Future Blue Originals: Cathedral vs Jeffersonville Comment Count

Adam Schnepp

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[Nasternak]

Last weekend David and I hopped in the creeper van CheFBOlet and took advantage of Michigan playing in Indiana. We made our way to Indianapolis to check out Cathedral’s Emil Ekiyor, the highest-rated prospect in Michgan’s 2018 class (per the 247 composite). David thought he’d be getting Ekiyor film during this year’s Prep Kickoff Classic in Detroit, but an injured left ankle kept Ekiyor on the sidelines for the first game of the year. He’s now back in the lineup, but having been only a month since the game in Detroit the ankle is unsurprisingly still heavily taped.

Emil Ekiyor Every-Snap Film

Ekiyor is #72 and lined up at center.

[Hit THE JUMP for the Ekiyor scouting report]

Scouting

There’s no Braden-esque photo, but I’d be surprised if it took you more than three or four plays to notice how much Ekiyor looks like a DI interior lineman right now. He uses his size to his advantage, with the key element of his success leveraging his size into movement being… well, leverage. Ekiyor’s bend is really impressive; he’s the best prospect I’ve seen this season at consistently keeping his pads low. He bends particularly well at the hips and fires into opponents low, which allows him to use his heft to drive defensive linemen back with consistency.

It’s worth noting that he’s moving those linemen from the center position, so he’s doing a lot of angle blocking. His footwork and hand placement were consistently great, as he was able to get one hand into an opponent’s chest plate and the other into his armpit. There are numerous examples of Ekiyor establishing this hand position and using it to steer a 2-tech, with the goal-line run at 1:14 being one of the clearer—and more emphatic—examples. As far as footwork is concerned, Ekiyor keeps a good base and very much adheres to the old scouting adage that an interior lineman must constantly move his feet. His first two steps and low pad level always seem to put him in the right position to extend his arms and finish his block.

The ankle injury made things that require extra movement difficult to evaluate. Watching live I thought Ekiyor was slow getting to the second level and would be limited in college by this, but after watching his film it’s clear that he’s hobbling. You can see him try to block the second level at 00:22 and then two plays in a row starting at 2:15. The pattern to these is that he clearly has identified who his target is, but he’s physically unable to get there fast enough to block said target. I did read a camp scouting report that said he was good in space, FWIW.

Summary

Ekiyor has the size, technique, and strength you want in an interior lineman. He uses his hands well and keeps his feet moving, and his leverage is excellent thanks to good hip and knee bend. He shows intelligence in his targeting at the second level even if his ankle hobbled him. Despite the ankle, he displayed short-area quickness in his ability to angle block. There weren’t many pass-pro snaps to evaluate, but Ekiyor shuffled his feet and attempted to mirror the player across from him. His real strength is run blocking, where he’s able to not only win blocks at the point of contact but steer opposing linemen where he wants them.

Some weight redistribution will be needed when Ekiyor arrives at Michigan, but that’s the case for virtually all interior linemen; just look at Mike Onwenu’s studio shots from year one to year two. I think he has a future at center; his shotgun snaps were crisp and he didn’t seem to have an issue snapping and taking the right steps to get into his block, and the fit is better if mobility is more of an issue than the ankle injury. The depth chart is also a little less stacked in the middle; he could be Ruiz’s backup next season.

Comments

BlueinOK

September 27th, 2017 at 4:55 PM ^

Just looking at your film provided I like how he looks in run blocking. He got into some guys and moved them and seemed to be advanced (for high school) in his technique. Pass blocking looks meh but high school is hard for that. I really like him after watching his film. 

Steves_Wolverines

September 27th, 2017 at 5:04 PM ^

It says a lot about a kid when you have Bama and Michigan going toe-to-toe to get you on their team. 

He's a piece, with Ruiz and hopefully Filiaga, that will finally give us an O-Line that can control the game against anyone. 

Shop Smart Sho…

September 27th, 2017 at 5:14 PM ^

The nice thing is that you know if he's at Cathedral he is getting a quality education. Kids with his athletic ability have options around the city where they could coast if they want to. That school doesn't allow it.

MusicCityMaize

September 27th, 2017 at 8:55 PM ^

Very much agree.  Cathedral is a good quality school.  My son and daughter attend.  I've had the opportunity to see a few Cathedral games, since my son is in the marching band.  Ekiyor moved from LT to C this year.  He is playing hurt and the ankle affects his mobility. 

Jeffersonville was very much overmatched in this game, so it was not a great indication of competition.  Cathedral has played a handful of out-of-state powerhouses earlier this year and held their own in most of them.  So, besides last week's game, he has gone against better competition on Def.  

Zarniwoop

September 27th, 2017 at 8:29 PM ^

Jesus. I'm so glad not to be lining up across from him.

The DLinemen against him didn't even try to rush the passer.

He looks like he needs a college weight and conditioning program, but man is he a specimen.

Don

September 27th, 2017 at 9:18 PM ^

Nobody under the age of 21 should be subjected to that, because the only suitable condition to listen to bagpipes is when you're in the bag yourself.

GRBluefan

September 27th, 2017 at 10:23 PM ^

The most boring film I have ever seen. Half the time he is just standing around doing nothing. Not his fault, since there is nobody to block, but really boring. He is big, though, and when he got to block he moved people as far as he wanted to. And his effort was plus.

arontal

September 28th, 2017 at 1:08 PM ^

Not sure what people can make of this.  

Big dude, kinda fat, not many plays where he has to move much, playing competition where he's 12" taller and outweighs them by 100lbs.  A couple of really nice drive blocks where shoves a DL 15 yards out of the play and not much more.  I would expect anyone with that size discrepancy to make those blocks.