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Miami defensive back Keionte Scott is emerging as a potential draft pick for the Kansas City Chiefs, showcasing impressive skills at the NFL Scouting Combine. His ability to excel in zone coverage and blitzing makes him a strong candidate to enhance the Chiefs' secondary.
Scott started at the junior college level at Snow College. Scott was a big-time recruit coming out of high school, having offers from every major conference. He was the fourth-ranked cornerback in the country. After playing junior college, he committed to Auburn. He started for the Tigers for three seasons in SEC country. Scott transferred to Miami before the season and was a crucial part of one of the best defenses in the country. He played in the slot, made second-team All-ACC and was a semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe award. Scott had a great showing in the College Football Playoff. He started with 10 tackles, two sacks and a forced fumble against Texas A&M. In the Ohio State game, he had the game-changing pick-six, reading a bubble screen and finishing the big play with a touchdown. Scott improved his stock with a strong showing at the NFL Scouting Combine. He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.33 seconds with a 1.53-second 10-yard split. His jumps werenāt quite as good, but still a strong 34 inches on the vertical leap and 10 feet 3 inches on the broad jump.
Keionte Scott's strengths include outstanding play recognition, competitive spirit, effective run defense, and exceptional blitzing skills.
At the NFL Scouting Combine, Keionte Scott ran the 40-yard dash in 4.33 seconds and showcased a vertical leap of 34 inches.
The Chiefs may consider drafting Keionte Scott due to their need for depth in the secondary and his fit in a zone coverage scheme.
Keionte Scott needs to improve his man coverage skills, as he struggles with stiff hips and keeping up with agile slot receivers.

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Scott has played plenty of football through the years, and it shows on his film. His play recognition and intelligence are outstanding. Scott regularly blows up plays before the offense can set them up. That intelligence should help him transition to the NFL quickly. Scott plays with a competitive fire that is contagious. He plays like every play is the last play of the Super Bowl. That shows up in different ways. As a run defender, Scott plays bigger than his frame. He has no issues tackling in space and inserting into a gap to fit the run. In the modern NFL, itās vital to have a slot that can defend the run; Scott checks that box. One of Scottās best skills is taking on perimeter blocks; good luck running screens at him. Heāll blow up a slot receiver trying to block him and ruin a play immediately. His size, physicality, and downhill explosiveness make it hard for receivers to block him. Scott is also an excellent blitzer. Against Texas A&M, Scott had two sacks when blitzing. He knows how to time his blitz and what angles to run through. His speed and relentless attitude make him a terror off the edge. The skill of blitzing is arguably Scottās best trait, and teams will love it.
Scott is pretty good at everything except playing in man coverage. His hips are a bit stiff, and he struggles to keep up with shifty slot receivers. The team that drafts Scott will have to work to limit having him in those spots.Ā If you can keep him in zone coverage or blitzing, heāll be a higher-impact player.
Scott mightāve been a questionable fit in past Chiefs defenses that played more man coverage. However, the Chiefsā defense no longer has the cornerback talent it had a few years ago and might need to move to a more conservative zone scheme to better mask its lack of depth at cornerback. That would fit Scott perfectly. If Scott can sit in underneath zones and attack everything in front of him, heāll thrive. Scott is also a great fit for what the Chiefs want to do in the blitz game. The way he times and disguises his rushes is perfect with defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo.
With Kansas Cityās needs at wide receiver, defensive line, and right tackle, thereās a chance the defensive backfield is not addressed until later in the draft. At that point, youāre just trying to find starter-level players. Scott can be that. Scott will turn 25 this year, which is a red flag for taking him high in the draft. However, around the third-round, itās hard to argue against drafting a capable starter. Heās competitive, fairly athletic, and really smart. Heās likely a one-contract player, but he can be good on that contract. The Chiefsā current slot defenders are either free-agent signing, formerĀ Miami DolphinsĀ cornerback Kadar Kohou, or Chamarri Conner. Scott would be an upgrade from those two. If youāre trying to patch together a cornerback, improving the slot depth could be helpful for that. He would help add depth to a secondary that is currently thin.