Why Caleb Downs is a premium prospect in the 2026 NFL Draft
Football is increasingly a game dictated by numbers.
The draft profile for Caleb Downs should begin there.
Let’s start with these numbers, from charting data collected while I studied his 2025 college football season. Downs played 208 snaps aligned as a half-field safety, with another 97 snaps aligned as a middle-of-the-field safety. The Ohio State defender aligned as a boundary cornerback for 50 more snaps, a slot corner for another 168 snaps, and even played 41 snaps down in the box.
But the pre-snap numbers are just a part of the story. A brief snapshot of a bigger picture.
After the snap, Downs rotated to the middle of the field for 232 of those plays, played as a deep boundary defender for 114 of those plays — including several where he began aligned in the slot or as a boundary corner — and spent many other either as the pole runner between the safeties, dropped down in the flat, or even rushing off the edge or through the interior.
Suffice it to say, Downs is one of the most versatile players in the 2026 NFL Draft.
Which might make him the best.
Downs began his college career at Alabama, playing under Nick Saban in his complex defensive system. But he stepped into the starting lineup as a freshman, recorded eight tackles in his debut, and ended the year as the SEC Freshman of the Year.
When Saban announced he was stepping away from the game, Downs entered the transfer portal, and made the move to Ohio State. All he did while with the Buckeyes was become a two-time unanimous All-American, the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, and the winner of both the Lott Trophy (given to a college defensive player “for their personal character and athletic abilities”) and the Jim Thorpe Award (given to the best defensive back in college football).
He also helped Ohio State win a title in 2024.
Studying Downs between the lines, while that versatility stands out where he is at his best is down in the box, particularly working in zone coverage with his eyes on the offense. Watching Downs put his experience under both Saban and Matt Patricia to use as he works through route concepts is a thing of beauty, and will translate extremely well to the next level.
Take this play against Texas where he is aligned to the right side of the offense, on the single receiver side:
This is a third-down play, with the Buckeyes dropping into zone coverage. Downs matches the vertical release of the single receiver, turning him loose when that receiver breaks to the inside. As that happens, the safety drops down on the crossing route, taking that away from Arch Manning.
When the quarterback breaks the pocket, Downs moves downhill slightly, but maintains a relationship to the back curling out of the backfield. That puts him in position to rally and tackle the back after the checkdown, forcing a fourth down for Texas.
Here is another example of this in action, also from his game against Texas. He begins the play aligned as a linebacker, but bumps out in response to motion. He matches the release from the #3 receiver, but then slides outside to take the out route from the #2 receiver:
Watch him on this play near the bottom of the screen, where he starts out in an inside alignment. He bumps out at the snap and matches the slant route from the outside receiver, but then peels off that and breaks on the checkdown from the running back:
One last example of this in action comes from Ohio State’s game against Penn State. He is again in the box, on the right side of the offense. He matches a vertical release initially, then works to a potential wheel route, but when the quarterback breaks the pocket he crashes downhill on the crossing route:
The pass is off the target, but if this was a good throw the receiver would have paid a price.
Putting Downs in situations where he has his eyes towards the offense not only plays to his prowess in zone coverage, but it emphasizes one of his strengths: Being a wrecking ball working downhill against both the run and the pass. Watch this play against UCLA, where he works out of the slot and blows up a designed throw to the flat:
Not only does Downs beat the blocker to the spot but he completely shuts this play down before it begins, chopping down the receiver for a loss on the play.
Here is a similar moment against Purdue, only this comes on a middle screen:
Downs begins this snap aligned across from the #3 receiver. Purdue motions the back out to the right, creating a “fast” 4×1, and Downs mirrors that movement pre-snap. But watch how he tracks the back and then explodes downhill, turning what could have been a huge gain into a short play for the offense.
“Screenshot scouting” is best used sparingly, but it fits here:
This is the state of play when the underneath throw is made. With three linemen releasing upfield, Purdue has a chance at a big play.
Downs has other ideas.
Then there is what he can do against the run. Watch him work downhill on this run against Washington, holding the running back to a minimal gain in the red zone:
This is textbook from Downs, as he works down to the edge, maintains outside leverage, and executes a pitch-perfect tackle in space.
Watch him read this play off the left side of the offense against Miami:
The safety reads this play better than the offense, slicing inside at the snap and hitting the back behind the line of scrimmage.
His ability against the run often starts with a perfect understanding of leverage. As with that example against Washington, watch him work outside-in on this snap against Illinois, where he begins the play aligned across from the single receiver on the left side of the offense:
Downs maintains outside leverage in relation to the running back, who initially thinks about bouncing this play to the outside. Only when the back commits inside does Downs make his move, breaking on the ballcarrier to hold this to a minimal gain.
Watch him “run the alley” on this snap against Ohio:
That will work.
In man coverage situations, Downs was often tasked with matching tight ends, often players who were bigger than him. But he showed an ability to get to the hip of the receiver, often forcing throwaways or making the quarterback look in a different direction.
Like on this play against Minnesota, where he works through traffic to get to a crossing route on a mesh concept, forcing a late throwaway from the quarterback:
Downs is viewed by many as one of the best football players in the class, but the question is one of positional value. As a safety, he plays a “non-premium” position and his draft stock in many ways parallels what we saw from Kyle Hamilton when he came out of Notre Dame. While the two are different types of safeties — Hamilton’s versatility included more of deep safety role while Downs thrives in the box — the discussion is similar.
Hamilton fell to No. 14 in the draft, will Downs have a similar fall?
What could work in Downs’ favor is what we just saw from the Seattle Seahawks. Under Mike Macdonald the Seahawks changed the numbers in their favor on defense, playing with both safeties deep before the snap but relying on one of them to crash downhill when needed to stop the run.
You can imagine Downs thriving in such a role, and with Seattle coming off a Super Bowl win, do not be surprised to see other teams try and replicate what Macdonald built in the Pacific Northwest.
Downs might be one of the best players in the class.
And he might be coming out at the exact right moment.
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