
Barron is the first pure cornerback selected after two-way standout Travis Hunter went No. 2.
Jahdae Barron is headed to the Mile City city.
With the No. 20 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, the Denver Broncos selected the 2024 Jim Thorpe Award winner, making Barron the first pure cornerback selected this year after two-way standout Travis Hunter was picked No. 2 by the Jacksonville Jaguars.
The newest in orange & blue.
Welcome to #BroncosCountry, @Officia1dae! pic.twitter.com/ula1UCN67v
— Denver Broncos (@Broncos) April 25, 2025
Barron is the first Longhorns defensive back selected in the first round since Kenny Vaccaro was the No. 15 pick by the New Orleans Saints in 2013. The pick also means that Barron will join plenty of former Texas players in Denver — quarterback Sam Ehlinger, defensive tackle Malcolm Roach, safety Brandon Jones, and safety PJ Locke.
The do-it-all hometown hero hails from Pflugerville and originally committed to and signed with Baylor. After being granted a release when head coach Matt Rhule left for the NFL, Barron signed with the Longhorns and, as they say, the rest is history.
Barron’s career started slow, seeing action in just 14 games over his freshman and sophomore years. However, it began to take off as a junior when he moved from cornerback to nickel, a season in which he started nine games and totaled 78 tackles, 11.5 tackles for loss, a sack, fumble recovery, and two interceptions.
The following year, Barron made the jump from contributor to star at the Star position. He played in 14 games with 12 starts while registered 61 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss, one interception, one fumble recovery, and a career-high six pass breakups. As a Jim Thorpe Award semifinalist with a COVID year of eligibility remaining, Barron had a decision to make.
Ultimately, Barron opted to return and improve his draft stock while making the jump back outside to corner while wearing the No. 7 jersey that Longhorn legend Michael Huff donned in his playing days.
“I want to leave this mark and do that, represent how I’m on a whole different journey,” Barron said at SEC Media Days. “It’s deep to represent Michael Huff and to play with burnt orange in the standard he played and try to be better and better.”
The decision paid dividends.
“I think Jahdae has made himself a ton of money this year by coming back,” Texas head coach Sarkisian said in November.
In one of the most memorable seasons by a defensive player in recent memory, Barron brought home the Jim Thorpe Award behind 67 tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss, a sack, five interceptions, and 16 passes defended. He was a first-team All American and Defensive MVP of the 2025 Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl.
Barron’s stat sheet on the Forty Acres convey a dominant defensive back. The tape and testing support that narrative, giving Barron the potential to become the first Texas defensive back taken in the first round since Kenny Vaccaro in 2013.
Jahdae Barron is a uniquely talent with experience playing outside CB and Nickel while starring at Texas. The versatility and ball production (5 INT’s & 11 PD’s in 2024) widen the possibilities for his destination in the upcoming NFL Draft.#NFLDraft #Texas #MBTexasFootball pic.twitter.com/8BqHgF1Ywl
— All 22 Films (@All_22_NFL_Cuts) April 12, 2025
For Sarkisian, one of the most impressive things about Barron is his growth over his time at Texas.
“You gotta remember Jahdae was here for a year before we got here, right? When we arrived who he was then is not who he is today. And that’s part of where the culture, the development of the program. I think he’s a guy that tapped into it right, and took in all the opportunities that he had, and to see the growth for him, not only on the field, but off the field, the maturity, the physical growth, his ability to utilize a football IQ that is elite,” Sarkisian said in an appearance on Chris Simms’ podcast.
At the NFL Combine, Barron confirmed his elite athleticism with a 4.39 40-yard dash, 35-inch vertical leap, and 10’3” broad jump.
Barron is widely considered to be the second-best corner in the draft, behind Travis Hunter and above Will Johnson. To Barron, however, he’s the top cornerback in the draft because of his versatility after playing nickel, outside cornerback, dime linebacker, and even cross training at safety, where he played 15 snaps in 2024.
“I always believe I am the best and I show it my play and my actions, not just on my words, but I’m the best — I can do it all. There’s a lot of people in this draft class, I’m not knocking what they do, they do a lot of great things. I’m not knocking them, but I can do it all at every position. I can fit the run fit. I can play slot on the two. I can blitz in the A gap. I can play outside on the line. I can be the middle runner. I can play post safety. I can play hash safety. So I can do a lot of things, and I really take a lot of pride in that, a lot of film work in that, and a lot of execution and time and details that I did with Coach [Terry] Joseph and how he developed me just to be able to learn diagnose plays,” Barron said at the Texas Pro Day in March.
Barron is one of the crown jewels of this Texas draft class and one of the most coveted prospects in the draft. His versatility, technical skills, and football IQ will make him a Day 1 pick and asset for whichever team calls his name.
“Whoever gets this guy is getting a pro, right? He’s a guy who’s gonna walk in and it’s gonna be, ‘Where do you need me? I can go do that,’ and from week to week he can play different spots. Reminds me a little bit of Minkah Fitzpatrick that way, where Minkah could do so many things when we’re at Alabama. I think Jahdae can kind of be that same type of guy of, ‘What do you need me to do this week? And I can get that done,’” Sarkisian said.