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What a 30-visit draft prospect cornerback would bring to the team

MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - JANUARY 19: Keionte Scott #0 of the Miami Hurricanes reacts during the second quarter against the Indiana Hoosiers in the 2026 College Football Playoff National Championship at Hard Rock Stadium on January 19, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We continue our 2026 NFL Draft preview of draft prospects that could interest the Dallas CowboysToday we are looking at cornerback Keionte Scott from Miami.

Keionte Scott

CB 
Miami Hurricanes 
Senior 
4-star rating
5’11”
193 lbs

History

Before Keionte Scott was playing in the FBS, he took the JUCO route and played at Snow College in 2020 and 2021. He was team captain, a two-time JUCO All-American, and a conference co-defensive player of the year, which is what turned him into one of the most sought-after JUCO defensive backs.  

His first FBS shot came in 2022 at Auburn. He was immediately significant because he became a starter and a return-game weapon. He was credited with 53 tackles and one interception, and he was active as a punt returner with a 74-yard punt return touchdown versus Arkansas.

In 2023, Scott remained at Auburn and had 44 tackles, two tackles for loss, five pass breakups, and added 15 kick returns for 222 yards and a TD. 

His 2024 season was a down year statistically because of availability. He played in 11 games but only started in four games and finished with just 18 tackles. The season was limited due to  injuries and coaching options at the position. 

In 2025, Scott transferred to Miami and this was the season that remade his career. He had 64 tackles, 13 TFL, five sacks, two pick-sixes, two forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries, and five PBUs. He was named second-team All-ACC and received Jim Thorpe Award semifinalist honors. He also had multiple standout games that included an 11 tackle game versus  Florida State, nine tackles and three TFL against Louisville, and eight tackles and a sack at SMU.

Late in the year he missed Miami’s final three regular-season games due to a foot injury, returned for the CFP opener, and immediately popped with 10 tackles, three TFL, and a forced fumble versus Texas A&M. In the Cotton Bowl Classic versus Ohio State, he had a 72-yard pick-six and won the game’s Felix R. McKnight Defensive MVP award. 

2025 Statistics

756 Defensive Snaps
64 Total Tackles
13 TFL
20 Total Pressures
5 Sacks
5 Pass Breakups
2 Interceptions
2 INT TD
2 Forced Fumble
2 Fumble Recoveries 
15 Missed Tackles
69% Reception Percentage Allowed
0 TD Allowed
69.0 Passer Rating Allowed
0 Penalties

Snap by Position

Box- 34%
Slot- 64%
Wide- 1%

NFL Combine/Pro Day

Awards

2020: JUCO/NJCAA All-American
Conference Co–Defensive Player of the Year
2021: JUCO/NJCAA All-American
Conference Co–Defensive Player of the Year
2025: Second-Team All-ACC

Scorecard

Overall– 80.3
Speed- 95
Acceleration- 89
Agility- 81
Strength- 79
Tackling- 60
Run Defense- 89
Man Coverage- 69
Zone Coverage- 81
Press Man- 83
Discipline- 96

THE GOOD

  • Elite run support for a nickel defensive back
  • Has an elite downhill trigger and plays with real physicality near the line
  • Impact blitzer with great timing off the edge and finishes well
  • High-end zone defender
  • Plays with great vision and reads the quarterback eyes well
  • A fantastic understanding of spacing
  • Loose hips with smooth transitions and the ability to mirror breaks without panicking
  • Plays bigger than his size
  • Alignment versatility playing from the slot and at safety
  • Consistently arrives fast to the ball and plays with a constant attack tempo 

THE BAD

  • Has serious man-coverage limitations
  • Can struggle to mirror sudden releases and breaks by opening his hips too early
  • Looks less comfortable locating the ball downfield 
  • Not a true boundary corner
  • Tackling technique shows a lot of inconsistency
  • Will peek into the backfield and bite on fakes or trigger too aggressively
  • Needs better body control at the catch point, especially when playing through contact
  • Medical red flags 
  • He’s an older prospect with a long college timeline, and will be 25 by the time the season starts

THE FIT

Scott’s best NFL fit is as a starting slot defender in an aggressive, pressure-oriented defense that asks its inside defensive backs to fit the run, blitz, and play match coverage. You maximize him by keeping him primarily inside where his short-area quickness, tackling and trigger show up, while giving him help versus bigger outside X receivers. 

SUMMARY

Keionte Scott profiles as a high-impact defender as a compact, explosive nickel defensive back who plays like a linebacker in the run game but still has the quickness and instincts to hold up in match coverage. His best tape shows an aggressive trigger, decent tackling for the position, and real blitz value. He gets into the backfield and finishes like a front-seven player, while also producing takeaways in the passing game because he reads concepts well and attacks the football. 

The main questions are fit driven. He’s best inside and in pressure-heavy schemes, so teams will want to limit full-time outside duty against big, long NFL X receivers, and they’ll vet the durability questions because he finished 2025 with a foot injury and had a history of issues while playing at Auburn. 

Overall, he projects as an early NFL starter at nickel with great value helping on run fits, pressure, and turnovers, but that’s only if he’s used in the right structure.

PRO COMPARISON

Alontae Taylor

BTB OVERALL RANKING

61st

CONSENSUS OVERALL RANKING

60th
(Consensus ranking based on the average ranking from 90 major scoring services, including BTB)


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