
Unveiling the NFL Draft’s Ultimate Deep Threats: Which Wide Receivers Leave Defenders in the Dust?
Harris averaged 0.197 missed or broken tackles per touch, a below-average rate for this group, suggesting his huge run-after-catch numbers also had a lot to do with Ole Miss scheming him into the open field in the first place.
3. Emeka Egbuka, Ohio State (69.4%)
Jeremiah Smith rendered Egbuka the best No. 2 wideout in recent college football history. Egbuka would have been the standard-bearer for at least 128 teams, though, and put up nice all-around numbers. Smith was Ohio Stateâs deep threat and Egbuka was its short-area version, averaging 7.9 yards of target depth compared to the freshman phenomâs 12.7.
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