Ideal fits and projections for each SEC QB in the 2021 NFL Draft

Looking into landing spots for Kellen Mond, Kyle Trask, KJ Costello, Feleipe Franks and Mac Jones.

We saw an SEC quarterback drafted at No. 1 overall last year when Joe Burrow was selected by the Cincinnati Bengals in the 2020 NFL Draft.

The conference doesn’t feature a quarterback with quite as much hype surrounding him as Burrow did this time last year, but former Alabama quarterback Mac Jones has been projected as high as No. 3 overall.

Outside of him, there are some prospects at the position who may prove to have great upside if given the proper opportunity.

Here’s a look into the projections and some possible fits for SEC quarterbacks making the jump to the next level in 2021.

Around the SEC: KJ Costello should be garnering more attention after Mississippi State pro day

Costello recently took part in pro days at Mississippi State and San Jose State, recording impressive showings at both.

Former Mississippi State quarterback KJ Costello was one of the most talked-about passers in the SEC heading into the season — even more so after he broke the single-game conference passing record with 623 passing yards against LSU the first game of the season.

But the upward momentum was essentially halted there, as the team struggled through the remainder of a season they finished at 3-7 overall.

Costello missed a total of four weeks during the season due to a concussion and COVID-19 exposure and was replaced by true freshman Will Rogers.

In cases like these, it’s almost commonplace to point blame at the quarterback, but there were several things outside of Costello that factored in.

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Mississippi State didn’t have a complete offseason to transition from an offense based on a running quarterback to one focused on the passing attack, on top of being one of the youngest teams in the conference.

Costello recently took part in pro days at Mississippi State and San Jose State, recording impressive showings at both.

It’s hard to find many flaws in this — Costello is solid on the deep ball, has a nice release, the footwork is good and he throws accurately and with anticipation.

It will be interesting to see where Costello — who has drawn interest from multiple NFL teams — lands when the draft begins on April 29.

He finishes out a four-year career between Stanford and Mississippi State with a completion percentage of 62.9%, 7,434 passing yards, 55 touchdowns and 29 interceptions.

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Around the SEC: Former Mississippi State RB Kylin Hill ready to ‘wake everybody up again’ ahead of 2021 NFL Draft

Former Bulldogs running back Kylin Hill is looking forward to maximizing his potential in the NFL.

Few college running backs have shown the level of playmaking ability and high level of versatility throughout history that former Mississippi State rusher Kylin Hill has.

Hill’s success started at Columbus High School, where he totaled over 3,500 rushing yards and 45 touchdowns. He finished out his career there as a four-star recruit and the sixth-best running back in the 2017 recruiting class.

It didn’t take long for him to become a popular name in college football, either. He recorded a statement season in 2019, considered one of the best players in the Southeastern Conference when he carried the ball 242 times for 1,350 yards and 10 touchdowns, accompanied by 180 receiving yards and one touchdown in the air.

Hill played in the first three games of the 2020 season, catching 23 passes for 237 yards and with 15 carries for 58 yards before opting out for undisclosed reasons.

With the opt-outs that came both ahead of and during the 2020 season also came a sense of amnesia. There were players who stayed and played, emerging and raising their draft stock in eye-catching ways we weren’t expecting to see, causing some to almost forget about the talent of those who chose to stop playing temporarily.

Hill says he recognizes this sense of amnesia and has a simple response to it.

“It’s time for me to wake everybody up again,” he said.

The running back knows what he brings to the table for an NFL team, and is confident in his abilities as one of the best players at his position.

“The simple fact is that I can do it all between the tackles,” he said. “I can split wide with comfort and take advantage of and create mismatches. I believe I’m the best route-runner in this year’s class at my position, but there are plenty of exciting backs within this class.”

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Obviously, the Mississippi State offense underwent a major change with the introduction of the Air Raid, but Hill describes it as a simple switch.

“(The transition to the new offense) was easy,” he said. “I did this before in high school, so I just had to dig back down into my old roots and do whatever was needed to help us succeed.”

