Adam Guthrie

Bio

Height 6'7"
Weight 285 lbs
Hometown Washington Court House, OH
High School Miami Trace
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#287 National
0.9083 Rating

Scouting Report

A
91 / 100 Ceiling 91 • Floor 83
year 1 contributor NFL Rd 5

Adam Guthrie is a 6-foot-7, 285-pound four-star offensive tackle and Clemson signee who ranks as a top-300 national prospect (No. 287, 0.9083 composite) and a consensus top-20 OT in the 2026 class. A high-upside, length-and-frame tackle prospect who picked the Tigers over Ohio State and Georgia, he profiles as a developmental left tackle with the rare measurables and dual-sport athleticism programs covet on the edge.

Physical Profile

Guthrie checks every box for the tackle position with prototype length at 6-7 and a frame that comfortably carries 285 pounds with significant room to add 25-30 more without losing mobility. The height and arm length give him the wingspan to wall off edge rushers and recover against speed-to-power. As a multi-year varsity basketball player, he shows the loose hips, foot quickness, and body control in space that don't always come with a frame this size — that hardwood athleticism is the single biggest reason his pass-protection ceiling outpaces most tackles his height, who often play tall and stiff.

Play Style

Guthrie plays like a frame-and-length tackle who controls reps with his reach and recovery rather than overwhelming power. In the run game he gets movement and finishes, fitting a downhill, gap/zone-heavy scheme that asked his line to mash defenders for nearly 3,800 yards. In pass pro he uses his length to set the edge early and his basketball footwork to mirror, kick-sliding to protect the corner. He has two-way experience (also played defensive line), which shows up as competitiveness and motor. The tape is more 'high-ceiling projection' than 'finished product' — he wins on tools and effort against the level of competition he faced.

Strengths

  • Elite length and frame for the position (6-7, 285) with a build that translates directly to an SEC/ACC left tackle body, exactly the imposing pass-protection wall Matt Luke's room values
  • Run-blocking production and finish: anchored a Miami Trace line that produced 3,723 rushing yards and 48 rushing TDs as a senior, demonstrating he can sustain blocks and create movement at the point of attack
  • Pass-protection reliability and basketball-bred athleticism — charged with zero sacks allowed by his staff in 2025, and his hoops background shows up in lateral slide quickness, knee bend, and balance in space

Areas to Improve

  • Functional strength and play weight — at 285 on a 6-7 frame he needs an extended college strength program to anchor against college-caliber bull rushes and avoid getting walked back; mass addition is priority one
  • Pad level and hand technique — tall tackles tend to play upright and lose leverage; he must consistently sink his hips, strike with timing, and refine hand placement/reset rather than relying on length and reach against weaker high school competition

College Projection

Likely a redshirt-and-develop tackle who spends Year 1 adding mass and refining technique in the weight room before competing for swing-tackle depth in Years 2-3. With his length he profiles primarily as a left tackle, though his frame and experience playing both sides give Clemson flexibility at either spot. Realistic timeline to a starting role is years two-to-three, contingent on strength development; the physical ceiling is a multi-year starter and potential all-conference performer.

NFL Outlook

Carries legitimate developmental NFL traits — the 6-7 frame, length, and basketball-driven movement skills are exactly what pro scouts project at left tackle. Draft outcome will hinge entirely on functional strength gains and technical refinement against ACC/SEC edge rushers over his college career. If the development curve holds, he profiles as a Day 2-3 draftable tackle with mid-round upside; a true top-tier outcome would require him to translate the length and athleticism into consistent, leveraged power at the next level.

Best Fit

A run-first or balanced pro-style program that will redshirt him, invest in his frame, and develop his hand technique over time — precisely the Matt Luke-coached Clemson offensive line he committed to. A zone-and-gap rushing scheme that lets him use his movement skills, paired with a patient developmental timeline, maximizes a high-ceiling tackle who is being recruited on projection as much as present production.

Player Comparison

Myles Garrett Texas A&M • Cleveland Browns 82% match

Both prospects share elite physical dimensions at 6'7" 285 lbs with exceptional athletic ability that translates to dominant play despite limited early exposure. Garrett was similarly rated as a blue-chip recruit (#287 national ranking mirrors Garrett's high-but-not-elite recruiting ranking) who possessed rare size-speed combination and versatility that made evaluators project significant upside potential even when his technique was still developing.