Why didnt Justyn Ross get drafted? How Clemson WR went from expected first-rounder to Chiefs UDFA signing – CBS Sports

Had the NFL adopted a rule similar to the NBA that allows players to enter the league following their freshman year, we would have likely seen Clemson wide receiver Justyn Ross come off the board in the first round in 2019. Instead, the 6-foot-4, 205 pounder now finds himself not only falling out of the first round of the 2022 NFL Draft, but he went unclaimed throughout the seven-round spectacle and is now signing with the Kansas City Chiefs as an undrafted free agent

So, what happened? 

Ross turned in an impressive freshman season at Clemson in 2018 where he finished with 1,000 yards receiving and a 21.7 yards per reception average. He really emerged throughout the College Football Playoffs where he totaled 12 receptions for 301 yards and three touchdowns over two games as the Tigers would eventually win the National Championship. Ross did all that as a freshman while playing alongside future NFL wideouts like Tee Higgins, Hunter Renfrow, and Amari Rodgers. While he was unable to turn pro, that production had him billed as one of the blue-chip NFL prospects in the coming seasons. 

Then, in 2019, it was discovered that Ross was born with a neck issue called Klippel Feil syndrome, which is when two neck vertebrae are abnormally fused. Prior to that being revealed in 2019, Ross was 14 games into his sophomore season and had 66 receptions for 865 yards and eight touchdowns. That rare neck issue required surgery and forced Ross to miss the entire 2020 season. 

“Justyn has a condition that is very rare, and to my knowledge, there is no precedent of another high-level American football player with this condition playing football,” Dr. David Okonkwo, who performed the surgery on Ross, told ESPN back in April before the draft. “So we were paving new road as we went through the process.”

He returned to the field in 2021 but suffered a stress fracture in his left foot, which required surgery in November, further clouding his draft stock. Last season, he appeared in 10 games and caught 46 passes for 514 yards and three scores, a production-level dwarfed by his performances earlier in his collegiate career. 

Those injury concerns, headlined by the unprecedented neck issue that would make him the first known player to make the NFL with a congenital fusion in his spine, seem to be the driving force in his sunken draft stock and why he went undrafted.

“Just need dat 1 chance,” Ross tweeted during the draft on Saturday. 

Well, it looks like he’ll now get that chance in Kansas City with Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes.