Patriots draft profile: George Gumbs Jr. explodes off the edge
Image: yahoo
BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA - SEPTEMBER 13: Edge George Gumbs Jr. #34 of the Florida Gators defends during the second half of a game against the LSU Tigers at Tiger Stadium on September 13, 2025 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Photo by Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images) | Getty Images Speaking to reporters at Gillette Stadium on Monday, New England Patriots executive vice president of player personnel Eliot Wolf pointed to the edge as a position his team will be looking to address in the upcoming NFL Draft. There is one area in particular the Patriots want to improve, namely the group’s overall speed. There are several capable edge rushers who fit this description, and today we are going to look at one of them. Meet George Gumbs Jr. out of the University of Florida. Hard facts Name: George Gumbs Jr. Position: Defensive edge/Outside linebacker School: Florida (RS Sr.) Opening day age: 23 (10/25/2002) Measurements : 6’4 3/8”, 245 lbs, 33 5/8” arm length, 9” hand size, 4.66s 40-yard dash, 7.00s 3-cone drill, 41” vertical jump, 10’1” broad jump, 22 bench press reps, 9.19 Relative Athletic Score Experience Colleges: Northern Illinois (2021-23), Florida (2024-25) Career statistics : 45 games (19 starts) | 1,210 defensive snaps, 375 special teams snaps, 189 offensive snaps | 98 tackles, 13 missed tackles (11.7%), 21 TFLs, 4 FFs, 2 FRs | 55 QB pressures (11.0 sacks, 10 hits, 34 hurries) | 21 targets, 13 catches surrendered (61.9%), 152 yards, 2 PBUs | 1 special teams tackle, 1 missed special teams tackle (50.0%) | 11 targets, 4 catches, 44 yards (11.0/catch), 3 drops | 2 penalties (incl. 0 declined/offsetting) Accolades: SEC Academic Honor Roll (2024) Gumbs Jr’s career up until this point can be split in two parts: before and after moving from offense to defense. Primarily a wideout who also played some fullback, tight end and safety at Neal F. Simeon Career Academy in Chicago, he was rated a three-star wide receiver. He did draw some early interest, primarily from Division II schools but also a couple of FBS programs, but after Covid-19 disrupted the recruitment process opted to join Norther Illinois as a preferred walk-on in 2021. In three seasons with the Huskies, Gumbs Jr. saw limited action on offense. He played 11 games over his first two seasons, starting out as a receiver before moving to tight end for his sophomore campaign. After spring practices in 2023, he moved again, this time to the defensive edge. Gumbs Jr. made an immediate impact as a defender, registering 3.5 sacks and a pair of forced fumbles in his first year as an edge. With momentum on his side, he entered the transfer portal and after a brief commitment to Cincinnati joined Florida in January 2024. Over the next two seasons, he continued to build his résumé, adding 7.5 sacks and two more forced fumbles plus two recoveries, to his career totals; he also had 14.5 tackles for loss as a Gator. Draft profile Projected round: 5-6 | Consensus big board : No. 183 | Patriots meeting : 30 visit Strengths: Gumbs Jr. is a fantastic athlete, whose combination of size and speed made him seamlessly move from offense to the defensive edge. He is a flexible and agile player, who explodes off the edge even after adding bulk to his frame to better compete on defense. His feet are quick allowing him to dominate slower offensive linemen, and he has excellent pursuit speed and the flexible lower-half to bend around the corner. He also plays with a motor that seemingly never runs low. Gumbs Jr. showed steady improvement against the run, using his physicality to make plays in the backfield; a whooping 21% of his career tackles resulted in a loss of yardage. He also is a capable coverage player, who has the movement skills to drop out of a two-point alignment. You don't always see George Gumbs Jr.'s combine spider chart insanity on the field (yet), but when it's there, it's there. The first rep, where LSU's right tackle said, "F this dip-and-rip; I'm just going to tackle him" is pretty funny. And he gave Monroe Freeling problems. pic.twitter.com/a5TdtwVHqs — Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) March 30, 2026 Weaknesses: Gumbs Jr’s game can best be summed up in one word: chaotic. He relies mostly on his physical attributes to win as a pass rusher, but lacks an overall plan. Once blocked, he struggles to disengage. His countermoves are a work in progress, as are his hand placement, initial punch, use of leverage and timing. He effectively runs face-first into contact and trusts his athleticism and length to do the work for him, something NFL-level blockers will be more ready to deal with than his college opposition. He also has a tendency to over-pursue and despite showing improvement since making the move struggles to hold the edge in the run game. Patriots preview What would be his role? Given his status as a developmental player with a raw technical foundation, Gumbs Jr. would likely begin his Patriots career as a rotational option on the edge. He most likely would start out as a sub-package pass rusher, a role that would allow the team to best mask his deficits but still him in a position to be successful in a fairly narrow area of responsibility. Does he have positional versatility? Technically, Gumbs Jr. does bring some versatility to the table given his background as a wide receiver and tight end. However, his NFL reality will be different. With plenty of work to be done from a foundational perspective, he will most likely spend his early career focusing on getting better as an all-round edge defender rather than any excursions to the other side of the ball. What is his growth potential? Gumbs Jr. is a gifted and well-built athlete who has the baseline skills to succeed in the NFL. Before being able to do so on a consistent basis, however, he and the team need to make an investment in properly developing him. If they do so, he offers an enticing ceiling as not just a pass rush specialist but — given his physical mindset — a three-down player on the edge. Why the Patriots? As mentioned above, the Patriots are looking for speed at the edge and Gumbs Jr. has plenty of it. He also would join an ideal setup in New England: with Harold Landry and Dre’Mont Jones as starters, the team has plenty of experience to take some pressure off of him, allow him time to grow into his role, and to guide him toward a future as bright as his talent suggests. Why not the Patriots? Gumbs Jr. is quite raw, which in turn also limits the impact he will have early on in his career. For a team facing some questions on the edge from top to bottom, a more polished prospect might be preferable. One-sentence verdict: Gumbs Jr. is a traits-based edge who has a sky-high ceiling but also comes with some risk. For more information about George Gumbs Jr. and the rest of this year’s class of prospects, please take a look at Adam’s 2026 NFL Draft Guide . Also, what do you think about Gumbs Jr. as a potential Patriots target? Do you like him? Where would you pick him? Please head down to the comment section to share your thoughts.
Read the original article
Visit the source for the complete story.

