2025 NFL Draft: Contract details revealed for Panthers second round pick Nic Scourton

The contract details have been revealed Nic Scourton for who was selected by Carolina Panthers in the second round of the 2025 NFL Draft. Per Spotrac, is expected to sign a four-year contract for $8,806,818 with a signing bonus of $2,899,504.
Scourton headed to the NFL Draft after spending three seasons in college. His first two years were spent at Purdue, followed by a final year at Texas A&M.
He was highly productive at both stops, though his best work came in 2023 at Purdue, his sophomore season. During that campaign he tallied 50 tackles, 15.0 tackles for a loss, 10.0 sacks, a forced fumble and three passes defended. Each of those statistics was a career high for him.
In total across three seasons, Nic Scourton logged 109 tackles, 31.0 tackles for a loss, 17.0 sacks, three forced fumbles and five passes defended. He had a sizeable impact in the front seven defensively.
Those skills and the ability to rush the passer will be highly coveted at the NFL level. Thus his selection in the 2025 NFL Draft.
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What NFL Draft analysts are saying about Nic Scourton
Though Shemar Stewart often stole the headlines on the Texas A&M defense, it was Nic Scourton who quietly hogged most of the production. He knew how to convert his athleticism into production.
There are some questions about his ability to play the run, but he’s widely considered a plug-and-play type off the edge. The NFL Network’s Lance Zierlein wrote the following in evaluating Scourton as a prospect:
“Physical edge presence with the potential for creating havoc on all three downs. Scourton can power across the blocker’s face and into gaps but is an average “set-and-contain” run defender. He plays with adequate hustle and range in pursuit and hits runners with heavy pads.
“He’s an eclectic rusher with a mature rush plan and rarely shows opponents the same look on consecutive plays. He won’t outrace or bulldoze tackles, but he utilizes tempo alterations and a bag full of moves and counters. Teams threw chips and double-teams his way out of concern and respect. Scourton’s size, demeanor and rush talent give him a chance to become a productive three-down starter off the edge.”