Open Nav
Show Navigation
Show Menu

Trey Sermon Dynasty Value

Trey Sermon

Trey Sermon
Player Profile
RB UNS

Height

6'0"

Weight

215 lbs.

Experience

4 yrs.

Bye

18

Birthday

Jan 30, 1999

Age

26.0

College

Ohio State

NFL Draft Pick

2021 - Rd 3, Pk 88

Dynasty Analysis

{{dynastyProjection ? dynastyProjection.comment : "No comment"}}

Draft Sharks Model

{{rookieModel.overall_score}}

{{rookieModel.overall_percentile}}{{getOrdinalSuffixForPercentile(rookieModel.overall_percentile)}} percentile

{{rookieModel.analytic_avg}}

{{rookieModel.athleticism_percentile}}{{getOrdinalSuffixForPercentile(rookieModel.athleticism_percentile)}} percentile

{{rookieModel.athleticism_percentile}}%

{{rookieModel.film_avg}}

{{rookieModel.film_percentile}}{{getOrdinalSuffixForPercentile(rookieModel.film_percentile)}} percentile

{{rookieModel.film_percentile}}%

{{rookieModel.production_score}}

{{rookieModel.production_percentile}}{{getOrdinalSuffixForPercentile(rookieModel.production_percentile)}} percentile

{{rookieModel.production_percentile}}%

Trey Sermon Player Comp

{{rookieModel.comp_player_name}}

{{rookieModel.comp_write_up}}

Trey Sermon Dynasty Trade Values

{{colDef}}
{{scoringColDef.label}}

Trey Sermon Combine Results

Arm Length
{{advancedStats.ArmLength ?? '-'}}
Hand Size
{{advancedStats.HandSize ?? '-'}}
40 Yard Dash
{{advancedStats.FortyYardDash ?? '-'}}
Vertical Jump
{{advancedStats.VerticalJump ?? '-'}}
Broad Jump
{{advancedStats.BroadJump ?? '-'}}

Trey Sermon Future Projections

{{colDef.label}}
{{scoringColDef.label}} {{parseFloat(Number(dynastyProjection[score]).toFixed(0)).toLocaleString()}} -

Trey Sermon Scouting Report

Trey Sermon Scouting Report

  • Height: 6’0
  • Weight: 215
  • Age: 22.3

Pro Day Results

  • 40-yard dash: 4.57 seconds
  • Vertical: 37 inches
  • Broad: 10’5
  • 3-cone: 6.83 seconds
  • Short Shuttle: 4.28 seconds

Trey Sermon College Stats

Car Yds YPCTDsRecYdsYPRTDs
20171217446.15161398.72
2018 164 947 5.8131218115.10
2019 54 385 7.148718.91
2020 116 870 7.5412957.90

A 4-star recruit out of Georgia, Sermon chose Oklahoma over a slew of offers from schools including Alabama, Auburn, Florida and Georgia.

He contributed right away for the Sooners, ranking 2nd behind Rodney Anderson in carries as a true freshman and trailing the incumbent by just a single reception. Sermon’s 6.1 yards per rush also nearly matched Anderson’s 6.2.

The following season found injury limiting Anderson to just 11 rushing attempts. So Sermon took advantage, leading OU in carries and rushing TDs. He delivered 4 games of 100+ yards, but he also had to share the backfield. Sermon found just 2 occasions where he reached double-digit carries in consecutive games.

The high point came when Sermon racked up a monster 26-206-3 rushing line at Texas Tech, and then followed with 124 yards and 2 more scores on 16 carries against Oklahoma State. His 12 receptions and 181 receiving yards each led the backfield as well. But Kennedy Brooks averaged a whopping 8.9 yards per rush to stomp Sermon in that category and beat him in total rushing yards on 45 fewer attempts.

Sermon’s junior season on the field found his Sooners run come to an end. He would lead the 2019 team in carries just 3 times, reaching 11 attempts only twice and never exceeding that total. Sermon dealt with a knee injury that cost him games, but his playing time suffered even outside of that. He wound up 4th on the team in rushes, behind Brooks, QB Jalen Hurts and transfer Rhamondre Stevenson. Sermon also finished 3rd among RBs in receptions. His strong 7.1 yards per carry beat Brooks, but trailed Stevenson’s 8.0.

In search of more playing time -- which wasn’t coming at Oklahoma -- Sermon transferred to Ohio State. As a graduate transfer, he was able to avoid sitting out a year.

Sermon endured an early rocky patch with OSU’s RBs coach before mending. That might be a meaningless blip, or it could be worth watching given that he left Oklahoma after disagreeing with HC Lincoln Riley on playing time.

Sermon wound up leading the Ohio State backfield in carries, rushing yards, yards per carry, receptions and receiving yards. He started somewhat slowly, however, splitting work with Master Teague despite outperforming the incumbent. Sermon averaged just 11 carries over the first 5 games of the COVID-abbreviated season, never exceeding 13 in that span. Teague led him 87-55 in rushing attempts over those 5 games, while Sermon averaged 6.3 yards per rush vs. Teague’s 4.9.

Sermon took control of the Big Ten title game, however, racking up a school-record 331 yards and 2 TDs on 29 rushes vs. Northwestern -- a tough D that stifled star QB Justin Fields. Sermon followed that with a 31-193-1 rushing line in the national semifinal win over Clemson. That game also included 4 receptions for 61 yards, accounting for 33% of Sermon’s season catches and 64.2% of his receiving yards. Those 2 games also accounted for 51.7% of Sermon’s carries and 60.2% of his rushing yardage for the year.

