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Giovanni El-Hadi, a Michigan Wolverines offensive lineman, is projected to be selected on Day 3 of the NFL Draft after a successful college career. He played 51 games, starting 24, and was part of a national championship team in 2023.
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Giovanni El-Hadi played 51 games, starting 24, and logged over 1,679 career snaps, with more than 1,000 at left guard and over 675 at right guard.
His strengths include extensive starting experience and strong performance in the run game, while weaknesses involve limited athleticism and concerns about his ceiling after five years in college.
Concerns about his athleticism and performance in bigger games during his college career likely contributed to his exclusion from the NFL Combine.
Giovanni El-Hadi is projected to be a Day 3 selection in the NFL Draft, with potential to be signed as an undrafted free agent.

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El-Hadi was a good player for the Wolverines and the anchor of the offensive line for the last two seasons. At the same time, the unit has not been as strong over the last two seasons as it once was when Michigan was annually in the College Football Playoff and winning back-to-back Joe Moore Awards. Part of that is certainly on coaching, but I think it is safe to say that El-Hadi never really reached the potential that I think a lot of fans hoped for when he first got started. He was talked about as the next Zak Zinter or Trevor Keegan, but El-Hadi only ever achieved a third-team all-Big Ten recognition and never ascended above that. The good news for El-Hadi is the brand recognition that comes from playing and being a captain at Michigan and having a now-NFL head coach in Harbaugh who promotes his value. Offensive linemen in Ann Arbor are expected to do a lot, including the guard position. Pulling from the interior was extremely common, and both J.J. McCarthy and now Bryce Underwood had RPO’s that they were reading, leaving different assignments for offensive lines depending on whether they hand it off or throw the ball. For success, the offensive line has to understand unique hand and vocal signals, understand how defenses are lined up, and still be able to move their assignment out of the way. El-Hadi did so adequately in his time at Michigan, and an NFL team is going to value that, despite not receiving an invite to the NFL Combine. El-Hadi’s also been battle-tested against NFL talent in practice. He went up against the likes of Mason Graham, Kenneth Grant, Derrick Moore, Jaishawn Barham, Kris Jenkins, Mazi Smith, and more, every day in practice for years, even working against them on the offensive scout team. He understands what it will take to face talent at the next level, and should, at minimum, have a spot on a practice squad once the regular season hits. Expectations are a late pick, but he might also be a valued UDFA by someone in the league, maybe even his former head coach. With the history of success before him on both the offensive and defensive lines from the Michigan pipeline, expect him to have the NFL shield on his neck this fall.