball skills and motivated make-up to develop into a starting NFL tight end capable of pushing for Pro Bowl consideration. BACKGROUND A no-star tight end recruit out of high school, Dallas Goedert (named after the Dallas Cowboys, although he grew up a Green Bay Packers’ fan) was a multi-sport marvel growing up (mostly swimming, soccer, basketball and football), focusing on basketball until his senior season at Britton-Hecla when he decided to put all his effort into football. He played nine-man football in high school and was the best player on the team, switching between quarterback, running back and wide receiver on offense, depending on the play-call, also playing linebacker and safety on defense and performing all the kicking, punting and returning duties. At a small high school (under 150 students total), Goedert went overlooked as a recruit, receiving only one scholarship offer to Division-II Northern State in South Dakota. He had higher goals, however, and decided to walk on at FCS-level South Dakota State, redshirting in 2013. Goedert started three games as a redshirt freshman and posted eight catches for 100 yards in 2014. He became a full-time starter as a sophomore and finished second on the team with 26 receptions for 484 yards and six touchdowns, earning First Team All-MVFC honors. Goedert had his best statistical season as a junior, setting a new single-season school record with 92 catches. His 1,293 receiving yards and 11 touchdowns in 2016 were also SDSU records for a tight end, earning Unanimous All-American and First Team All-MVFC honors. Goedert returned for his senior year and posted 67 catches for 1,068 yards and six touchdowns, again earning FCS All-American honors.