Notre Dame lands another speedy receiver in 2023 recruiting class

Notre Dame continues to do work recruiting in Texas! Welcome Kaleb Smith!

Notre Dame has landed another commitment, their 26th overall, in the 2023 recruiting class.  Kaleb Smith, a 6-0, 175-pound wide receiver from Reedy High School in Texas.  Smith joins defensive back Peyton Bowen and receivers Jaden Greathouse and Braylon James as Texas high school football stars in Notre Dame’s class.

Smith is coming off a senior season where he caught 53 passes for 786 yards and six touchdowns.  His junior year saw him catch 35 passes for 475 yards and six more touchdowns.

Smith was on campus for Notre Dame’s blowout victory over Clemson this year which came a short time after he de-committed from Texas Tech.  He chose the Irish over Texas Tech who he had as his only other finalist on Thursday evening.

This only adds more depth to a position that needs it at Notre Dame, and adds to a class that is seen currently as one of the nation’s top two or three according to nearly every major outlet.

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PHOTOS: Tennessee’s Wide Receiver U

PHOTOS: A look at Tennessee’s Wide Receiver U

The University of Tennessee first fielded a football team in 1891.

The Vols have won 19 conference championships: Southeastern Conference (16), Southern Conference (2) and SIAA (1).

Tennessee has won six Southeastern Conference East division titles since the league went to a divisional format in 1992.

The Vols have won six national championships in 1938, 1940, 1950, 1951, 1967 and 1998.

Tennessee has appeared in 54 bowl games. The Vols are 29-25 in bowl contests.

Throughout Tennessee’s history, the Vols have fielded numerous wide receivers who have made an impact for UT’s program. Tennessee has been called Wide Receiver U throughout the years.

Below are photos of the Vols’ wide receivers through the years.

Seahawks coach Pete Carroll: This is the fastest team we’ve had

Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll believes he has his faster roster yet heading into the 2022 NFL regular season.

There may still be questions about how things will shake out with a new quarterback under center, but coach Pete Carroll knows one thing for certain about his squad this season . . . the Seattle Seahawks have speed on their side.

“This is the fastest team we’ve had,” Carroll said after Saturday’s walkthrough, first mentioning the obvious with wide receivers Marquise Goodwin, Tyler Lockett, DK Metcalf and Dee Eskridge.

“To me, it’s always a priority,” Carroll explained. “It’s always faster the better. We are looking for strongest, fastest make-up of the players. I don’t care about how much guys weigh in terms of how big they are. I care about how fast they are and how well they can move.”

And it’s not just the receivers that can turn on the heat this year, it’s players throughout the roster that add quickness to this squad.

“When you have offensive tackles that run a 4.9 (seconds), that gives you the chance to really pick up your speed,” Carroll continued. “We are fast on the edge coming off and on the defensive side of the ball. The DBs can run, the corners can run. So, it just seems like every part of our game seems faster.

“And I’m calling on it and hopefully we’ll see the factor on special teams in a lot of ways.”

The Seahawks have their first chance to showcase their speed on Monday night when they host the Broncos at Lumen Field.

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POLL: Which of the Chiefs’ new wide receivers will score first?

Our weekly poll asks #Chiefs fans to make their pick for which new wide receiver will connect with Patrick Mahomes for a touchdown first.

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The Kansas City Chiefs will be traveling to Arizona soon as they get set to face the Cardinals in their season opener for 2022.

Some of the biggest changes for the Chiefs this season come on the offensive side of the ball at the wide receiver position. They traded Tyreek Hill and let players like Demarcus Robinson, Byron Pringle and Marcus Kemp walk in free agency. In doing so, they were able to rebuild their wide receiver group with veteran additions like JuJu Smith-Schuster, Marquez Valdes-Scantling and Justin Watson. They also added second-round draft pick, Skyy Moore.

Patrick Mahomes recently apologized to fantasy football owners, claiming the team is going with a committee approach at the receiver position.

“The biggest thing, I think there is going to be a different player every single game that has the big game,” Mahomes said. “It’s not going to be just necessarily Tyreek (Hill) and Travis (Kelce) every single week where it’s like one or the other that has a big game or both. Every single game it’s going to be somebody different. So, I’m sorry to all you fantasy football guys, but it’s going to come from everywhere. So you’re going to have to choose the right guy every week.”

In our latest weekly poll, we want to know who Chiefs Kingdom thinks will be the right guy this week. Who will be the first of the new wide receivers to catch a touchdown pass from Mahomes? Will it be Smith-Schuster, who looked like the team’s WR1 during training camp? Could the rookie Moore be the beneficiary of there being very little film in Week 1? How about Watson, who was the team’s leading receiver during the preseason?

Be sure to vote in the poll at the top of the page. Let us know your thoughts in the comment section down below and on Facebook and Twitter.

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LOOK: Official Alabama Football depth chart for Week 1 matchup with Utah State

Take a look at the announced starter for the Crimson Tide to open the 2022 college football season

Nick Saban and the Crimson Tide will soon open up the 2022 season with an at-home matchup against Utah State. With less than a week until kickoff, Alabama has revealed its official depth chart.

While some positions played out as expected, others are rather interesting and will likely lead to some debate among fans. The wide receiver position is full of surprises, where only one of the two transfer receivers is starting and a freshman will be playing with the first team.

Roll Tide Wire will offer an in-depth look at the depth chart and what it means for the Crimson Tide ahead of Saturday’s matchup.

Stay tuned for more coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide football.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow AJ Spurr on Twitter @SpurrFM.

Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today!

2022 Minnesota Vikings season previews: Wide Receivers

Our preview series continues with the wide receivers

The 2022 season is less than a month away and it’s time to get excited Vikings fans.

In a similar vein to how fans felt when Mike Zimmer took over for Leslie Frazier, the excitement is palpable for the beginning of the Kevin O’Connell era.

While the team prepares for the season, we are doing the same at the Vikings Wire. We will be producing previews breaking down both each position and the team as a whole.

Today, we continue with our preview series by talking about the wide receivers.

Quarterback Preview
Running Back Preview

2022 Florida Football Season Preview: Wide Receivers

Let’s take a look at Florida’s options at receiver for the 2022 season. Behind Justin Shorter and Xzavier Henderson, who else can we expect to contribute?

As we move through our position-by-position breakdown of the 2022 Florida Gators fall roster, one of the bigger question marks on offense is the wide receiver room.

Florida lost three of its top five pass catchers from last season during the offseason, leaving [autotag]Justin Shorter[/autotag] and [autotag]Xzavier Henderson[/autotag] as the presumed starting tandem out wide and [autotag]Trent Whittemore[/autotag] as the natural successor to [autotag]Rick Wells[/autotag] in the slot. Transfer [autotag]Ricky Pearsall[/autotag] was brought in via the transfer portal and should be a valuable asset as well.

These are the four players expected to make an impact at the receiver position in 2022 for the Gators, but there’s always room for someone to break through with 18 players in the position room. The top of the depth chart here is pretty thin, so the backup spots are almost all up for grabs at this point.

Here’s a look at all the wide receivers listed on the 2022 Florida Gators’ fall roster.

See also:

2023 Florida Football Season Preview: Quarterbacks

2023 Florida Football Season Preview: Running backs

Chase Claypool claimed he’s a top what receiver in the NFL?!!?

Love you Chase but did you mean on the Steelers specifically?

Cooper Kupp, Davante Adams, Deebo Samuel.

Justin Jefferson, Ja’Marr Chase, Stefon Diggs.

Ceedee Lamb, Tee Higgins, D.K. Metcalf.

If the question is “Who is the best wide receiver currently in the NFL?” then these would be a little more than a handful of the first names that popped up.

Then after another handful or two of names you might find former Notre Dame standout [autotag]Chase Claypool[/autotag], now a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers.  Claypool sees things a little differently though as he recently called himself one of the elite wide receivers in the entire NFL.

Claypool spoke on the “I am Athlete” podcast with hosts Brandon Marshall, LeSean McCoy, and Adam “Pacman” Jones.

I’m going to say, my second year, I was a better player than I was my first year,” Claypool said. “The plays just didn’t work out, right? Some of the plays just didn’t go my way. I didn’t make some plays I need to make. But as a football player, understanding the game, knowing what to do, knowing where to be, I was better. So I’m going to be better this year.

“And just like you said, understanding I’m not normal — I feel that way when I’m on the field. I know for a fact I am not like the rest of the guys in the NFL. I know I’m a top-five receiver. I know I’m a top-three receiver.”

-Chase Claypool

In order to perform you need to have confidence whether you’re in sales, construction, football, or any other industry.  However, if Claypool is a top-three receiver in the NFL right now then I’m a top-three candidate to be on the July cover of GQ magazine.

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‘Nothing but opportunity’: Cowboys’ season start may be giant Hail Mary for Prescott, young WRs

Cowboys fans may be worried about the team’s lack of WR experience, but Dak Prescott is using camp to develop a valuable rapport with them. | From @ToddBrock24f7

There’s a growing sense from a large contingent of Cowboys Nation that the team desperately needs to bring in outside help at wide receiver, that last season’s top-ranked offense cannot possibly go into the 2022 season banking on its current stable of inexperienced pass-catchers to carry the load.

But the man dishing them the ball doesn’t seem worried at all.

“I do what I’m asked to do,” Dak Prescott told reporters after Thursday’s joint practice with the Chargers. “Being the quarterback of this team and any time you’re playing this position, you know your responsibilities: to get other guys to come with you, to get others guys to be locked in, be disciplined. There’s no difference whether the receiving corps is old or young: they look to me for answers; I look for them just to communicate and be on the same page. We’ll continue to do that and continue to grow.”

