Jordan
Seaton.

Jordan
Seaton.

LSU· #77· Jr· 6'5"· 317 lb
"Few offensive linemen combine the fluid kick slide to neutralize speed specialists with the anchor strength to shut down power rushers. Jordan Seaton makes it look routine, deploying violent and precise hands to control the point of attack. If he refines his processing against complex schemes, he has the potential to be a high-quality, decade-long starting left tackle."
Jordan Seaton is the prototype modern offensive tackle, prioritizing lateral agility and body control over sheer mass. At LSU, he demonstrated elite power absorption, utilizing an exceptionally strong anchor and violent hand placement that neutralizes the most explosive edge rushers in college football. His game is built on dynamic balance; he is rarely out of position or overextended, allowing him to react to interior counters with hip fluidity uncharacteristic of his size. In the run game, he uses intelligent attack angles and natural leverage to displace defenders, showcasing a "finisher" mentality that scouts value for establishing the game's physical tone. His NFL projection is that of an immediate left tackle starter with All-Pro potential if he refines his technical discipline in blitz situations. While possessing impressive length, he occasionally over-relies on his athletic ability to recover ground, a bad habit NFL defensive coordinators will punish with stunts and cross-pressure schemes. His ceiling is conditioned on the consistency of his footwork in the deep set, where his feet sometimes settle too early. Nevertheless, Seaton offers a combination of dancer's feet and impact strength that is extremely rare, making him a safe bet for the Draft's Top 20.
- 01
Elite footwork and lateral recovery
Seaton exhibits a smooth, consistent kick slide, allowing him to maintain half-man relationship against speed rushers. His click-and-close ability to shut down the inside lane against spin or rip moves is pro-level, always maintaining a low center of gravity. This makes him effective in both zone schemes and critical third-down situations.
- 02
Violent and precise hand usage
The player doesn't just strike; he "hooks" and neutralizes the defender's pressure points with impeccable hand placement inside the shoulder pads. Once initial contact is established, his grip strength is sufficient to control the opponent's torso and direct the pass rush flow away from the QB. This technique drastically reduces holding penalties by eliminating the need to chase the outside shoulder.
- 03
Immediate anchor and power control
Possesses a massive lower base, allowing him to absorb bull rushes without yielding ground into the pocket. His transition from kick slide to planting the anchor is instantaneous, demonstrating functional core strength that enables him to sustain attrition battles. In the NFL, this ability to halt the linear momentum of power rushers will make him an invaluable asset.
- 04
Controlled aggression at the second level
As a pulling blocker, Seaton is terrifying for linebackers due to his ability to identify targets in the open field and seal lanes. He not only reaches the second level but maintains the contact balance necessary to impact and continue to a second block if needed. His radar for seeking extra work signals high competitiveness and game understanding.
- 01
Tendency to over-extend initial punch
At times, Seaton seeks contact too early before setting his base, leaving him vulnerable to defenders with a good swim move. In the NFL, technical rushers will use his own momentum to throw him off balance if he doesn't maintain frame discipline. He must learn to let the defender come to him instead of chasing shadows.
- 02
Eye discipline against pressure schemes
He has shown moments of hesitation when facing defensive line twists and stunts, taking a microsecond too long to process the assignment change. This lack of eye discipline can lead to direct A-gap pressures if he doesn't communicate effectively with the guard. This is a necessary area of growth to operate in complex pass protection systems.
- 03
Pad level consistency
In short-yardage situations, he sometimes rises too quickly, losing leverage advantage against shorter, more compact defenders. While his natural strength compensates for this error at the collegiate level, against NFL defensive tackles, this high pad level will result in interior pocket collapses or goal-line stalemates.
Loading seasons…
Projects a similar profile of a technical and athletic tackle who can be a solid, reliable starter from day one.
The comparison centers on his ability to combine elite athleticism with overwhelming power to set the tone in the trenches.
His floor is a functional starter whose effectiveness is limited by technical and mental inconsistency.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Jordan'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
- 5.22sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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