Jon Beason

OLB, ILB · Miami (FL)
The team leader and a fiery competitor, the Dick Butkus Award candidate was bothered by several nagging injuries the second half of the 2006 season, but still went on to lead the team in tackles (76). The versatile and hard-hitting defender began his Miami career as a fullback, but shifted to strong-side outside linebacker as a redshirt freshman in 2004. He also played several games at middle linebacker that year before shifting to weak-side outside linebacker as a sophomore. Beason could be in line for an other position shift in the National Football League, as his size and instincts might be better suited for middle linebacker in the pros. Former Miami head coach Larry Coker considered Beason in the mold of some former Hurricane linebackers that played during the Coker era -- Dan Morgan (Carolina) and Jonathan Vilma (New York Jets). Coker called Beason a tremendous competitor with the range to make plays from sideline-to-sideline. Beason was a linebacker, strong safety and fullback at Chaminade-Madonna Prep. He earned All-American honors and was the 30th-ranked prospect in the state of Florida, according to Allen Wallace of Super Prep. He was rated the sixth-best linebacker in the country by Tom Lemming's Prep Football Report and was a member of the Orlando Sentinel's Florida Top 100 list. He also earned Fox Sports Net All-South third-team honors. As a senior, Beason rushed for 811 yards and 12 touchdowns at fullback. He also was credited with 75 tackles and had five pass interceptions. He lettered in basketball, starting at small forward and helping lead his team to the finals of the state playoffs in 2002. Beason enrolled at the University of Miami in 2003, choosing the school over Florida State, Florida, Tennessee, Louisiana State and Georgia. He only appeared in two games, gaining three yards on one rushing attempt before a shoulder injury would force the coaching staff to grant him a medical hardship. In 2004, Beason shifted to defense. He saw reserve action as a middle and strong-side outside linebacker in 12 games, starting on the strong-side vs. Virginia, Wake Forest and Virginia Tech. He totaled 29 tackles (9 solos) with a sack and four stops for losses. He also competed on the special team coverage units. The versatile athlete again shifted positions in 2005, taking over weak-side outside linebacker duties and starting 10 of 12 games. He produced 66 tackles (44 solos) with six stops behind the line of scrimmage and also collected four quarterback pressures. Before the 2006 season, Beason joined the Miami track-and-field team. He competed on the indoor squad during the spring, finishing 18th at the ACC Indoor Track and Field Championships with a season best mark of 6.50 meters in the long jump. Back on the football field, Beason earned second-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference honors from The NFL Draft Report. He played in 12 games, starting nine times. A slight tear of the medial collateral ligament in his knee vs. Florida International forced him to sit out the Duke game and compete for only a handful of plays vs. Georgia Tech. He still led the team with 76 tackles (51 solos), adding 1.5 sacks and eight stops for losses. He played in the season finale vs. Boston College with a soft cast to protect a left thumb injury suffered the week before vs. Virginia. In 38 games at Miami, Beason started 22 times. He collected 171 tackles (104 solos) with 2.5 sacks for minus-14 yards and 18 stops for losses totaling 45 yards. He posted four quarterback pressures, returned one interception 4 yards and deflected two passes. He caused and recovered a fumble and had one rushing attempt for a 3-yard gain.