2020 Draft: 5 wide receiver prospects Cowboys must consider

As we enter our eighth official day of free agency the Dallas Cowboys have already locked up Amari Cooper signing him to a five year $100

The Dallas Cowboys locked up Amari Cooper, signing him to a five-year, $100 millioncontract with $60 million in guarantees. While the top of the receiver depth chart is secure there are some serious questions with the depth of the position. He returns to combine with Michael Gallup as one of the league’s most exciting young duos. After losing starting slot receiver Randall Cobb to the Houston Texans (three year $27 million), though, there is a hole in the slot that will need to be addressed in free agency or at some point in the draft. Behind the top two receivers is Jon’Vea Johnson, Ventell Bryant, Cedrick Wilson Jr., Lance Lenoir, Devin Smith, and Noah Brown; a collection of late round selections with some upside to develop, veterans, and core special team players.

There is a need to find young wideouts capable of impact in the slot and with versatility to play on the outside if they were to suffer injury.

Lucky for the Cowboys this is a great year to be in the market for a receiver as this could be the deepest draft class we potentially have ever seen. This class has a variety of different skills, size, and ability. There is surely a receiver that will fit what the Cowboys may be looking for in this draft class.

Here are five of the top prospects, where the Cowboys may have to draft them, and how they fit.

Laviska Shenault, WR, Colorado

Image result for laviska shenault

Originally from DeSoto, TX the 6-foot-1, 227 pound receiver has made the University of Colorado home for the past three seasons. Shenault is a receiver with a running backs frame and play style. He is difficult to bring down in the open field and is a physical runner. He has good ball skills and attacks the ball once its in the air. He can be a chest piece for an offensive coordinator as he can be used in the slot, on the perimeter, with jet sweep action and as a move guy. Shenault has plenty of skill at the position but at the moment he is more playmaker that pure receiver as he will need to continue to develop as a route runner. Shenault finished his Junior season with 56 receptions, 764 yards, four touchdowns, 23 carries, 161 yards, and two touchdowns.

Shenault would be an excellent fit with this Cowboys offense as he has played in the slot as well as on the outside and could add another element of physicality to the offense. He also offers up value as a return man with play making traits. Shenault is recovering from a core muscle injury that could push him down the board some with the depth of this class. Pick 51 would be great value for Shenault if he is available.

NFL:

“2 Live” is both talented and stoic as a three-level threat with outstanding physical traits and ball skills. He offers explosive playmaking potential with strength/wiggle to house a short catch-and-run throw or race and leap to pull in a bomb downfield. Shenault shines as a phone-booth bully who’s able to body up and create late windows while securing throws with vice-grip hands. Evaluators get excited by his talent as a direct-snap runner, but sometimes he’s too physical for his own good, which could bring his history of durability into play. Despite his traits and talent, there is work to be done as route-runner and coordinators need to determine how best to use him. He’s a high-end talent, but not a sure thing. An exciting ceiling but a lower floor.

Draft Network:

 Laviska Shenault checks nearly every box you’d want from a high-end wide receiver prospect entering the NFL — minus production. Shenault’s physical ability is jaw dropping and should transcend a dysfunctional offense at Colorado. Shenault possesses the explosiveness, physicality, short area quickness, hands and linear speed to become a high volume alpha receiver at the NFL level. He’s capable of defeating press on the boundary and should produce immediately.

Walter Football:

Perhaps the trait that stands out the most about Shenault is his toughness. He is a thickly built receiver who plays the game the right way. Many wideouts with Shenault’s strength and physicality are prone to pushing off of defensive backs, but Shenault has enough quickness to get open, and when he gets the ball in hands, he is special with the way he dodges and weaves by defenders while running through arm tackles. Shenault is very physical with defensive backs to power through tackles and get yards after contact. Cornerbacks really struggle to get him on the ground, and he is dangerous with his ability to produce quality gains on bubble screens and other easy completions because of his run-after-the-catch skills.

2020 NFL draft: K.J. Hill scouting report

Everything NFL draft fans need to know about Ohio State wide receiver prospect K.J. Hill

K.J. Hill | WR | Ohio State

Elevator Pitch

Hill is another receiver in a long line of receivers from the Ohio State University that will be looking to make the jump to the NFL level. Hill is a player that can play at multiple spots. Not to mention he has return ability which will help him get on the field in multiple aspects of a game and increases his draft stock.

