Chukwuma Okorafor

OG, OT · Western Michigan
The NFL has increasingly become a truly global game with top prospects in recent years hailing from far-away places such as Ghana (Ziggy Ansah), Nigeria (Osi Umenyiora), Germany (Sebastian Vollmer) and Estonia (Marghus Hunt), among other places. Okorafor is hoping to add Botswana to the list. He and his family immigrated to American in 2010. As one might expect, it did not take long for football coaches to notice the young but already massive athlete suddenly roaming the hallways. Okorafor quickly became well known to college recruiters across the country but then-Western Michigan head coach P.J. Fleck convinced him to stay within the state. Okorafor wasted no time in making an impression, playing in all 12 games his freshman season and starting all 13 at right tackle a year later. Okorafor made the switch to left tackle as a junior and teamed with the equally monstrous 6-5, 319 pound Taylor Moton to give the Broncos one of the best sets of bookend tackles in all of college football. The Broncos averaged 228.1 rushing yards per game in 2016, good for 24th in the country. They also rushed for 36 touchdowns on the season. Moton, who started all year at right tackle and wound up earning an invitation to the Senior Bowl, was selected 64th overall in the 2017 draft by Carolina - a grade that Okorafor may end up beating after earning First Team All-MAC honors on the blindside the past two seasons and himself earning a trip to Mobile this winter. Though it is true that Western Michigan did not face the week-in, week-out level of competition of Power Five programs, scouts have plenty of tape of Okorafor against top talent with matchups against Ohio State, Michigan State (twice), Illinois, Wisconsin and Southern Cal over the past three years. Okorafor has undeniable NFL traits with intriguing movement skills for a player his size and length. He remains fundamentally raw, however, often getting a late, passive punch on edge rushers and rarely dominating opponents - even those from the MAC - as much as he should. With a solid showing in Mobile, however, Okorafor could join former teammates Moton and wide receiver Corey Davis (Titans, No. 5 overall) as a top 64 selection, setting a standard for NFL prospects never before seen at Western Michigan. BACKGROUND Born in Botswana and only immigrated into America with his family in 2010. A soccer player throughout his youth in Botswana, Okorafor first found himself playing football as a sophomore in high school, moving from kicker to the offensive line. Earned All-American accolades as a prep senior and recruiting interest from the likes of Michigan, Oklahoma and Florida, among others. Was only 17 years old when he first played at Western Michigan. Goes by "Chukes."