Hudson Parliament
Bio
Recruiting
Scouting Report
Hudson Parliament is a four-star interior offensive lineman and the consensus No. 1 prospect in South Dakota's 2026 class, ranked the No. 19 IOL nationally (#331 overall, 0.9026 composite). A two-time All-State pick and the 2024 South Dakota Gatorade Player of the Year, he chose Iowa over Big Ten and Big 12 offers including Minnesota, Iowa State, Kansas and Kansas State. He projects as a power-scheme guard with a rare athletic-testing profile for his size.
Physical Profile
At a thick, well-distributed 6-foot-4, 320 pounds, Parliament carries Power Five interior mass already and tested as an elite mover at the Riggs Combine: a 5.0 forty, 10-foot broad jump and 4.56 pro-agility are exceptional explosion and lateral numbers for a 320-pounder. The weight-room base is verified power — 650 deadlift, 550 squat, 325 clean — which shows up as functional drive strength, not just bulk. The 6-4 frame plays slightly short for tackle, which is exactly why his measurables and bend funnel him inside to guard, where his squat-anchored leverage and short-area burst are positional pluses rather than concerns.
Play Style
Parliament is a downhill, mauling run-blocker who finishes — the pancake total isn't an accident, it's a temperament. On film he generates real movement at the point of attack, climbs to the second level with the athleticism his testing suggests, and uses his wrestling base to stay attached and torque defenders to the ground. In pass protection he's more of a sit-and-anchor blocker than a refined technician, relying on grip strength, base and recovery quickness rather than polished footwork. He also logged snaps on defense (22 tackles), underscoring his motor and versatility.
Strengths
- Documented play strength and finish — 97 pancakes as a junior with a 650-lb deadlift and 550-lb squat; he plays through the whistle and consistently puts defenders on the ground in the run game
- Pass-pro reliability against his level of competition — surrendered zero sacks as a junior anchoring an 11-1 state finalist, showing a sturdy anchor and the hand resets to recover
- Rare lower-body athleticism for the position (5.0 forty, 4.56 pro-agility, 10-ft broad) plus a wrestling background that translates directly to hand-fighting, balance, leverage and the ability to mirror and re-anchor
Areas to Improve
- Hand technique and usage — his own HS staff notes he's still learning to place and reset his hands; he wins now partly on raw power and will need cleaner punch timing and inside hand placement against college DL
- Level of competition and body control — South Dakota Class AAA is a step below national talent, and coaches note he's still 'learning how to move his body,' so pad level, knee bend out of his stance, and play-to-play consistency need refinement against faster interior rushers
College Projection
Classic Iowa-style developmental interior O-lineman: a redshirt-then-develop guard who spends his first 1-2 years adding strength and refining hand technique in a strength-centric program, with a realistic path to a two-deep role by Year 2 and a multi-year starter at guard by Years 3-4. Center is a possible cross-train given his intelligence and coachability. His floor is high because the strength, motor and frame are already college-ready; the timeline hinges on technical polish.
NFL Outlook
Developmental NFL guard upside rather than a projected early-round lock. The athletic-testing profile (size-adjusted explosion and agility) and verified weight-room power are the kind of traits that earn late-round/priority-free-agent looks if the technique catches up to the tools after three or four years of Power Five coaching. The ceiling is a draftable interior lineman; the more likely outcome is a quality multi-year college starter with a camp invite.
Best Fit
A downhill, gap/power-zone running scheme that asks guards to drive-block and pull — Iowa is a near-ideal landing spot. He fits a strength-and-development program that will let him redshirt, refine hands and pad level, and lean on his wrestling-based leverage and explosive lower half in a physical, run-first identity rather than a finesse outside-zone or pass-heavy spread system.
Player Comparison
Johnson was a 6'4", 314-pound defensive tackle who was similarly ranked as a mid-level 4-star recruit (#340 nationally) from a smaller market (Galloway, NJ). Like this prospect, he had strong fundamentals and work ethic that translated well to major college football, becoming a reliable starter and eventual NFL draft pick despite not being an elite blue-chip recruit.