Trevor
Goosby.

Trevor
Goosby.

Texas· Jr· 6'7"· 311 lb
"The modern left tackle mold looks a lot like Trevor Goosby: a giant with light feet and an erasing wingspan. His fluidity to mirror on an arc and recover is elite, but his tendency to play high makes him vulnerable to power. He is a high-caliber project with Pro Bowl potential, but his floor is that of an inconsistent starter if his technique isn't refined."
With a wingspan that appears to cover half the field and a sculpted 6'7", 311 lb frame, Trevor Goosby embodies the ideal left tackle prospect. Operating as the blindside protector in Steve Sarkisian's Texas offense—a hybrid system blending pro-style concepts, RPOs, and Air Raid—Goosby has been exposed to a varied diet of assignments that accelerate his learning curve. His role isn't merely that of a passive bodyguard; the Texas scheme demands he be an athlete in space, execute complex blocks on the move, and anchor against elite SEC predators. This context makes him such a captivating study: a specimen with top 1% physical tools, whose tape shows flashes of absolute dominance interspersed with the errors of a player still learning to assemble all his pieces. Analyzing his tape, fluidity is the first word that comes to mind. In pass protection, his kick-slide is smooth and efficient, allowing him to gain depth and cut off the angle of speed rushers with a facility that belies his size. There are plays, like one on 3rd & 12 against Alabama, where he mirrors an edge rusher in a perfect arc, maintains balance, and uses his independent jab to neutralize a hand-swipe attempt, all looking like a 10-year veteran. Yet, in the same game, facing a bull rush, his pad level rose, his hands opened, and he was pushed into the pocket, demonstrating the inconsistency that both frustrates and excites scouts. In the run game, his athleticism shines in outside zone schemes. He is highly effective reaching 3-techniques on reach blocks and possesses the agility to climb to the second level and eliminate a linebacker. He is not a natural 'mauler'; his success relies more on positioning, angles, and athleticism than violently displacing defenders in gap-power schemes, though he possesses the functional strength to improve in that area. Goosby's strengths are rooted in his almost unfair physical gifts. His combination of height, arm length, and lateral agility is in the 99th percentile. This length grants him a massive margin for error; he can recover leverage even after a poor first step, using his arms like pistons to re-establish distance and control the defender. His processing in screen game and open-field assignments is remarkably good, demonstrating spatial awareness not all linemen of his size possess. When his technique is clean—when he sinks his hips, keeps his elbows tucked, and delivers a compact, accurate punch—he is virtually unblockable. These flashes are what make teams willing to invest a Top-10 pick in his potential. However, the areas for development are critical and will determine his trajectory. The primary issue is an inconsistently high pad level, a common flaw in linemen of his stature. When he plays upright, it negates his power base and makes him an easy target for leverage and bull rushers. This directly compromises his 'anchor,' his ability to set and stop a defender's charge. On tape against teams with powerful defensive fronts like Georgia or LSU, he was seen giving ground concerningly. His hand technique, while showing potential, still needs refinement. He tends to be a 'catcher' rather than a 'puncher,' waiting for the defender instead of imposing his will at the snap, and his timing can be late, allowing rushers access to his chest. He also over-relies on his athleticism, bending at the waist instead of bending his knees, which leaves him off-balance and susceptible to counter moves. In the NFL, the ideal fit for Goosby is a zone scheme that capitalizes on his mobility and athleticism, similar to Kyle Shanahan or Sean McVay's systems. He could survive in a vertical scheme due to his feet in pass pro, but he will need a top-tier offensive line coach to polish his anchoring technique. His career projection is high-risk, high-reward. In his rookie year, he is expected to start due to his draft capital, but inconsistencies will likely translate to sacks allowed and penalties. However, by his third year, if he absorbs coaching and develops his functional strength and technique, Goosby has all the tools to become a Pro Bowl Left Tackle and the cornerstone of an offensive line for a decade. His ceiling is that of one of the league's best protectors; his floor is that of a functional but frustrating starter.
- 01
Elite Frame and Length
Possesses a prototypical 6'7" frame with exceptionally long arms, allowing him to initiate contact and keep defenders at bay. Against Oklahoma State, he consistently neutralized their top edge rusher, using his reach to win the hand battle before it could begin.
- 02
Lateral Agility and Fluid Feet
Displays rare lateral movement capability for his size, enabling him to mirror explosive speed rushers. His deep-arc kick-slide vs Texas Tech was textbook, staying square and balanced throughout the play without crossing his feet.
- 03
Outside Zone Blocking Potential
A weapon in outside zone schemes where his athleticism allows him to seal the backside and climb to the second level fluidly. He had a key block on a 40-yard run against Baylor, executing a reach block on a 3-technique then eliminating the linebacker at the next level.
- 04
Outstanding Recovery Ability
His length and hip flexibility allow him to recover from false steps or being initially beaten. Against Alabama, after an inside move unbalanced him, he executed an instant hip flip and used his inside arm to push the rusher past the QB, saving a near-certain sack.
- 05
Screen Game Intelligence and Execution
Understands the angles, timing, and rhythm necessary for effective screen game play. On a crucial screen pass against Houston, he navigated traffic, identified the most dangerous defender in space, and neutralized him with a controlled block 12 yards downfield.
- 01
Inconsistent Pad Level
Due to his height, he struggles to consistently maintain a low pad level, making him vulnerable and diminishing his power. Against Georgia's defensive line, he was consistently beaten at the point of attack by shorter defenders who easily won the leverage battle.
- 02
Anchor Strength Underdeveloped
When defenders get their hands into his chest, he battles to anchor and stop a powerful bull rush. He allowed two critical pressures against Texas A&M by being pushed back, collapsing the pocket and forcing the QB to escape.
- 03
Punch Placement and Timing
His hands are often wide and reactive rather than proactive, tending to 'catch' defenders instead of striking them. Against a technical pass rusher from LSU, his punch was late and outside the frame, allowing a clean rip move that resulted in a sack.
- 04
Tendency to Lean and Lose Balance
He relies too much on his upper body length and leans from the waist instead of bending his knees, which leaves him off-balance. A spin move by an Oklahoma DE left him completely out of position in the third quarter because he had overextended on his initial set.
Loading seasons…
A very reliable, Pro Bowl-caliber starting LT, especially in a system valuing athleticism.
His absolute ceiling if he maximizes functional strength and refines hand technique.
A long-term starter whose athleticism never solidified into consistent dominance, showing vulnerabilities.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Trevor'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
- 5.17sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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