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The New York Giants selected defensive tackle Bobby Jamison-Travis in the sixth round of the 2026 NFL draft. Despite not being widely recognized, the Giants showed significant interest in him.
What pre-draft scouting reports said about New York Giants DT Bobby Jamison-Travis
The New York Giants had to sit and wait for hours before they made their first of three sixth-round selections in the 2026 NFL draft on Saturday. But when they were put on the clock, they wasted no time in calling the name of Auburn defensive tackle Bobby Jamison-Travis.
Who?
Jamison-Travis was not a player many had on their radar, but the Giants certainly knew who he was. And their race to select him highlighted their interest.
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Pre-draft scouting reports on Bobby Jamison-Travis were limited, as he was not widely recognized before the draft.
The Giants selected Bobby Jamison-Travis due to their strong interest in his potential as a defensive tackle.
Bobby Jamison-Travis was drafted by the New York Giants in the sixth round of the 2026 NFL draft.
Bobby Jamison-Travis plays as a defensive tackle.
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"We talked about the D-tackle position a little bit last night, and we're happy to get him in here. Big body, long, strong, powerful," general manager Joe Schoen said, revealing the team hosted Jamison-Travis on a pre-draft visit.
Here's a look back at what the pre-draft scouting reports had to say about Jamison-Travis.
From Dane Brugler:
Quientrail “Bobby” Jamison-Travis grew up in the Minneapolis area with his mother (Julia Jamison); his father died in 2013. Jamison-Travis has two children with his girlfriend (Janae Winters). He grew up focused on basketball but gave football a try in junior high (he wanted to play, like his two older brothers). Because of his size, he played on the offensive and defensive lines at Minneapolis North High School. As a senior, he earned all-state honors (19 sacks) and helped North to a 13-0 start before a loss in the 2019 state championship game. He also lettered in basketball, track and wrestling.
Jamison-Travis didn’t qualify academically out of high school, so he enrolled at Iowa Western Community College. After he became a junior college All-American, he was highly recruited and committed to Auburn over Nebraska, Penn State and others. He was a full-time starter as a senior for the Tigers and boosted his NFL grade.
Jamison-Travis fills out his wide frame well and doesn’t have much excess weight. He doesn’t explode out of his stance to create knockback but does hold the point with a functional anchor. He moves well on his feet, with the body flexibility to sift through congestion and find the football. His motor stays cranked, and character feedback from scouts is off the charts because of his pleasant personality and work ethic.
Jamison-Travis has good size/length with adequate upper-body power but is too often engaged in long-form block battles instead of controlling and defeating the block at the point. He shows first-step and hand-strike quickness, but he’s forced to lean into contact to bolster his base, leaving him unable to move quickly with the design of the play. He can make tackles two gaps away but his rush is unimaginative and in need of openers to get things going.
Jamison-Travis makes his money on early downs, and the NFL role for him is pretty clear: rotational nose tackle in an odd-front or two-gap scheme where his job is to hold the point, control the A-gap, and let linebackers flow to the football. He is at his best when a defensive coordinator asks him to line up as a shade nose or one-technique and absorb blocks rather than create on his own. His run defense tape at Auburn is genuinely good, and his ability to stack blockers and clog rushing lanes will translate to a specific role at the next level.
The limitations are real, though, and they define his ceiling. His timed speed puts him in the bottom tier athletically at the position, and his pass-rush game lacks the variety to win consistently against NFL-caliber guards. He is not going to contribute in sub packages or nickel situations, which caps his snap count in a league built around the passing game. The block-shedding issues and occasional anchor slippage against double teams could get exposed against better offensive lines than he faced in the SEC.
The path to a roster is narrow but real. A team that values gap integrity on early downs and needs a big body to pair alongside a more dynamic interior rusher can find value here. His JUCO background, his climb from the bottom of Auburn's depth chart, and his improved discipline as a senior all speak to a work ethic that gives you some confidence in continued development. He is not going to change a defense, but in the right scheme with a defined role, there is a useful NFL run stopper here.
This article originally appeared on Giants Wire: What pre-draft scouting reports said about Giants DT Bobby Jamison-Travis