Former Bulldogs quarterback KJ Costello commended Hill for his role within the offense over the two games the pair shared a field for together.

“After Week 1, his second-round grade was skyrocketing because he was showing his catch ability,” Costello said.

Since opting out, Hill says he’s spent the time period between then and now to continue training, and feels he’s gotten to know himself even better as a person and an athlete.

Like so many other players going through the extensive process ahead of the draft, Hill says he’s been putting a lot of focus on film study and getting to know the game better, though he feels he has a firm handle on it — as his track record would indicate.

Outside of football, Hill has been a force for change in society as well. People of Mississippi and beyond know he’s more than just a football player because of all his efforts toward social justice.

Hill, who threatened to boycott the 2020 season if Mississippi didn’t change its flag, says he’s happy with the progress society has made against racism. But he still sees more work to be done.

“I’m proud to say we are in a better spot now than what we were years or even just months ago,” he said. “I’m not saying everything is positive. There are still plenty of people out there who are against it all. I plan to stay active in it and hopefully get more involved in it.”

It will be interesting to see where Hill ultimately ends up when the 2021 NFL Draft rolls around in April, and it’s for certain that whichever team snags him will get a thoughtful player who can instantly bring some pop to their ground and passing game.

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Around the SEC: ‘Worldly’ QB KJ Costello brings depth to society, the NFL

KJ Costello is poised to make an impact in the NFL after a season that doesn’t define him as a quarterback.

Imagine projecting a first-round quarterback to the seventh round or pinning him as an undrafted free agent over a small handful of games in the midst of an unprecedented season.

That’s exactly what several analysts did to KJ Costello.

Regardless of what some may think about Costello’s performances in 2020, it’s not a reflection of his ceiling as a quarterback.

“I’m battling the perception of what happened,” Costello said. “What the hell happened? We go for 600 yards, we beat the defending national champions.”

Only that first game of the Mississippi State Bulldogs’ season against LSU is reflective of his actual potential in reality.

Costello was a veteran on a team of players who had only a couple of months to learn a new system under new coaches. The effects of that shone after the victory over LSU.

“We were playing defenses that were begging us to run the football, and that wasn’t our style,” Costello said. “If you’re playing against defenses that are running drop eight, and if you’re not going to run the ball, you have to be really good at sitting in zones and understanding space. We were too immature as a team to do that.”

That’s true, considering Mississippi State had one of the youngest teams in the SEC right next to LSU.

It didn’t help either that Costello contracted COVID-19 and also suffered a concussion during the season, bringing him to a total of four weeks missed. So, in terms of showings deemed to be poor performances, we’re really looking at a very small sample size of games — and certainly not enough to underestimate a player who brings practically all that you’d want in a quarterback to the game in his own right.

If we’re focused on numbers, perhaps what we should be looking at more are things like his 78.8 cumulative grade on dropback passes and his 84.2 true-dropback grade from 2018 at Stanford, along with the traits he brings to the table as an individual.

Costello has found success throwing the ball at all levels of the field, his arm strength is strong. His footwork in the pocket is impressive and he has a strong upper-body rotation with a good range of motion. The signal-called is poised in the pocket with a powerful presence.

His accuracy and ball placement is primarily good, though the stat line reflecting that was somewhat skewed by receivers who couldn’t catch the ball, almost more times than not their fault where interceptions were concerned at Mississippi State.

Costello isn’t the most mobile quarterback, and he won’t buy a team extra yardage for the most point in that area. But he has enough to create space to pass — and the concept of mobility in the modern NFL is something he has thoughts on.

“Trends happen… we’re not really talking about mobility in terms of taking off and running, but in terms of creating space to throw,” Costello said. “These defensive linemen are getting better and better every year, to where the from the snap to the time the ball needs to be out is decreasing. That’s where that trend is stemming from.”

In the short time Costello spent in the South, he made an impression and earned the support of those around him. That’s something running back Kylin Hill won’t hesitate to say.

“I can argue for KJ with anybody,” Hill said. “The man was a hard worker and anybody can vouch for that. It’s more to him than just football. He always checked in on me and constantly texted me with positivity and we’ve had some great conversations. He’s a true brother to me and an excellent leader.”

