2022 Season
INT
0
PD
0
TACK
21
TD
0
Prospect Summary
Joey Porter Jr. NFL Draft Scouting Report
CB, Penn State Nittany Lions
Penn State cornerback Joey Porter Jr. projects as an impact defender in the NFL. This is a player with surreal length and physicality on the outside and I thought he took some massive strides in 2022 by becoming a more consistent coverage defender. His leap in play and functional athleticism catapult him into the upper echelon of prospects for the 2023 NFL Draft.
Originally a 4-star recruit, Porter Jr. is the son of longtime NFL sack artist Joey Porter. Porter Jr. played his high school football at western Pennsylvania powerhouse North Allegheny High School and committed to Penn State as the fourth-best recruit in the state for the class of 2019. He appeared in four games as a true freshman before redshirting in 2019 and has been a starter ever since, starting during the 2020 COVID-19-shortened season. His play peaked in 2022 as the team’s Most Valuable Defensive Player and a second-team All-American by many outlets.
Porter Jr. might be the longest cornerback you’ve ever seen. He’s got incredible reach and influence inside the contact window and at the line of scrimmage. I really appreciated the growth he showed in 2022 with his patience in that area as well; he trusted his footwork and his length to disrupt releases and force receivers to work into their stem with lateral displacement. The pop in his hands in press is significant and further helped to bubble landmarks. Porter Jr. offers effective tackling and a massive tackling radius at the catch point as well, showing plenty of juice as a striker in run support or when he’s recognizing quick game to the flats and able to shoot past blocks from skill players.
He had some crazy dominant stretches of tape this season and was rarely tested in coverage after the season opener against Purdue, in which he broke up six passes and nearly jumped an out route in zone coverage for a near interception. His ability to play around the frame of receivers and extend for the football is pretty rare and offers him plenty of value as a lockdown option or in zone. Vertically, he moves well in transition when he’s got hands on receivers and it is impressive to watch him flip his hips and carry routes. He can go stride for stride and squeeze his man outside the red line. He appeared comfortable in a series of roles, too. Penn State bumped their shell at times and we caught some glimpses of Porter Jr. as a high-post safety in deep zones against closed formations if prompted by shifts or motions and he was capable of handling those assignments and hawking deep in coverage as a back-end option. Football intelligence appears to be a strength that could afford him opportunities in multiple systems.
That said, I don’t believe that Porter Jr. is necessarily a universal prospect. If you charge him with playing off a fair amount, I think it can pose some problems in mirroring at the top or routes or triggering on quick game. He’s a high-hipped, leggy player who can have some lag in transitional quickness if he’s playing in space. Off-man isn’t where Porter Jr. is going to win and if you’re looking to play him in Cover 3, asking him to half-turn or play as the ‘Cloud’ cornerback would accentuate his strengths better than asking him to pedal and play soft zone over the top. I like that alternative as well, as block deconstruction in spite of his length was an area I thought he still stands to grow in. There’s no reason he can’t ace this dynamic of the position but playing him in deep thirds or in press-man to carry will remove some of the strain of run support. Additionally, I thought there were a handful of times where he was a little too far upfield and forced to grab to gear down and feel breaks from receivers when playing in phase, which some officials may be quick to call for defensive holding. Some will mention his ball production (one interception) as a question mark but I accredit that to how little he got targets in the passing game.
Expectations for Porter Jr. are going to be rooted firmly in where he lands from a system perspective. Press-man teams will get the most value out of him but I see a world where he’s impactful in deep third coverage as a Cover-3-heavy zone corner as well. In either outcome, this is a day-one starter for an NFL defense.
Top Reasons to Buy In:
- Prototypical length and then some to play press-man on the perimeter
- Excellent ball skills at the catch point
- Significant growth in press technique and footwork in 2022
- Height/weight/speed athlete at a premier position
Top Reasons For Concern:
- High-hipped frame can lead to some tightness in transition
- Perimeter block deconstruction in run support can improve
- Scheme-specific talent
Size (NFL Combine):
Height: 6′ 2 1/2”
Weight: 193 lbs
Arm Length: 34”
Hand Size: 10”
Athletic Testing (NFL Combine):
40-yard Dash: 4.46s
Vertical Jump: 35”
Broad Jump: 10′ 9”
Short-Shuttle: TBD
Three-Cone: TBD
Bench Reps: 17 reps
Ideal Role: Perimeter cornerback
Scheme Fit: Press-man-heavy defensive system
Prospect Comparison: Marlon Humphrey (2017 NFL Draft)
TDN Consensus Grade: 86.50/100 (First-Round Value)
- Crabbs Grade: 86.50/100
Written By: Kyle Crabbs
Exposures: Arkansas (2021), Purdue (2022), Auburn (2022), Michigan (2022), Minnesota (2022), Ohio State (2022)
Joey Porter Jr. NFL Draft Scouting Report. Add him to your big board here.
