INDIANAPOLIS - Anthony Coughlan spends his fall covering one of the deepest talent pools in college football, but when the Colts’ southeast area scout watched Georgia last season, one player kept rising above the rest.
That player was linebacker CJ Allen.
“He’s the best practice player I viewed this fall,” Coughlan says. “Just the detail and intensity and focus he had really stood out to me.”
What stood out to Coughlan wasn’t just the way Allen moved, but the way Georgia trusted him. The Bulldogs inserted him into the starting lineup as a freshman, then handed him the defensive signal-calling duties for the next two seasons. For a program coached by Kirby Smart, that kind of responsibility says plenty.
“(Georgia’s) a tough place to play and practice, and he graduated from that program,” Coughlan adds about Allen. “It’s a hard thing to do, coming there as a freshman among all those top players in the country and playing early. I just think that speaks to his preparation out of high school and his determination and his mental makeup and maturity.
“He’s highly instinctive. I think he has rare instincts for a college football player. His reactiveness, quickness, it allows him to play faster, and he’s already fast.:”
That blend of instincts and speed is what makes Allen such an intriguing fit for the NFL, and for the Colts in particular. In his first spring in the league, he appears to be in line for the lead role in defensive communication. That would be a notable assignment in Lou Anarumo’s system, where no rookie has ever handled that job since Anarumo became an NFL defensive coordinator in 2019.
Coughlan’s evaluation is rooted in what he saw in Athens last fall, where Georgia’s defense was loaded and the SEC produced a record 87 draft picks this past April, 19 more than the Big Ten. Even in that setting, Allen drew the highest praise from the Colts scout.
“He’s got rare instincts for college,” Coughlan lauds. “So, the reactive quickness kind of allows him to play faster, and he’s already fast.
I just see a rare feel. And for a two-and-a-half-year starter in a complex system like at Georgia, there’s a lot on his plate mentally, so definitely I could see green dot potential for us, and he’s handled that the last two years at Georgia”
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