The Miami Dolphins didn’t draft Kadyn Proctor at No. 12 overall to play tackle. They drafted him to play left guard, and the move might be the smartest thing Jon-Eric Sullivan’s new front office makes all year.
Proctor spent three seasons protecting the blind side at Alabama. In Miami, Sullivan has already confirmed the rookie will line up inside, next to left tackle Patrick Paul. On the PFSN’s Football Debate Club, NFL draft analyst Omari Brown argued the position change does more than fill a hole. It raises Proctor’s ceiling.
Why Left Guard Fits Kadyn Proctor’s Game
“I think [Kadyn] Proctor’s ceiling as a guard is exponentially higher than it was as a tackle,” Brown said. “All the concerns that I had for Proctor, the lack of foot speed, the weight concerns… So playing guard at 350 to 360 pounds, he gets to be in a phone booth and really gets to use his athleticism. I think he’s going to be a multiple-time Pro Bowler going forward at the guard position.”
The logic holds. Proctor’s tape showed rare power and a punishing initial punch, but his footwork and recovery speed lagged behind his physical gifts. Against quicker edge rushers, his pass sets gave up too much ground, and those losses showed up on tape. Out on an island at tackle, the flaws stay exposed. Inside, the field shrinks and the matchups change.
PFSN’s Jacob Infante reached the same conclusion from a different angle.
“I’m with Omari here. I think he’s got a multi-time Pro Bowl ceiling at guard,” Infante said. “You look at the strengths, obviously the sheer size and the physicality, the churn coming out of his lower body. I think he’s much more able to show that off in condensed spaces. The lack of foot speed, the lack of change of direction isn’t going to show up as much in a phone booth.”
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Brown pointed to Proctor reporting to camp at “arguably 385 pounds” during his college career, a number that captures the conditioning questions scouts kept raising. Proctor measured in at 352 pounds before the draft. At guard, carrying weight costs him far less than it would for a tackle asked to mirror speed off the edge.
What Proctor’s Switch Means for Miami’s Offensive Line
Miami’s plan stacks two of its biggest bodies on the same side. Paul stays at left tackle, Proctor slides to left guard, and Aaron Brewer anchors the middle. Last year’s left guard, Jonah Savaiinaea, shifts to the right side. For a running game built around De’Von Achane, that left-side mass is the entire point.
The risk isn’t the fit. It’s the setting. Proctor enters a full rebuild under first-time NFL head coach Jeff Hafley and first-time general manager Sullivan, with Malik Willis taking over at quarterback on a three-year, $67.5 million deal. Rookies developing inside transition years don’t always hit their ceilings on schedule.
There’s also the question of where Proctor eventually lands. Austin Jackson is in the final year of his deal at right tackle, and Sullivan has said the team will keep training Proctor outside. Left guard may be a starting point, not a destination.
For now, the bet is clean. Take a player whose flaws live in space, then put him where space disappears. If Proctor tightens his hand timing and keeps his weight in check, the phone booth is where a former five-star recruit finally becomes what everyone projected. Miami doesn’t need him to be a left tackle. It needs him to be great at one thing, and left guard might be it.

