LATRELL McCUTCHIN SR. | CB | Houston

Board Rank: Top-120
NFL Role: CB3 / Rotational Outside Corner
Player Type: “Disruptor with Edge”

When the conversation shifts from raw traits to competitive tape, Latrell McCutchin Sr. starts gaining real traction inside draft rooms. He’s not being evaluated as a projection-only corner — he’s being evaluated as a defender who shows up on film with intent, urgency, and production at the catch point.

Turn on the tape and the identity is clear: this is a ball-disrupting, tone-setting corner who plays through receivers, not around them. His pass breakup production isn’t accidental — it’s the result of timing, physicality, and a willingness to finish every rep. In a league that values disruption as much as coverage, that matters.

McCutchin isn’t built on flash metrics alone. He wins with competitiveness, positioning, and edge, consistently forcing quarterbacks to earn every completion. That’s the kind of profile defensive coaches trust — especially in sub-packages and rotational roles where reliability and effort show up immediately.

From an NFL board perspective, this is where his value sharpens:
a corner with proven ball production, NFL-level toughness, and a clear pathway to sticking on a roster through defense and special teams.

Tape, Traits, Translation


McCutchin’s evaluation centers on competitive toughness and ball disruption. His 10 pass breakups show a corner who consistently finds the football and challenges receivers at the catch point.

He’s not a pure shutdown athlete, but he plays with urgency and physical intent, which shows up in contested coverage situations.

Trait Breakdown:

  • Ball Skills: Active hands, plays through receiver

  • Competitiveness: High — never concedes reps

  • Length: Useful at catch point

  • Top-End Speed: Average — can be stressed vertically

Film Doesn't Lie:
He’s better in phase than recovery, winning with positioning, not makeup speed.

Front Office Tag:
“Length + disruption traits. Depth corner who competes for reps.”

NFL Translation:
Best in physical systems like the Pittsburgh Steelers or Baltimore Ravens where corners are asked to compete snap-to-snap.