Morris is a physically gifted mauler with freakish athletic testing who waited five years at Georgia to finally start — and when he did, he earned PFF All-SEC honors. The tools are tantalizing: a 9.98 RAS, 420-pound bench doubles, and enough movement skills to moonlight as a goal-line fullback. But the tape tells a more complicated story — inconsistent pad level, conditioning questions, and a profile that Zierlein himself called 'a little too uneven' despite the rare blend of power and movement talent. He's a gap-scheme guard who can bury defenders at the point of attack when engaged but gets himself into trouble oversetting speed rushers and playing high. The ceiling is a quality NFL starter if coaching can harness the physical gifts; the floor is a roster-bubble athlete who never puts it all together consistently.
- Elite athletic profile for the guard position — 9.98 RAS (5th all-time among OGs since 1987) with exceptional size-speed combination at 6-5, 334 lbs and a 5.09 forty
- Devastating run blocker who generates vertical push and displacement at the point of attack; excels at washing defenders out of gaps and punishing second-level defenders
- Freakish weight-room strength (420 lb bench doubles, 505 lb squat doubles) that translates to heavy-handed punch and strong anchor when technique is sound
- Versatility with snaps at both guard spots and left tackle, plus usage as a goal-line fullback — rare athletic range for an interior lineman
- Strong pass blocking efficiency (99.4% career, 83.7 PFF pass block grade in 2025) indicating high-end baseline in protection when locked in
- Consistency is the defining red flag — late bloomer who waited until his redshirt senior year to become a full-time starter, with questions about conditioning and work ethic that have followed him throughout his career
- Tends to play high and overset against speed rushers, creating inside counter opportunities; pad level inconsistency undermines his natural power advantages
- Profile described as 'uneven' by Zierlein despite elite physical tools — gap between athletic testing and on-field production consistency raises developmental concerns
- Durability concerns with leg injury against Florida in 2024 that ended his starting run, and a leg injury against Alabama plus a shoulder injury against Kentucky in 2025
Similar to Lamp's Western Kentucky profile before his draft rise — an exceptionally athletic guard with high-level physical tools and strength metrics who was held back by consistency questions and a less-than-straightforward path to starting. Morris's elite testing, power at the point of attack, and questions about sustained high-level play mirror Lamp's arc as a physically gifted interior lineman who needed the right coaching environment to maximize his gifts.