NFL Prospect Focus....Kony Ealy Another year, another stud defensive line prospect from the University of Missouri. Greg Gabriel NFPJanuary 15, 2014, 10:39 PM EST.. A few years ago, when Missouri announced it was going to leave the Big 12 to play in the SEC, I felt the school was making a mistake. From a personnel and recruiting standpoint, I thought the Tigers just didn’t have the talent to compete with the best in the SEC. Oh, how I was wrong. Not only is Missouri competing, the school is competing for SEC Championships. The reason being is that they have the athletes both on the defensive line and at the skill positions to play with the best teams in the SEC. Last year, Missouri had defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson, who ended up being a first-round selection with the Jets and is quickly becoming one of the better young defensive linemen in the NFL. This year, their top defensive lineman is junior DE Kony Ealy, who is entering the draft early and come May, should be a first-round draft pick. Kony Ealy – Defensive End – Missouri Ealy notched 9.5 sacks for the Tigers in 2013. Ealy is a fourth-year junior and a two-year starter for the Tigers at left defensive end. Coming out of high school, Ealy was an undersized defensive end (approximately 230 pounds), but was still rated as a 4-star recruit and had offers from schools such as Georgia Tech, Nebraska and Mississippi. Ealy redshirted his first year and was a role player during his second season. As a starter in 2012, he had 37 total tackles including 3.5 sacks and 10 tackles for loss. This past season, Ealy had a breakout year with 43 total tackles, 9.5 sacks and 14.5 tackles for loss. When you take into account the fact that Missouri rotates their defensive linemen, those are outstanding stats. When Ealy is in the game, his athleticism and hustle jump out on tape. Ealy has good defensive end size at about 6050 – 275 with good arm length. He is a very good athlete with speed, body control and change of direction. He plays fast and looks as if he will run in the 4.68 range. He has excellent snap reaction and a very good first step. As a run defender, Ealy is good. He has the strength and power to hold the point and uses his hands to shed blocks. He makes a lot of pursuit plays and does a fairly good job versus the inside run. While Ealy can be inconsistent versus the outside run, the reason is that he’s a bit undisciplined and tends to get caught inside. He needs to play contain better and not allow himself to be hook blocked. Where Ealy excels is as a pass rusher. He is explosive off the ball and has a variety of moves. He can make a quick step outside and then counter and come back across his opponent’s face to get inside pressure. He also has the speed and bend to edge rush, dip his inside shoulder and burst to the quarterback. Ealy’s burst off a block to the quarterback is excellent. While he is not a real big guy, he has explosive power through his hips and can bull rush with effectiveness. Overall, Ealy possesses the integral trait that NFL teams covet: He can rush the passer. He is best suited to play as a 4-3 defensive end, but most of the 3-4 clubs will work him out as a linebacker and if he proves to be able to drop into coverage, he will have high value to those organizations as well. From an athletic viewpoint I see no reason why he can’t play on his feet. He has the bend and hip flexibility needed to drop. Don’t be surprised to hear Ealy’s name mentioned a lot in the weeks leading up to the draft. He is an impressive player. Follow Greg on Twitter: @greggabe
Watched a lot of Ealy in college . He is Meh .....probably very comparable to what we already have in Clayborn.
No thank you.. I'll take rather us take Michael Sam later.
No thank you.. I'll take rather us take Michael Sam later.
Yep . same here.
No thank you.. I'll take rather us take Michael Sam later.
Yep . same here.
Same page as you guys.
Kony will be taken too Early.
No idea what you guys are seeing in him as anything like AC. AC doesn't have nearly, or really any, edge ability. Ealy has quite a bit. I'm not sure how strong he is vs the run but who the heck cares, the man can rush the passer.
No idea what you guys are seeing in him as anything like AC. AC doesn't have nearly, or really any, edge ability. Ealy has quite a bit. I'm not sure how strong he is vs the run but who the heck cares, the man can rush the passer.
The only thing I see in him that is like AC is that they are both 1 trick ponies. AC is stout against the run and Ealy is a pass rusher. That being said, I want nothing to do with Ealy at #7.
No idea what you guys are seeing in him as anything like AC. AC doesn't have nearly, or really any, edge ability. Ealy has quite a bit. I'm not sure how strong he is vs the run but who the heck cares, the man can rush the passer.
The only thing I see in him that is like AC is that they are both 1 trick ponies. AC is stout against the run and Ealy is a pass rusher. That being said, I want nothing to do with Ealy at #7.
Not to put this crassly but that is a BIG difference. Guys who have one trick rushing the passer (Freeny, Rice) make a lot of cash in the NFL because it is a rare skill - also his run defense isn't as bad as you are saying much like Simoen was never as bad as the overhype said..
He doesn't explode out of his stance. I don't see what the big deal about him is.
He doesn't explode out of his stance. I don't see what the big deal about him is.
Except that the scouting reports I've seen, and the games I watched, disagree with that notion. He is not a rolling speed guy. I suspect he will do very well on the explosion measures at the combine.
I'm not in love with him based on the little I've seen, but if you don't have a pass rush and there's a 6'5" 275 lb guy with production from a major conference whom everyone starts to zero in as a top 20 pick, you better pay attention.
Not a huge fan, definitely not worth the 7th overall pick. Watkins please
I'm not in love with him based on the little I've seen, but if you don't have a pass rush and there's a 6'5" 275 lb guy with production from a major conference whom everyone starts to zero in as a top 20 pick, you better pay attention.
You look at his pros and I'm not sure why, other than he is not from some school in FL that people don't like (and if he'd played at UF I'm sure he'd be better than clowney at this point to plenty of people):1. Size - a 43 team needs someone bigger than Barr to man the spot.2. Speed - I think his measurables at the combine will be very good. The rarity in the 43 is to find a big man who can move.3. Explosive - He is quick from his stance4. Diversity - the "he's not Gaines Adams" bit here that Ealy can do more than just try and run around guys.5. Production - SEC, SEC...I mean isn't this the gold standard for folks to run around SEC talent?Pass rushers rise, and especially big pass rushers, so if he measures out at the combine like I think I'd suspect easy top 10.