Rookie Rundown: WR Rashod Bateman, Minnesota

Bateman has enough skills to challenge for a Round 1 selection.

Minnesota sent wide receiver Tyler Johnson to the NFL in 2020, and this year Rashod Bateman enters with even more appeal as an outside target capable of playing from the slot.

A productive stint with the Golden Gophers offers considerable tape for scouts, and there’s much to like — as well as fixable traits a coaching staff will be able to sort out in time.

Bateman was listed through the program as being 6-foot-2, 210 pounds, and his Minnesota Pro Day measurements shaved nearly two inches and 30 pounds from the junior. He timed faster than most people likely expected, and while it is unofficial, Bateman plays functionally faster than average.

Height: 6-foot-0 3/8
Weight: 190 pounds
40 time: 4.39 seconds

Minnesota played Bateman as a freshman in 2018, and he went on to earn the school’s Most Outstanding Offensive Player of the Year Award. His breakthrough season in 2019 resulted in an all-Big Ten first-team selection, third-team Associated Press All-American recognition, and the conference named Bateman its “Receiver of the Year.”

Table: Rashod Bateman NCAA stats (2018-20)

Year School Class Gm* Receiving Rushing
Rec Yds Avg TD Att Yds Avg TD
2018
Minnesota
FR
13
51
704
13.8
6
0
0
0
2019
Minnesota
SO
13
60
1,219
20.3
11
0
0
0
2020
Minnesota
JR
5
36
472
13.1
2
0
0
0
Career
147
2,395
16.3
19
0
0
0

*includes postseason/bowl games

We’ve see a little bit of everything from Bateman through just under two and a half seasons. He finished 2019 averaging a whopping 20.3 yards per grab that was sandwiched between a pair of more indicative 13-plus-yarders.

The 2020 season was originally going to be played in the spring of 2021, but it returned to the fall of ’20, so Bateman rescinded his opt-out notification. In the sixth game, the school was scheduled to face Wisconsin, at which time the Badgers experienced positive COVID-19 test results. In response, Bateman once again opted to sit out, this time for the remainder of the year.

Pros

  • Strongest attribute is advanced route-running repertoire — quick feet in and out of breaks, sells body fakes, understands advanced concepts
  • Nuanced, diverse movements to create separation off the line — able to overcome a lack of elite burst
  • Played primarily from the slot in 2020 after playing on the outside in 2019
  • Array of on-field productivity, stemming from home run and possession traits, being unafraid over the middle, and having a nose for the end zone
  • Late hands and catches away from his body — has several “wow” grabs on film
  • Plus body control in the air
  • Adjust well to underthrown passes, and there were plenty of those in his time with Minnesota
  • Natural understanding of route concepts and responsibilities accompanying them — coming back for his quarterback, sitting in soft spots, deep releases, etc.
  • Plays bigger than he measured at pro day
  • Fast enough build-up speed to challenge deep

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Cons

  • Limited experience as a blocker
  • Borderline WR1 upside and could be “overdrafted” as a career No. 2 receiver
  • Isn’t a twitchy, flashy athlete, which will turn off teams in relation to current needs/style — isn’t going to be thrown a ton of screens or utilized from the backfield
  • Despite wide array of tricks to escape press-man coverage, he struggled at times with stronger corners (worst example is vs. Nebraska in 2019)
  • Dropped 19 of 166 catchable targets, according to Pro Football Focus — seems to be more concentration-related issues than a lack of raw talent
  • Significant statistical peaks and valleys during his NCAA career — not all his fault but will incite a closer look by scouts

Fantasy football outlook

Bateman will attract some attention late in the 2021 NFL Draft’s opening round. The most likely teams to show interest that early: Chicago (No. 20), Indianapolis (No. 21), Tennessee (No. 22), and Baltimore (No. 27).

