Mike Gesicki is the best athlete in this tight end class, proven just as much outside of football as in. He had offers to play basketball from multiple Patriot League schools. The Penn State powerhouse volleyball team had a spot for him. Yet Gesicki chose Nittany Lion football, excelling because of the sports he passed up.

"That's something that I take a lot of pride in. When the ball's in the air I consider it mine. I don't believe in the whole 50/50 ball. It's more of a, in my perspective, 80/20, in that range. I think in basketball, going up to get a rebound or going up to attack the rim or dunk on somebody, whatever it is. Then in volleyball, going up for a spike and getting up to the highest point. The hand-eye coordination. Just everything that those games have to offer, I've been able to translate that to my football and my overall athletic ability,” said Gesicki.

Gesicki claimed top honors in everything at the Combine except the bench press, where he was just one rep from the best. His career at Penn State was a tale of two halves, with just 24 catches and a touchdown his freshman-sophomore years, then blowing up with 105 grabs and 14 TDs his junior-senior run. It was a turn-around rooted by a change in approach.

"There were times I'd go up to the building at 11 o'clock at night. Our coaches would find out the next day and say 'hey, what are you doing in the building? Aren't you supposed to be asleep?' My thing is I pride myself on my work ethic. So I'm going to outwork anybody and everybody in order to get to where I want to go and achieve what I want to achieve,” said Gesicki.

Whether Gesicki can be more than just a pass-catching tight end is the question. That's a big reason why he'll likely be a second round selection.

Tuesday we remain on offense and profile Georgia running back Sony Michel.