PFF: There's a 'real chance' Tennessee's James Pearce could be No. 1 overall pick in NFL Draft

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ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller wrote in January that Tennessee edge rusher James Pearce Jr. could have potentially been the first defensive player selected in this year’s NFL Draft, had the superstar sophomore been draft eligible.

Earlier this week Pro Football Focus went a step further when looking at the 2025 NFL Draft board. The question pondered by PFF’s Max Chadwick: Could Pearce potentially be the No. 1 overall pick? 

“He has freakish explosiveness at 6-foot-5 and 242 pounds,” Chadwick wrote, “and he converts speed to power at an elite level. With the 2025 NFL Draft looking like it’ll feature a weaker quarterback class, there’s a real chance that Pearce could be the No. 1 overall pick.”

James Pearce led Vols with 10.0 sacks, 14.5 TFLs, 16 QB hits last season

Pearce finished fifth overall in the Pro Football Focus defensive ratings last season, with a 91.0 grade. He was just behind UCLA’s Laiatu Latu (96.2), Marshall’s Elijah Alston (91.2) and SMU’s Elijah Roberts (91.2). Pearce was third in pass rush with a season grade of 92.4, behind Latu (94.2) and Texas State’s Ben Ball (93.0).

Pearce was played 462 snaps in 13 games, with 246 pass-rushing snaps and 182 snaps in run defense.

“Pearce became one of the most fearsome pass rushers in college football this past season,” Chadwick wrote for PFF. “The sophomore’s 21.3% pressure rate ranked third among all edge defenders in the country, as did his 92.4 pass-rush grade. Pearce ended the season as the fourth-most-valuable Power Five edge defender, according to PFF’s wins above average metric.”

‘His speed and savvy pass-rush moves are worthy of the hype’

Pearce led Tennessee’s defense with 10.0 sacks as a sophomore, four more than the next closest player (Tyler Baron). He led the Vols in tackles for loss with 14.5, three more than Aaron Beasley’s 11.5. And he racked up 16 quarterback hits, 11 ahead of Baron in second place.

And he ended his breakout sophomore season by taking an interception back for a touchdown in the win over Iowa in the Citrus Bowl.

Pearce was Tennessee’s highest-rated defender with the 91.0 overall grade, coming in ahead of Jaylen McCollough (85.8), Kamal Hadden (85.7) and Keenan Pili (80.8). Fellow sophomore pass rusher Joshua Josephs had a grade of 79.1.

“Pearce is a 6-5, 242-pound blur rushing off the edge,” Miller wrote for ESPN in January. “With 43 pressures and 9.5 sacks in 2023, Pearce established himself as one of the best pass-rushers in the SEC. 

“In fact, an AFC West scout who covers the conference told me Pearce would be the first defensive player drafted in the 2024 class if he were draft-eligible. Expectations are high for Pearce, but his speed and savvy pass-rush moves are worthy of the hype.”

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