PHILADELPHIA — Gary Lewis didn’t just walk into the Philadelphia Eagles’ NovaCare Complex on Monday; he kicked the door down. The Franklin & Marshall wide receiver, fresh off a historic 2025 campaign, participated in a high-stakes NFL Pro Day on March 9, forcing scouts to look past his Division III label and focus on pure speed and production. Lewis finished his college career with 41 total touchdowns and 2,896 receiving yards. Yesterday was about proving those video-game numbers translate to Sunday football.
Small School, Monster Numbers
You don’t accidentally score 18 receiving touchdowns in an 11-game season. Lewis tormented defensive backs throughout F&M’s undefeated 2025 Centennial Conference run, averaging nearly 18 yards per catch. When the lights shined brightest, he delivered. Scouts packing the Eagles’ indoor facility wanted to see if the Gagliardi Trophy semifinalist possessed the elite burst required to separate from NFL-caliber cornerbacks. He gave them exactly what they came for.
During the route-running drills, Lewis hit his breaks with violent precision. He snapped his hips, accelerated out of his cuts, and swallowed up the football. The loud smack of the ball hitting his hands cut through the quiet tension of the NovaCare Center. He proved he is not just a feel-good local story; he is a legitimate offensive weapon.
“I’ve been fighting for respect since I stepped on campus. You come from DIII, they assume you played against guys who work at accounting firms. Today was about showing these scouts I can fly with anyone.”
— Gary Lewis, F&M Wide Receiver
NFL Draft Implications
Lewis firmly enters the late-round draft conversation or priority undrafted free agent (UDFA) territory. NFL front offices constantly search for cheap, explosive talent capable of contributing on special teams while developing on the practice squad. His resume already proves he can carry an offense—he recorded 221 receiving yards and four touchdowns in a single game last September against Catholic University. Now, his Pro Day performance forces general managers to evaluate his tape without the small-school bias.
- Career Catch Radius: High-point ability validated by 40 career receiving TDs.
- Yards After Catch: Consistently broke the first tackle in the open field on tape.
- Versatility: Ranked 10th in F&M history with 3,045 all-purpose yards, offering immediate special teams value.
The 2026 NFL Draft approaches fast. Teams looking for a hidden gem in the later rounds just moved the F&M standout up their big boards. Lewis turned a quiet Monday workout in Philadelphia into a loud statement.

