Damon Bankston, RB
Height: 5’ 10 ⅜”
Weight: 196 lbs
Class: Fifth-year Senior
School: New Mexico
Hands: 9 ½”
Arm Length: 30 ⅞”
Wingspan: 72 ⅝”
40-Yard Dash: 4.44 seconds
Bench Press: 21 reps
Vertical: 33”
Broad Jump: 10’ 3”
20-Yard Shuttle: 4.32 seconds
3-Cone: 6.89 seconds
STATS
Damon Bankston was an unranked running back recruit from Katy Paetow in Katy, Texas, who enrolled at Weber State, an FCS school in Ogden, Utah.
Bankston would stay at Weber State from 2021 to 2024 before transferring to New Mexico for his final season of college football in 2025.
As a redshirt senior, Bankston would rack up 635 rushing yards, 397 receiving yards, and 8 scrimmage touchdowns, as well as another 434 kick return yards and two touchdowns on just 12 returns.
Strengths
Explosive athlete with elite acceleration
Soft, natural hands as a pass-catcher out of the backfield
Solid vision when operating in zone run schemes
Usually a patient runner before accelerating through gaps
Plays very quick as a runner with a bit of a choppy style
Eliminates tackle angles with acceleration
Can make defenders miss in space with a solid juke move
Kick return specialist with two return touchdowns in 2025
Willing as a pass protector in the backfield
Weaknesses
Likely won’t be able to survive through contact often against NFL-caliber defenders
Questionable ability to run between the tackles at the next level
Not necessarily a weakness but only one year of FBS film, not sure how he’ll adapt to NFL game speed
Questionable size to succeed in pass protection
Ball security was an issue for him in 2025, including two fumbles in one game against Colorado State
Play strength is a concern with contact balance, ball security, pass protection, and the ability to be an all-around back
Summary
Bankston will at best be a change-of-pace back in the NFL who never handles a significant workload.
Carving out a role as a return specialist should be the goal for Bankston to make the roster in 2026, which will also be a tall task for him to solidify with Deonte Banks back for the Giants in 2026.
Bankston, who at this point is probably more of a practice squad candidate, can definitely provide some juice on special teams as a kickoff returner. In college he averaged 36.2 yards per return and had two returns for touchdown, showing some explosiveness.
The step up in competition from the FCS to FBS for Bankston caused him to be less consistent with creating yards after contact and making defenders miss.
It’s fair to estimate that with another step up in competition, Bankston could once again see a decrease in that ability to create.
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