Draft Buzz pre-draft assessment of Keylan. State champion shot-putter, 1,000-point and 1,000-rebound basketball player, and three-star football recruit all describe the same person: Keylan Rutledge out of Bradley Central High School in Cleveland, Tennessee. No Power 5 programs came calling, so he signed with Middle Tennessee State in 2022 and earned Conference USA All-Freshman honors after six starts at right guard. His sophomore year brought first-team All-Conference USA recognition, a team captaincy, and four Offensive Lineman of the Game awards. A coaching change at MTSU sent him to the transfer portal, and Georgia Tech won out. That transition nearly ended before it started when a December 2023 car accident left him with a severe foot injury, costing him the entire offseason and spring practice. Rutledge started all 13 games at right guard in 2024 anyway, earning first-team All-ACC and All-American honors. His 2025 season was stronger still. He allowed zero sacks across 801 regular-season snaps, ranked top 10 nationally among guards in PFF's overall, run, and pass blocking grades, and became Georgia Tech's first back-to-back first-team All-American since Calvin Johnson. The ACC honored him with the Brian Piccolo Award for courage. Scouting Report: Strengths Powerful hands at the point of attack that jolt defenders off their landmarks consistently. Stout anchor against bull rushes, rarely conceding ground when set and balanced. Finishes blocks with real aggression, burying defenders well past the whistle. Effective puller who locates second-level targets and arrives with force. Combine-verified athleticism with a 5.05 forty and the fastest shuttle among all linemen. Showed center versatility at the Senior Bowl, adding three-position value on the interior. Durable and tough, starting all 26 games across two seasons after a serious car accident injury. Competitive temperament that coaches had to dial back at the Senior Bowl, not ramp up. Scouting Report: Weaknesses Pad level rises through his reps, especially against quicker interior defenders. Pass sets can get too flat against wider rushers, exposing soft edges to counters. Footwork gets choppy when defenders cross his face with lateral movement. Hand placement widens in pass protection, creating leverage disadvantages on initial contact. Balance and body control remain inconsistent snap to snap, particularly in space. Edge leakage against twitchy B-gap swim and rip moves is a real concern at the next level. Scouting Report: Summary Rutledge's predraft process answered a lot of questions that the tape alone couldn't settle. The combine confirmed what his basketball and shot-put background suggested: this is a genuinely athletic interior lineman at 316 pounds, not just a phone-booth mauler. Posting the best short shuttle of any offensive lineman in Indianapolis, along with a 5.05 forty and a 32.5-inch vertical, validated the movement skills you see on his pulls and combo blocks at the second level. Add in the Senior Bowl week where he handled center snaps comfortably and you have a guard who gives a coaching staff real flexibility along the interior. The technical issues are coachable, not structural. His pad level, hand placement, and pass-set depth all need refinement, but the athletic foundation is strong enough to support those corrections with proper repetition. The foot injury from the 2023 car accident is worth monitoring, but two full healthy seasons of high-level production since then should ease most medical concerns. His competitive makeup is genuine. Senior Bowl coaches actually had to pull him back, which is the kind of problem you want with a young lineman. A gap-scheme offense that features pulling guards and play-action concepts is where Rutledge fits best, though his combine numbers suggest he can handle zone concepts too. He should contribute in a rotational role early and has the upside to develop into a quality starter within two seasons. The versatility to play all three interior spots, even if center remains a work in progress, adds real roster value. His tape, his testing, and his Senior Bowl week all point the same direction: a dependable, physical guard with more athletic range than most evaluators initially expected.
It will be great if he can start on Day one and be good. My guess is that he will need this season to develop.
rumor is that he was the 49ers target…which is why they traded out of their pick right after the Texans took him. Nice move
Hopefully Keylan can immediately elevate our OL but most need a year to develop. Credit to Caserio for doing everything he can to fix the weakest position on our team.