Ennis Rakestraw Jr., NFL Draft Prospect Profile and Scouting Report

Missouri CB Ennis Rakestraw Jr - 2024 NFL Draft Scouting Report

Name: Ennis Rakestraw Jr.

School: Missouri

Year: Junior

Position: CB

Measurables: 6’0”, 188 lbs (Missouri Website).

Combine: ARM: HAND: VERTICAL: BROAD: BENCH: 40-YD DASH: 4.51 10-YD SPLIT: 1.54 BROAD: 10':

Stats:

{Al will insert stats here}

Courtesy of Sports-Reference.com

 

General Info:

Despite a decorated career at Duncanville High in Texas, Ennis Rakestraw Jr., was not an especially highly touted recruit coming out of high school. 247Sports considered Rakestraw a composite three-star prospect for the 2020 class, and the 70th best CB recruit. Nationally, Rakestraw was considered the 896th overall recruiting prospect by 247Sports. Still, he received 27 offers, ultimately committing to Missouri over Alabama, Texas, Michigan State, and Miami (amongst others).

Mizzou did not hesitate to throw Rakestraw straight into the fire, as he started all 10 of the Tigers games in 2020. He was the first true freshman to be an opening day starter on defense since 2017, and he was up to the task. Rakestraw recorded a team leading six passes defensed, along with 24 tackles and a sack, though he was not able to come down with any interceptions.

Rakestraw’s 2021 started nicely, with 13 tackles and two passes defensed in four games. However, he suffered a season ending injury (torn ACL) against Boston College (in that fourth game), leading to him being redshirted due to injury as a sophomore.

As a redshirt sophomore in 2022, Rakestraw bounced back well. He started all 13 games and managed the first interception of his career. His 12 passes defensed were second on Mizzou’s roster and 25th in the nation.

2023 was Rakestraw’s final season, as he declared for the NFL Draft following a decent year. He recorded 35 tackles for the second consecutive season and broke up four passes.

Rakestraw was invited to the 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl, but wound up sitting out because of a surgery. He has also been invited to the annual NFL Scouting Combine, and should be recovered enough to participate in measurable and positional drills. Rakestraw is projected to be a first round pick by most pundits, and likely goes early in the second at the latest.

 

Positional Skills:

Strengths:

Rakestraw is at his best when he is allowed to play physically. He thrives in press and was one of the stickiest man coverage Corners in college football last season.

Flexible, fluid CB. He not just changes direction well, but can do so suddenly, allowing him to respond quickly to WR breaks and disrupt their timing. Rakestraw also has excellent balance which makes him really hard to shake.

Speaking of disrupting timing, Rakestraw’s skill in press coverage deserves another mention. He is a masterful defender off of the line of scrimmage. Rakestraw has the athleticism and instincts to hold his own against a variety of releases off the line and a deep repertoire of tools he uses to jam WRs at the line.

Experience on the boundary and in the slot.

Willing and very capable run defender. Does a good job working against blocks and wraps-up ball carriers.

Weaknesses:

Rakestraw’s raw stats were nothing special. He only recorded a single interception in his career and his passes defensed in his career don’t really stand out.. Some of that might be how proficient he is in man—there might be some island effect there, which the tape supports—but it is worth flagging as a concern.

A lean frame leaves some room for how he will manage against bigger WRs. Rakestraw can bully smaller players, but his lack of size could be exposed by the AJ Browns and Mike Evans of the NFL.

Rakestraw does not have the ideal speed for an NFL Corner. His technical proficiency and fluidity in man coverage covers for the lack of speed to some extent, but if he gets beat off of a break, Rakestraw is beat. There isn’t makeup speed.

His physicality sometimes gets him into trouble—Rakestraw gets grabby, especially against faster WRs (again, probably a consequence of his relative lack of speed) and that is going to result in some holds, illegal contacts, and DPIs.

 

Fit with the Packers:

New Defensive Coordinator Jeff Halfley has expressed a desire to have an aggressive, press-man defense—exactly the kind of defense that Ennis Rakestraw thrives in. There are a lot of questions about the Packers CB room right now: will Carrington Valentine take the next step? Is Eric Stokes going to be able to return to rookie form three years and a devastating injury later? Is Keisean Nixon going to be back? It is incredibly likely that the Packers address Corner early in the draft, potentially in the first round where Rakestraw is expected to be picked. CB is a definite need this year and is a premium position. Ultimately, although he might be a little slower than Green Bay tends to like at the position, Rakestraw is perfect fit for their new defensive scheme, has the fluidity and attitude the Packers like, and could easily be their first round pick in 2024.

