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Draft Sickos · Prospect profile2027 Draft · BB #147
IOL· #4 IOL· Round 4· Tier 5 · Rotation

Greg
Johnson.

Greg Johnson

Minnesota logoMinnesota· Sr· 6'4"· 320 lb

"His anchor and violent hands provide a high floor as an interior pass protector, capable of neutralizing powerful bull-rushers from day one. However, his limited lateral agility exposes him against stunts and explosive rushers. Johnson projects as a reliable starter in a power scheme, a physical enforcer who will solidify the interior of a line."

Draft Sickos · Scouting profile2027 Draft · No. 005
01Play style

Greg Johnson presents as the prototype interior offensive lineman who thrives in gap/power schemes. His 320-pound chassis is excellently distributed, with a massive lower body allowing him to anchor against 340-pound nose tackles without yielding an inch of ground. What impresses most on his tape is his initial violence; Johnson specializes in gaining leverage at initial contact, utilizing a heavy punch that can stun defenders at the first level. While not the most lateral athlete for pure zone schemes, his ability to work double teams and climb with correct angles to the second level demonstrates highly refined football intelligence for the Minnesota program. Looking to the next level, Johnson projects as a solid "high-floor" starter who can stabilize an interior unit from day one. His ceiling is limited by average lateral agility, which could expose him against elite interior pass rushers who employ quick counters and swim moves. The big question mark in his evaluation will be his consistency in open space during screen plays or long pulls, where his contact balance sometimes falters. If he refines his footwork and maintains a wider base in the mirror, he has a strong case to become an immovable piece in an offense prioritizing clock control and down-hill running.

02What he does well
  1. 01

    Exceptional Anchor and Center of Gravity

    Johnson displays a wide base and an almost unmovable anchor when facing frontal bull-rushes. His ability to absorb initial impact and re-establish his base allows him to maintain pocket integrity even against heavier defenders. In the NFL, this makes him an insurance policy against internal pocket collapse.

  2. 02

    Hand Violence and Punch Location

    He uses very heavy hands, delivering them with surgical precision to the defender's chest. Once he achieves inside hand placement, his control over the opponent's shoulders is absolute, allowing him to dictate the block's direction. This ability to "stun" on contact is rare among fourth-round prospects.

  3. 03

    Intelligence in Gap and Duo Schemes

    He perfectly understands blocking angles and when to disengage from a double team to seal off a linebacker. His eye discipline allows him to quickly identify stunts and defensive line crosses, reacting with technical proficiency rather than pure athleticism. He is a player rarely found out of position or confused by complex schemes.

  4. 04

    Play Motor and 'Finisher' Mentality

    He doesn't just block; he aims to bury his opponent under the turf on every snap. He plays with controlled aggression that sets the unit's physical tone, maintaining effort until the final whistle. This "bully" mentality is highly valued by offensive line coaches looking to change their trench culture.

03What he's missing
  1. 01

    Limited lateral agility and mirror range

    Struggles when forced to retreat to cover outside shoulder rushers in clear passing situations. His hip fluidity is limited, resulting in slow recovery if the defender gains the initial step advantage. In the NFL, speed interior rushers could exploit this lack of lateral range.

  2. 02

    Contact balance on the move

    When asked to pull or block at the second level, Johnson tends to lunge forward excessively. This compromises his contact balance, allowing more agile defenders to elude him or use his own momentum against him. He needs to keep his feet active and shoulders aligned to be effective in open space.

  3. 03

    Foot recovery after initial contact

    If a defender unbalances him with a swipe or rip move, Johnson struggles to quickly re-establish his base. His footwork can become heavy and static, forcing him to resort to holding to prevent pressure. Refining his foot quickness in emergency situations will be key for his survival at the next level.

04Trait grades

Position-specific sub-grades. Scale 0–100, same yardstick as the Sickos Grade.

Run Block60
Pass Pro79
Anchor79
Hand Use77
Leverage71
IQ / Communication72
05Production
Source · sports-reference

Loading seasons…

06Grade + Comps
Overall
55
/ 100 · UDFA
/ LIKELY
Kevin Dotson

The comparison focuses on his 'road grader' profile, a powerful guard who can be a solid, physical starter, albeit with athletic limitations.

/ CEILING
Gabe Jackson

If he maximizes his technique, his ceiling is to be a dominant and almost immovable pocket guard, similar to Jackson's peak performance with the Raiders.

/ FLOOR
Ben Bredeson

This floor represents a scenario where his athletic deficiencies limit his role to a quality backup or intermittent starter, primarily in run-heavy schemes.

End of report · Draft Sickos 2027

RAS · Relative Athletic Score

Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football

Pending

/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27

Greg'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 IOL on percentiles vs. his positional cohort (see athletic radar below).

Auto-syncSource · ras.football
06Athletic profilevs. IOL on Big Board
40VERTBRD3CSHTLBNCH

— — — positional median (p50)

40 yd
5.41sp50
Vertical
in
Broad jump
in
Three-cone
s
Shuttle
s
Bench
rep

Finding historical comps…

Profile card · Shareable

Scouting card for Greg Johnson

Post the verdict, not the rumor.

One image with everything that matters: rank, tier, NFL comp, archetype, measurables, RAS and the scout's one-liner. Built to win the conversation on X, IG, Discord or the draft group chat.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Who is Greg Johnson?
Greg Johnson is a IOL prospect from Minnesota (Sr). Draft Sickos has him ranked #147 on the 2027 NFL Draft big board. A classic "road grader" with a granite anchor and heavy hands, ideal for physical offenses seeking a reliable interior enforcer.
How tall is Greg Johnson? What does he weigh?
Johnson measures 6'4", 320 lbs, and has run a 5.41s 40-yard dash.
What round is Greg Johnson projected in the 2027 NFL Draft?
Draft Sickos projects Johnson as a Round 4 pick, ranked #147 overall and #4 among IOLs on our 2027 big board.
Which NFL player does Greg Johnson compare to?
Our staff comp is Kevin Dotson (Rams) — For his ability to generate displacement in the run game and his massive anchor in pass protection.. See the full comps card (high / likely / low ceiling) on this page for the reasoning.
Where can I read a full Greg Johnson scouting report?
Right here — this page is the Draft Sickos scouting report on Greg Johnson: tesis, strengths, weaknesses, NFL comparisons, RAS athletic score, film breakdown and the scout's verdict.

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End of report · Draft Sickos 2027