Next Gen Stats: Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy had highest athleticism score in 2024 draft class

According to NFL Next Gen Stats, #Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy had the highest athleticism score in the 2024 draft class.

The Kansas City Chiefs took Xavier Worthy with the No. 28 pick in the 2024 NFL draft to give Patrick Mahomes an elite deep threat to utilize next season.

Though Worthy wasn’t the first wide receiver off the board last week, his exceptional talents more than warranted selection in the first round.

After putting himself on the map by breaking the 40-yard dash record at the NFL combine, Worthy became an un-missable prospect who was both polarizing and almost universally coveted.

Worthy’s speed may have been what caused his meteoric rise up draft boards, but experts with NFL’s Next Gen Stats also had him graded as the most athletic player in the 2024 draft class overall.

Raw talent isn’t enough to propel any player to stardom in the NFL, but few athletes have the tools that come naturally to Worthy.

If he can channel his speed, agility, and strength into receptions, yards, and touchdowns in Andy Reid’s offense, the Chiefs might have found their next great wide receiver.

WATCH: Chiefs draft picks arrive in Kansas City for rookie minicamp

Check out this video of the #Chiefs’ draft picks arriving at the team’s practice facilities for rookie minicamp.

The Kansas City Chiefs are set to kick off their rookie minicamp this weekend with all of their picks from the 2024 NFL draft in attendance.

Along with their draft selections, players from around the country are set to commune in Kansas City with rookie minicamp invitations, which act as a foot in the door for future contracts with the team.

Though nothing is guaranteed for the invitees, participation in offseason workouts is a crucial part of life in the NFL.

Xavier Worthy and other rookies were seen arriving at the Chiefs’ practice facility on Friday in a video that was posted by the team’s official social media accounts.

 

As this is the prospects’ first taste of life in the NFL, the rookie minicamp is a crucial part of Kansas City’s offseason program and should provide plenty of intrigue for the coaching staff as they sculpt the Chiefs’ roster for next season’s title defense campaign.

Eric DeCosta liked WR Xavier Worthy but says Ravens were looking for an ‘outside big-bodied guy’

After veteran wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.’s departure this offseason, the Baltimore Ravens entered the 2024 NFL Draft with the possibility of adding another player at the position, even as early as the first round. Instead, the Ravens ended up …

After veteran wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.’s departure this offseason, the Baltimore Ravens entered the 2024 NFL Draft with the possibility of adding another player at the position, even as early as the first round.

Instead, the Ravens ended up taking Clemson cornerback Nate Wiggins with the No. 30 overall pick, waiting until the fourth round to address wide receiver with the selection of North Carolina’s Devontez Walker.

While speaking on The Ravens Lounge, general manager Eric DeCosta talked about the possibility of drafting Texas wide receiver Xavier Worthy in the first round.

Worthy is a heck of a player, an explosive guy, a guy that I liked a lot as a prospect,” DeCosta said. “But looking at him, he’s a little bit like a Zay [Flowers]/[Marquise]Hollywood Brown type of guy. We have a Zay. For us, we were looking for a different body type this year. We were looking for an outside big-bodied guy. I subscribe to the theory that it’s like a restaurant. You go to a restaurant, you want a lot of different things on the menu. You don’t want all the same thing on the menu. At the receiver position, it is smart to have different types of receivers.

Worthy broke the record for the fastest 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine, clocking in at 4.21 seconds. The Ravens did not even have the chance to take the Longhorn receiver as the Kansas City Chiefs traded with the Buffalo Bills to jump two spots ahead of Baltimore and select Worthy with the No. 28 overall pick.

PFF: Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy tallied third-most receiving yards in FBS since 2021

According to Pro Football Focus, #Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy racked up the third-most receiving yards in the FBS since 2021.

The Kansas City Chiefs found their newest offensive weapon in the first round of the 2024 NFL draft by selecting Texas standout Xavier Worthy with the No. 28 pick.

Few players made more of an impact for their college team, and after Worthy set the 40-yard dash record at the NFL combine earlier this year, it is a wonder that he managed to drop within striking range for Kansas City.

According to Pro Football Focus, Worthy had the third-most receiving yards in the FBS since 2021 with 2,752, trailing top 10 picks Rome Odunze and Malik Nabers, who were taken by the Chicago Bears and New York Giants respectively.

While Worthy’s slight frame was a concern for some scouts, his blazing speed and outstanding productivity warranted a first-round selection and should translate well to his new career in the NFL.

Chiefs fans will have to wait a few months to see Worthy in action but have plenty of his highlights to watch to hold them over until training camp opens this summer.

Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy’s childhood mentor explains significance of his jersey number

#Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy’s childhood mentor explains the significance of his jersey number.

The Kansas City Chiefs added more speed to their receivers room following the NFL Draft with the selection of Texas Longhorns standout Xavier Worthy. The 40-yard dash scouting combine record holder will be expected to make an impact in his rookie season, and he honed his skills early as a youth with a dedicated mentor.

Chiefs Wire’s Ed Easton Jr. sat down with Worthy’s high school coach Chris Maxey, to discuss the importance of the Texas standout’s jersey number, his influence on the future, and how his humble personality will fit in with the Kansas City community.

“Well, he always liked it,” Maxey said of Worthy’s inclination to wear the No. 1 jersey. “At first, he couldn’t get it, so I always told him that if he were that number one when you walk on the field, they’re gonna look at you no matter if you did bad, short or tall; they [are] all going to wonder why you got that number one, some unique number. He always held the standard, you want to be number one when you wear it, you got to fill the shoes, and he takes on the challenge. He continued to wear it and continued to show out.”

Maxey continues to work with youth athletes at Central East High School in Fresno, California. He uses Worthy’s journey as a positive example of what can happen if you work hard and pursue your goals.

“I’d say trust the process and be humble,” Maxey explained. “There’s gonna be good days and bad days. You know, [that is] part of the sport. I’m sorry to say there are injury times; there are things you heard and you can’t do. Even then, you have to trust the process. He went through a time where he got a little injury hiccups. He trusts the process; history repeats itself.

“I tell everybody to stop trying to rewrite the weird, rewrite the story, take the good with the bad, and learn from the good. Also, learn from the bad. Be humble, and always trust the process. Be patient, don’t try to cut corners, you try to cut corners, it’s going to bite you. Overall, just trust the process and be consistent. Don’t think you’re bigger than anybody.”

Worthy’s selection as the Chiefs’ first-round pick is a great honor, but Maxey feels his personality will shine in the Kansas City community.

“[He is a] great kid, humble, he’s gonna put in work, he’s gonna bring a lot to the organization,” Maxey said. “He gifted me [a] 98-inch TCL TV, someone who is just part of his story. He’s a very loving, caring person. He’s a very humble, hardworking kid, someone that I think the Chiefs organization will love for a long time; he’s going to bring a lot to the team.

“He’s going to bring a lot of hard work, so whatever the coach is asking him, the staff, the organization, he’s going to be there and put both feet forward; he’s not going to be one foot in, one foot out, throughout the community… In the locker room, [he] is going to be someone that’s going to be all in. He’s a very high-character kid. So he won’t be someone who will distract the organization. [He] is going to be a hard worker and be a Chief, and it’s all about the Chiefs.”

Worthy will have plenty of eyes on him alongside veteran Marquise “Hollywood” Brown as a new speedy option who can help Patrick Mahomes do damage down the field.

2024 Top-10 fantasy football rookies

2024 was the Year of the Quarterback. It was not the Year of the Running Back.

Seven rounds later in Detroit and the NFL draft seeded teams with rookies. Rosters are relatively set, other than a few free agents that have yet to land. How did this draft compare to previous seasons?

Quarterbacks


An NFL-record six quarterbacks were selected over the first twelve picks and then none until the 5.15 pick for another record gap. The fury over picking signal callers suggests this may be a challenger to the famous 1983 class. But 2021 saw five taken in the first 15 selections and three years later, only Trevor Lawrence is still a starter from that entire draft class. This set of quarterbacks are expected to remake the landscape of the NFL within a few years. Or just become 2021 all over again.

Running Backs


Fantasy football loves rookie running backs. That’s about the end of affection for the position that continues to be devalued despite their contributions each season. A new NFL record was set when only Jonathon Brooks was drafted from the position over the first two rounds. And he’s fresh off a torn ACL six months ago. This was considered a weak class and the NFL treated it as if they were just adding special teamers instead of every-down contributors.

Tight Ends


Brock Bowers carries the only realistic fantasy hopes for a rookie tight end to matter. Only two tight ends were selected until the fourth round as a sign that the position carried minimal importance for 2024 outside of Bowers. He is the Sam LaPorta in this draft.

Wide Receivers


There was plenty of interest in wide receivers for the pass-happy NFL. The seven taken in Round 1 tied the record set in  2004. Three wideouts went over the first nine picks and there’s a lot of optimism about the first dozen selected. Marvin Harrison Jr., Malik Nabers and Keon Coleman landed in spots where there is an immediate opening to become the No. 1 wideout.

Overall, the draft was weak for rushing but infused a ton of talented youth into the passing game.

Top 10 fantasy rookies

  1. WR Marvin Harrison Jr., Ohio State
    Arizona Cardinals 1.04, 6-3, 209 pounds, 4.35 est. 40-time

    Oddly, the top fantasy rookie is usually a running back but that changes this year. Harrison brings the complete elite package to Arizona where the next best wideout is Michael Wilson. The rookie has minimal competition for targets and a quarterback in Kyler Murray who is capable of a 4,000-yard season. The top wideout lands in perhaps the most advantageous situation of any receiver.
  2. RB Jonathon Brooks, Texas
    Carolina Panthers 2.14, 6-0, 216 pounds, 4.45 est. 40-time
    Fantasy loves rookie rushers and for good reasons. Brooks was the only back taken in the first two rounds. He was a first-round grade but comes off a torn ACL last November. He’s expected to be healthy for training camp and joins a rebuilding Panthers as their clear primary back.
  3. WR Keon Coleman, Florida State
    Buffalo Bills 6-3, 213 pounds 4.61 40-time

    The ex-Seminole was only the eighth wideout drafted but like Harrison, lands in an ideal spot with the Bills remaking their receivers and should turn into their No. 1 wideout soon if not immediately. Bills just lost 241 receptions from last year with Stefon Diggs and Gabe Davis gone. Not a burner, but Coleman should become the immediate possession receiver and a friend in the end zone.
  4. WR Brian Thomas, LSU
    Jacksonville Jaguars 1.23, 6-3, 209 pounds, 4.33 40-time
    The Jaguars needed to replace previous No. 1 wideout Calvin Ridley and turn to the speedy Fighting Tiger that led the nation with 17 receiving scores last year. He’ll slide into the No. 2 behind Christian Kirk and carry the expectation of being the No. 1 sooner than later. Paired with a healthy Trevor Lawrence should produce fantasy starter stats.
  5. RB Trey Benson, Florida State
    Arizona Cardinals 3.02, 6-0, 216 pounds, 4.39 40-time

    While Benson is not the immediate starter, he joins an improving Cardinals team that has relied on James Conner for three seasons with mostly moderate results. Conner is in his final contract year and Benson brings a much-needed speed element to the backfield. Conner is a 233-pound power back who always misses a few games. Benson will contribute from Day 1, fill in when Conner is hurt again, and angle to be the primary by 2025 at the latest.
  6. WR Malik Nabers, LSU
    New York Giants 1.06, 6-0, 200 pounds, 4.35 40-time

    There is no argument that Nabers is an elite talent that any team would benefit from using. That said, five years of Daniel Jones has produced ZERO 1,000-yard wideouts. Nabers drew the short straw and suffered the pain of being so good, that he was available to the worst teams. Nabers will improve the Giants, probably, but he’s landed in what has historically been the NFL Siberia for wide receivers.
  7. QB Jayden Daniels, LSU
    Washington Commanders, 6-3, 210 pounds, 4.35 40-time

    C.J. Stroud was the rare rookie quarterback that became a fantasy starter. And Caleb Williams was the 1.01 pick with the standard ridiculous skills and proven production. But Daniels lands in Washington, where the offense was upgraded and Daniels was the premier running quarterback in this draft. That looms huge as a rookie who will otherwise have to learn to read NFL defenses and synch up with his receivers. Or just run the ball as he did at LSU, where he gained 1,134 yards and ten touchdowns as a rusher last year.
  8. TE Brock Bowers, Georgia
    Las Vegas Raiders 1.13, 6-3, 243 pounds, 4.5 est. 40-time

    Not many analysts saw the Raiders grabbing Bowers, but he fell to the 1.13 despite being one of the best prospects at the position for many years. Bowers was the top receiver in Georgia for all three seasons. He just flattened Michael Mayer‘s career arc, but should offer fantasy startability for a Raiders’ offense that sports a weak backfield and only Davante Adams and Jakobi Meyers as weapons when they pass.
  9. WR Xavier Worthy, Texas
    Kansas City Chiefs 1.28, 5-11, 165 pounds, 4.21 40-time
    The chance that Xavier Worthy will be overvalued in fantasy drafts is right at 100%. Even faster than Tyreek Hill, Worthy will have fantasy value in Year 1, and may surprise matched up with Patrick Mahomes. But he becomes just another option for an offense that also has Travis Kelce, Marquise Brown, Rashee Rice (maybe) and Kadarius Toney (for the two games that he lasts).  Worthy is smallish for any heavy workload and will need time to reach his potential. But have to think there are a handful of very deep scores waiting to happen.
  10. WR Ladd McConkey, Georgia 
    Los Angeles Chargers 4.13, 6-0, 186 pounds, 4.39 40-time
    Many other rookies could end up this good, but McConkey gets the advantage of landing with the Chargers where they stripped out their starting wideouts and McConkey could easily carve out a starting spot if not end up as the No. 1 receiver this year. But the wet blanket here is new HC Jim Harbaugh importing a run-heavy approach that threatens to significantly blunt the passing offense.

Top 10 dynasty rookies

  1. WR Marvin Harrison Jr. (ARI)
  2. RB Jonathon Brooks (CAR)
  3. QB Jayden Daniels (WAS)
  4. WR Keon Coleman (BUF)
  5. QB Caleb Williams (CHI)
  6. WR Brian Thomas (JAX)
  7. WR Malik Nabers (NYG)
  8. WR Rome Odunze (CHI)
  9. RB Trey Benson (ARI)
  10. WR Xavier Worthy (KC)

UDFA rumors: James Madison WR Reggie Brown to sign with the Chiefs

Former James Madison WR Reggie Brown is expected to sign with the Kansas City #Chiefs

The wide receiver situation seems to have been addressed by the Kansas City Chiefs following the first-round selection of Xavier Worthy in the 2024 NFL Draft. General manager Brett Veach didn’t draft another receiver, but he was far from done at that position.

According to KPRC 2 Houston’s Aaron Wilson, James Madison, standout wide receiver Reggie Brown will sign a rookie deal with the Chiefs after going undrafted. Brown was a First Team All-Sun Belt Conference wide receiver last season. He recorded 53 receptions for 1,054 receiving yards with a team-leading nine touchdowns.

Brown will have a chance to compete for a spot on the roster as the receiver room grows. The Chiefs still have young options at the position alongside recently signed Marquise “Hollywood” Brown. Chiefs head coach Andy Reid has always found a way to get the most out of wideout options that can fit the scheme system.

Brown set a James Madison single-game record with 202 receiving yards versus UConn, accumulating four 100-yard games during the breakout season.

For more Chiefs UDFA signings, follow our tracker.

Five Longhorns selected within first 52 picks of 2024 NFL draft

Player development at Texas is at an all-time high.

After Texas did not have a single player selected in 2022, the Longhorns have been well-represented in the 2024 NFL draft. It’s a testament to the player development under Steve Sarkisian’s staff over the last few years.

Texas has had five players selected within the first 52 picks. Defensive tackle Byron Murphy was the first Longhorn off the board to the Seattle Seahawks at No. 16.

The Kansas City Chiefs traded up to snag speedy wide receiver Xavier Worthy in the first round with pick No. 28.

Day 2 has been a busy one for former Longhorns as well. Defensive tackle T’Vondre Sweat (Tennessee Titans), running back Jonathon Brooks (Carolina Panthers) and wide receiver Adonai Mitchell (Indianapolis Colts) were all selected in the second round.

For two straight NFL drafts, the Longhorns have now produced the No. 1 running back off the board. Bijan Robinson went No. 8 to the Atlanta Falcons in 2023 and Brooks was the first running back taken off the board to the Panthers in the second round of the 2024 NFL draft.

The future is bright for the Texas football program.

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

How Texas’ Xavier Worthy fits with the Kansas City Chiefs

The Kansas City Chiefs traded up to what was the Bills pick at No. 28 in the 2024 NFL Draft to take Texas wide receiver Xavier Worthy.

When the Kansas City Chiefs last traded up with the Buffalo Bills in the NFL Draft, they selected Patrick Mahomes with the No. 10 pick in 2018. Continue reading “How Texas’ Xavier Worthy fits with the Kansas City Chiefs”

Chiefs WR Xavier Worthy gifted his high school coach a 98-inch television

#Chiefs first-round pick Xavier Worthy gifted his high school coach a 98-inch television after being selected in the 2024 NFL draft.

The excitement every NFL prospect feels heading into the draft is the product of years of hard work to fulfill a dream. Texas star Xavier Worthy’s dream came true Thursday night when he was selected 28th overall by the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2024 NFL draft.

“I’m coming with a mentality to work hard, earn my spot, and earn my spot in the locker room,” Worthy said in his introductory Zoom press conference. “I feel like I can play receiver; I’ve ran a whole route tree, disciplined, smart, knows the game very well, so I feel like I’m ready to compete and see what’s up in Kansas City.”

His upbringing supported and instilled a work-hard mentality, and he showed his appreciation to a former coach who helped him reach his goal.

Last week, Worthy surprised his mentor and childhood football coach, Chris Maxey, who helped inspire him throughout his journey, with a 98-inch television thanks to TCL, the NFL’s official TV partner. He posted his admiration and the incredible moment on his Instagram.

https://www.instagram.com/worthyyy/reel/C6JuRNgOyye/

While playing football at Central East High School, Maxey convinced Worthy to run track and stepped in as an added parent figure. He even made the six-day trip to Virginia for the Junior Olympics in the seventh grade when his mom couldn’t take time off work.

His persistence pushed Worthy to develop into the athlete he is today, and now he’s headed to the highest level of the sport.