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#142

Emmett Johnson

RB Nebraska Junior
51.5
Grade

Draft Projection

4
Round
118 - 135
Pick Range
#-
Position Rank

Measurements

5'10"
Height
202
Weight (lbs)
30.25"
Arm Length
9.625"
Hand Size

Athletic Testing

4.56s
40-Yard Dash
35.5"
Vertical Jump
120.0"
Broad Jump
16
Bench (reps)
7.32s
3-Cone

College Statistics

12
Games
10
Rushing Tds
920
Rushing Yards
5.1
Yards Per Carry

Strengths

  • Exceptional vision allows him to set up blocks and identify running lanes before they fully materialize, pressing the line of scrimmage with the patience of a veteran.
  • Electric lower-body agility produces string-together cuts that leave defenders grasping at air; his jump-cut ability to bounce outside the tackle box consistently creates positive yardage.
  • Versatile scheme fit with proven production in inside zone, outside zone, and duo concepts; reads his keys cleanly and makes decisive decisions on whether to bounce or bang it up inside.
  • Legitimate weapon in the passing game with 46 receptions in 2025; his route tree and soft hands make him more than a checkdown option on third downs.
  • Slippery ball carrier who gets skinny through tight creases and minimizes the strike zone for incoming defenders, preserving his body and avoiding the big clean shots.
  • Contact balance exceeds what his 200-pound frame suggests; he pinballs off tacklers, runs through arm tackles, and keeps his legs churning after initial contact.
  • Explosive burst through the hole once a crease appears; his acceleration at the second level turns what should be modest gains into chunk plays.
  • Dependable volume back who shouldered a heavy workload down the stretch, demonstrating durability with eight 100-yard rushing games and the ability to get stronger as games wore on.

Areas to Improve

  • Pass protection remains a developmental area; his chips lack the stopping power to stall bull rushers, and his blitz pickup technique needs refinement against pressure packages.
  • Home-run hunting tendencies occasionally hurt him; he'll chase cutbacks one too many times instead of planting his foot and getting vertical for available yards.
  • Timed speed is adequate but not special; he won't consistently outrun high-end pursuing defenders to the edge on the NFL level.
  • Slight frame at 200 pounds raises questions about his ability to handle a true bell-cow role and hold up in short-yardage and goal-line situations against NFL front sevens.
  • Power at the point of attack is average at best; he's not going to consistently push piles or drag defenders for extra yardage the way bigger backs can.