Grayson McKeogh
Bio
Recruiting
Scouting Report
Grayson McKeogh is a high-ceiling 6-foot-7, ~294-pound offensive tackle and Notre Dame commit who ranks as a consensus four-star (0.9443 composite), the No. 130 overall prospect, No. 12 OT, and No. 4 player in Pennsylvania. A converted tight end/defensive end with only one year of starting reps at tackle, he pairs elite length and a multi-sport (varsity basketball) athletic profile with significant projection-based upside.
Physical Profile
Prototype left-tackle frame at 6-7 with long arms and a 'framey' build that scouts flag for immense bulking capacity — he is currently carrying ~280-294 pounds on a skeleton that should comfortably hold 315-320 without losing range. His basketball background shows up in rare short-area foot quickness and bend for the height, though the high center of gravity that comes with 6-7 frames creates natural leverage challenges in the run game. Athletically he profiles as a true edge protector rather than an interior mauler.
Play Style
On film he plays like the converted athlete he is: smooth and comfortable in his pass sets, kicking and mirroring rushers with light feet rather than overpowering them. He's at his best in space — pulling, climbing, and reaching — where his quickness lets him cover ground few tackles his size can. In the phone booth he is still developing; he wins more with positioning and length than with violent, sustained drive. The tape is that of a tools-and-traits prospect whose floor is raised by clean technique in protection and whose ceiling depends on physical maturation.
Strengths
- Natural, flat-backed pass protector who mirrors well around the arc — the most projectable trait for a future Power-conference tackle and the foundation of his high evaluation
- Outstanding short-area foot quickness for a 6-7 frame, allowing him to travel in the run game, reach defenders, and climb to the second level (a direct carryover from his varsity basketball background)
- Demonstrates real grip strength and pop in his hands as a puller and climber, plus valuable two-way experience from his time at defensive end that gives him an understanding of pass-rush angles
Areas to Improve
- Drive blocking in a phone booth — feet can get stuck in the ground when asked to plow defenders in the power run game; needs to learn to sustain and finish rather than rely on initial quickness
- Anchor and leverage versus inside power — his higher center of gravity makes him vulnerable when bull-rushed; adding functional lower-body mass and refining pad level/hand timing are the priorities, as is general technical consistency given only one season at the position
College Projection
Likely a developmental redshirt or rotational year one at Notre Dame while he adds 20-30 pounds of functional mass and absorbs college strength/technique coaching. Profiles as a multi-year starter at tackle by his second or third season, with the versatility to kick inside to guard for early depth. His 4.14 GPA and football IQ suggest he'll pick up scheme quickly; the limiting factor is purely physical development, not aptitude.
NFL Outlook
A genuine NFL Draft candidate on the strength of his length, pass-set fluidity, and athletic profile — exactly the developmental tackle archetype that hits late on Day 3 and beyond. Current realistic projection is a Day 3 (Rounds 4-7) ceiling that could rise meaningfully if he maxes out his frame and proves he can anchor versus power, given he's nowhere near his physical or technical peak as a one-year tackle.
Best Fit
A pro-style or zone-heavy running scheme that lets him use his foot quickness in space (reach blocks, pulls, second-level climbs) rather than a downhill, gap-power offense that would expose his current drive-blocking limitations. A patient, development-focused offensive line room — like the one he chose at Notre Dame — that can redshirt him, build his lower body, and let his protection skills carry him to an eventual tackle starting role is the ideal landing spot.
Player Comparison
Garrett entered college as a highly-rated multi-positional athlete at 6'4" 270 lbs with elite recruiting pedigree, similar to this prospect's 6'7" 275 lb frame and top-130 ranking. Both were versatile defensive prospects who could play multiple positions along the defensive line, with exceptional athleticism for their size that made them coveted recruits despite some positional uncertainty early in their development.