Miles Frazier has been an integral part of LSU’s nationally renowned offensive line and is headed to the draft. Here is a 2025 NFL Draft Scouting Report and film analysis on him.
Overview, Film Analysis, And 2025 Scouting Report Of LSU OL Miles Frazier
Measurables:
- 6’5”
- 325 lbs
Player Background:
Miles Frazier graduated from Eastside HS as a three-star recruit in the 2020 class, beginning his college career at Florida International. He appeared in just four games in his first season, starting one and logging just over 100 total snaps. He was FIU’s top lineman in 2021 after maintaining his freshman redshirt, starting 10 of 11 games and posting a 76.3 PFF grade. One of the top linemen in the portal that following offseason, he committed to LSU.
He was a full-time starter in 2022 with the Tigers, posting a decent 62.6 PFF grade in over 800 snaps. Frazier continued to be a consistent contributor at the top of the depth chart in 2023. His PFF grade rose to 66.4 in almost 800 offensive snaps, with a solid 82.4 pass-blocking grade. His final season with LSU was his best, improving to a 70.3 overall PFF grade and his PBLK grade at an elite 88.4 mark.
Accolades:
- Freshman All-American (2021)
Strengths/Pros:
Frazier is built like every offensive line coach’s dream. He’s tall, thick, and he covers a ton of space on the interior. His strength is pretty evenly distributed and can exude good force through all pressure points. He sinks into his base well after the snap, stacking in-line blocks quickly and setting up well-positioned early leverage. His leg drive is solid when establishing positional advantage over defenders, getting them into bad positions, and manipulating their base.
He provides a strong presence as a help blocker, leveling defensive linemen with good power and re-directing them out of plays. Frazier resets his feet swiftly and rarely gets forced to swing his upper half into bad spots. He blocks defenders well when engaging laterally and is able to clear space to extend inside runs. He keeps his entire body aligned enough to maintain blocks when getting moved backward and is aware enough to move himself out of rushing lanes.
Weaknesses/Cons:
Frazier might be strong, but he’s much slower than most linemen. He’s quite ineffective as a pulling guard, often unable to get to the contact point on time. He lets himself get too rotational within sliding patterns, risking flags and/or getting fully evaded by defenders. Despite his fantastic size, he doesn’t offer enough length to control defenders from a distance or maximize his overall area.
His blocking can get too chaotic at times, trying to throw defenders away from him and ultimately letting them readjust and make later plays. Frazier isn’t athletic enough to work well at the second level and can’t get out in front of defenders to push them away from gaps. His feet get moved backward too frequently and closes the pocket too early, especially against weaker pressure. His hands often get sloppy and slow when run-blocking as well.
Potential Team Fits:
NFL Projection:
Frazier would need to take incredible strides to be a consistent starter, but he’s strong and capable enough to be a decent backup. He won’t be overwhelmed often if asked to stay on the interior and could be a solid Day 3 selection for teams needing OL depth. His floor is decently high because of his strength tools, but his ceiling isn’t high enough to be anything more than a late-round depth selection.
Prospect Grade:
- Mid 5th Round
Film Exposures:
- 2024 vs. USC
- 2024 vs. South Carolina
- 2024 vs. Vanderbilt
Main Image: Petre Thomas – USA Today Sports