Defensive Lineman Jared Odrick Thinks He Would Fit With Patriots

It’s no secret that the Patriots are going to be looking for defensive-line help in this week’s NFL draft. They struggled all season to replace Richard Seymour’s production at defensive end.

One player whose name keeps popping up in mock drafts as a possible successor to Seymour is Penn State’s Jared Odrick. Although many experts question whether or not he can fit into Bill Belichick’s 3-4 defense — he played defensive tackle in a 4-3 with the Nittany Lions — Odrick is confident he’d be able to make the transition.

“Yeah, I definitely could see myself playing in that system,” Odrick told the Boston Herald. “I think the thing people have a misconception about is that in a 3-4 defense, you’re just sitting there, eating up blocks. I just think football is football.

“There’s a lot of techniques you use in a 4-3 that you can use in a 3-4. There’s a lot of differences, but at the same time, it’s still football. I just think with my size and my skill set, I’ll have success.”

The 6-foot-5, 304-pound Odrick is heralded for his “long arms, his brute strength, his athleticism and his occupying of double teams,” according to the Herald’s Karen Guregian. The projected mid-to-late first-rounder was named the Big Ten defensive player of the year this past season after recording 43 tackles, including 11 for a loss, and a career-high seven sacks.

Odrick was able to meet Belichick in an interview leading up to the draft, and he thinks it went well.

“It was brief. I think he liked me,” Odrick told the paper. “But you just don’t know what to expect, good or bad. We’ll find out.”

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Odrick has also met with the New York Jets, Dallas Cowboys, Cleveland Browns and New Orleans Saints.