Big Cat Country
The Jacksonville Jaguars traded up in the fourth round of the 2026 NFL Draft to select Duke defensive end Wesley Williams with the No. 119 overall pick.
Williams arrives in Jacksonville with a reputation as a high-motor defender, a team captain, and one of the most respected leaders to come through Duke’s program in recent years. But there is much more to the rookie edge rusher than sacks and tackles for loss.
Here are five things Jaguars fans should know about their newest defensive lineman.
Long before he became an NFL Draft pick, Williams was earning recognition for what he did in the classroom.
While attending Battlefield High School in Virginia, Williams maintained a 4.2 GPA and was named the recipient of the Franklin D. Watkins Memorial Award, an honor presented annually to the nation’s top African-American scholar-athlete. He continued that academic success at Duke, earning Academic All-ACC honors in both 2024 and 2025 before graduating with a degree in public policy.
The Jaguars have often emphasized intelligence, character and leadership when discussing roster construction. Williams checks every one of those boxes before he ever steps onto an NFL field.
Football wasn’t Williams’ only path into athletics.
His father played college basketball, while football success can also be found elsewhere in the family tree. His cousin, Kaleb Oliver, played at both Georgia Tech and Western Kentucky, while his uncle, Jermaine Belin, earned All-Big West honors during his career at Boise State.
Growing up surrounded by athletes helped shape the competitive mindset that would eventually carry Williams from Virginia high school football to the NFL.
Williams wasn’t simply another highly-rated recruit coming out of Virginia.
At Battlefield High School, he became one of the most decorated players in school history. As a senior, he recorded 105 tackles, 32 tackles for loss and 13.5 sacks while helping lead the program to its first regional championship in a decade and a trip to the Virginia Class 6 state semifinals.
His impact on the program was so significant that he ultimately became Battlefield’s first-ever NFL Draft selection, giving his hometown community a player to celebrate for years to come.
Most fans think of edge rushers as sack artists. Williams has a different specialty.
During his career at Duke, he blocked five kicks, including two field goals in the same game against Clemson in 2023. He later added blocked kicks against Elon, Florida State and NC State, developing a reputation as one of the most disruptive special teams players in the ACC.
That skill could be particularly important in Jacksonville. Day Three draft picks often earn roster spots through special teams before carving out defensive roles, and Williams already has a proven track record of changing games in that phase.
For a Jaguars team looking to improve across all three phases, his ability to affect field position and steal points could accelerate his path onto the game-day roster.
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