The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Miami star believes he’s ‘The Playmaker Jr.’

- By Jason Butt

Editor’s note: In the fourth story of our position-by-position NFL draft series, we look at the top tight ends.

Brevin Jordan doesn’t lack confidence.

While most of the attention at the tight end position leading to this year’s NFL draft has centered around Florida’s Kyle Pitts, the Miami standout Jordan believes he has the chance to be a productive weapon with the capability to cause mismatches. A move tight end — meaning he can move around the formation and line up at numerous spots — Jordan said his receiving capabiliti­es will shine in the pass-happy NFL.

He likened his big-play potential to a certain former Miami star who concluded his football career with an induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

“Michael Irvin, that’s the original ‘Playmaker’ here at ‘The U,’ ” Jordan said. “I think I’m ‘The Playmaker Jr.’ I’m a tight end who can line up all over the field. You can put me in the backfield, you can put me in the slot, the outside. I’m a big dude, a stockier guy.”

Pitts’ measurable­s include that he’s 6 feet 5 and 245 pounds. That, with his speed and position flexibilit­y, has him as a potential option to go in the top five of the NFL draft. Jordan is 6-2 and 247 pounds. He has good speed and can flex out as a receiver, too, but can also line up next to a tackle and block.

Jordan has even caught passes in the flat lined up at fullback. Jordan, who caught 38 passes for 576 yards and seven touchdowns as a junior in 2020, said this kind of versatilit­y should make him an ideal draft pick for any team.

“Any offensive coordinato­r who has the chance to meet me in the NFL is going to love me,” Jordan said. “Every offensive coordinato­r I had here during my time at Miami loved me. You can line me up anywhere on the field, and I’ll make plays. Dan Enos in my sophomore year, he lined me up at fullback, and I’m running flat routes from fullback, I’m lead blocking from fullback. You can literally line me up anywhere you want, and I’ll make plays for you.”

Jordan figures to be one of the first five tight ends selected in the draft. However, the draft analysts have only two tight ends pegged for the first two rounds.

Behind Pitts, the consensus second tight end predicted to go off the board is Penn State’s Pat Freiermuth, who earned the nickname “Baby Gronk” because of what his teammates perceived as similariti­es to Tampa Bay’s Rob Gronkowski. Freiermuth has received a second-round grade.

Behind Freiermuth, there are a handful of tight ends, including Jordan, who teams will turn to in the middle to late rounds to improve their rosters. Grouped among that next tier with Jordan is Notre

Dame’s Tommy Tremble, a similar type of tight end at 6-3 and 241 pounds.

Most of the higher-ranked tight ends have the versatilit­y to move around the offensive formation to catch passes and block from the different spots. Tremble, who played at Wesleyan School and is the son of former Georgia Bulldog Greg Tremble, sees himself in that mold as well, although he wasn’t used often in the passing game at Notre Dame. In 2020, Tremble

caught only 19 passes for 218 yards.

“I see myself as a guy who can do all of that,” Tremble said. “I lined up in the slot, out wide, as a wing on the line, as a fullback. I feel like I’m a guy who can play all those positions. I think for the next level, what I’m going to bring is a guy who’s a complete tight end. I’m a guy who can do it all. I think my biggest strength is my versatilit­y in all aspects of the game.”

POSITION-BY-POSITION SERIES

■ QUARTERBAC­KS: How far will Justin Fields drop in draft? | Top 10 QBS

■ RUNNING BACKS: Plenty of prospects to pick from | Top 10 RBS

■ WIDE RECEIVERS: Draft deep with talent | Top 10 WRS

■ TIGHT ENDS: Ability to create mismatches is key | Top 10 TES

■ Follow our coverage of the draft in the AJC epaper.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/AP 2020 ?? “Any offensive coordinato­r who has the chance to meet me in the NFL is going to love me. Every offensive coordinato­r I had here during my time at Miami loved me. You can line me up anywhere on the field, and I’ll make plays,” says tight end Brevin Jordan.
JOHN RAOUX/AP 2020 “Any offensive coordinato­r who has the chance to meet me in the NFL is going to love me. Every offensive coordinato­r I had here during my time at Miami loved me. You can line me up anywhere on the field, and I’ll make plays,” says tight end Brevin Jordan.

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