The Giants’ defensive line is one of the quieter long-term questions hanging over the roster, even after this year’s wave of additions up front. The team clearly spent with an eye toward stuffing the middle and letting its athletic linebackers run free, but if the veterans start to slip or the interior pass rush doesn’t hold up, that whole plan can wobble fast.
That’s why Ole Miss defensive tackle Will Echoles is worth a hard look. He’s sitting 26th on the Consensus Big Board right now, but there’s room for that stock to climb. He’s still extremely young, has only one season as a starter, and yet he already looks like one of the most disruptive interior defenders in college football.
Echoles checks in at 6-foot-3 and 315 pounds, and the first thing that jumps off the tape is the blend of burst and force. He’s got real snap anticipation, often getting moving before almost everyone else, and that first step lets him fire low into blockers and jolt them backward when he wins leverage. He doesn’t have much speed over distance, but he doesn’t need it to wreck a play in a phone booth.
The production backs it up. Last season, Echoles posted 5.0 sacks, 11.5 tackles for a loss, and 32 total hurries.
He can win with power or quickness, and in one-on-one matchups he can be a nightmare. He also has the versatility to work as either an A-gap or B-gap defender because his size, lateral agility, and quickness all show up together.
He’s not just a pass-rush threat, either. Echoles is also a strong run defender with a good feel for how plays are blocked and where the lane is going to open.
His heavy hands and raw strength let him control linemen, shed when he wants, and make plays on the ball carrier. He can plug the middle or knife through and disrupt on his own.
The effort stands out, too. Echoles plays with real competitive toughness and doesn’t coast through snaps. He keeps working, keeps chasing, and while he won’t run down a ton of backs from behind, he’ll still pursue across the field.
There’s still plenty to clean up. Like a lot of young interior linemen, Echoles needs to sharpen his technique and get more consistent from snap to snap.
When his pad level is right and his hands land cleanly, he can overwhelm offensive linemen. But those are still flashes, not the default.
Too often his pads pop up or his strikes miss, and when that happens he can fade out of the play. He needs to keep working on landing his hands on blockers’ chest plates and refining his rip move.
The same goes for his pass rush. When he gets under an opponent’s pads and drives, or when he wins half-man leverage with the rip, his rush can look nearly impossible to stop. The challenge is making that the standard instead of the exception.
He also has to tighten up his tackling. Echoles was charged with 10 missed tackles last year, and better technique should help him become a more reliable finisher when he gets there.
That ties into the bigger picture with his body composition, too. He carries more body fat than ideal, looks a little top-heavy, and that can hurt his balance when his pad level rises.
A leaner frame could help him move better and generate even more power. He might be a highly effective interior penetrator at 300 to 305 pounds, though his frame is big enough that he could probably stay in the 315 to 320 range if he trims down properly.
The age is what really makes him pop. Echoles is only 19 and won’t turn 20 until August 7th, which means he’s still developing physically and technically. That gives him a different kind of upside than a lot of the players around him.
The Giants have leaned toward older defensive tackle prospects in recent drafts, with Darius Alexander and Bobby Jamison Travis both on the older side for rookies. The thinking there seems pretty clear: more mature players may be better prepared to handle the grind inside.
At the same time, Arvell Reese and Francis Mauigoa were both 20 when they were drafted, which suggests youth at the top of the board doesn’t scare them off. If that remains part of the equation, Echoles could fit neatly into the Giants’ draft radar.
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Greg Newsome II has the clearest path because of his experience, but the race has widened enough that the Giants are at least taking a longer look at Art Green as well. Green has made his name mostly on special teams, so any push into the cornerback conversation would be a notable development for a defense still trying to settle its best combination on the outside. [Read more 🡒]
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Bill Parcells Earned His Flowers But Giants Fans Will Still Bristle
Bill Parcells keeps piling up the kind of recognition that makes his Hall of Fame case feel even more untouchable. CBS Sports recently put together a list of the 20 greatest NFL head coaches of all time, and Parcells landed at No. 13 after receiving votes from all six reporters who took part. For Giants fans, the placement is easy enough to understand. Parcells led New York to two Super Bowl titles and helped establish the franchise as a heavyweight, while also leaving his mark by quickly reviving other struggling teams along the way.
Still, any ranking of Parcells tends to stir up a little New York grumbling because it invites the old comparison game. The Giants have another championship coach in Tom Coughlin, and he did not make CBS Sports list at all despite drawing votes from half the panel. Parcells earned his flowers here, but for a fan base that remembers both eras well, the debate over where he belongs among the all-time greats is never going away. [Read more 🡒]
