Commanders could draft Miles Frazier
- Offensive Line | LSU Tigers
The Washington Commanders' offensive line was not in an ideal place last season. There were building blocks, but it was nowhere near a complete unit. This offseason, it has gotten closer to being the finished article, and it is really just a couple of pieces away following the trade acquisition of Pro Bowl left tackle Laremy Tunsil.
Miles Frazier has experience all over the offensive line, starting his college career at left tackle at Florida International before moving to every spot besides center after transferring to LSU. This is the type of versatility the Commanders need, and he's got previous knowledge of protecting Jayden Daniels.
The prospect has good size, standing at 6-foot-6 and 317 pounds. Although his arm length at 32 3/4 inches profiles him more as a guard in the NFL.
Frazier displays his strength in the pass-blocking discipline. His power, hand placement, and recoverability all point to NFL-ready pass protection. He did not allow a single sack in his last 20 college games, which just backs that up even more. He posted an 88.0 pass-blocking grade from Pro Football Focus.
Even if he isn't drafted for a chance at a starting job, Frazier could be a valuable depth piece of the offensive line due to his elite pass protection and versatility to play all over the protection.
Commanders could draft Kobe Hudson
- Wide Receiver | UCF Knights
The Commanders lost a lot of depth at wide receiver this offseason. Dyami Brown got big money from the Jacksonville Jaguars, and Olamide Zaccheaus signed for the Chicago Bears. The trade for Deebo Samuel Sr. and retaining Noah Brown softened the blow, but it is still in dire need of better depth.
Kobe Hudson could be the perfect late-round prospect to come in and be a good depth option for the Commanders. Standing at 6-foot-1 and 193 pounds, he showed fine size for the position. His speed isn't great, running just a 4.57-second 40-yard dash at the NFL Scouting Combine.
The UCF prospect gets encouraging separation off the line of scrimmage and is great at using the defender's leverage against them. This could make Hudson a real problem in the short-to-intermediate passing game.
He could struggle in other route packages, as cornerbacks tend to get more athletic in the NFL and will likely catch up to him after his initial separation. Hudson finished his 2024 campaign with 47 receptions for 770 receiving yards and four touchdowns on 88 targets.
