INDIANAPOLIS — The stopwatches are clicking, and the draft boards are already shattering inside Lucas Oil Stadium. We caught up with ESPN draft guru Matt Miller at the 2026 NFL Combine to rip through the noise and deliver the hard truths about this year’s top prospects. He didn’t pull punches. From Ohio State linebacker Sonny Styles breaking gravity to the glaring physical red flags surrounding Miami edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr., the tape is finally meeting the tape measure.
Gravity Defied: Sonny Styles is a Freak
You could feel the air leave the stadium when Sonny Styles hit the turf. The Ohio State linebacker didn’t just jump; he launched a missile, clearing a staggering 43.5-inch vertical. For a player measuring over 6-foot-4 and 240 pounds, those numbers shouldn’t exist. Teams scrambling for a hybrid defender who can erase tight ends and blitz the A-gap just found their crown jewel. Styles essentially locked up a top-10 selection, leaving scouts frantically scribbling in their notebooks.
The T-Rex in the Room: The Edge Rusher Debate
Not every measurement sparked cheers. Miami’s Rueben Bain Jr. and Texas A&M’s Cashius Howell hit a wall during the weigh-ins. Bain recorded 30 7/8-inch arms, while Howell measured at a mere 30 1/4 inches. Miller immediately flagged the issue. The math is brutal: no first-round edge rusher has measured with arms under 31 inches since 2003. General managers now face an agonizing decision. They must either trust the elite college film or bet against decades of physical metrics.
“Arm length was the topic of the day. You have to go back to 1999 to find an edge rusher with sub-31-inch arms who hit double-digit sacks in a season. Someone is going to have to make a very expensive gamble.”
— Matt Miller, ESPN NFL Draft Analyst
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Kansas City Chiefs sit at the back of the first round, and Miller expects the defending champions to bypass a running back entirely. They need immediate help in the trenches to protect Patrick Mahomes and hunt rival quarterbacks. Miller circled Texas Tech’s David Bailey and Ohio State’s Arvell Reese as prime targets for Steve Spagnuolo’s aggressive front. If Bain slides down the board due to the measurement panic, Kansas City might sprint to the podium to grab him at a massive discount.
Walking the concourse with Miller, you quickly realize how exhausting this week gets. He hasn’t slept a full night since the Senior Bowl in Mobile. Fans hanging over the railings screamed his name, begging for mock draft spoilers, but Miller just laughed, sipping his fourth black coffee of the morning. With defensive backs and receivers like USC’s Makai Lemon and Clemson’s Avieon Terrell preparing to light the track on fire this weekend, the 2026 draft picture is finally coming into focus. The margin for error is shrinking by the millisecond.