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Comments (21)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
splitpea1's picture

February 24, 2024 at 11:02 am

I like him. His attitude, physicality, and proficiency in man coverage is just what we need for our secondary makeover. I'm not too worried about his size or his grabbiness--that's just typical of a lot of college players. If we can't find a safety to our liking at 25, I won't be disappointed if we took Rakestraw because he is ideal for the slot.

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LambeauPlain's picture

February 24, 2024 at 12:18 pm

While S is not a deep class, CB is.

If Team Gutey goes OT in the first round, I would not be shocked if the two 2nd rounders are the best S and CB on the board. Rakestraw should make it into the 2nd round.

And if the Packers do what I hope they do with their first 3 picks...S, OT, LB...there will still be quality CB depth in the 3rd. And they do have to add depth at CB, even if Stokes returns ready to go.

I do like Rakestraw. He has that CB "enforcer" attitude. He seems as excited to lay the wood on a ball carrier as he does with a pass breakup. His 4.5 speed is fine...and his play speed seems really fast & anticipatory and seems to diagnose plays in a snap. He's an attacker.

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WD's picture

February 25, 2024 at 06:13 pm

Breaking news! The combine begins Thurs. Before then it is like picking with a blindfold on. People see projected 40 times and then get excited. Calm down. Secondly, we have no idea how the draft will fall to the Packers. There will be options available every pick. Gute and management will do their homework. Fanatics like myself who get obsessed with the draft every year will no doubt question a number of picks like we do every year. I drink beer and snack to calm my nerves. However, in the end I think the team will improve markedly. We are in good hands. After the combine I will as usual make up the ideal draft for the Packers. I have been doing this for decades. Luckily management doesn't pay any attention. The Packers generally don't take O- linemen in the first round because of the famous Tony Mandarich first pick in the draft bust. They could have chosen Barry Sanders! In hindsight that Jordon Love pick is starting to look good!

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stockholder's picture

February 25, 2024 at 06:45 pm

Barry didn't want to play for the packers

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stockholder's picture

February 24, 2024 at 12:31 pm

No thanks- Very Risky pick.

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jannes bjornson's picture

February 24, 2024 at 02:09 pm

Mach 12. Pre-Track Meet ( move a 2025 #2, #5 )
#30 Kinchens FS
#32 Morgan LT
#51 Sweat DT
#80 Irving RB
#130 Jalen Ford LB
#134 B.Coleman OG
#149 Isaiah Davis RB
#164 Sione Vaki SS
#168 Aaron Casey LB
#189 Ovie Oghoufo Edge
#204 Jowan Briggs DT
#216 Andru Phillips CB
#243 Cody Schrader RB
#251 Jacob Monk Ot/OG
Bag Fuller as the free agent CB.

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PackEyedOptimist's picture

February 24, 2024 at 04:51 pm

PFN (a few trades): Key: added a SECOND ROUND pick next year
28 OT Kinsley Suamataia Tackle or Guard, whatever we need
41 C Zack Frazier Vital backup and potential near-future starter
65 S Calen Bullock A good 1-high safety
91 S Javon Bullard Another good safety
93 DT Braden Fiske Completes the DL build
102 CB Khyree Jackson Tall, athletic CB
127 RB Jaylen Wright Fast RB with WR skills
131 RB Ray Davis Love this guy despite his age
216 LB Omar Speights Fast little LB ST minimum
243 OLB/ED Brennan Jackson High effort competitor- ST minimum
251 ILB JD Bertrand AJ Hawk type

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stockholder's picture

February 25, 2024 at 04:30 am

King Sua will be tough to pass on.
IMO a ILB should be taken @41
DeJean is still nursing and should drop.
Bullard will go before #91.- 2nd rd.
I would move Wright up.

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mnbadger's picture

February 25, 2024 at 11:49 am

I agree with Stockholder.
Already has one acl tear and is having another surgery according to the article.
That's a big point to add. Why not share what's being operated on?
Kevin King?
GPG!

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MooPack's picture

February 24, 2024 at 12:49 pm

He's a bit thin/wiry, but he does have some fire in him. He'd be a great slot. He started out ranked end of 2nd - top of 3rd. He's now end of 1st, top of 2nd. Combine will tell more. Hopefully he has good shuttle and 3-cone, which I think he will. That would make up for some lack of top end speed.

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jannes bjornson's picture

February 24, 2024 at 02:11 pm

See how he fairs when they send the automated tackling dummy at him...

