If Size Doesn’t Matter, D’Angelo Ponds Could Be A Steal

April 17th, 2026

In the 2026 Rose Bowl, Indiana CB D’Angelo Ponds blasts the ball loose from Alabama QB Ty Simpson.

Regular readers know Joe cringes when folks hype what a guy did at the combine to mean he’s a superior football player.

OK, cool, the guy bounced around cones and ran around in shorts indoors. That’s nice. But what did he do on a football field?

Measurements, Joe has a strong hunch, will keep Indiana cornerback D’Angelo Ponds out of the first round next week in the NFL draft. And maybe, just maybe, push one of college football’s best corners to Day 3. But there’s one major element that cannot be measured at the combine: heart.

Ponds plays football with a full heart, and then some.

One draft analyst doesn’t believe in measurements. He believes in ball. And that would be Emory Hunt of CBS, the Czar of the Playbook. Ponds stands 5-8, 181 pounds, tiny by NFL standards.

Hunt doesn’t care because Ponds can ball. Hunt has Ponds as his No. 1 cornerback in the draft, listed in his Football GamePlan Draft Guide 2026.

* Excellent press-bail and bail technique. Able to explode into and out of the break and make a beeline to the football. His click-and-close ability is A+.

* Competes at a high level despite his stature. Strong run defender and is an above average blitzer off the corner. Despite giving up some pounds in the weight department, he’s still a very dependable tackler.

* A+ ball skills and ball awareness; won’t miss an opportunity to turn the ball over.

After speaking with several NFL scouts, veteran NFL scribe Bob McGinn of GoLongTD.com has Ponds as his No. 6 corner.

6. D’ANGELO PONDS, Indiana (5-8 ½, 181, 4.37, 2): First Hoosiers defensive back to make first team All-Big Ten in two seasons since safety Mike Dumas in 1989-’90. “He could walk in the door and be a nickel,” one scout said. Played outside on the right for the national champions. “I don’t know how he plays on the outside,” a second scout said shortly before IU pro day. “He’s a really good football player but I don’t know if has the traits to be a good corner in the NFL. He got the most he could out of what he has. He’ll have to run fast at that size and I don’t know if he will.” On the April 1 pro day he ran a blazing 40. His vertical jump (43 ½) at the combine led the position. “He’s a baller,” a second scout said. “I don’t like small corners typically but as competitive as he is, he’s a nuisance. I like him a lot but the size is always going to be an issue.” Started 10 games at James Madison in 2023 and then 26 for IU in 2024-’25. “He’s the exception to the rule,” said a third scout. “You really don’t want to draft him in the second but he’s gonna get drafted and will play. He has the football mentality. He’s fearless. He can play the nickel for sure, but he’s going to have to play the nickel like Philly does. In other words, he can be near the box but he can’t be in the box. He can play man coverage. He can’t be in the box and blitzing off the edge. Every time you see a small corner he’s on his second or third team already. Guy’s a tough dude. He hits, man. I love him, but how much balls do you have drafting him? Even in the third round you’d be scared.” Finished with 169 tackles, seven picks, 33 passes defensed and one forced fumble. Defensive MVP of both the Rose Bowl and the Peach Bowl. “He makes plays in all situations,” a fourth scout said. “He’s one of those guys that you want to not like but you always end up liking him. The size doesn’t necessarily bother me ever as long as you have the length. He was on Jeremiah Smith’s high-school team so he’s used to competing against big guys. So that’s not gonna bother him at all.” Arms were 29 3/8, shortest of the top 15 corners. Played with Ohio State’s Smith (6-3, 215) at Chaminade Madonna, leading the team to state titles in 2021 and ’22. Added a fifth scout: “Little tiny guy, but every time I saw him he was making a play. He made a lot of plays. Fourth round. At worst, he’s a role starter.” From West Park, Fla.

Ponds had a solid game against Ohio State in the Big Ten championship game. He switched between covering the best receiver in college football, his former high school teammate Jeremiah Smith, and a likely first-round pick next week, Carnell Tate.

Ponds was targeted six times in that game by Buckeyes quarterback Justin Sayin and Ponds forced four incompletions and allowed just one catch.

In the Rose Bowl against Alabama, Ponds destroyed Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson on a blitz, forcing a fumble in an Indiana rout.

Against Oregon in the playoffs, Ponds was named the Peach Bowl Defensive MVP after a 25-yard pick-six on the game’s first play from scrimmage.

In the national championship game against Miami, Ponds was targeted six times, allowing one catch for one yard while forcing four incompletions.

So it seems Ponds rises to the occasion.

Joe has nothing against Ponds. But man, at 5-8, 181, this guy could get broken in half in the NFL before he bulks up. However, neither Jacob Parrish nor Antoine Winfield, Jr. measured 5-10 before they were drafted.