Vitals

Height | 6-0

Weight | 196

Class | Redshirt Senior

College Stats

College Bio

Combine Profile

Strengths

The all-time leading receiver at Ohio State, Hill is as dependable as they come. Didn’t have huge numbers for the Buckeyes but did his job and did it well. Very nuanced in his route running, very crisp. A guy who you can count on to be in his spot when the quarterback is ready to throw the ball. Very reliable hands as well. Catching outside his frame won’t be an issue.

Hill is a player who can rack up the yards after the catch. Very shifty in space which allows himself to be elusive against the defense at all levels. His ability to run precise routes gives him the ability to create separation for a good target window for quarterbacks. High football IQ, he will find soft spots in the zone to sit.

For special teams, Hill can make his impact in the return game. He had experience for the Buckeyes as both a punt and kickoff returner. His kickoff returns were very few but it could be a way for him to make an early impact for his perspective new team. He is a much better receiver than returner.

Weaknesses

With Hill’s frame, questions will arise about his ability to deal with press coverage from more physical corners at the NFL level. His ability to get clean releases will be key for him. Not the most physical receiver in the upcoming class. Adding strength to his upper body will help in that regard.

His lack of top speed won’t make him a big deep threat without the ability to create separation from defenders. Due to his lack of length, not a guy who will climb the ladder for jump balls. This also limits his ability to be an outside the frame pass catcher even though he can do that well.

Projection: Day 2

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Is Ohio State football becoming wide-receiver U?

Ohio State has been known for being a run-heavy team throughout its history, but is it now becoming Wide Receiver U?

It’s been well documented that Ohio State has been laying claim as “DBU” for churning out NFL defensive backs throughout history. The Bucks may start claiming the title of “Wide Receiver U” before too long.

Ohio State was a little late to the passing game as Buckeye Legend Woody Hayes famously said: “There are only three things can happen on a pass, and two of them are bad.” But Ohio State would start to evolve with names like Chris Carter, Terry Glenn, and David Boston in the 80’s and 90’s.

However, you might be surprised to know that since the 2000 NFL draft, Ohio State has had more receivers drafted than any other college program. It’ll no doubt add to that total with guys like KJ Hill and Austin Mack this coming April.

It seems now, Columbus is the place to be for highly-touted receivers to land. The 2020 recruiting class lays claim to the No. 1, No. 5, No. 12, and No. 15 ranked receivers in the nation (Julian Flemming, Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Gee Scott, Jr., and Mookie Cooper). Add this class to what was a strong 2019 receiving class led by the No. 2 nationally-ranked receiver, Garrett Wilson, and there is something special in the making.

Speaking of Garrett Wilson, he and fellow Buckeye Wideout, Chris Olave just made the Pro Football Focus list of top 25 receivers returning to college football in 2020.  Wilson comes in at No. 24 and Olave makes the ranking at No. 10.

Brian Hartline is doing work not only bringing in top-level talent, but developing that talent as well. And we’re excited to see what this explosive group can do going forward.

WR KJ Hill becomes Ohio State’s all-time reception leader

Ohio State’s KJ Hill, with a ten-yard reception in the third quarter, became Ohio State’s all-time receptions leader.

Ohio State came out of the gate scorching hot in the third quarter, and KJ Hill certainly helped.

On a drive where the Buckeyes eventually took the lead 24-21, Justin Fields completed a ten-yard pass to KJ Hill. That reception gave him 192 receptions which later taken up to 193 with the go-ahead touchdown.

Hill, who has been playing since he’s a freshman, took over David Boston’s record, who played just three seasons in Columbus in the late 1990s.

While Hill has had a relatively quiet career with Ohio State, he’s slowly become one of their most consistent threats. With that catch, Hill now has five receptions for 68 yards and a touchdown on the day.

Here’s the catch that gave him the record.

With over a quarter left to play, Hill will be looking to widen his lead as Ohio State’s receptions leader. He’s one reception, which will likely come in the fourth quarter, away from three straight seasons of 50-plus receptions.