Bruce Feldman released his annual College Football Freaks List early this morning, and despite being such as relatively "new" face amongst the SEC's starting offensive line units, Trevor Goosby is well known behind the scenes.
Goosby's entering his third season at the University of Texas and his first season as a full-time starter at left tackle in Steve Sarkisian's offense, replacing Kelvin Banks Jr. who was selected in the1st-round of the 2025 NFL Draft by the New Orleans Saints.
At 6'7" and 312 lbs., Goosby's physical measurables jump off the page, but it's what he's able to do at that size that's truly miraculous. According to the Feldman and his team, Goosby clocked a 1.44 second 10-yd sprint time. That's absolutely unfathomable from an offensive lineman.
For example, former Texas star CB Jahdae Barron's time was a 1.5. Think about that for a second, Trevor Goosby has more burst and acceleration off the line than an All-American 1st-round NFL Draft pick cornerback. To go along with that time, he hit a max speed of 20 mph on testing day this offseason.
In some cases, super-athletic offensive linemen aren't as "weight-room strong" as others but this also isn't the case with Goosby. He topped the bench press numbers as well with a weight of 365 pounds which was the highest amongst Longhorn offensive linemen this year. His core strength, explosion, and body control are incredibly impressive as well. In May, he did a 360-degree dunk at 312 pounds alongside some of his teammates in the gym.
Texas LT Trevor Goosby is one of the more freakier athletes in CFB. 3️⃣6️⃣0️⃣🤘 pic.twitter.com/R6ai3eyKpV
— Justin Wells (@justinwells2424) May 1, 2025
Feldman also had some nice things to say about Goosby's playing ability as well:
"Once ranked as the 34th best offensive tackle prospect in the 2023 recruiting class, Goosby has proven to be a terrific evaluation. As a redshirt freshman last season, he started two games, one at left tackle and the other at right. PFF gave Goosby an 80.8 pass blocking grade for the season, which was higher than Cameron Williams, Texas’ starter at right tackle, although the freshman had a much smaller sample size."
Now slated to take over that starting left tackle role protecting Arch Manning's blind side, he'll have even more eyes on him in 2025 and beyond. If he's able to continue growing and developing as a player under Kyle Flood, the sky is undoubtedly the limit for Trevor Goosby and the Longhorns' offensive outlook.