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Local QB hopes to be late-round sleeper in NFL Draft

Broad Run high school alum Connor Jessop had a prolific senior season at Division II Shepherd University and may have turned himself into a late-round NFL Draft sleeper. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)
Broad Run High School alum Connor Jessop had a prolific senior season at Division II Shepherd University and may have turned himself into a late-round NFL Draft sleeper. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)
Jessop improved his fitness working with trainer Rhys Gully (left), posting better performance marks than many of the top quarterback prospects. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)
Jessop trains at OneLife Fitness in Brambleton with other athletes including Nigel Johnson (right), who played on the Virginia basketball team as a graduate transfer this season and is looking to improve before the NBA Draft, and Deon Clarke, a former Virginia Tech linebacker who latched onto the Seattle Seahawks practice squad. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)
Jessop trains at OneLife Fitness in Brambleton, Virginia, with other athletes including Nigel Johnson (right), who played on the Virginia basketball team as a graduate transfer this season and is looking to improve before the NBA Draft, and Deon Clarke (center), a former Virginia Tech linebacker who latched onto the Seattle Seahawks practice squad. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)
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Broad Run high school alum Connor Jessop had a prolific senior season at Division II Shepherd University and may have turned himself into a late-round NFL Draft sleeper. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)
Jessop trains at OneLife Fitness in Brambleton with other athletes including Nigel Johnson (right), who played on the Virginia basketball team as a graduate transfer this season and is looking to improve before the NBA Draft, and Deon Clarke, a former Virginia Tech linebacker who latched onto the Seattle Seahawks practice squad. (草莓传媒/Noah Frank)

BRAMBLETON, Va. 鈥 If the NFL Draft is really about anything for most fans, it鈥檚 about quarterbacks. The opportunity to land a team leader and signal-caller who could change the trajectory of your franchise for years, even decades, is tantalizing for any franchise. And, as we all know, that pick could come from places you least expect 鈥 like or 鈥 and from any point in the draft, from the , to the , to the .

This year鈥檚 quarterback class is perhaps the biggest, broadest group in recent memory. As many as six QBs could realistically be selected in the first round alone: Josh Allen, Sam Darnold, Lamar Jackson, Baker Mayfield, Josh Rosen and Mason Rudolph. But there鈥檚 a local quarterback who has caught the eyes of a number of teams heading into this week鈥檚 draft, enough to perhaps turn himself into the latest late-round, diamond in the rough story.

Connor Jessop has run into some bad timing in his life. As a high school junior 鈥 the prime recruiting year for prep athletes 鈥 he broke his collarbone just four games into the season. Despite the fact he was coming off a state championship season as a sophomore, interest waned. He was rated a two-star recruit by one amateur scouting service, just a one-star recruit by the rest. Rather than let that affect his confidence, he has looked at others who have defied the labels put on them.

鈥淚 know J.J. Watt was a two-star. I know Eric Fisher, who was the number one overall pick a couple years ago, he was a two-star athlete,鈥 he told 草莓传媒.

Jessop鈥檚 lone scholarship offer was to FCS Richmond, so he decided defiantly to walk on at his lifelong rooting interest and parents鈥 alma mater, Virginia Tech. When the coaching staff in Blacksburg changed and it quickly became apparent he would never get his shot as a starter for the Hokies, Jessop realized to have a chance to keep playing, he was going to have to swallow his pride and find a school that would give him an opportunity.

For a quarterback in need of guidance and looking for a better path forward, a transfer to Shepherd University is, allegorically, a little on the nose. Located about 10 miles up the Potomac River from Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, just across the river from Maryland, the Division II school turned out to be exactly what Jessop needed.

鈥淚鈥檝e always thought that I could play at the highest level, but I think it became a reality once I got to Shepherd and talked to the then-quarterback coach, Joel Gordon,鈥 said Jessop of his former coach, who has since moved up to the Division I level at Iowa State.

Jessop鈥檚 senior year numbers speak for themselves. He threw 40 touchdowns, more than any Division I quarterback other than Mayfield and Mizzou鈥檚 Drew Lock, and did so in just 11 games. He threw just nine interceptions in nearly 400 passing attempts, racking up 3,532 yards. His 63.2 completion percentage rated above Darnold鈥檚 and Rosen鈥檚, well above Allen鈥檚. And the Rams finished 10-1.

Of course, that came against Division II competition. But there are more Division II players than you may realize in the NFL 鈥 , including practice squad players. More have gotten looks in recent years, thanks to the success of those on whom teams have taken flyers over the last decade. They鈥檙e scattered all over the league, from Ravens cornerback Brandon Carr, to Vikings Pro Bowl receiver Adam Thielen, to Pats Pro Bowl corner Malcolm Butler, who made the Super Bowl-sealing interception three years ago.

鈥淚 certainly remember coming down from a Division I school, and being like, 鈥榃ow, these guys can really play,鈥欌 said Jessop. 鈥淭here might be a half a step here, or an inch there (of difference). But there鈥檚 really minor differences between these guys that are being recruited to Power 5 schools in Division I and going to Division II schools.鈥

That half-step is often the difference, though, when it comes to getting seriously considered in the NFL. That鈥檚 why Jessop sought out an old friend this spring in Rhys Gully, a trainer he has worked with since his junior year as a multisport athlete at Broad Run High School. The two have worked together all spring to give him a chance to make his mark when it mattered most.

After a lackluster performance on a cold, rainy day at Shepherd in front of a handful of scouts, Jessop turned heads just two days later at West Virginia鈥檚 pro day. In the variety of physical tests that prospects are put through, he posted marks that ranked in the middle or top of the pack among the 19 quarterbacks invited to the NFL combine. He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.77, faster than Darnold, Mayfield or Rosen. His 9鈥8鈥 broad jump beat them all as well. And at 6鈥5鈥, he’s as tall as any quarterback in the draft.

Jessop credits those marks to his work with Gully, as he says he was nowhere close to this point when they started working together.

鈥淚 remember the first day that we were testing our numbers I was like, 鈥榊ikes 鈥 I didn鈥檛 realize I was this bad of an athlete,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淎nd then to see how big of a jump I made in just a two, two-and-a-half month period, I鈥檓 thrilled with the results.鈥

It鈥檚 been enough that about half the league has been in touch with both Jessop and his agent, and he has been invited to tryouts with both local and NFL clubs. And while the Explosive Performance regimen that Gully put Jessop on isn鈥檛 necessarily anything revolutionary, it unlocked his athletic potential in the areas he needed the most improvement, focusing on the areas an NFL player can improve the most. It makes sense when you understand the program鈥檚 roots.

鈥淲e go to the Olympic training center each year. We鈥檝e gone to EXOS to help with their combine training,鈥 said Gully.

, the Chicago Bears have shown a lot of interest in Jessop. Draftscout.com ranks him the , but with his stock rising at just the right time. Jessop knows that if hears his name called, it won鈥檛 happen until the later rounds on Saturday. But if he has learned anything the past few years, it鈥檚 patience with the process. This time, he knows he has done everything he can to put himself in the right place at the right time.

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