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Edward Ingram[1] (born February 11, 1999) is an American professional football guard for the Houston Texans of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the LSU Tigers and was drafted in the second round of the 2022 NFL draft by the Minnesota Vikings.

Key Information

Early life

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College career

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Professional career

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Pre-draft measurables
Height Weight Arm length Hand span 40-yard dash 10-yard split 20-yard split 20-yard shuttle Three-cone drill Vertical jump Broad jump
6 ft 3+14 in
(1.91 m)
307 lb
(139 kg)
33+58 in
(0.85 m)
10 in
(0.25 m)
5.02 s 1.68 s 2.88 s 4.76 s 7.81 s 20.5 in
(0.52 m)
8 ft 6 in
(2.59 m)
All values from NFL Combine[3][5]

Minnesota Vikings

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Ingram was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings with the 59th pick in the second round of the 2022 NFL draft.[6] As a rookie, he appeared in and started all 17 games.[7]

Houston Texans

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On March 13, 2025, Ingram was traded to the Houston Texans for a 2026 sixth-round pick.[8]

Personal life

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In August 2018, Ingram was arrested on two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a minor, stemming from events that occurred 2015.[9][10] After charges were dismissed in September 2019, Ingram was reinstated to the team from his indefinite suspension.[11][12]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Edward Ingram (born February 11, 1999) is an American professional football guard for the Houston Texans of the National Football League (NFL).[1][2] A native of DeSoto, Texas, Ingram played college football at Louisiana State University (LSU), where he appeared in 45 games and made 34 starts across four seasons primarily at guard.[3] Drafted by the Minnesota Vikings in the second round (59th overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft, he became a regular starter on the offensive line, appearing in 48 games with 41 starts over three seasons.[4][5] In March 2025, Ingram was traded to the Texans in exchange for a 2026 sixth-round draft pick, providing a fresh opportunity amid the team's offensive line rebuild.[6] Early in the 2025 season, he has posted elite performance metrics, including the NFL's highest overall blocking grade (84.0) and second-highest run-blocking grade (86.1) among guards through the first four weeks, according to Pro Football Focus evaluations.[7] Off the field, Ingram, who was adopted as a child along with his siblings following early-life hardships, has advocated for adoption support initiatives, including holiday shopping events for foster families.[8][9]

Early life

Early life and high school career

Edward Ingram was born on February 11, 1999, in DeSoto, Texas, where he was raised after being adopted along with his siblings by his parents, who initially sought to adopt one child but expanded their family upon learning of the sibling group.[8][1] Ingram attended DeSoto High School in DeSoto, Texas, participating in football as an offensive guard.[3] Measuring 6 feet 4 inches tall and weighing around 320 pounds as a senior, he developed physical dominance suited to the lineman position amid Texas's competitive high school football environment.[10][11] During his senior year in 2016, Ingram earned selection to the Texas Sports Writers Association Class 6A All-State first team as a guard.[11] He played a key role on DeSoto's offensive line, contributing to the team's perfect 16-0 record and first-ever 6A state championship, highlighted by a 38-29 victory over Cibolo Steele in the title game where DeSoto gained 303 rushing yards and 525 total yards.[12][3]

College career

Career at LSU

Ed Ingram enrolled at Louisiana State University in 2017 after being recruited as a highly touted offensive line prospect from DeSoto High School in Texas.[3] As a true freshman that season, he quickly earned a starting role at right guard, appearing in all 13 games and starting 12, contributing to an LSU offense that averaged 30.3 points per game in the SEC.[13] His rapid transition to starter highlighted strong initial fundamentals in leverage and run blocking, though pass protection remained an area for development amid competition from defenses like those at Florida and Auburn.[14] Ingram did not play during the 2018 season due to an indefinite suspension imposed by LSU for a team rules violation, later tied to legal charges in Texas that were dismissed in September 2019, allowing his reinstatement.[15] This hiatus preserved his eligibility but interrupted his on-field progression, forcing a rebuild of timing and technique upon return.[3] Reinstated ahead of the 2019 campaign, Ingram shifted to left guard and resumed starting duties, playing in 13 games with significant snaps (722 total, third among LSU offensive linemen) as part of the Tigers' national championship-winning offense that ranked first nationally in scoring (48.4 points per game).[3] His role emphasized anchor strength in the run game, supporting a ground attack led by Clyde Edwards-Helaire, though he faced challenges against elite SEC pass rushers.[16] In 2020, Ingram started multiple games at left guard after a midseason return to the lineup in October, appearing in 10 games amid a shortened SEC schedule due to COVID-19 protocols, where LSU's offense ranked mid-tier in the conference.[17] He focused on refining footwork and hand placement to counter speed rushers, showing incremental improvements in blocking efficiency.[14] Ingram's senior year in 2021 marked his most consistent performance, starting all 11 games at left guard for 811 offensive snaps and earning second-team All-SEC honors. He allowed just 2 sacks and 11 pressures, posting an 82.6 pass-blocking grade (top among SEC guards per PFF), which underscored enhanced technique in maintaining leverage against athletic fronts like those at Ole Miss and Texas A&M.[14][18] Overall at LSU, he appeared in 45 games with 34 starts (22 at left guard, 12 at right guard), prioritizing physicality and positioning over athletic flash in a power-oriented scheme.[3]

Professional career

2022 NFL Draft and rookie season

The Minnesota Vikings selected Ingram in the second round (59th overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft.[19][20] Pre-draft evaluations highlighted his upper-body strength and power, positioning him as a potential drive blocker suited for guard due to functional athleticism despite shorter arm length, with a 40-yard dash time of 5.02 seconds recorded at the NFL Scouting Combine.[21][22][23] Ingram signed a four-year rookie contract worth $5,997,974, including $3,224,799 in fully guaranteed money.[4] As a rookie, he started all 17 regular-season games at right guard, logging 1,168 offensive snaps (100% of team total) and contributing on special teams for 81 snaps (16.4%).[24][25] Ingram faced adaptation challenges typical of a first-year interior lineman transitioning to the NFL's speed and complexity, allowing a league-high 63 pressures among guards.[26] He drew penalties for issues like a recurring false start or holding infraction late in the season, though offensive coordinator Wes Phillips noted no serious consideration for benching him, praising his overall progress and run-blocking reliability.[27] Head coach Kevin O'Connell commended Ingram's rapid acclimation to professional schemes post-draft.[28]

Minnesota Vikings tenure (2022–2024)

Ingram served as the starting right guard for the Minnesota Vikings throughout his rookie season in 2022, appearing in all 17 games and logging over 1,000 offensive snaps, primarily in a zone-blocking scheme under head coach Kevin O'Connell that emphasized athleticism and angle leverage over pure power.[29] Despite his consistent role, Ingram struggled with pass protection, allowing 63 pressures according to Pro Football Focus (PFF) metrics, which contributed to a low overall grade of 57.0, ranking him among the weaker guards league-wide.[30] His run-blocking showed more promise, leveraging his 6-foot-3, 307-pound frame for short-yardage situations, though inconsistencies in footwork and hand placement limited overall effectiveness against speed rushers.[31] The 2023 season saw modest improvement, with Ingram starting 15 of 15 games played, reducing pressures allowed to 42 while maintaining a slightly higher overall PFF grade of 59.1.[32] He remained a fixture in the Vikings' offensive line, which ranked mid-tier in run efficiency, benefiting from his strength in combo blocks and drive blocking on inside runs, yet pass-protection lapses persisted, particularly against twists and stunts where his lateral quickness proved inadequate.[33] Penalties were infrequent, but his technique—often relying on bull-rushing rather than mirroring—exposed vulnerabilities in a scheme demanding sustained engagement, leading to critiques that his college-honed power style did not fully adapt to NFL-level edge pressure.[34] By 2024, Ingram's role diminished, starting only 9 of 16 games as he lost his position amid ongoing pass-blocking deficiencies, posting a dismal 49.1 PFF pass grade and allowing 5 sacks alongside 24 pressures.[35] [36] His run-blocking grade of 58.1 offered some utility in goal-line and short-yardage scenarios, where physicality aided conversions, but three penalties committed and persistent issues with hand usage and balance underscored a failure to evolve technically, contributing to the Vikings' offensive line instability under O'Connell's system.[37] These metrics highlighted causal factors in his tenure, including limited agility for pass sets and over-reliance on strength without refined leverage, rather than solely schematic mismatches, as evidenced by comparative underperformance against peers in similar zone-heavy offenses.[38]

