Byrum
Brown.

Byrum
Brown.

South Florida· Jr· 263 lb
"Few QBs blend the fluidity to throw from awkward off-platform angles with the gravitational pull of a power runner. Byrum Brown is an offensive engine in an NFL-ready frame, built to punish defenses with his arm and legs. His ceiling as a starter will ultimately depend on his ability to evolve from a simple scheme to processing complex NFL defenses."
Byrum Brown is a modern dual-threat prototype operating with unusual maturity for South Florida's high-tempo scheme. He possesses a robust physical frame, allowing him to absorb punishment on designed QB runs, showcasing elite contact balance for the position, reminiscent of power backs. His throwing mechanics are compact, with a quick release that compensates for an occasional tendency to drop his shoulder on deep passes. In the pocket, he demonstrates functional calm, keeping his eyes downfield while managing pressure with subtle climbing, avoiding panic and seeking escape routes only when the play structure completely breaks down. His NFL projection critically depends on his transition to a full-field read and progression system. He currently excels in RPO concepts and single-side reads but shows flashes of anticipatory throwing on intermediate routes that suggest a solid starter ceiling. The primary question mark lies in his consistent deep ball accuracy, where he sometimes over-relies on arm strength, sacrificing the touch needed to beat NFL corner leverage. If he refines his footwork and synchronizes his feet with his eyes on third-level reads, he has the athletic and mental profile to be a low-profile but highly efficient QB1.
- 01
Off-Platform Lethality
Brown possesses the hip fluidity and core strength to generate torque without needing to firmly plant his feet. This ability allows him to make surgical throws while escaping the pocket, maintaining playmaking threat even when the line collapses. It's an essential trait for the modern game where structure is ephemeral.
- 02
Pocket Navigation and Presence
Unlike many athletic QBs, Byrum isn't primarily an instinctive 'scrambler'; he uses his pocket movement to buy time, not just to run. He displays an excellent sense of lateral pressure, subtly sliding while maintaining a ready throwing base. This eye discipline under fire is superior to other Group of Five prospects.
- 03
Gravity as a Power Runner
His ability to punish defenses on read-option forces linebackers to freeze, opening massive windows over the middle. He's not just fast; he runs behind his pads with an aggressive pad level, allowing him to convert short third downs through sheer physicality. In the NFL, this stresses opposing defensive coordinator's gap integrity schemes.
- 04
Compact and Quick Release Mechanics
The ball leaves his hand with minimal trajectory, minimizing safety reaction time. This quick delivery is ideal for quick-passing systems and screens, allowing him to be productive in up-tempo play. His ability to alter his arm slot allows him to avoid defensive hands at the line of scrimmage.
- 01
Inconsistent Deep Ball Touch
Tends to overthrow or 'flat-linear' long passes, lacking the necessary arc to place the ball over a defender's *trail technique*. In the NFL, these flat trajectories are interception magnets for safeties with range. He needs to learn to use his legs more to generate the necessary parabola on 40+ yard routes.
- 02
Reliance on single-side reads
USF's scheme often simplifies his decisions, and at times he gets 'locked' onto his first read even when coverage is obvious. This lack of *full-field progression* processing is the biggest hurdle to his *NFL readiness*. His ability to process post-snap safety rotations must improve drastically.
- 03
Inconsistent footwork under pressure
While his composure is good, his feet sometimes get 'heavy' or too wide when immediate interior pressure arrives. This affects his weight transfer and causes balls to sail short or die in the *dirt*. Maintaining a consistent *base* is vital for his accuracy at intermediate levels.
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Embodies the expected curve: a QB with enough athletic and arm talent to be an average starter or a premium backup whose physique elevates the team's floor.
Represents the ceiling if Brown refines his footwork and post-snap processing, converting his physical talent into consistent starter production.
Illustrates the floor if aerial game processing doesn't scale, limiting him to a backup role with specific play packages due to his athleticism.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Byrum'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 QB on percentiles vs. his positional cohort (see athletic radar below).
— Sin datos atléticos registrados
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