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The 2026 NFL Draft features a strong class of wide receivers, with Jordyn Tyson from Arizona State leading the rankings. While there may not be any standout superstars, several players are expected to make significant impacts in the league.
In 2025, no position had more players drafted into the NFL than the wide receiver position. Itās no surprise, as teams typically carry 5-7 wide receivers and are always looking at finding the next superstar at the position. This year, I donāt think the draft has any superstars at the position, but there are a lot of names who are going to be productive players in the coming years. Here are our top WRs in the 2026 class:
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If anyone in this draft class turns into a true alpha wide receiver in the league, itās likely to be Jordyn Tyson. He was an absolute target machine at Arizona State, and itās easy to say why: much like a 7-Eleven, heās always open. Tyson runs the complete route tree, and his strong hands allow him to make contested catches. He doesnāt have āfreakishā athleticism, but then again, neither did Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Reggie Wayne, or Jerry Rice.
Every analyst out there has different rankings for KC Concepcion, and itās easy to see why. It boils down to what you value in a WR prospect. If you value a WR who is an explosive athlete with great acceleration that gets himself wide open in and out of cuts, youāll love Concepcion. If you value a WR who doesnāt drop passes, youāll hate him. His biggest issue at both NC State and Texas A&M was routinely dropped passes, but thatās something that I believe heāll be able to fix in the pros. Heās also one of the best return men in this class.
Death, taxes, and Ohio State wide receivers. Next up in the long Ohio State pipeline is Carnell Tate. Heās the safest wide receiver in this class: he was a big-time recruit out of high school, possesses capable physical tools, and was the utmost professional in his work at Ohio State. The only knock on him is that he was never a WR1, but he played alongside Emeka Egbuka and Jeremiah Smith, so itās hard to use that as a legitimate gripe.
If your team is in need of a slot receiver, you should be ecstatic if they draft Makai Lemon. The 2025 Biletnikoff Award winner may lack the top-end strength and speed to play outside, but he is an incredible slot. Heās the best route runner in the class, and excelled against both man and zone coverage at USC.
Omar Cooper Jr is this classās best āafter the catchā WR, and this was put to great use in an Indiana offense that heavily utilized RPOs and screen passes. His physicality and elusiveness in both broken and open fields have him drawing comps to Deebo Samuel, but thereās only one Deebo Samuel ā Cooper is about 20 pounds lighter than Deebo and would not hold up if moved to RB in the way that Deebo once did.
Denzel Boston is what he is ā a big-bodied, strong, contested-catch specialist who will play on the outside. Heās the son of former NFL WR David Boston, and that shows up in his craft ā heās a great route runner and has incredible hands. But he lacks top-end speed and the accelerative burst to consistently get himself open. This archetype at the WR position has featured some booms and some busts at the NFL level.
After following Kalen DeBoer from Washington to Alabama, Bernard got a full college career playing in the same offense that produced Jalen McMillan, Rome Odunze, and JaāLynn Polk. He has the highest floor of any Day-2 WR, as his savvy as a route-runner and great hands make him NFL-ready. Look for him to excel in an offense that utilizes the middle of the field in the passing game, just like the DeBoer offense.
Iām very high on Chris Bell as an NFL prospect, but very concerned about his torn ACL that he suffered last season. I was thoroughly impressed with what I saw from him at Louisville this past season. Heās big, and plays big, and still has the quick twitch burst to separate from defensive backs at all levels of the field. But can he still play this way coming off a torn ACL? The medical evaluation will tell us a lot.
Branch is another receiver in this class who āis who he is.ā Heās slight of frame, but incredibly fast at full speed and quick in and out of cuts. Heās an excellent return man and is the fastest man on almost any field heās on. My worry for him is that he will be pigeon-holed into the same role in the NFL that he was at Georgia ā a designed-touch merchant who lives off of screens and jet sweeps. My comp is that he is Tavon Austin if Tavon Austin played in one of college footballās most unexciting offenses.
The hardest team to evaluate receivers for is back at it again with Chris Brazzell. Heās 6ā4ā, blazing fast, and destroys press coverage. But thatās about all that we know about him. As an outside receiver in Josh Heupelās offense, Brazzell essentially only ran posts, hitches, and go routes. Thatās far from the whole NFL route tree.
Fields may have been one of the biggest beneficiaries of the combine at the WR position. He showed up and was bigger and faster than he appeared on tape. What he did show on tape was his ability to separate against man coverage at any level, and a massive catch radius. His skill set should transfer up to the NFL, and his physical tools are better than we previously thought.
Every year in the NFL draft, there comes a WR who was limited in college by who was throwing to him and the offensive scheme around him. This year, that title may belong to Kevin Coleman. Heās not the biggest or the fastest, but he possesses great hands and showed outstanding knowledge of how to find holes in zone coverage. He was a target monster at Missouri, and itās not hard to see why. This skill of beating zone should certainly work in the NFL, even if he is not the most physically dominant player.
If you have a need for speed, Brenen Thompson can fill it. He looked and played fast on tape, and the 4.26 40-yard dash at the combine confirmed that Thompson is the fastest WR in this class. The downside is that he is quite small at only 5ā9ā, 164 pounds. But this isnāt a whole lot smaller than DeSean Jackson or Xavier Worthy. That is the archetype we are looking for here.
If you need a slot receiver, Antonio Williams can fill it. He broke out as a true freshman as the slot in Clemsonās offense, and held onto that spot for the entirety of his career. Heās not an elite athlete, but heās also not small or slow, either, and heās got a ton of experience in the slot. I donāt think he has the ability to be an outside receiver in the NFL.
In the Lane Kiffin offense, Stribling ran a very limited route tree, but he was incredible in those routes. He has the acceleration to beat man coverage off the line of scrimmage, the speed to win on go routes, the physicality to make contested catches, and the elusiveness to take a 5-yard hitch to the house. The downside is that we simply havenāt seen a whole lot of versatility outside of those traits.
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The top wide receivers include Jordyn Tyson from Arizona State and KC Concepcion from Texas A&M.
Jordyn Tyson is noted for his ability to run the complete route tree and make contested catches, making him a likely candidate for an alpha receiver role in the NFL.
In 2025, the wide receiver position had the highest number of players drafted compared to other positions.
NFL teams typically carry 5-7 wide receivers, highlighting the importance of finding productive players at this position.

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