One of Costello’s high school coaches, Rick Curtis, is confident in his ability to come back from rough circumstances and knows how strong he is as a teammate.

“I think the great thing about KJ is his competitiveness,” Curtis said.
He’s always going to bounce back. I think that’s something, that, if I was an NFL team that I would look strongly at. He brings a lot to the table. He’s a guy that a team rallies around. In everything he does, he’s going to put his heart and soul into it.”

****

If you’ve ever studied the Air Raid offense, you know that it’s more of a philosophy than anything else.

The phrase “attack, attack, attack” is a big part of that, and Hal Mumme introduces that concept to his students very early on. It’s what the entire system is based upon.

Jeff Grady, who coached Costello in high school, can attest to his ability to do just that. Grady says Costello has one of the strongest work ethics he’s ever seen out of a player he’s worked with.

“He’s tenacious, he attacks,” Grady said of Costello. “He’s the kind of guy that’s always in attack mode. He brought us back from some very large deficits. He never quit.”

Being a quarterback who is confident, dominant and aggressive in nature with a quick release is another important element — and Costello brings it to that.

He learns an offense fast, and his already quick release has continuously improved — something you can see if you look at the film from high school to present day.

Things were not always perfect in the Air Raid in the first year Leach introduced it to Mississippi State

“A lot of success the quarterback relies on the pieces outside of him,” Costello said. “We were in an interesting situation of trying to throw the ball against a defense with five underneath defenders and three defenders north of 20 yards deep in terms of the safeties.”

That became more noticeable after Week 1’s success.

“All of the sudden the defensive coordinators are like ‘hey, we’re going to play a prevent defense and force everything to be caught in front of us and if they want to do this the whole game, we don’t believe they will, but if they want to, they’ll just have to dink and dunk and really check it down to their running back the entire game,” Costello said. “If you go back and watch tape, when they play Washington and Cal, they play a very similar defense. They play a 3-4, the will (linebacker) and sam (linebacker) end up dropping out and they’re playing a prevent defense. A lot of times, people play that on third down or the end of a game, and we were seeing that almost 90 percent on snaps, which was insane to be quite honest.”

I’ve never played in a football game where I felt like it was happening in slow motion in terms of defenders weren’t moving… just stretching defenders… when you have five underneath defenders, nobody has to move. They just pass everything off, so we weren’t able to complete anything downfield.”

This isn’t to say the Air Raid doesn’t work — often times it does. There’s almost always someone open to throw to, allowing the team that runs it to drive down the field quickly and aggressively.

“I learned a ton. I learned how to check the ball down. I learned to be efficient, I learned how not to put the ball in danger,” Costello said.

If we created a tidal wave response when people were dropping eight, I think we would have done what we did to LSU to a lot of people,” said. “I think we would have demanded respect. We would have put a lot of pressure on a lot of defenses. We ourselves had a pretty good defense. I haven’t had that good of a defense in a while, so it wasn’t great not being able to support them.”

The West Coast pro-style system Costello played in at Stanford couldn’t have been much more different than the one he adapted to at the helm for the Bulldogs.

The Air Raid is based on repetition and perfecting concepts as opposed to overall complexity.

“I would play a game where I feel like I’m playing a complete game and putting us in a perfect place at Stanford checking from a run to a run or a run to a run to a pass based on the defense’s structure,” he said. “I’d go 19-for-22 for like 200 yards and I felt like I played a perfect game. In the Air Raid, you go 36-for-60 for 600 yards and you can make 15 or 20 not-so-great passes or throw it away or whatever… The intermittent passing game, a lot more preparation and detail. It’s like, the is what these guys are doing, this what they’re playing.’ Leach’s philosophy is more like we’re gonna run 8-10 plays. We’re gonna run it regardless of coverage and we’re gonna do it so much in practice that we’ve kind of built in a response with something we can execute with.”

****

Costello challenges the people around him  — whether you’re a layperson looking at his thoughts on bitcoin, democracy and other things on Twitter or a coach who works with him day in and day out.