If the Bucs want to take a flyer on Ponds on the second night, Joe wouldn’t chug battery acid. The guy may not live to see the end of his rookie contract, though.

The scouts McGinn talked to seem convinced Ponds can play nickel. Draft him, put him at nickel, then flip Jacob Parrish to outside corner. Joe’s good with that.

 

65 Responses to “If Size Doesn’t Matter, D’Angelo Ponds Could Be A Steal”

  1. Beeej Says:

    He could pay nickel…I believe I’d rather see Parrish on the outside

  2. PSL Bob Says:

    Damn, that kid can play! Totally agree with Joe. He may get broken in half at some point, but till then he’ll be a difference maker!

  3. BigZ Says:

    Keionte Scott please. Can play nickle and slot. Plays the run very well. 4.3 40. He can blitz too. Hes got some dawg in him. Top 50 player.

  4. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    Meh,

    VJ Payne for Moneybacker

  5. Lakeland Says:

    D’Angelo Ponds is the most skilled CB in this draft
    He use to cover Jeremiah Smith when they were at Chaminade -Madonna
    He blanket the top wideouts he faced, throughout the Big 10 and playoffs

    There’s so many positive things about him
    So few negative things about him

  6. Lakeland Says:

    He’s the same size as Darrell Green
    And he plays big like Darrell Green

    And Darrell Green played in the NFL for 20 years
    Every year at a high level, Hall of Fame level

  7. 813bucboi Says:

    draft this kid!!!!….sounds like a more mature honey badger!!!

    D.Ponds and Devin Moore from UF would improve our secondary drastically and they’ll both be Day2 or Day3 picks

    GO BUCS!!!!

  8. Joe Says:

    He’s the same size as Darrell Green
    And he plays big like Darrell Green

    And Darrell Green played in the NFL for 20 years
    Every year at a high level, Hall of Fame level

    You know, that’s an interesting point. There is no question that football when Darrell Green play was significantly more physical than today. Yet Green stayed on the field for 20 (!) years.

    So maybe it’s not that crazy to select Ponds?

  9. Lakeland Says:

    That’s why I always say

    Look at the programs these kids come from
    D’Angelo Ponds was a star at Chaminade -Madonna, a national high school power
    He was a starter at James Madison, when Coach was hired at IU
    He took Ponds with him, and IU became a power
    Then IU won the national championship, with Ponds as their best CB

    Those are the intangibles l look for in a player
    Their background in football, their success at every level, their skill set
    I don’t care nothing about a 3 minute highlight video, or a combine workout

    Give me a highly productive player, who have competed against the best

  10. Smashsquatch Says:

    Don’t be scared Jason. He’s a baller. Fluid & fast, he can play man or zone and would fit nicely as a nickel. His quicks make him a perfect fit. Don’t be afraid to reach, you can never have enough guys like this. Love your idea Joe, slide Parrish outside and let Mighty Mouse wreak havoc in the slot.

  11. Redzone Says:

    Very Ronde Barber-like – would be a helluva pick

  12. LUVMYBUCS Says:

    Ponds gives you positional versatility without the liability. Outside, inside — he plays both with purpose and physicality. And when he gets to the ball carrier, he finishes.

  13. Fanofdabucs Says:

    Ponds would be an excellent 2nd round pick. If he was 2 inches taller, he may be the first CB drafted .

    Put him in nickel spot and move Parrish outside.

  14. SteveK Says:

    Pick him, all for it. He has a 43 inch vertical so he can play a lot taller than he is.

  15. D-Rok Says:

    This guy loves to play football – yes, please! We need more of his type on our defense.

    Obviously, his production shows that his size didn’t matter. In fact, due to his size, I’d say he’s compensating more (with coverage skills and reaction quicks) than a prototypical corner.

    He’s a dawg. Get those types!

  16. bakerfan Says:

    Is he a better tackler than what the Bucs trotted out last year…. The answer seems to be YES. So go get him, a player with heart but undersize is way better than a so called right size player with no heart which I saw last year on numerous occasions.

  17. 813bucboi Says:

    lakeland

    great points

    GO BUCS!!!!

  18. Bee Says:

    Judging by the highlights he played a lot of man, and looked very good doing it.

    My question is, how much man do you think he’d be playing on the Bucs? Bowles will have him 7-10 yds off the line. Can he still be effective in this system? Also, there’s no way to accurately guess a player’s durability so its a dice roll with every player.

  19. Marine Buc Says:

    Ronde was one inch taller and 5 ILBs lighter…

    My only problem is his limited role potential at NCB.

    If he is able to play outside I would consider it because I really like this kid.

