Bear
Alexander.

Bear
Alexander.

Oregon· Sr· 6'4"· 293 lb
"Bear Alexander's first-step explosiveness is a wrecking ball designed for the backfield. His ability to win a lineman's shoulder from the interior disrupts schemes, but his inconsistent anchor against double teams raises questions about his role on early downs. He projects as an immediate situational disruptor, with starter potential if he develops more base power and discipline."
Bear Alexander is a disruptive interior defensive lineman operating under the *interior penetrator* archetype with elite first-step quickness that unbalances offensive lines from the *snap*. His ability to generate immediate pressure through the A or B *gap* makes him a technical nightmare for interior linemen, utilizing a combination of natural *leverage* and hand violence that allows him to disengage quickly from blocks. Despite not possessing the prototypical mass of a pure *nose tackle*, he compensates for the lack of bulk with unusual *hip fluidity* for his size, enabling him to bend the corner on the interior *pass rush* and close space to the quarterback with a noticeable *burst* on tape. His NFL projection directly depends on his ability to maintain integrity against *double-team* run schemes. Currently, Alexander shines when allowed to attack vertically but struggles when asked to anchor *at-the-point* against powerful guards, where his *pad level* tends to rise after initial contact. To reach his ceiling as an impact starter in 4-3 schemes or as a 3-technique in odd fronts, he must develop a more consistent secondary *pass rush* move repertoire, as he cannot rely exclusively on raw explosiveness to win individual matchups at the next level. If he refines his eye discipline in *read-and-react* situations, he possesses the potential to be a constant chaos generator in the opposing *backfield*.
- 01
Elite initial explosiveness and get-off
Alexander possesses one of the quickest first steps in his class, allowing him to gain the offensive lineman's shoulder before they can establish their base. This vertical penetration forces offenses to adjust their protections and generates rapid pocket collapses from the interior.
- 02
Hand violence and hand-fighting technique
He displays advanced ability to reset his hands during contact, utilizing highly coordinated swipes and arm-overs to prevent linemen from capturing his chest. His capacity to keep his upper extremities active allows him to disengage from blocks on the move and pursue the play laterally.
- 03
Hip flexibility and lateral agility
Unlike many linemen nearing 300 pounds, Bear can rotate his torso and hips to reduce his surface area and slip through tight creases. This agility allows him to execute stunts and twists with high efficacy, crossing multiple gaps without losing speed or balance.
- 04
Competitive motor and pursuit range
His effort doesn't end at initial contact; he shows a relentless motor pursuing plays sideline-to-sideline. At the next level, this trait translates to tackles for loss on screen plays or seemingly broken runs, providing intangible value to the defensive unit.
- 01
Inconsistent anchor against double-teams
His vertical attack mentality sometimes sacrifices his center of gravity, allowing heavier linemen to displace him from his assignment in power run situations. Needs to improve his anchor and lower-body stability to avoid being a liability in gap integrity schemes.
- 02
Eye discipline and misdirection
His aggressiveness sometimes works against him, biting on fakes or play-action plays that take him out of position. Must develop better reading of OL keys to diagnose the play before fully committing to penetration.
- 03
Reliance on speed over power
While physically strong, his pure bull rush is still developing and he doesn't always efficiently convert speed to power. In the NFL, where guards have heavier hands, he'll need a more physical attack plan when his initial speed is neutralized.
Loading seasons…
Wyatt mirrors Alexander's profile as a high-motor, athletic interior lineman whose primary value stems from disruption rather than consistently anchoring against double teams.
This comparison illustrates Alexander's ceiling, predicated on his ability to translate initial quickness into functional power, thereby establishing himself as a consistent interior pass-rush threat.
This represents the floor for Alexander should he fail to cultivate a more robust anchor, relegating him to a career as a rotational pass-rusher, a distinct liability against formidable run schemes.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Bear's RAS will publish once the official testing drops.
The Relative Athletic Score needs the 40, vertical, broad jump, shuttle and 3-cone — numbers that don't exist until the NFL Combine or pro day. Until then we grade the DL on percentiles vs. his positional cohort (see athletic radar below).
— — — mediana posicional (p50)
- 40 yardas
- 5.00sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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