Creed Humphrey's college football resume stacks up with any offensive linemen in this NFL Draft.

He played in 39 career games at center for Oklahoma, starting 37 of those. Humphrey's first season with the Sooners earned him Freshman All-American honors. He followed that up with a 2nd team All-American season in 2019 where Humphrey was also a finalist for the Rimington Award as the nation's best center. This past season he was a 3rd team All-American, not allowing a sack on 401 pass plays, according to PFF.

But Humphrey believes there's more to his game than those accolades.

"I'd say leadership qualities," Humphrey said following his Pro Day. "I've been a two-time captain here at OU and that's voted on by the players, so it's something the players really saw in me and I'm thankful for them for doing that. Leadership qualities and really just my football knowledge. Understanding defensive philosophies. Knowing what teams want to do in certain situations. What teams want to do in different formations. Different things like that. I'd say that's what really separates me from a lot of people in this draft."

Further projecting to the next level, Humphrey is a lefty who believes he can play both center and guard in the NFL. That was emphasized by Humphrey putting up surprising workout numbers during his Pro Day, posting times in most drills that would've ranked top 5 of all OL at last year's combine.

"At Oklahoma I'm not asked to do a ton athletically," Humphrey said. "We're a heavy gap-schemed team. I'm blocking back a ton, so it was good for me to go out there and show my athleticism. I was pretty happy with how I did today. There were a couple things I could have done a little bit better, but I was pretty happy overall."

Humphrey checks one box for Bills head coach Sean McDermott: a wrestling background. Creed hit the mat growing up, following in the footsteps of his father, who was a 3-time All-American wrestler at Central Oklahoma.

Humphrey is projected as a late-1st to 2nd round selection.