  20. Badbucs Says:

    Take him if he falls to the 4th round. Not a draft year we can afford too many gambles. We need at least 4 guaranteed starters.

  21. Hunter's Crack Pipe Says:

    Sticks like glue in that cut-up. I like him more than reaching because of measurables.

  22. Lakeland Says:

    I think he’s a better Outside CB than what the Bucs have
    Ponds is not a nickel, but he can adjust to playing nickel

  23. Lakeland Says:

    Morrison, McCollum, Parrish, are the ones you’re gambling on

    Ponds is a sure thing

  24. TampaBayBucFan Says:

    TBBF’s head is spinning with all these draft scenarios…..the Bucs and…..the Bucs and…the Bucs and….the Bucs and….

  25. LUVMYBUCS Says:

    Don’t get me wrong — you can see exactly why Bowles is begging for size. Turn on the Atlanta tape and watch Kyle Pitts abuse our undersized DBs and the argument makes itself. Based on that alone I’d prefer Keonte Scott at the position. But don’t sleep on D’Angelo Ponds — the kid is not a slouch-He’s not a consolation prize. Would be a welcomed addition to the roster

  26. Bojim Says:

    ‘Vernon’ could ball too. Where is he now?

  27. DS Says:

    Crassus part is if he was 5’11 or 6ft he’d be CB # 1 and a top 10
    Pick, measurables don’t mean much imo

  28. football 1 Says:

    I like it!!. yes bench McColumn . I hope they do draft a great corner. we need one or two badly. I don’t think we can start the season with McColumn and Morrison as the starting corners, no way.

  29. OLDSCHOOL1976 Says:

    Three reasons to NOT draft a 5’-8” light CB:

    Tet McMillian
    Drake London
    Chris Olave

    Even Jamaal Dean was too small to cover these guys and our other guy (Zion)
    Was big enough but couldn’t get the job done either.

  30. KABucs Says:

    He’d be a 3rd or 4th round steal. Dude’s like glue. Very Parrish-like.

  31. OLDSCHOOL1976 Says:

    Give me Julian Neal or Tacario Davis, size matters.

  32. Guinness8 Says:

    I think Brent Grimes was about that size, maybe slightly bigger.

  33. 3.28.Evans Says:

    Draft Beer.

  34. garro Says:

    Nope That is what we have now. Pic tells me he is not interested in tackling anyone as well. Standing over a QB show boating does not impress this Bucs fan. Monte would have kicked him off the field for that back in the day.

    Go Bucs!

  35. Lakeland Says:

    Somebody will draft him

  36. Brandon Says:

    Dude is short but far from small. He’s got good thickness and strength. He’ll also get a tad bigger. I like him a lot in round 3.

  37. BringBucsBack Says:

    He is not right for Todd’s WAO (Wide A$$ Open) defense. This kid plays his receivers much too tightly. He will also have to have those good tackling skills coached out of him.

  38. SB~LV 🏈 Says:

    The NFL humbles all that attempt to enter, play and overstay.
    When the league is bigger and faster this guy sadly is too small to invest in

  39. Adam's Angry Says:

    Giggity, Joe.

    Giggity.

  40. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    “Give me Julian Neal or Tacario Davis, size matters.”

    I’d take either over Ponds all day, just as fast and a few noticeable inches taller.

    When you hear “it’s a game of inches” they’re talking just as much about leverage as they are the 36 inches in a yard.

  41. larrd Says:

    Frank Minnifield was about Ponds size. He was a great outside cornerback.

  42. Buccaneer Bonzai Says:

    I’m all fore drafting him in the 3rd or 4th.

    My only concern is he sounds like he’s a ‘man coverage ‘ guy, and Bowles is a zone guy.

    That makes me doubt Bowles will want him.

  43. Warren Brooks Lynch Says:

    “My only concern is he sounds like he’s a ‘man coverage ‘ guy, and Bowles is a zone guy.”

    Benjamin Morrison draft reports all hinted at him playing a ton of man(press & off) at Notre Dame and that’s legitimately why we drafted him because his versatile in terms of scheme.

    It’s not a this/that thing, there are zone concepts with man responsibilities underneath

  44. 813bucboi Says:

    Lakeland Says:
    April 17th, 2026 at 12:46 pm
    Somebody will draft him

    BINGO!!!!

    and he’s going to lock up some good WRs too…wouldnt want to see him in the NFC South thats for sure

    GO BUCS!!!!

  45. Boge Says:

    Its guys like this that allow you to go BPA in round 1. There’s lots of starters to be found in rounds 2-4. Mgmt just needs to get it figured out and be aggressive.

  46. Pickgrin Says:

    If he’s there mid 4th round? absolutely!

    3rd? Probably not.

