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Reading: Zion Matthews Is Built for the Next Level, Waiting on the Right Fit
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Zion Matthews Is Built for the Next Level, Waiting on the Right Fit

Tramayne Wright
Last updated: February 1, 2026 8:55 pm
Tramayne Wright Published February 1, 2026
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Production, Patience, and a Pro-Ready Profile

At first glance, Zion Matthews looks like the answer coaches are always searching for. The frame checks out. The speed shows up. The film pops. At roughly 5-foot-11 and just over 210 pounds, the Dr. Phillips High School running back already carries NFL-type size, with room to add even more as his body matures. When he runs, it’s downhill and decisive. When he needs to make someone miss, he can do that too. The question surrounding Matthews has never been if he can play at the next level; it’s why the recruiting process hasn’t caught up to the tape. Those closest to the game aren’t confused.

Justin R. Felton Sr., who has evaluated talent across multiple levels, describes Matthews as a rare combination of power and awareness. He’s not just a bruiser or a space player, he’s both. Felton points to moments that don’t show up on stat sheets but matter deeply to coaches. One sideline view told the story: Matthews nearly swallowed in the backfield, slipping a tackle, bursting through a crease, then glancing toward the first-down marker before extending the ball just enough through contact to move the chains. It was instinctual. Calculated. The kind of detail that signals football intelligence, not just athleticism.

That intelligence showed up all season.

During his senior year at Dr. Phillips High School, Matthews rushed for 1,356 yards while averaging 6.4 yards per carry, finding the end zone 18 times on the ground. He added over 130 receiving yards and two more touchdowns as a pass catcher, reinforcing his value as a three-down back. His biggest moments came under the brightest lights. In one game, Matthews erupted for six touchdowns and more than 200 rushing yards, breaking the school record for most touchdowns in a single contest. A week later, against an undefeated opponent, he followed with four more touchdowns and nearly 180 yards rushing. Across those two games alone, Matthews accounted for 10 touchdowns and over 500 all-purpose yards of dominance against quality competition.

Beyond production, the résumé keeps growing. Matthews earned Dr. Phillips’ Most Athletic award, a reflection of both his on-field impact and overall presence within the program. Academically, he brings a 3.5 GPA, giving colleges flexibility and confidence when evaluating his long-term fit. Physically, he’s already clocked in the mid-4.6s in the 40-yard dash, with the expectation that added strength and college-level development will only sharpen that time.

What makes Matthews particularly intriguing in today’s recruiting climate is projection. At 210 pounds now, evaluators believe a college strength program could push him into the 220–225 range without sacrificing quickness, turning him into a true downhill “MAC truck” back who can still create in space. Just as important, his understanding of situational football, pass protection, and reading leverage suggests he’s far from a finished product.

In an era where offers can fluctuate, and noise often outweighs nuance, Zion Matthews represents substance. He’s a high-upside running back with production, intelligence, and the kind of maturity programs trust. The next opportunity won’t be about hype; it’ll be about fit, development, and patience.

And when that call comes, the program on the other end won’t just be getting a running back. They’ll be getting a competitor who understands the details, respects the process, and brings a DAWG mentality every time he lines up.

Zion Matthews, who is represented by Justin Felton Sr of Felton Athletic Management & Financial, continues to position himself for the next level.

TAGGED:Dr. Phillips HSFlorida Footballhigh schoolrecruitingRunning Back
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