O.J. Howard

TE · Alabama
One of the primary questions scouts ask when projecting college players to the NFL is how well players will perform against top competition. For Howard, the opposite might be the bigger concern. Despite obvious physical tools - including an imposing frame, rare straight-line speed and soft hands - Howard was inexplicably ignored as a receiver throughout much of his career at Alabama. His career numbers (114 receptions for 1,726 yards and seven touchdowns) hardly suggest that he will be a first round pick, though he almost certainly will be. His production would be even less impressive if his gaudy totals against Clemson in the past two national championship games were thrown out of the equation. In those two contests - the only two over Howard's career in which he eclipsed the 100 yard receiving mark - Howard was nearly unstoppable, hauling in a combined nine passes for 314 yards and three touchdowns. On the surface, Howard's story reads like many of the other highly regarded prospects in Nick Saban's football factory in Tuscaloosa. Blessed with obvious physical gifts, Howard signed with the Tide amid great expectations as a five-star recruit. He earned early playing time, wowing with his combination of size and athleticism. Howard played in all 13 games (and started five times) as a true freshman in 2013, catching 14 passes for 269 yards and two touchdowns. He was held out of the end zone a year later, hauling in 17 passes for 260 yards in 14 game appearances (three starts) as a sophomore. Take away the breakout national title games and Howard's junior (33 catches for 394 yards and zero scores) and senior campaigns (41-489-2) are potentially more alarming than exhilarating. Fortunately for Howard, the NFL drafts prospects based on raw talent not box scores. And with so many mouths to feed in Alabama's offense, scouts are likely to give Howard the benefit of the doubt with the expectation that he - like former under-utilized Alabama pass-catchers like Amari Cooper and Julio Jones - will excel once featured in the NFL.