Is Texas A&M’s Myles Garrett a Heisman candidate? Steve Palazzolo of Pro Football Focus sure thinks so.

The website analyzed Garrett as one of the “top runners up” behind Louisville quarterback Lamar Jackson, who is widely considered the favorite for the award through the first four weeks of the 2016 season. PFF credited the junior as the “nation’s best pass-rusher” and ranked him No. 2 in the PFF College 101 prior to the season.

Garrett has a 89.8 pass-rushing grade after posting a 92.8 mark in 2014 and 89.7 in 2014. Despite drawing double teams, the A&M standout still manages to pressure the quarterback at a higher rate in 2016 (18.3 percent) than his career average (17.3).

Here’s an excerpt from PFF’s analysis on Garrett:

His down-to-down impact has been as great as any pass-rusher in the nation the last three years, but that brings us to one of the obstacles with getting a pass-rusher to New York: sack totals. Despite our calling Garrett the best pass-rusher in the nation, he “only” has three sacks, and that’s hard to compete with the Lamar Jackson’s of the world who averages three touchdowns per half. Using sacks as a gauge of the entire season does not do justice to the true value of a pass-rusher, particularly when the process of achieving the sack is far more important than just obtaining the statistic. Pressuring the quarterback in two seconds to force him into a teammate’s sack or forcing a quick incompletion are more difficult to achieve than being on the opposite end and picking up the clean-up sack, and that’s where we can better quantify Garrett’s value.

You can read Palazzolo’s full analysis at Pro Football Focus here.