Atop the second round, which is a better placement in terms of value, Bateman could be in the plans for a number of teams. Jacksonville, the New York Jets, Atlanta, Miami, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Carolina make up the first seven selectors of Round 2, and Bateman would be a viable target for each franchise.

In 2021 drafts, the single-year outlook is somewhere in the neighborhood of matchup-based flex through seldomly used depth. Some of this depends on how much on-field work NFL teams are able to utilize during the pandemic. Long-term valuation has Bateman’s outlook that of a strong No. 2 PPR career path. WR1 worth is in his grasp with the right setting around him.

As an NFL comparison, Keenan Allen is commonly tied to Bateman. It’s a fair one, but Allen is physically larger in stature and has better hands. Allen is a sound comparison from a fantasy trajectory perspective. While injuries kept Allen down early in his career, he has blossomed into a low-tier WR1 PPR option or an ideal No. 2. If Bateman’s career arc follows suit, gamers will have a heck of a player at their disposal for years to come.

Players we’ll miss most from the Big 10 and Pac-12: Minnesota WR Rashod Bateman

Ranking the 10 football players we will miss watching the most from the Big 10 and Pac-12: No. 7 Minnesota WR Rashod Bateman.

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The Big Ten announced its decision Tuesday to postpone fall sports. Minutes after, the Pac-12 made the decision to postpone its season as well.

With two of the Power Five conferences not playing, the entire college football season is up in the air. The SEC, ACC and Big 12 still have plans to have their conference-only seasons, but there are a number of players, coaches and teams that college football fans will miss watching dearly.

The No. 7 player we will miss watching most this year from the Big Ten and Pac-12 is Minnesota junior wide receiver Rashod Bateman.

Bateman was the best receiver for the Gophers last season. In his first two years with the Gophers, he caught 111 passes for 1,923 yards and 17 touchdowns. Bateman is eighth all-time on Minnesota’s career receiving yards list and is tied for fifth in touchdown receptions.

Bateman would have a serious shot at becoming Minnesota’s all-time leader in receptions, yards and touchdowns if he were playing this season. Instead, he will likely head to the 2021 NFL draft after two seasons of outstanding Big Ten play.  ESPN’s Todd McShay has Bateman going seventh overall in this years’ mock draft.

Philadelphia Eagles land All-American WR in way too early 2021 NFL mock draft

Philadelphia Eagles land All-American WR Rashod Bateman in way too early 2021 NFL mock draft

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The Eagles are expecting huge things from Alshon Jeffery and DeSean Jackson, in what could be the final season for both players in Philadelphia.

During the 2020 NFL Draft, the Eagles added Jalen Reagor (TCU), John Hightower (Boise State), and Quez Watkins (Southern Miss). The hope is that all three players have productive rookie seasons and allow the Birds to solidify the wide receiver spot.

If for some reason one or two of those players don’t pan out, the Birds will have plenty of options coming out in 2021. In the first of a way too early 2021 mock draft from 24/7 Sports, the Eagles land Minnesota All-American Rashod Bateman late in the first round.

27. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: RASHOD BATEMAN, MINNESOTA, WR

The 6-foot-2, 200-pound standout is an “an alpha receiver … [with] physical tools [that] are off the charts,” raves Pro Football Talk. PFT is so high on Bateman, it has him ranked higher among receivers than Ja’Marr Chase, Jaylen Waddle, and DeVonta Smith.

A Georgia native, Bateman spurned SEC schools to attend Minnesota and he hasn’t looked back ever since.

Bateman started at wide receiver as a true freshman and set a Golden Gophers freshman record with 51 receptions, 704 receiving yards and six touchdowns.

Last season as a true sophomore, Bateman was named a semifinalist for the Fred Biletnikoff Award and first-team All-Big Ten after catching 57 passes for 1,170 yards (20.5 yards per catch) and 11 touchdowns.

Bateman earned Second-team All-American by Sports Illustrated and USA Today and was a third-team selection by the Associated Press.

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