Dre Pollard

Bio

Height 6'0"
Weight 175 lbs
Hometown Las Vegas, NV
High School Clark
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#318 National
0.9034 Rating

Scouting Report

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

Dre Pollard is a four-star athlete (No. 318 nationally, No. 19 ATH, No. 3 in Nevada per the 247Sports Composite at 0.9034) out of Clark High School in Las Vegas who signed with Stanford after flipping from Washington on Signing Day. A genuine three-way contributor with elite, verified track speed, Pollard is one of the most versatile prospects in the West, holding offers at running back, receiver, and cornerback.

Physical Profile

Listed at 6-0, 175 pounds, Pollard has a lean, wiry sprinter's frame that will need 15-20 pounds of college mass regardless of where he lands positionally. His athleticism is the headline trait and it is not projection — it is documented: 4A Nevada state titles in the 100 (10.85), 200 (21.99), and 400 (48.50), plus multiple sub-10.7 100m clockings including a 10.61. That 400m title is the underrated tell, signaling rare speed endurance and recovery ability that translates to playing all three phases without fatigue drop-off. He pairs verified top-end speed with the initial quickness to threaten edges immediately, a combination that explains the cross-position offer sheet.

Play Style

Pollard plays fast and decisive, using initial burst to win the edge and top-end speed to finish — his 1,847 all-purpose yards as a junior and balanced 650/727 rush-receive split as a senior show a player who is a weapon the moment the ball is in his hands. On film he wins with acceleration and angles rather than power, threatening to take any touch the distance. Defensively, his four interceptions reflect a player who trusts his speed to play downhill on the ball and recover when beaten. He is a space player and stressor first — get him a seam, a return lane, or a route into open grass and his straight-line gear changes the math.

Strengths

  • Elite, track-verified speed — 10.61 100m and a 48.50 400m title give him both home-run top-end and the speed endurance to separate late in routes and pull away in the open field; this is true 4.4-or-better game speed, not a forty-yard projection
  • Rare three-phase versatility backed by production: as a senior he posted 650 rushing and 727 receiving yards with 14 total TDs on offense while adding 29 tackles and four interceptions at corner — the four picks show real ball skills and instincts on defense, not just an athlete hiding on that side
  • High-end return value (467 kick-return yards, 350 punt-return yards) that gives him an immediate special-teams role and roster floor at the next level while he develops a primary position

Areas to Improve

  • Needs to add functional mass and play strength to his 175-pound frame — at the college level the lean build will be tested in press coverage at corner, in pass protection and inside-run contact at RB, and against physical jams at receiver
  • Position must be defined and refined; spreading reps across RB/WR/CB in high school means his route tree, coverage technique, and positional fundamentals are all less developed than a single-position specialist's, so technique catch-up is the key early-career task

College Projection

Expect Stanford to settle him at a single primary position early — most likely slot receiver or cornerback, where his speed and ball skills are highest-leverage — while he contributes immediately as a kick/punt returner. Realistic timeline is a return/special-teams and rotational role as a freshman, with a path to a starting job by Year 2-3 once he adds mass and locks in position-specific technique. His athletic ceiling is clearly Power-conference starter caliber; the variable is how quickly the developmental refinement catches up to the tools.

NFL Outlook

As a four-star with documented elite, sub-10.7 sprint speed and demonstrated two-way ball skills, Pollard carries legitimate Day 2-3 NFL upside if he converts cleanly to a single position — most plausibly as a press-man corner or a vertical slot, with a special-teams gunner/return floor that pro teams value. The draftable scenario hinges on adding strength and proving positional polish over raw athleticism; the speed and the four-interception ball production are exactly the traits that translate, but he is a tools-and-trajectory projection at this stage, not a finished product.

Best Fit

A program that embraces positional flexibility and plays in space — which makes the Stanford landing spot reasonable, though his ceiling is highest in a scheme that weaponizes speed: a spread/vertical offense that isolates him in the slot, or a man-heavy defense that lets a long-speed corner play press and trail. Either way, a developmental staff willing to commit him to one position and build a strength base will maximize a prospect whose athletic floor is already among the best in the West.

Player Comparison

Julian Edelman Kent State • New England Patriots 78% match

Similar compact frame at 6'0" 175 lbs with elite football IQ and versatility that likely drives the high ranking despite unknown position. Both prospects demonstrate the type of intangibles and competitive traits that separate them from physically similar players, with Edelman's college success coming from his route-running precision and clutch performance rather than elite physical measurables.