Ohio State Linebacker Sonny Styles Dazzles At NFL Combine
The NFL Combine is usually a made-for-TV event where guys run around in shorts and scouts pretend they’ve just witnessed the second coming. Most of the time, it’s fine. Forgettable, even. Then Sonny Styles showed up in Indianapolis and made everyone put their phones down.
The Ohio State linebacker didn’t just have a good combine. He had a historic one — the kind that makes NFL scouts spill their coffee, pull out their laptops, and start rearranging their big boards at 10 PM on a Thursday.
What Styles Actually Did At the 2026 NFL Combine
Here’s where the numbers stop being numbers and start being ridiculous. Styles posted a 43.5-inch vertical jump. That’s the highest vertical by an off-ball linebacker at the combine since 2003. To put that in perspective, Hall of Fame Wide Receiver Calvin Johnson, who measured the same height but was actually lighter at 239 pounds, only managed a 42.5-inch vertical at his 2007 combine.
He also ran the 40-yard dash in 4.46 seconds, tying his Ohio State teammate Arvell Reese for the fastest time among all defensive linemen and linebackers on the night. His broad jump of 11 feet, 2 inches led every single player who participated on Thursday and ranks among the best in recent combine history. It was only topped by Jamie Collins (11’7″ in 2013), Bud Dupree (11’6″ in 2015), and Willie Gay Jr. (11’4″ in 2020) among linebackers.
Per NFL Research, Styles is the only player since 2003 to run a sub-4.5 40-yard dash, post a 40-plus-inch vertical, and clear 11 feet in the broad jump — all while weighing 230 pounds or more.
Why Styles’ Numbers Actually Matter
The explosion he showed Thursday translates directly to what NFL defenses are desperately hunting for. He is a linebacker who can cover ground sideline to sideline, match tight ends in space, and bring the kind of lower-body power that disrupts both the run game and the pass rush.
The last linebacker to come close to that kind of vertical was Cameron Wake in 2005, who jumped 45.5 inches. Wake went on to become one of the most terrifying pass rushers of his era. That’s the company Styles is keeping now.
Even Kyle Hamilton Was Shook
Here’s the moment that made the whole night feel surreal. NFL Network ran a Simulcam comparison between Styles and Ravens All-Pro Safety Kyle Hamilton. The graphic showed Styles outpacing Hamilton in the 40 (4.47 vs. 4.59), out-jumping him in the vertical (43.5 vs. 38 inches), and doing all of it at a heavier frame.
Hamilton, watching from home, reposted the graphic on X with the caption: “I just got brutally framemogged.” When one of the best defensive players in the NFL is simultaneously impressed and mildly humiliated by your combine numbers, you’re doing something right.
Where Styles Goes From Here
None of this happens in a vacuum. Styles backed up his combine performance with a genuinely excellent senior season at Ohio State. He was already rated No. 7 on Mel Kiper Jr.’s big board and No. 5 on Daniel Jeremiah’s top-50 list heading into combine week. After Thursday night? The debate isn’t whether Styles goes in the top 10 anymore. It’s whether any team picking in the top five can justify passing on him.
Styles himself said it best earlier in the week: “The great defenses you look at, there’s at least two or three guys who can play a multitude of roles.” He was talking about versatility as a value. What he showed at Lucas Oil Stadium was something more. He wasn’t just checking boxes — he was rewriting them.
