Andrew Trout

Bio

Height 6'6"
Weight 295 lbs
Hometown Cold Spring, MN
High School Rocori
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#385 National
0.8967 Rating

Scouting Report

A
90 / 100 Ceiling 90 • Floor 82
year 1 contributor NFL Rd 5

Andrew Trout is a 4-star offensive tackle from Rocori High School (Cold Spring, MN) and the cornerstone of Minnesota's 2026 class, committing as an in-state sophomore less than two weeks after P.J. Fleck's offer. A long, heavy-framed left tackle prospect (6-6/6-7, 285-300 lbs, 6-9 wingspan) with a 0.8967 composite ranking him a consensus top-25 OT nationally, he projects as a future Big Ten blindside protector whose biggest question is durability after two junior-year foot fractures.

Physical Profile

Trout carries prototype left tackle length on a frame that has grown from 6-6/285 to a reported 6-7/300 without losing functional movement, and the 6-9 wingspan is the headline trait — it gives him the reach to engulf edge rushers and recover when his hands land late. His mass is already at a Big Ten baseline, but the build still reads as ascending rather than finished, with room to add lower-body and core strength as he fills out. The length-plus-frame combination is exactly why analysts like Mike Roach said he 'looks like a Big Ten tackle already'; the trait profile is squarely an outside-the-numbers fit at left tackle rather than a projection inside to guard.

Play Style

Trout is a pass-protection-first left tackle whose game is built on length, patience, and clean kick-slide footwork rather than mauling. The 'no sacks allowed' production reflects a prospect who wins with positioning and reach — getting his hands inside, mirroring speed off the edge, and using his wingspan to neutralize counters. The 69 pancakes show he can be a finisher when he gets movement, but his profile leans more toward the technically reliable, blindside-protecting archetype than a road-grading down-blocker. He plays with the demeanor scouts described as 'big and menacing,' which paired with his frame gives him a high floor as a pass blocker.

Strengths

  • Elite length and wingspan (6-9) for the position — reach lets him lock out and steer edge rushers, and recover in pass pro when initial leverage is lost
  • Proven pass-protection production: started 13 games as a sophomore with 69 pancakes and zero sacks allowed, signaling rare technical maturity and anchor for his age
  • High-major frame and growth trajectory already at a Big Ten weight baseline (300 lbs), plus the football-IQ/footwork to be invited to the Nike Next Ones camp against elite national competition

Areas to Improve

  • Durability — broke the fifth metatarsal in his left foot twice during his junior year; staying healthy through a full senior season and proving the foot holds up to the demands of LT footwork is the No. 1 box to check
  • Play strength and lower-body development — like most young, tall tackles he needs to add functional power in the run game to anchor against college bull rushers and finish reps through the whistle rather than relying on length

College Projection

Developmental redshirt as a true freshman is the likeliest path, using a year in a Big Ten strength program to add the lower-body mass and play strength his frame is asking for. With his length and pass-pro foundation, he profiles as a multi-year starter at left tackle by his redshirt sophomore or junior year, and the early commitment plus three-plus years in Fleck's program should let Minnesota develop him on its own timeline rather than rushing him onto the field.

NFL Outlook

As a consensus top-25 OT in the class with the length, frame, and pass-protection traits NFL teams covet at left tackle, Trout has a legitimate Day 2-3 developmental draftable ceiling if his trajectory continues and the foot durability is fully resolved. The wingspan and clean pass sets are the kind of measurables that travel; the swing factors are sustained health and adding the play strength to hold up against pro-caliber power rushers, which will determine whether he lands as a drafted starter or a depth/swing-tackle profile.

Best Fit

A pro-style or zone-leaning Big Ten program that protects with length and footwork over pure power — which is exactly the Minnesota fit he committed to. Fleck's culture-and-development model maximizes a long-runway prospect like Trout: a patient strength program to build his anchor, a left-tackle-friendly pass-pro scheme that leverages his reach, and a roster timeline that lets him redshirt and ascend without being thrown in early.

Player Comparison

Teven Jenkins Oklahoma State • Chicago Bears 82% match

Jenkins shared a nearly identical physical profile at 6'6" 295 lbs coming out of high school and was similarly ranked as a solid 4-star prospect outside the elite tier. Like this prospect, Jenkins had the size and frame to project as either an offensive tackle or defensive end in college, with his ranking suggesting strong fundamentals and athleticism that would translate well regardless of final position designation.