Jamaree Salyer NFL Draft Prospect Profile and Scouting Report

NFL Prospect Profile: Jamaree Salyer, OL, Georgia

Name: Jamaree Salyer

School: University of Georgia

Year: Sr

Position: Offensive Lineman

Measurables: 6’4”, 325 lbs.

 

General Info:

Born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, Jamaree Salyer was born to be a Bulldog. He attended Pace Academy, where he was an All-American offensive guard his senior year. The five-star recruit was the 8th overall ranked prospect in his class and the highest ranked offensive lineman. He rejected offers from schools like Alabama, Ohio State, and Clemson to play for the Bulldogs in Athens, Georgia, just over one hour from home. Salyer was an instant contributor upon arriving in Athens. He played in 26 of Georgia’s 28 games in his first two seasons at Georgia, including multiple starting assignments at right tackle as well as game action at center. As a full-time starter in his junior and senior seasons, Salyer played left tackle as well as both guard positions. He received 2nd Team All-SEC honors for his senior season which also culminated in a national championship. Jamaree declared for the NFL Draft on January 15th and has since been training in Pensacola, Florida alongside fellow prospective draftees.

 

Positional Skills:

Strengths

Salyer’s physical gifts jump off the screen when evaluating his film. His height does not tell the entire story of his length; his wingspan is 80 inches. This will undoubtedly benefit him in pass protection, allowing him to beat NFL defenders to the punch. Weighing in at 325 pounds, he is often able to overpower his opponents at the line of scrimmage. His powerful punch is matched by his impressive hand control, allowing him to seal off defensive lineman and open holes for his running back. A smart player with a great feel for the game, he always appears in control. Jamaree Salyer is a versatile lineman who took snaps at all five positions of the offensive line during his tenure at Georgia.

 

Weaknesses

Balance and flexibility are Salyer’s biggest weaknesses on the football field. He loses his footing on occasion and is unable to bend well. This combination caused him to give up the outside edge to athletic edge defenders at the left tackle position. Salyer often stands up immediately out of his stance, giving up his leverage. He also struggles at times with his footwork on pass sets. While they never sidelined him for an entire season, injuries are a concern for some with Salyer, as he suffered multiple throughout his time at Georgia.

 

Fit with the Packers:

Green Bay’s front office places heavy value on prospects’ RAS (Relative Athletic Score). Salyer only tested for bench press (31 reps), but his raw physical gifts would certainly grab the attention of a team that places such stock in athletic ability. It should come as no surprise that the Packers met with Salyer in late March. The Packers value versatility as a key asset of their offensive linemen as well; there is no lineman more versatile than Salyer in this draft class. His ability to play all five positions on the offensive line would provide Green Bay with much-needed depth up front. Green Bay may view his versatility as more of a necessity than a luxury given the injury status of Elgton Jenkins and David Bakhtiari, so it is possible he fills in along the left side of the line early in the season. If he is a starter throughout the entire season, however, it will likely be at right guard or right tackle. Following the departure of Billy Turner, Green Bay will look to replace the “Swiss Army knife” of their offensive line. The Packers may turn to Jamaree Salyer to fill this void on Day 2 of the NFL Draft.

 

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Comments (13)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
stockholder's picture

April 20, 2022 at 02:57 pm

No problem. Lots of depth at Ot in this draft.

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BirdDogUni's picture

April 20, 2022 at 03:06 pm

Sounds like he was born to be a Falcon too. Falcons need OL for sure.

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Leatherhead's picture

April 21, 2022 at 08:08 am

I like this guy. I regularly select him on Day 2 in my simulations, often in the third round.

This is a guy who started in the SEC as a freshman. Here's his floor: He's good enough to start on the offensive line in the toughest conference in college football, and he played well enough to win the National Championship. He has actually played all five positions, a testament to his versatility. So that's his floor.

If he didn't have some flaws, he'd be going in the Top 5. But this guy is clearly a Day Two pick who will start in the NFL.

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LLCHESTY's picture

April 20, 2022 at 05:11 pm

I don't see them drafting a guy that struggles with lateral movement. Seems like the typical Georgia plodder that needs to go to a power/gap team. Packers like guys that run the agilities tests well.

