Matt Ryan

Matt Ryan

Profile

Name

 

Matt Ryan

NFL Minute Projects:

Chicago Bears

Round 1, Pick 11

School

 

Boston College Eagles

Age

 

22

Class

 

Senior

Birth Date

 

May 17, 1985

Hometown

 

Exton, PA

Number

 

12

Position

 

QB

Height

 

6-5

Weight

 

220

40-Time

 

4.8

View Matt Ryan’s Official Boston College Profile

Scouting Report

Strengths: Is tall enough to scan the entire field from within the pocket, reads defenses fairly well and generally finds the open man given enough time. Accurate, takes something off underneath passes and can lead receiver when throwing underneath. Puts good touch on downfield passes and flashes the ability to drop the ball in over coverage. Mobile enough to get outside the pocket and throws well on the run. Shows good poise, is a leader on the field and wants the ball in hands late in games. Appears to be adjusting to new offense well and can be an effective game manager.

 

Weaknesses: Doesn’t have a cannon for an arm, doesn’t put great zip on downfield passes and gets into trouble when tries to throw into tight coverage. Lacks ideal mobility, has some problems buying time in the pocket and doesn’t always make sound decisions when the protection breaks down. Isn’t going to make defenders miss, doesn’t have great top-end speed and isn’t a dangerous open field runner that can consistently pick up yards with feet. Though tough and willing to play through pain, sustained a high-ankle spring during the 2006 season opener, broke left foot during 2006 Virginia Tech game, underwent foot surgery in January and durability is a concern.

 

Overview: Ryan was redshirted for the 2003 season. During his first three seasons (2004-’06) Ryan played in 26 games (18 starts) completing 419 passes on 693 attempts (60.5 percent) for 4,806 yards, 25 touchdowns and 18 interceptions. Ryan missed one game in 2006 with a sprained ankle. The table is set for Ryan to have a big year because Boston College is expected to open up its offense and he has the accuracy as well as the smarts to excel in the new scheme. However, his lack of elite arm strength and mobility does put a cap on his upside. His potential to develop into an effective starter or above-average backup should make him a late first-day pick if he stays healthy and improves his decision making in the face of pressure.

 

STATS Passing   Rushing  
Statistics Att Comp Pct Yds TD Int Rating   Att Yds Avg TD  
2007 - - - - - - -   - - - -  
2006 426 262 61.5 2,939 15 10 126.4   51 -30 -0.6 4  
2005 195 121 62.1 1,514 8 5 135.7   37 94 2.5 5  
2004 71 35 49.3 350 2 3 91.5   12 -3 -0.3 0