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golfpacker1's picture

February 24, 2024 at 01:51 pm

He is a Top 7 CB on most ratings services. If I had my choice of Rakestraw or T J Tampa-Ia State, it would not a hard decision. I take Tampa who is bigger @ 6'2, heavier @ 205lbs, and faster, though they both run 4.4s. Tampa was a shutdown CB for the Cyclones the last 2 years. He could start for Stokes right away if he is unavailable again.

I think this draft is set up well to fill GBs draft needs. And no matter if we pick say Dejean @ S, or a top O-lineman like Suamataia, or a top CB @ #25, we can fill either of the 2 top needs in the second round with starter caliber, upgrade players. Even if no one we like falls to #25 and we trade back, we still have great options and more premium picks to boot.

Who Knows, someone might throw the farm at us to trade up to #25 for a QB if any are left. Or all the QBs might get picked before # 25 in which case someone great that we need falls to #25. Either way we can't lose.

The only other top-rated CB I wouldn't pick in the 1st round is Lassiter from Georgia, unless he runs a faster 40 time @ the combine. We don't need a 4.6 40 CB, they are easy to find. Give me Tampa, or Jackson-Oregon, or Hart-ND. Bigger faster shutdown=Better. And they will all be available after the first round so we can spend the first 2 picks on OG and S.

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MooPack's picture

February 24, 2024 at 02:01 pm

Completely agree on Tampa. If I had a choice, I'd forgo Rakestraw for an OL and grab Tampa in the 2nd.

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golfpacker1's picture

February 24, 2024 at 05:23 pm

100% agree MOO. The draft is always exciting, and this one will be no exception. We will have great options at all 5 of our top needs: S, CB, Oline, RB, and Oline in the first 3 rounds. I am doubling on Oline to score 2 studs. We turned WR and TE into strengths in the last 2 years. This year we rebuild the Safety & RB rooms. And reload O-LIne & CB.

Stokes at this point is a big question mark. If he doesn't get healthy and return to form, Tampa would be a great replacement. More physical, bigger, and almost as fast. On the other side of the coin, if Stokes comes back healthy, he is almost like getting a good FA cornerback because we really haven't had him for 2 years.

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LLCHESTY's picture

February 24, 2024 at 02:20 pm

Rakestraw had a passer rating allowed above 100 two years in a row. Good tackler and could be an excellent slot defender but I wouldn't draft him before the 3rd round.

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PackEyedOptimist's picture

February 24, 2024 at 04:03 pm

My thoughts as well.
He seems to play more like a box safety, but I'd prefer someone with better hands for the interception.

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LLCHESTY's picture

February 24, 2024 at 09:34 pm

I think they most likely add three or four DBs in this draft, I hope at least two of them can be labeled playmakers.

A safety I like on day 3 is Kenny Logan from Kansas. Pretty evenly played snaps in the box and deep, 128 snaps in the slot. Not a ton of interceptions but returned kickoffs and punts so the hands are there. From what I've seen doesn't mind filling against the run at all. Looking forward to his testing next week.

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ArlenWilliams's picture

February 24, 2024 at 11:08 pm

The way we treat celebrities... and ourselves with them....

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golfpacker1's picture

February 25, 2024 at 10:06 am

I like Kenny Logan too, other interesting Day 3 Safeties I have researched are:

Sione Vaki-Utah ballhawk-fast-and can play RB very well in a pinch-4th-5th
Kitan Oladapo-Oregon ST-big and fast-6'2 215lbs and 4.5 40- 4th-5th
Malik Mustapha-Wake Forest-really fast and loves to tackle-he is a keeper- 4th

Evan Williams-Oregon he had the big pic in the Shrine game-fast-
Dadrion Taylor-Emerson-Texas Tech-not big but is fast and a ballhawk

Jaylon Carlies-Missouri-Big and fast @ 6'3 220lbs 4.5s-cheaper version of Jeremy Chinn

Jalyx Hunt-Houston Baptist- played S & Edge? -6'3 and 240lbs-sounds like a LB switch

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LLCHESTY's picture

February 25, 2024 at 11:52 am

Carlies was 227 lbs at the Senior Bowl. Played some SS there but mostly WLB. Seems like he and James Williams are moving LB.

Oladapo could even sneak into the 3rd depending on his testing this week or at his pro day.

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WD's picture

February 25, 2024 at 03:32 pm

Of course the question is how much is a little slower? We won't have that critical information until after the combine. Honestly, what is more important in the CB position? On deep passes in particularly you need CBs' who can keep up with the growing number of super fast (sub 4.4) receivers. Besides, we have Jaire, Stokes, Valentine and Balentine. If Stokes is healthy I really don't see the urgency in the first round for CB. Safety is the weaker position. The best way to improve our secondary is to improve our pass rush and stop the damn run.

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