Grady recalls this from Costello’s high school days.

“He used to challenge me as his coach,” Grady said. “Not in negative ways, but more of a ‘hey, why are we doing this? What’s the reason behind this?’ He challenges you to think, and he challenges you to have answers.”

Anyone who has spent time around Costello will tell you that he’s an incredibly deep thinker and has a lot of thoughts on a wide range of topics.

“He puts that out there,” Curtis said. “He’s worldly, let’s put it that way.”

“He just has that kind of composure, that confidence. He doesn’t flaunt it, it’s just that he has it. I think it’s something that’s built into him,” Curtis said. “It’s not just football with him. It’s world events, it’s politics. All those kinds of things, he’s going to get involved in. He’s not just a football player.”

Harry Welch, one of Costello’s first coaches, noticed it as well and says his high level of intelligence applies both on and off the field.

“He’s always been very cerebral,” he said. “He went through a very rigorous academic program in high school and then at Stanford. He’s always been someone who, his cerebellum has been an asset.”

Costello has a degree in Political Science from Stanford and had Condoleeza Rice as his advisor and mentor.

But he’s not necessarily interested in going into politics at this point, and perhaps not any point in the near future.

“I’m interested in a lot of things in terms of national security and cybersecurity and things like that,” Costello said. “But that’s side hobbies in terms of what I studied at Stanford. I’m more interested in paying attention… it’s taught me how things actually work in terms of style and function and things like that. I think a lot of people don’t necessarily understand the ties that society is rooted in.

A lot of the stuff I studied at Stanford was the interconnectedness of university, the private sector and the government, which a lot of people don’t necessarily think about how all of those are interconnected.”

Costello says he’s interested in working with a team when his own football career is over.

“I want to play as long as I can and I want to manage a team after I’m done playing,” he said. “That’s the plan. I wouldn’t go straight into politics, that’s for sure, especially with nowadays it’s not my cup of tea right now the way it’s shaken out.”

****

At the end of the day, Costello has a firm sense of who he is as a person and a player.

Going from being projected as one of the most sought-after players in the 2021 NFL Draft to someone who may struggle to get a hard look doesn’t change any of that.

Each of his high school coaches will tell you there’s no reason to believe he can’t be successful at the next level, and that if anything, the way the season ultimately went at Mississippi State just gives him more drive.

“I battled adversity and I played in the SEC. Now I’m more interested in surprising folks along the way.”

Welch puts who Costello is a person and a prospect in perspective better than anyone.

“I think most people will see a guy who is extremely intelligent and wants to play football, who has the physical attributes and a great desire to excel at the next level. I thought he was an outstanding young man, and I think yet, he’s still an unpolished diamond — especially where the NFL is concerned.”

Around the SEC: Don’t count KJ Costello out as a legitimate QB prospect in the 2021 NFL Draft

Here’s a complete breakdown of what a team is getting in the former Stanford signal-caller.

KJ Costello was one of the hottest prospects ahead of the 2020 season for good reason.

He showed just how high his ceiling was when he came into Tiger Stadium and broke the single-game SEC passing record with 623 passing yards against the No. 6 Tigers.

That was good for the 11th most in FBS history and the most-ever in a debut.

Costello was money that game, completing 36-of-60 pass attempts (the most pass attempts in history by a Bulldogs quarterback) with five touchdowns and two interceptions.

It wasn’t long after that Costello seemed to fade into the background, though, as analysts observed what some deemed a sharp decline that included a concussion in Oct. 31’s matchup against Alabama.

Costello still shouldn’t be counted out as a legitimate NFL prospect, though.

Here’s a complete breakdown of what a team is getting in the former Stanford signal-caller:

Pros

Derick E. Hingle-USA TODAY Sports

At 6-foot-5 and 223 pounds, Costello is a larger quarterback prospect. He has strong mechanics and maintains his platform, while rarely ever getting off-balance.

Costello has found success throwing the ball at all levels of the field, and his arm strength is beyond adequate.

