NEW YORK — 103 catches. 1,608 yards. 13 touchdowns. Ohio State’s Carnell Tate didn’t just play football over the last two seasons; he absolutely dominated opposing secondaries. The 2026 NFL Draft WR Big Board is officially locked in, and the race for the top pass-catcher is fierce. Front offices are finalizing their targets as the draft clock ticks down.
The Elite Tier: Tate, Lemon, and Tyson
Carnell Tate brings a 6-foot-2, 190-pound frame and flawless body control. He catches everything thrown his way. Scouts love his fluid movement through traffic to move the chains. Right behind him is USC’s Makai Lemon. Lemon hauled in 79 catches for 1,156 yards and 11 touchdowns in 2025. He commands the slot and breaks tackles with pure aggression. You could almost feel the tension in the air at his Pro Day when he burst off the line. He proved he possesses the sudden speed required to separate against elite NFL cornerbacks.
Then we have Arizona State’s Jordyn Tyson. Tyson racked up 61 catches for 711 yards and eight touchdowns in just nine starts last year. A lingering hamstring issue scares some teams, but his high-point jump-ball ability makes him a lethal outside threat. He contorts his body in the air to secure wild catches over tight coverage.
The Business of Football
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“I put in the hours when no one was watching. The stats are cool, but I just want to win a Super Bowl and dominate the guy lined up across from me.”
— Carnell Tate, Ohio State Wide Receiver Prospect
Draft Implications and What Comes Next
This wide receiver class will heavily influence the first round. Teams like the New England Patriots and the Kansas City Chiefs desperately need outside threats to stretch the field. If Tate falls past the top 10, expect an aggressive trade-up from a contending team. Lemon gives any offense an immediate, high-volume target from the inside. Tyson offers the highest vertical ceiling if he stays completely healthy.
After 12 years of analyzing search trends and sports news cycles, I’ve learned one absolute truth: modern offenses simply cannot survive without elite perimeter weapons. General managers must weigh Tate’s consistent production against Tyson’s explosive upside. The decisions made late this April will shape the AFC and NFC power structures for years to come.