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jannes bjornson's picture

April 20, 2022 at 08:59 pm

He fits the Ravens scheme.

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Duneslick's picture

April 20, 2022 at 07:51 pm

When they dont test at the combine and are healthy it is hiding that they won't test well

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LLCHESTY's picture

April 20, 2022 at 09:50 pm

It's more and more guys every year. I'd bet it's the agents telling them not to run. Right now it's probably a gamble worth taking. TE Jalen Wydermyer was considered a 2nd or 3rd rounder before the combine and pro days, now he'll be lucky to get drafted before the 7th round. Ran over a 5 second 40 and had a 25.5" vertical and 9 foot broad jump. Ended up with a RAS of one. If he didn't do anything he probably slides but not that far.

I'm sure the players run the test a couple weeks before the combine and if they put up a bad number or two the agents tell them skip it until the pro day if not altogether.

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Leatherhead's picture

April 21, 2022 at 08:12 am

IMO, teams base their evaluation on what they see on the film, and the interviews with the player, his coaches, etc. Running 40 yards in your underwear doesn't have a lot to do with your football ability, particularly when you're talking about an OL.

The combine is an opportunity to measure and weigh guys. I don't think our personnel people are making decisions about players based on what they did at the combine.

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MarkinMadison's picture

April 20, 2022 at 09:29 pm

The 5-position player is always going to get attention in Green Bay. You won't mistake him for Bakh. He has some movement skills but I don't think that is what he is best at. I think he is a RT or G. I'm not really sold on him. I like Waletzko better.

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jannes bjornson's picture

April 21, 2022 at 11:44 am

Goedert will be moving up boards. Central Michigan.

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LambeauPlain's picture

April 21, 2022 at 08:06 am

Looked to be a fine prospect, however:

When a 5 star recruit, the 8th best player at his position in the nation, goes to one of the top programs in the country and the best he can finally achieve is 2nd team all SEC as a senior, it gives me pause.

When a supposed athletic OLineman doesn't test his athletic traits...more pause.

Then you dig in and read he has a foot injury last year and missed games to go along with other nagging injuries that may have affected his play...pause until the 4th round.

He hasn't put it together and you wonder if he will. There will be several OL prospects in the 2nd who have put it all together in college.

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Leatherhead's picture

April 21, 2022 at 11:13 am

"The best he can do......."

Come on, man. The SEC is the toughest, most talented conference in college football. By your standard, only a first team SEC guy is better. That's grading on a pretty tough curve.

Consensus has him at #74. Thehuddlereport, which has done a great job for 20 years, has him a little lower at #84. He's a Day Two offensive lineman, just like Kinnard and Lucas, and Rhyan and several others. He's not going to fall to Day 3.

Mark in Madison is 100% correct when he talks about versatility. This is a guy who could fill in at a lot of places and that's attractive. I think Jenkins is our LT of the future, and Myers is our starting center. Runyan has done well at LG. My plan would be to play him at RT and use Nijman to backup/rest Bakhtiari, who is probably going to need days off of practice at a minimum.

Given that we don't pick on the second day until #53, I'm assuming the very top guys will be gone. Zion Johnson and Kenyon Greene will be probably be on the board at the start of the day but they'll go quickly.

When our turn comes, we're likely looking at a pool of offensive linemen that includes

Tyler Smith, Bernhard Raimann, Dylan Parham, Daniel Faalele, Abraham Lucas, Darrien Kinnard, Cole Strange, Sean Rhyan, Jamaree Salyer, Ed Ingram. Petite-Frere. Some of these will undoubtedly be gone at #53, but for the most part, this is what we're looking at as far as Top 100 offensive linemen. I'd like two in this draft.

Every one of these guys has something that makes them imperfect, but they're all going to start games in the league if they stay healthy. There's things they don't do well, but there are things they do very well, and that's why you have coaching and practice.

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jannes bjornson's picture

April 21, 2022 at 03:43 pm

Both he and Shaffer were All -SEC. I like Shaffer better.

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