The quarterback’s footwork is solid, he has a strong upper-body rotation with a good range of motion. Very poised in the pocket with a powerful presence.

His accuracy and ball placement is generally good, though he has shown inconsistency in both of these areas at times and did have a few blunders at Mississippi State.

Three SEC games that caught our attention on Saturday

Here’s a look into three games that were worth looking at without LSU taking the field in the SEC on Saturday.

It was an unexpected open date for LSU football last weekend, with the matchup against Florida that was supposed to occur Saturday tentatively rescheduled for Dec. 12.

This was a highly anticipated matchup, and one that presented an opportunity for the Tigers to make a statement against the No. 10 team in the country, but there were still other games around the Southeastern conference plenty worth turning attention to, even without LSU taking the field.

Here’s a look into three of those.

Texas A&M 28, Mississippi State 14

Katie Stratman-USA TODAY Sports

Mike Leach’s air raid offense with graduate transfer quarterback K.J. Costello at the helm put the SEC on notice in Week 1, taking down LSU 44-34 on the road as Costello hung 623 yards a defense that clearly needed work.

But the ship seems to be sinking for the signal-caller, who was benched yet again for Will Rogers.

Costello completed 15-of-22 passes for 99 yards and one interception before Rogers was brought in. Rogers completed 15-of-18 passing attempts for 120 yards and one touchdown in relief.

It will be interesting to see how the quarterback situation continues to evolve moving forward, and if the Bulldogs can get their feet under them again.

Cavalcade of Whimsy: It’s the KJ Costello, Mississippi State Show

What I think, know, believe, KJ Costello, and the sample size needed for the College Football Playoff, all in the latest Cavalcade of Whimsy

What I think, know and believe about the college football world, KJ Costello, the Mississippi State offense, and the sample size needed for the College Football Playoff, all in the latest Cavalcade of Whimsy.


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Check out all the past Cavalcades

Sorry if this column sucks, it’s not my fault …

Like LSU, at least it leads the nation in run defense.

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It’s almost as if the Pac-12 plays its game after dark, or something

First question I’ve been asked on every appearance over the last 48 hours: “Can you believe what Mississippi State did to LSU?”

Uhhh, yeah.

America, have you really not seen the Mike Leach offense before?

Of course the 623 yards and five touchdowns put up by KJ Costello in Mississippi State’s stunning 44-34 win at LSU were amazing, but this is what Leach’s teams do.

They put up ungodly numbers.

They take a slew of unnecessary chances when they’re up big in the second half, making games far more interesting than they need to be.

They sort of play defense – but not really – on the way to a 4th-to-6th place conference finish and, God willing, a mid-tier bowl game.

And they play a wacky-fun brand of college football.

But this all seems foreign to a whole lot of SEC fans, as if what happened on Saturday against LSU came from out of nowhere.

Of course it was incredible. Of course Mississippi State fans should be jacked. Of course the win is a big freaking deal. However, LSU really was missing an entire NFL team full of players from last year, including CB Derek Stingley Jr. – possibly the best college football player in America not named Trevor – who only makes all the difference in the world if he wasn’t out sick with non-COVID related issues.

But none of that really matters, especially this year.

How great was that Mississippi State performance? It’s been one of the rock-steady absolutes so far in 2020 is that almost all teams are really, really off to start the season. Without a regular spring practice and with the summer sessions screwed up, almost no one has the timing down.

The timing seemed just super for a Leach offense that’s all about quick reads and precision.

But again, college football, have you not seen this thing before? LSU fans should know the numbers better than anyone else.

Who led the nation in passing last year? Nope – it wasn’t Joe Burrow. It was Washington State’s Anthony Gordon, and he led by a mile averaging a ridiculous 51 more yards per game than Burrow.

Wazzu led the nation in passing in 2019. It led the nation in passing in 2018. Wazzu’s passing game was a disaster in 2017 – it finished second. It totally bottomed out in 2016 – it finished third.

It led the nation in passing in 2015, and 2014, and was fourth in 2013 …

This is what Mike Leach teams do.

