Blake
Frazier.

Blake
Frazier.

Michigan· Sr· 6'6"· 317 lb
"Blake Frazier's calling card is functional power and technical discipline, using a textbook anchor and violent hands to control the point of attack. His football IQ makes him valuable climbing to the second level, but questions about his lateral range limit his ceiling. He projects as a solid starting right tackle, not a star, but a reliable anchor."
Blake Frazier presents as the prototypical Michigan-system tackle: a pragmatic operator with an enviable anchor and advanced understanding of run scheme assignments. His 6'6" frame is well-balanced, displaying core strength that allows him to absorb bull rushes without yielding ground into the pocket. In pass protection, he effectively uses his arm length to establish early contact, though his kick slide footwork tends to be more functional than explosive, relying more on mirroring technique and hand usage than elite lateral agility. Looking to the next level, Frazier projects as a solid right-side starter or a high-value swing tackle with an average-to-high ceiling in the league. His primary question mark lies in his ability to handle flexible NFL speed rushers who attack the outside half-man; if he doesn't improve his hip fluidity to redirect in short spaces, he might be forced to move inside as an elite guard. However, his pedigree, his step-on-step discipline, and his demolishing mentality at the second level guarantee he will have an immediate role in any offense prioritizing gap scheme or power running game.
- 01
Anchor and point-of-attack power
Frazier possesses a low center of gravity despite his height, allowing him to establish an immediate anchor against heavy interior linemen. This stability prevents the pocket from collapsing frontally, forcing defenders to seek longer routes outside. In the NFL, this level of functional strength is vital for protecting less mobile quarterbacks.
- 02
Hand usage and independent strike
The prospect exhibits controlled violence in his hands, landing precise blows to the defender's chest to dictate the pace of the block. He keeps his elbows tucked and thumbs up, making it difficult for defenders to activate their shedding moves. This technical discipline compensates for his lack of top-end speed in lateral deployment.
- 03
Intelligence in reach blocks and climbing to the second level
Frazier demonstrates excellent eye discipline in identifying stunts and assignment changes pre-snap. On run plays, he shows the necessary agility to seal the edge on reach blocks and then detach with authority to neutralize linebackers. His ability to find work in the open field will be highly valued by zone scheme coordinators.
- 04
Physicality and 'finisher' mentality
An inherent aggressiveness in his game embodies the identity of Big Ten football. He isn't content with winning initial leverage; he actively seeks to drive the defender to the ground and finish the block. This "punishment" mentality wears down defensive rotations over four quarters.
- 01
Lateral range limitations
Frazier struggles against edge rushers with an electric first step, showing difficulty reaching the meeting point in wide-9 situations. In the NFL, speed specialists could exploit this if he doesn't improve his set depth. His ability to recover once beaten by speed is limited due to average hip fluidity.
- 02
Tendency to over-extend in space
At times, his aggressiveness leads him to "hunt" defenders instead of letting the game come to him, causing him to lose his contact balance. When his weight shifts too far forward, he becomes vulnerable to swim or rip moves. Adjusting his pad level in these situations will be critical to avoid holding penalties.
- 03
Reaction speed to the 'inside counter'
While his frontal strength is excellent, his feet sometimes "plant" when the defender makes a sudden change of direction toward the inside shoulder. He needs to improve his lateral transition speed to avoid being beaten by technical counters in third-down situations. This lack of instant "mirroring" currently places him in Tier 3 compared to more athletic prospects.
Loading seasons…
His most probable developmental curve, becoming a reliable starter who is a plus in the run game and competent in pass protection.
Represents his ceiling as a high-quality, highly durable right-side starter, maximizing his strength and technique to anchor an offensive line.
His floor if technique isn't refined and lateral agility is exploited, relegating him to a 'swing tackle' role or low-end starter.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Blake'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 OT on percentiles vs. his positional cohort (see athletic radar below).
— — — mediana posicional (p50)
- 40 yardas
- 5.19sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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