Trade and Houston Texans career (2025–present)

On March 13, 2025, the Houston Texans acquired guard Ed Ingram from the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for a sixth-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, as part of Houston's efforts to rebuild its offensive line following injuries and inconsistencies in prior seasons.[39][40] Ingram, entering the third year of his rookie contract, expressed that the move provided a fresh opportunity, stating, "Was time for me to leave, this is the new start I needed," reflecting his desire for a scheme adjustment from Minnesota's zone-heavy approach to Houston's more versatile blocking assignments that better leveraged his power-based strengths.[7][41] Ingram quickly integrated into the Texans' lineup at right guard, forming an effective tandem with right tackle Tytus Howard, whose positional versatility complemented Ingram's aggressive run blocking and anchor stability in pass protection.[41] This partnership stabilized the right side of the offensive line, enabling improved gap schemes and combo blocks that enhanced quarterback protection and ground game execution early in the season.[42] Through five games in the 2025 season as of mid-October, Ingram posted Pro Football Focus grades of 84.0 overall and 86.1 in run blocking, ranking him as the highest-graded guard league-wide and second among all guards in run blocking efficiency.[7][43] His performance marked a resurgence attributable to individual technique refinements and schematic alignment, rather than external factors, contributing to the Texans' offensive line allowing fewer pressures per snap compared to preseason projections.[31][44]

Career statistics and accomplishments

NFL statistics

Ingram appeared in 48 regular season games for the Minnesota Vikings from 2022 to 2024, starting 41, before being traded to the Houston Texans prior to the 2025 season.[1] Through five games with the Texans in 2025 (as of late October), he has started all five, with career totals of 53 games played and 46 starts.[1]
YearTeamGames PlayedGames Started
2022MIN1717
2023MIN1515
2024MIN169
2025HOU55
Career-5346
Penalties across his career total 11, including 10 during his Vikings tenure and 1 with the Texans in 2025.[1] PFF data for 2025 shows Ingram allowing 9 pressures and 1 sack over 329 offensive snaps (212 pass-blocking, 117 run-blocking), with 2 penalties flagged.[31]
Metric (2025)ValueNFL Rank (Guards)
Pressures Allowed927th/81
Sacks Allowed125th/81
Pass Blocking Grade62.430th/81
Run Blocking Grade79.73rd/81

Awards and honors

Ingram earned second-team All-SEC honors as a left guard during the 2021 season at LSU, where he started 12 games and anchored the interior line.[45] He was also placed on the Outland Trophy watch list that year, recognizing top interior linemen in college football.[46] Additionally, Ingram contributed to LSU's 2019 College Football Playoff national championship team as a rotational player on the offensive line during their undefeated 15-0 campaign.[3] In the NFL, Ingram has not received traditional accolades such as Pro Bowl or All-Pro selections through his tenure with the Minnesota Vikings (2022–2024) or early 2025 stint with the Houston Texans.[1] Offensive linemen like Ingram often receive limited media-driven recognition compared to skill-position players, with formal honors typically reserved for standout seasons amid team success or individual dominance. Analytical evaluations, however, highlight his run-blocking prowess; in 2025 with the Texans, Ingram ranked as the highest-graded guard overall (84.0) and second in run blocking (86.1) per Pro Football Focus through the early season, marking a career-best improvement following his trade.[31][7]

Personal life

Family and background

Ingram's parents, Stanley and Becky, whom he has identified as his primary influences, instilled values centered on perseverance amid challenges rooted in their Texas background.[47] He maintains close ties with his sister Tyler, who has resided in Houston for over six years, providing familial support in the region.[47] Following his March 2025 trade to the Houston Texans, Ingram shifted his residence to the Houston area, citing the move's benefits due to its nearness to his DeSoto, Texas origins and extended family network.[7][12] Off the field, Ingram is represented by Klutch Sports Group, which handles his professional endorsements and inquiries, as indicated on his official Instagram account (@edingram70) with over 50,000 followers as of late 2025.[48] Ingram engages in philanthropy focused on adoption and youth support, including holiday shopping events with AdopteeBridge families in December 2024 and a $5,000 donation to Minnesota Children's Hospital in November 2024 to aid sickle cell patients.[8][49][50] These efforts reflect personal commitments to community resilience, independent of his athletic profile.[8]

References

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