    Licht has gotten us some really good players with his 3rd round selections over the last few years… (Parrish, Tykee Smith, JMac and YaYa in just the last 3 drafts). And I expect that will continue as there will be plenty of talent still on the board mid 3rd round this year.

    The tape may say ‘go for it” on this CB – but the measurables are going to give any NFL team pause… so he’s probably seen by most as a “flyer” type player. And a lot of teams prefer to save their “I’ll take a flyer on this guy” picks for day 3….

    The one measurable that stands out (besides speed) – is Ponds’ 43″ vertical jump – which is about 6″ higher than a lot of decent athletes – so when he’s going for the ball in a “jump ball” or “50/50″ type scenario – he’s playing more like a 6-0 or 6-1” CB than 5-8″….

  47. JustVisiting Says:

    Barry Sanders was 5’8″ and people were +trying+ to break him in two.

  48. Ash Says:

    Yeah🙄 size doesn’t matter keep lying to yourself. Lol

  49. SB~LV 🏈 Says:

    Barry Sanders was thick as a brick!

  50. Defense Rules Says:

    Can’t teach speed, and can’t teach height.

    Even still, if we didn’t already have Parrish for Nickel, I’d probably say Why not, in Rnd 4 or later. But we do have a Nickel; what we need is a couple more Outside CBs with the height, speed & talent to cover fast, tall WRs & TEs in the NFL, not college.

  51. Reality Says:

    Love his compete. Straight DAWG. Would love to come away with him in this Draft. Wouldn’t mind the Notre Dame transfer IOL Pat Coogan either later in the Draft either.

  52. HeartyDickerson Says:

    If we draft him for nickel and push Parrish to outside, that would mean 4/5 of our secondary is 5’9 or under.

  53. Lakeland Says:

    Relijah Hardy the Strongside LB for Indiana is 5’11 225 lbs
    They say he’s too small also, be was one of our LBs at Lakeland High
    We won back to back State Championships with him
    He had 102 Tackles, 8 Sacks, 15 TFL, 5 PD

    Him and Ponds are excellent football players, from great high school programs
    They have a lot of heart, and fight in them
    They beat Oregon twice, Alabama, Ohio State, Illinois
    Miami, Penn State, Miami

    Out performing some of the best football players in this draft

  54. Lakeland Says:

    “”Rolijah Hardy “”

  55. 3rd and 28 Says:

    3rd and 28 doesn’t get a season breaking 1st down with this guy in the mix imo .

  56. 3.28.Evans Says:

    Bowles x 2 = 0-17

    Simple math

  57. Kenton Smith Says:

    Sounds like a great football player. Sounds like the kind of guy who would be corner depth and solid special teams player who could be bound and determined to become a starter. Competitive, productive, winner. 5’8” 180 lbs? That tells me that he is one tough SOB. Fourth round? Can’t have enough good corners.

  58. Creamsicle Says:

    Kind of a ridiculous headline when the MO of the defense which came directly from the GM himself was to get bigger and badder but ok joe not the first time I saw something silly on this website

  59. Creamsicle Says:

    This time of the year is actually painful for football fans. The ridiculous speculation and click bait headlines are a reason to forget about football between free agency and draft.

  60. toopanca Says:

    Joe,

    I have evidence that Ponds might survive and thrive against big guys in the NFL.

    Growing up, my next door neighbors had the meanest damn dog I have ever seen – a monstrous little Pekingese. Watching Ponds play gives me PTSD flashbacks of that pocket sized horror.

    Standing in my yard, minding my own business, at any moment, a mouthful of those needle like teeth might clamp down on one of my ankles. I pretty soon learned that I couldn’t outrun it. And, as many times as I stomped at it and kicked at it, I never dissuaded the beast in the least. It got a mouthful of my ankle anytime it decided to take it.

    Watching Ponds, I am convinced that damn dog is back – this time as a cornerback who is too mean to get stomped.

  61. Beeej Says:

    In their 1970’s “over the hill gang” era, the Redskins had 5’9″ Pat Fischer and 6′ Mike Bass at corner. Whenever they played the Eagles, they always put Fischer on 6’8″ Harold Carmichael

  62. Darin Says:

    Best db in the draft. Will be gone soon. Not sure how he could be considered a steal for the slot he will get drafted

  63. ScottyMack Says:

    The key stat was that he had the highest vertical jump in the combine at his position. Height isn’t everything when you have those kind of springs!

  64. Kidfloflo Says:

    I saw a site listing him at 5′ 7!? If that’s his true measurements than I don’t see it…just too tiny to deal with the Mike Evan’s of the world treating him like their little brother. Unless of course he can jump out of the sky and dunk a basketball!

  65. Kidfloflo Says:

    Looks like Scottymack answered my question about hops