Home US SportsNFL Can these two UDFAs make an impact for the Rams in 2026?

Can these two UDFAs make an impact for the Rams in 2026?

by

While the Los Angeles Rams made free agency a priority in upgrading the 2026 defense, they did not invest much draft capital to that end. Of 12 rookie additions to the defensive side of the ball, 11 were undrafted free agents (UDFA) and the only draftee was Round 7 nose tackle Tim Keenan.

The final two UDFAs in this profile series are the two I rate as having the best chance to make an impact on the 2026 Rams. As rookies, they may limited to special teams work and their ceiling’s may be that of backups, but they both share some traits that translate well to the NFL, instincts, physicality, and ball tracking.

Advertisement

Linebacker Nikhai Hill-Green – ‘Bama  6’1 223 lb.

Well-traveled prospect with four college stops. Spent three seasons at Michigan and single years at North Carolina-Charlotte, Colorado, and finally, Alabama. Overall, he played in 56 college games with 26 starts. Lost the entire 2022 season to injury. Hill-Green’s stat line reads 257 tackles, 24.5 for loss, four sacks, 12 passes defended, and two interceptions.

Hill-Green tests out athletically average, not elite in any area and no glaring weaknesses. Good arm length, 32 3/8” and big, almost 10” hands. Steady speed over distance, 4.65 forty and very good initial quickness, 1.58 10-yard split. In upper and lower body strength/explosion, 23 reps on the bench, 34.5” vertical, and 9’4” broad are right at NFL standards. A 7.07  3cone portends good short area agility and change of direction, while 4.44 in the shuttle is a touch high for flexibility, burst, and balance. HIs game is better moving linearly than laterally.

Sturdy compact frame. Aggressive, downhill play style. Middle of the field to sideline pursuit speed. Good get-off and burst. Follows the ball and hustles in pursuit to make plays from behind. Quickly recognizes gaps and takes good angles shooting through them to stop runs and to blitz the quarterback. Solid, tackler, brings thump with him and claws at football with power strip or peanut punch. Stack/shed needs work, more strength work would help.  Best suited for zone coverage, he’’ll be at a disadvantage if having to turn and be sticky running downfield. Hill-Green takes deep drops, reads the QB, and shows good reaction skills to make plays on ball. Adequate tackler out in space. Good blitzer inside. In passing lanes, does a good job of timing and hand/eye coordination to bat down passes.

Advertisement

Although his size might hint at a coverage linebacker, Hill-Green is a hard-nosed, downhill thumper that punches above his weight. He checks four major boxes for an NFL-grade linebacker, awareness, instincts, quick-trigger reaction, and physical play. Plays with passion every rep. No reason he cannot be a value on special teams with his hustle, pursuit, and tackling.

Source link

You may also like