Khaiylan “De’Aarri” Griffin

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Khaiylan “De’Aarri” Griffin

Khaiylan “De’Aarri” Griffin

@DeAarri

6'1" | 205lbs | ATH | Belton High School | 26’ | 3.6 GPA | 4.66 40 | Cell- 254-258-4464| NCAA ID# 2301769038

Belton, TX Katılım Şubat 2023
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Michael Pevia
Michael Pevia@MichaelPevia_·
Belton WR Gavin Ross (@Gavinross05) is a 2-sport athlete (basketball) who has great footwork and athleticism. Things he excels at: - High pointing the football - Side step/Spin move after catch - separation at the top of his route He totaled 110 Rec, 1,478 yds, and 12 TD’s. Ross already broke 3 school records and aiming for an historic year in 2026. #txhsfb @BeltonTigerFB @CoachMann92 @TemBelSports @samspiegs @Tre_LandoTFL @dctf @GPowersScout
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Michael Pevia
Michael Pevia@MichaelPevia_·
3-Star Safety Jalani Culpepper (@JalaniCulpepper) is a hard hitting safety who takes no plays off 5’10, 190 lbs. The #Arizona Commit can come up to the LOS and make plays, takes good angles to the boundary to make a tackle, and does well recognizing screens. He’s can be a tone setter at the next level. 2026 could be a big year for the East View product. #txhsfb @EastView_FB @ArizonaFBall
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LSU Football
LSU Football@LSUfootball·
🤯That's Insane @JabariMack7
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Shea Dixon
Shea Dixon@Sheadixon·
The biggest update to Harold Perkins + his NFL Draft stock has arrived. At LSU Pro Day, the former 5-star and multi-year starter made a statement. Height: 6-0 5/8 Weight: 220 pounds Hand: 8-2 Arm: 31-4 Wing: 77-4 Vert: 35” Broad: 10-4 40: 4.38 More:➡️ on3.com/teams/lsu-tige…
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LSU Football
LSU Football@LSUfootball·
Mansoor Delane 4.35 DBU.
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art
art@canefilms·
Keionte Scott is the most interesting defensive back in this draft class because the question isn’t whether he can play; it’s what position he actually is. Start with the path. Scott went unrecruited out of Helix High School in La Mesa, California, despite catching 36 passes for 563 yards and 10 touchdowns on offense while grabbing four picks on defense. Nobody offered. He ended up at Snow College in Utah, earned JUCO All-American honors twice, got named conference co-Defensive Player of the Year, and left as the No. 4 JUCO prospect in the country. Transferred to Auburn, started immediately at nickel, put up 54 tackles in 2022 and earned second-team All-SEC in 2023 while leading the conference in punt return average. 2024, benched. Transferred to Miami. And had the best season of anyone in this secondary. Became a fan favorite 2025: 64 total tackles, 13 tackles for loss, five sacks, two interceptions (both returned for touchdowns), five passes defensed, two forced fumbles and two recovered fumbles. He had 19 run stops, second most among all cornerbacks and tied for 18th among all DBs. He was a Thorpe Award semifinalist. Second-team All-ACC. The Cotton Bowl game is the signature rep. Two plays after Jeremiah Smith hauled in a 59-yard bomb from Julian Sayin, Scott read a screen pass to Brandon Inniss, jumped the route, and took it 72 yards to the house to put Miami up 14-0. He turned his head and said something to the Ohio State bench on the way in. That’s after missing the final three regular season games with a foot injury suffered against Syracuse. In his first game back against Texas A&M in the CFP first round, he had 10 tackles, two sacks, three tackles for loss, and a forced fumble. He played the entire playoff like he was insulted that the world kept spinning without him. He’s not a traditional anything. He’s a defensive weapon you deploy based on what the offense is showing you. A player who can blitz, fit the run, sit in a zone, and occasionally man up a back or a tight end, all from the same alignment. The blitzing is the headliner. Five sacks from a defensive back is rare production. & those weren’t scheme manufactured, his timing off the edge, burst through the rush lane, and finishing ability are all legitimate. He processes blitz lanes well and closes on quarterbacks before they know he’s coming. The five sacks came in a six game stretch starting with the Louisville loss, through a two sack game against Texas A&M in the playoffs. It felt like Miami’s coaches figured out his identity on defense right around that point in the season and turned him loose. Against the run, he’s physical in a way that’s unusual for a 5’11”, 195-pound slot. He flies downhill, fits gaps with real aggression, and takes on blocks at the point of attack from players bigger than him. He gets under guys and dips past the with ease too. He set edges. He played like a linebacker on early downs and a corner on passing downs. That versatility is why he stayed on the field regardless of personnel. He throws himself at ball carriers instead of wrapping. The aggression that makes him exciting is the same thing that leaves him on the ground whiffing. NFL backs will make him pay for that more often. He turns 25 in August 2026. Six years of college football. He’s a plug-and-play defender for a team that needs someone who can walk into a defensive meeting room in August and contribute in September. It’s hard to see teams letting his playmaking fall past the middle of Day 2 given the production, the playoff tape, and a weak class. Best fit: a defense that wants its nickel to do more than cover. A coordinator who will move him around in sub packages, send him off the edge, drop him into underneath zones, and let his instincts and play speed create chaos. He played outside for Auburn and eventually was benched. Not his best there. But what he does well, he does at a level nobody else in this class can match.
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