Marek Jin

Bio

Height 6'3"
Weight 285 lbs
Hometown Exeter, NH
High School Phillips Exeter Academy
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#446 National
0.8916 Rating

Scouting Report

B+
89 / 100 Ceiling 89 • Floor 81
year 1 contributor NFL Rd 5

Marek Jin is a 6-foot-3/4, 285-295 lb interior offensive lineman (primary guard, position-flex to center) from Phillips Exeter Academy and a Boston College commit. Carrying a 0.8916 composite and a top-450 national grade, he profiles as a high-floor, power-based blocker whose wrestling pedigree—a former D.C. heavyweight state champion—shows up in his leverage, hand placement, and finishing demeanor.

Physical Profile

Jin has a prototypical interior frame: a thick, well-distributed 285-295 lbs on a 6-3/6-4 build with a low, naturally leveraged base that plays to his advantage in the phone-booth. His heavyweight-wrestling background is the headline trait—elite hip explosion out of a stance, hand-fighting fluency, and the balance to anchor against bull rush. He is not a length-and-twitch space athlete; his game is built on functional strength and a low pad level rather than elite arm length or recovery quickness, which is exactly the athletic profile that translates inside rather than at tackle.

Play Style

A throwback gut-of-the-line mauler. On film he is at his best in a downhill, gap/power run scheme where he can fire off low, generate movement with his hips, and wall off or drive defenders—his wrestling base makes him difficult to dislodge and dangerous as a finisher to the ground. In pass protection he sets with a wide, sturdy anchor and rarely gives ground to bull rush. The tendency to watch is over-aggression: a wrestler's instinct to lunge and chase the pin can pull him off balance against rushers who counter, so his game is built on controlled punch-and-anchor rather than reach-and-run.

Strengths

  • Leverage and anchor: wrestling-trained hips and hand placement let him sink, win the pad-level battle, and stonewall power inside—the single most projectable trait for a college guard
  • Finishing motor: scouting evals consistently flag a high motor and willingness to play through the whistle, burying defenders once he latches—a demeanor that holds up against elite competition (#1-ranked player in New Hampshire)
  • Footwork for a power blocker: reported clean footwork on both run and pass downs, plus center experience, giving him the snap-and-step coordination and scheme versatility to play three interior spots

Areas to Improve

  • Recovery athleticism in space: pulling, reaching the second level, and mirroring quick interior twitch/stunts will test his lateral agility—he must prove he can climb and adjust on the move, not just win at the point of attack
  • Competition level and pass-pro polish: New England prep ball means he'll need to refine independent hand usage and counter-move recognition against the speed-to-power and inside-counter rushers he'll see in the ACC

College Projection

Classic developmental-but-high-floor interior lineman for Boston College. Expect a redshirt/early-rotation timeline as he adds upper-body mass and refines pass sets against ACC-caliber 3-techniques, then competes for a starting guard or center job by Year 2-3. His positional flexibility and anchor make him the kind of dependable interior starter BC's pro-style, run-first identity is built on.

NFL Outlook

A long-term, developmental NFL projection rather than an early-round trajectory. The leverage, motor, and wrestling-rooted anchor are legitimately draftable traits for an interior lineman, but the route is multi-year: he'll need to prove space mobility and pass-pro refinement against top-tier competition in college before a late-round/priority-free-agent guard/center profile crystallizes. Floor as a developmental swing-interior body is real; ceiling depends on athletic testing and how the lateral quickness develops.

Best Fit

A pro-style, run-first program that majors in gap/power and duo concepts—which makes Boston College a clean schematic match. He maximizes in an offense that asks him to fire downhill and anchor inside rather than one built on heavy zone-stretch and second-level reach blocks, where his power and leverage are assets and his lateral range is less exposed.

Player Comparison

Zach Allen Boston College • Denver Broncos 82% match

Allen entered college at 6'4" 285 lbs with positional versatility between DE and DT, similar to this prospect's size and undefined role. Both came from strong academic backgrounds (Allen from a prep-focused high school program) with 4-star ratings around the #400-500 national range, suggesting solid but not elite recruiting profiles with room for positional development.