Beaux Limmer
Summary
Beaux Limmer was selected in Round 6 (#217 Overall) out of University of Arkansas. Limmer is an interior offensive lineman who spent the bulk of his college career at guard before shifting to center in his final season. He brings strong athleticism, good movement skills for his size, and demonstrated the ability to handle multiple interior positions in the SEC. His profile shows promise as a versatile depth or developmental starter on the interior, though questions remain about his anchor strength, arm length and suitability for certain power‑block schemes.
Strengths
Exhibits high football IQ: Shows the ability to identify stunts, blitzes, and scheme‑shifts quickly. NFL Draft Buzz
Displays excellent mobility Quick for an interior lineman: good feet, loose hips, ability to reach second‑level and move in space as a puller or zone‑blocker. Bleacher Report
Versatility across the interior : Played both right guard and center at Arkansas, giving him positional flexibility. Los Angeles Rams
Good punch timing and leverage: Shows out in run‑blocking situations: able to fire off snaps, gain position and finish blocks when engaged one‑on‑one. PFSN
Strong work ethic and durability: Numerous starts in a high‑level conference and credible snapping experience within complex offensive systems. nfl.com
Weaknesses
Lacks ideal arm length / reach: Shorter arms which could limit his ability to keep blockers off his chest in pass protection.
Frame and physical mass: May be borderline for power‑drive run schemes; evaluators noted minimal “sand” to consistently anchor vs elite bull‑rushers. Bleacher Report
Balance or technique lapses: Especially when overly aggressive; can lose foot‑placement or momentum and give up inside counters.
Fit Reliant: Best suited to zone‑oriented or movement‑based blocking schemes, rather than pure one‑gap power‑drive roles; scheme sensitivity could cap ceiling. PFSN
Limited experience at center: Only fully played there one season means there may be developmental learning curve for snapping, communication and alignments at the pro level. Los Angeles Rams
Fit & Outlook
Limmer fits best in an offense that values athletic, mobile interior linemen who can pull, reach, get to the second level and operate in zone‑blocking or gap‑scheme systems rather than one dominated by pure power/anchor snaps every play. A team that uses shifting blockers, pulling guards or centers, and moves its interior linemen in space will benefit from his mobility and awareness. He may be less ideal for a franchise that demands its center/guard to constantly win downhill push or stand in two‑gap power fronts every snap without rotation or relief. Given his versatility, Limmer also projects as a valuable swing interior lineman in early years — capable of backing up both guard and center, providing instant depth while he develops. Outlook‑wise: his floor is a dependable rotational interior lineman who provides quality depth, starts a few games, and contributes significantly in zone‑oriented offenses. His ceiling, given his athleticism and versatility, is that of a starting interior offensive lineman in the NFL — someone who could anchor the interior, move in space, and be a foundational piece. The key variables will be his ability to add functional strength/mass, refine his anchor in pass protection, and be placed in a system suited to his movement‑based strengths rather than asked to dominate pure power match‑ups immediately. With the right development path and fit, Limmer offers a high‑ceiling interior lineman for the future.