There’s plenty of growth happening in the Dallas WR room these days. CeeDee Lamb, the passing game’s primary weapon, has been sidelined the past two days with a cut on his foot. Michael Gallup and newly-signed James Washington, presumably the next two targets in the pecking order, are both rehabbing injuries; neither will be on the field for the start of the season.

That leaves seven other actual wide receivers on the roster. Six of them are in either their first or second year as a pro. Not a one has a single NFL reception on his resumé.

Only Noah Brown has actual receiving stats: 39 career catches in six years.

And he missed Thursday, too.

In other words, the door is wide open.

“Nothing but opportunity, honestly. And it was big for them,” Prescott said of his younger receivers. “I talked about it Monday, just them being able to step into an opportunity, make some plays, do something maybe that they haven’t done.”

Like snag a walk-off Hail Mary touchdown catch. Both Simi Fehoko and Dennis Houston were in the area when Prescott uncorked a bomb on the final snap of Thursday’s scrimmage.

It was the sort of play that Prescott would like to have gotten off as time expired in January’s wild-card loss to San Francisco. Converting it now, seven months later in a practice session, doesn’t make last season’s disappointment easier to swallow, but it definitely offers a glimmer of hope moving forward.

“It was definitely good to end on that note: just being in that situation: end of game, having to go Hail Mary, with the clock running,” Prescott told media members in Costa Mesa. “The guys did a good job of protecting, giving me a lane, letting me buy some time. I jumped up in there, and I saw Simi and Dennis; I felt like they had a good shot at it. I put it up, and I feel like it was just them two fighting for it. I’m glad we came down with it.”

And just maybe, that one play makes it easier for the Cowboys to believe that they can get by without signing a free agent wide receiver in the three weeks leading up to the season opener.

Gallup ran routes and caught a few passes from Prescott after Thursday’s scrimmage, but he has said he won’t be ready for Week 1. Washington could miss the first month of action, if not more. The “clown stuff” that apparently led to Lamb getting stitches in his toe this week only highlighted how tenuous the situation is for Dallas at wide receiver.

But it also closely mimics a typical football season, where one moment can change everything and force an untested youngster into a starring role on the biggest of stages.

That’s a frustrating prospect for the average Cowboys fan who is sure he has a better grasp on how to spend the Joneses’ money than they do.

But, right or wrong, Prescott continues to simply work with what he’s got.

“I don’t necessarily get frustrated. That’s what this is about,” he concluded. “This is exactly about that time to work and make other guys step up, take advantage of their opportunity. Who knows- hopefully not, but there may be times that those [veteran] guys aren’t available, and we have to know what we’re working with. Those guys have to know what I expect from them, how they expect me to throw the ball. That’s all good things to be worked on.”

Prescott and his green receiving corps ended Thursday’s practice with a Hail Mary.

They may have to start the season with one, too.

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Brian Kelly calls out veteran LSU receiver Jaray Jenkins regarding leadership

Kelly sent a message to the receiver room’s elder statesman.

LSU has one of the most intriguing wide receiver groups in the SEC (and potentially one of the league’s best).

With elite playmaker [autotag]Kayshon Boutte[/autotag] returning from injury and sophomores [autotag]Malik Nabers[/autotag] and [autotag]Jack Bech[/autotag] looking to build on solid true freshman campaigns, there’s a lot to be excited about — assuming the Tigers can find a quarterback capable of delivering the ball to them.

However, there’s one thing this young group is lacking: Experience, and the leadership that comes with it. That’s where fifth-year receiver [autotag]Jaray Jenkins[/autotag] comes in.

Jenkins has made a moderate impact so far at LSU, and he’s coming off his most productive season. Boutte’s return will limit his opportunities a bit, but he can still be a major part of this passing attack.

Asked if Jenkins has stepped up as a leader in the receiver room after the Tigers’ open scrimmage on Wednesday, coach [autotag]Brian Kelly[/autotag] called out the senior wideout.

“Yeah, that’s a good question,” Kelly said when asked if Jenkins had stepped up. “I wish he would take more of a leadership role. You’re hearing me, Jaray? Can he hear me? He’ll hear me won’t he?

“We need that leadership, and it comes from consistency. Will he hear that too? …He’s a great kid, we just need that (consistency) every single day. If we can get that from him every day, that room is going to be in great shape.”

Kelly certainly didn’t mince words here, and it’s clear from the way he said it that the coaching staff has been hoping for Jenkins to take a step up. He didn’t go super in-depth on what the veteran needs to do better, aside from being more consistent.

Jenkins started six games last fall, including five of LSU’s last seven after Boutte’s campaign was ended by a broken ankle. He finished with 34 catches (which ranked third on the team) for 502 yards and six touchdowns (both of which ranked second).

Even with a talented group, Jenkins is expected to take another leap this fall after mostly being a role player to this point in his career. We’ll see if he responds to this challenge from Kelly.

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Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno