Detroit Free Press

Florida State’s Jared Verse headlines the 2024 class of defensive linemen

- Dave Birkett Contact Dave Birkett at dbirkett@freepress.com . Follow him on X and Instagram at @davebirket­t.

Jared Verse had zero FBS offers coming out of high school, and looking back, he understand­s why.

“I was undersized out of high school, there was no doubting that,” the Florida State defensive end said at the NFL combine. “I was 200 pounds, 6-3, I wasn’t some monstrous force. If you looked at me in high school and looked at me today, you would probably be like, ‘What the …?’”

Today, Verse is 6 feet 4, a rocked up 254 pounds and one of the best pass rushers in this year’s NFL draft. He had 18 sacks the past two seasons at Florida State, and in many ways is a testament to perseveran­ce and hard work.

Verse signed with FCS Albany in 2019 and redshirted his freshman year while making a position switch from tight end to defensive end.

He moved home when COVID hit in 2020 and spent months in the makeshift weight room his father set up at his house. When he returned to Albany that winter for a fourgame spring season in 2021, Verse had packed on nearly 40 pounds and was a terror on the field.

He won Colonial Athletic Associatio­n Defensive Newcomer of the Year, had another 9.5 sacks in 11 games that fall and he hit the transfer portal in 2022 as one of the most coveted players on the market.

“Albany helped me flourish, they helped me grow,” Verse said. “Going to Florida State was something that changed my life for the better and ultimately being in this position today, being around all these athletic guys, being (at the combine) is just something I dreamed of. Kind of knew it was coming, but I just had to stay focused.”

Verse credits his family and the coaching staffs at both schools he attended for helping

fuel his rise.

He told ESPN in 2022 that he ate between 4,000 and 5,000 calories a day during COVID,

stuffing himself with large breakfasts and home-cooked dinners of tuna casserole and steak.

“They knew how much work I put in,” he said at the combine. “They knew how I was sacrificin­g going to parties or going to this, going out, going to social outings just to work out, just to watch some more film, just to hit the field. And it’s cause, them seeing all of that kind of put more belief in me. I never had any doubt in myself. They never had any doubt in me, and when you have a support system such as that it’s nothing to worry about.”

Verse said Albany first opened his eyes to what he could be as a pass rusher; as a freshman, he sat behind Eli Mencer, a converted running back who had 14.5 sacks in 2019.

And when he had a chance to leave school early last winter, he decided instead to stay for one more season at Florida State to polish up his pass rushing game.

“Coming back and learning that little bit more, it’s made me so much better of a player,” he said. “I don’t think I could even compare to the player I was in 2022.

“I feel like I was a good player. I was big, strong, fast, but it was the small things. the technical things, the little details, minute details that it wouldn’t matter in college football but when you’re in the NFL, when you’re going up against 10-year vets it’s going to matter.”

Verse is projected as a top-20 pick in a draft that’s light on difference-making defensive lineman.

Alabama edge rusher Dallas Turner, coming off a 10-sack season, and UCLA’s Laiatu Latu, who had a nation’s-best 23.5 sacks the past two years, also project to go high in Round 1, though Latu’s draft stock could be affected by medical concerns after he was forced to retire by doctors in his first college stop at Washington.

Texas’ Byron Murphy and Illinois’ Johnny Newton headline an even lighter defensive tackle class, and Missouri’s Darius Robinson, a Michigan native who played at Canton, and two more players with ties to Western Michigan, Braden Fiske and Marshawn Kneeland are potential top-50 picks.

Fiske transferre­d to Florida State last season, where played tackle alongside Verse.

“I spent five years in one program at Western Michigan and having to make that transition was kind of the beginning of understand­ing of how the transition might be for the NFL,” Fiske said at the combine. “You go from learning one system for five years from the same coaches, so having to make that transition to a whole new system, I think kind of prepared me for this opportunit­y coming up next. And just overall the exposure I got to get from Florida State and it was just the opportunit­y to play in front of that many fans and bigger crowds and just those different players and everything it was awesome.”

Verse called his decision to transfer “world-changing,” but said he wouldn’t change anything about his college journey because his time at Albany gave him the work ethic and drive he needed to potentiall­y be the first defensive lineman taken in the draft.

“At the end of the day, I was never supposed to be in this position,” he said. “I wasn’t even supposed to be at Florida State, I was never supposed to be standing here in front of you today. That was never, if you asked anybody in high school, I’m not supposed to be here today, so being the first pass rusher would mean the world to me but at the end of the day it’s not the end of the world. I’m still going to be working no matter what position I’m taken in, whether I go first round, second round, really all the way down to the seventh, I’m still going to give it everything I have.”

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