The 623 passing yards were crazy – it’s not like this was Oregon State the Bulldogs were facing – but throwing it around the yard 60 times and putting up video game numbers is a day at the office.

And now this experiment gets interesting. As a head coach, Leach has never had the players to work with like he has at Mississippi State.

That doesn’t excuse that he has never taken a team to a conference championship game, much less win one – if you can get to a Power Five championship at Northwestern, or Baylor, or Wake Forest, or Duke … – but now he has the lines, and he has the talent to fit the system.

As if you needed more reasons to watch SEC football …

Oh yes, this will be fun.

Seriously, just how good is Stanford QB Davis Mills?

America, have you really not seen KJ Costello play? My guess is yes.

A little inside baseball stuff here – Stanford being awesome equals pageview and site traffic death.

Over the last two-plus decades, CFN has always covered the Pac-10/Pac-12 with the same sort of analysis and effort of any of the other top conferences, but unless USC is USC, you can actually hear people ignoring the site whenever anything about the league is posted.

Triple that whenever anything is put up about Stanford, even when Andrew Luck was busy being the greatest pro prospect quarterback since John Elway, so it’s not a shocker that Costello needed this LSU game to become a college football name in the SEC world.

Costello was a massive recruit for Stanford in 2016. Jacob Eason was the biggest star quarterback prospect in the class, but Costello wasn’t far behind.

There’s no questioning his size, his arm, his composure, his personality, or his smarts – the guy graduated from Stanford – but he got banged up early last year and wasn’t quite able to come back to form when he was able to go.

Now he’s healthy, and now he’s about to be 2020’s college football big thing.

In 2018 he bombed away for 3,540 yards and 29 touchdowns, torched Leach’s Washington State team for 323 yards and four touchdowns in a wild 41-38 loss, and appeared to be ready to be on the verge of stardom before getting hurt.

Now, he’s the exact right quarterback in the exact right system at the exact right time. No, he’s not Trevor Lawrence, but he might just be the No. 2 quarterback off the board in the 2021 NFL Draft if he can stay healthy and keep this going.

Welcome to college football’s newest superstar, and if he can do that again against Alabama and in wins on a few more national stages, welcome to the lead dog in the 2020 Heisman Trophy race.

Welcome to the KJ Costello, Mississippi State show.

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Great Players About To Go Nuclear: 20 For 2020 Offseason Topics No. 11

20 for 2020, 20 key offseason topics: No. 11 The college football players who are already terrific, but are about to go to another level.

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20 for 2020 key offseason topics: No. 11 The college football players who are already terrific, but are about to go to a whole other level.


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They were among the best players in college football in 2019, but they either flew a bit under the radar or they didn’t become household names. That’s about to change.

The perfect player who fits the description was on last year’s list. Oklahoma State RB Chuba Hubbard is back, but he’s an established superstar. These five are on the verge of being there.

5. QB Sam Howell, Soph. North Carolina

He’s not all that big, and he’s not all that mobile, and he doesn’t have the biggest arm, but as a true freshman, he showed it.

Originally a key part of Willie Taggart’s 2019 Florida State recruiting class, Mack Brown and company swooped in and flipped Howell to be the main man to run the North Carolina offense. In a rebuilding job, the hope was for the true freshman to be ready right away, and then let him work through his mistakes as the team matured and the talent started to come in.

Instead, Howell came out rocking, bombing away for 245 yards and two touchdowns in the season-opening win over South Carolina, and hitting Miami for 274 yards and two scores with no picks in either one.

The Tar Heels won both games, and the season was off and running.

There were a string of losses the middle of the season, but Howell handled himself like a seasoned pro in close game after close game.

There were a few multi-interception games – the two in the loss to Appalachian State were a problem – but he only threw seven picks on the season and had two or more touchdown passes in every game.

He needs to be more consistent, he took a few too many chances, and there were too many misfires in key moments, but for a true freshman to hit 61% of his passes for 3,641 yards and 38 touchdowns with just seven interceptions in his first year, he wasn’t bad.

NEXT: The best pass rusher you probably don’t know, Part 1