Jordan Whitehead

SS, FS · Pittsburgh
A three-year starter at Pitt, Whitehead was a mismatch weapon in Pat Narduzzi’s scheme, lining up primarily at strong safety, but also saw snaps at free safety and cornerback (mostly near the goal line). Pitt also used his athleticism on offense, showing the stamina to play a high volume of snaps. A premium athlete, Whitehead plays with the quick-twitch movements to stay hip-to-hip with receivers and the range to cover every inch of the field. His athletic profile and developing instincts belong in a NFL secondary, but his eye discipline and cover technique are both areas that require attention, often getting crossed up or allowing too much spacing in coverage on film. As a run defender, Whitehead shows the heart and toughness to play big boy football downhill, but his inconsistent technique dent his batting average as a tackler. BACKGROUND A four-star cornerback recruit out of high school, Jordan Whitehead was a do-everything star at Central Valley and helped lead his team to a 15-1 record and the state title game, rushing for 1,933 yards as a senior and scoring 35 total touchdowns and in five different ways (rushing, receiving, interception, kickoff, punt) – he also collected 97 tackles and seven interceptions as a cornerback and free safety on defense. Whitehead earned numerous player of the year awards and was considered the No. 1 recruit in the state of Pennsylvania in the 2015 recruiting cycle. Schools like Alabama and Notre Dame went after him hard, but he wished to stay closer to home, narrowing his choice to Ohio State, Penn State, West Virginia and Pittsburgh before ultimately choosing to follow in the footsteps of several Aliquippa football players (Tony Dorsett, Darrelle Revis, etc) to Pitt. Whitehead earned ACC defensive newcomer honors as a true freshman in 2015 with 109 tackles (school-record for a freshman), 6.0 tackles for loss, seven passes defended and one interception, also adding a pair of touchdowns on offense as a running back. He started the first nine games of 2016 before his sophomore season was cut short due to an injury, finishing with 65 tackles, three passes defended and one interception to earn All-ACC Second Team honors. Whitehead missed the first three games of his junior year due to a suspension and posted 60 tackles, five passes defended and one interception, earning All-ACC Honorable Mention honors. He was also suspended in July of 2017 for what coach Pat Narduzzi said were rules violations and a "highly disappointing situations. " Whitehead sat out the fist three games of the season.