Penn State NFL Draft: Allar’s Reset and Rising Prospects

Penn State NFL Draft: Allar’s Reset and Rising Prospects - painting of Penn State Nittany Lions football venue

Allar’s High-Stakes Reboot with the Steelers

Penn State quarterback Drew Allar, once eyed as a potential No.1 overall pick and a lifelong Browns fan, slid to the third round before the Pittsburgh Steelers grabbed him at No.76. After ending his collegiate career with a broken ankle and a series of high-profile late-game interceptions, Allar insists this setback is a blessing: he’s used recovery time to dissect NFL film, refine his mechanics, and prepare for a fresh start. At 6-4 with thunderbolt arm talent honed since high school, Allar brings size, arm strength, and film-room passion. Yet scouts caution he must polish his under-pressure throws, broaden his field vision, and prove he can evolve from boom-or-bust to reliable NFL starter.

If Drew Allar’s career were a sitcom, this would be the season where the lead character trips over a banana peel, sprains an ankle, and then stages an epic comeback—complete with motivational montages set to power ballads. The Steelers must be giddy: they’ve snagged a guy who can throw rockets but occasionally hands the ball to the other team. It’s like hiring a gourmet chef who sometimes burns toast. But hey, who doesn’t love redemption arcs? Besides, if Allar’s best football is truly ahead of him, Pittsburgh fans will be tuning in like it’s the season finale of the greatest sports drama ever filmed.


Day-3 Diamonds: Penn State’s Draft Day Bargains

On Day 3 of the 2026 NFL Draft, Penn State prospects could fly off the board in Rounds 4-7. Leading the pack is edge rusher Dani Dennis-Sutton, whose surprise fall to Round 4 underscores his mix of athleticism and room for refinement. Safety Zakee Wheatley boasts six career interceptions and solid zone coverage skills. On offense, tackle Drew Shelton logged 29 straight starts and fits zone schemes, while dynamic backs Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen offer speed and vision despite injury concerns. Rounding out the list are interior disruptor Zane Durant, towering tackle Nolan Rucci, and sleeper tight end Khalil Dinkins—plus specialists like long snapper Tyler Duzansky.

This feels like a mid-season garage sale where every bargain bin holds a “future Pro Bowler,” as long as you ignore the fine print about late-night practice habits and occasional sprained ankles. Penn State’s Day-3 class reads like a superhero ensemble audition: each player has one or two blockbuster moves, but their origin stories still need tightening. Draft analysts will pretend they spotted these sleepers months ago, but really, it’s all a high-stakes game of Fantasy Football meets blindfold test. Tune in when someone’s “under-the-radar” tackle turns into tomorrow’s salary-cap headache.


Packer-Bound: The Dennis-Sutton Disruption Machine

Defensive end Dani Dennis-Sutton, a four-star high school recruit who battled injuries and pandemic cancellations, emerged at Penn State as a force with 12 tackles for loss, 8.5 sacks, and three blocked punts in his final season. Selected by the Green Bay Packers in Round 4, the 6-5 edge rusher brings length, power, and special teams prowess. While his pass-rush plan needs refinement—bend, burst, and unpredictability are works in progress—Dennis-Sutton’s motor and versatility (lining up standing or with a hand down) could see him on the field early, especially on punt-block and third-down packages.

Green Bay must be thrilled: they just added the draft’s official Office of Noise Complaints, a guy so athletic he could probably sack your Wi-Fi router. Dennis-Sutton’s playbook appears to be “smash, push, repeat,” which might prompt some comic relief from quarterbacks who didn’t invite him to their birthday parties. Sure, he sometimes looks like a tree stump struggling with origami in coverage, but nothing says “edge presence” like surprising your own coaches with a punt block. If he keeps growing beyond that predictable rush plan, the future could be bright—or at least entertaining.


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