A week later, Sermon left the national-title game after his 1st carry with an apparent upper-body injury. Nothing serious came of it, but that marked the end of his college career.

Trey Sermon Highlights

Games watched: Clemson, Northwestern, Nebraska, Penn State

Sermon runs with an intriguing mix of power and athleticism. At 215 pounds, he’s only slightly above average vs. historical NFL Combine HBs. But he’s punishing at the 2nd and 3rd levels of a defense.

Ohio State RB Trey Sermon breaks multiple tackles for a long run against Clemson.
Ohio State RB Trey Sermon runs through tackle attempts against Northwestern.

Sermon certainly benefited last season from some good run-blocking in a high-level Ohio State offense. But he also displayed vision and creativity to find rushing lanes even when they don’t immediately present themselves …

Ohio State RB Trey Sermon cuts away from a defender to gain yards against Nebraska.
Ohio State RB Trey Sermon weaves through the Penn State defense for a nice gain.

Here’s a sample from his Oklahoma days …

Oklahoma RB Trey Sermon shows good vision to find a path to the end zone on this long run.

And here’s some agility to elude a defender in the backfield, followed by the strength to drag tacklers …

Ohio State RB Trey Sermon eludes a defender in the backfield to gain some yardage.

Sermon’s 6.83-second 3-cone drill at Ohio State’s pro day backs up this displayed agility, rating 87th percentile for the position, according to Pro Football Focus.

That said, there are limitations to the movement skills.

Ohio State RB Trey Sermon fails to cut outside the defense on this running play.

There are other runners who could have gotten outside the edge defender on that play and created something.

Sermon also checks in a little tall for a RB. At 6’0, he’s nearly an inch-and-a-half taller than the historical Combine average for his position. That would matter less if Sermon had less of an upright running style.

Oklahoma RB Trey Sermon shows an upright running style.

Although he finds running room and ultimately produces a nice gain on that play, look at how tall Sermon remains as he navigates traffic near the line of scrimmage. That might not play as well vs. stronger, faster and smarter defenders in the pros.

Here’s another clip …

Ohio State RB Trey Sermon runs a little upright, which could make it tough to run through NFL tackle attempts.

In this respect, Sermon reminds me of Chris Brown, a 3rd-round pick out of Colorado in 2003 who had a decent but brief run with the Titans and Texans.

Former Colorado RB Chris Brown ran upright, similar to the way Trey Sermon ran at Oklahoma and then Ohio State.

Brown stood 6’3, three inches taller than Sermon.

Sermon will probably need to prove himself in the passing game with his NFL team after catching just 48 passses across 4 college seasons. He did catch the ball cleanly and display smooth transitions into his run after the catch in limited examples I saw, though.

Here are a couple of beyond-the-line examples from his Sooner days …

Oklahoma RB Trey Sermon catches a pass and then hurdles a defender.
Oklahoma RB Trey Sermon makes a catch for a TD.

Sermon also showed aggressiveness in pass protection but will surely need to be coached up in this area. His hand placement looked a little inconsistent in the samples I saw, and he comes at the blitzer pretty high in this clip …

Ohio State RB Trey Sermon works in pass protection.

Fantasy Outlook

Sermon fits into a sizable group of RBs who are waiting on their NFL landing spots. Well, more like we are waiting on those landing spots.

Sermon brings an intriguing package of traits that could lead to nice production in the optimal spot. If he lands in, say, Pittsburgh in Round 3, then he’d be my favorite to lead the Steelers’ backfield in production for the coming season.

But a lot will depend on where and when he goes. Sermon could just as easily land in Round 5 as Round 3. He could be some team’s James Conner, exploiting unexpected 3-down opportunity. Or he could be Brian Hill, bouncing around and looking decent without being able to earn consistent touches.

Let’s see what the NFL says.

Shark Bites

Jonathan Taylor RB IND

1:11pm EDT 10/18/24

Jonathan Taylor Out For Week 7

Jonathan Taylor Out For Week 7

Colts RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) has been ruled out for Sunday’s game vs. the Dolphins. He remained sidelined in practice all week. We’ll see if he can make it back for Week 8’s meeting with the Texans. Taylor's absence again leaves Indianapolis’ backfield to Trey Sermon and Tyler Goodson. Sermon remained the lead back last week, but Goodson was much more effective. We wouldn’t be surprised to see him take on an expanded role vs. Miami.

Colts RB Trey Sermon (knee) returned to a limited practice on Thursday. RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) remained out. It's looking like it'll again be Sermon and Tyler Goodson in the Colts' backfield for Sunday's game against the Dolphins.

Colts RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) remained sidelined for Wednesday's practice. HC Shane Steichen said before practice that Taylor is feeling "a lot better," but his status for this weekend's game vs. the Dolphins remains uncertain. RB Trey Sermon (knee) also missed practice on Wednesday. That left Tyler Goodson as Indianapolis' top healthy RB. He's worth stashing right now as we wait to see how this Colts backfield shakes out over the next few days.

Colts RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle) is out for Sunday's game vs. the Titans. He remained sidelined in practice all week. We'll see if JT can make it back for Week 7's game against the Dolphins. His absence will again leave the backfield to RBs Trey Sermon and Tyler Goodson. Sermon tallied 10 carries and six targets to Goodson's five carries and three targets last week.

Compare Plans » Compare Plans »