INDIANAPOLIS — Ohio State wide receiver Carnell Tate did not blink. Camera flashes illuminated the Lucas Oil Stadium press room as reporters pressed him on where he ranks among the 2026 NFL Draft wide receiver class. “Me. No question,” the 21-year-old fired back. Following a dominant junior campaign that delivered a 2025 National Championship to Columbus, Tate enters the 2026 NFL Combine as a premium asset. He torched secondaries last season, hauling in 51 passes for 875 yards and nine touchdowns while averaging a blistering 17.2 yards per reception. Now, the top prospect wants the league to know he is ready to take over Sundays.
Tate walked into the facility carrying the swagger of a future top-10 pick. The Chicago native sat down for formal meetings with several pass-catcher needy franchises, including the New York Giants, New Orleans Saints, Cleveland Browns, and Kansas City Chiefs. You could almost feel the tension in the air as scouts scrutinized his film. The Giants, picking at No. 5 overall, spent extensive time evaluating his route-running.
New York desperately needs a dynamic threat opposite Malik Nabers. Tate brings exactly that. He forces defensive backs into panic mode right off the line of scrimmage and attacks the football at its highest point. He operates with clean footwork and zero wasted motion. He also embraces the dirty work. He actively drives defensive ends and cornerbacks backward in the run game. Beyond the physical traits, Tate plays with a heavy heart and a profound sense of purpose. He dedicated his spectacular college career to his late mother, overcoming unimaginable personal tragedy in 2023 to reach the precipice of his ultimate dream.
“Mindset, the catching, the route-running, and the blocking. I got the mindset that I’m the best wide receiver in this draft class. I got the route-running; I’m able to manipulate DBs. Got the catching; I can contested catch over DBs and make great catches.”
— Carnell Tate, Ohio State Wide Receiver
The battle for the first receiver off the board just went nuclear. USC’s Makai Lemon and Arizona State’s Jordyn Tyson sit right on Tate’s heels, but the Buckeye star possesses an undeniable edge in overall polish. His confirmed meetings with teams sitting in the top 10—specifically the Giants (No. 5), Browns (No. 6), Commanders (No. 7), Saints (No. 8), and Chiefs (No. 9)—signal heavy, immediate interest.
If the Jets slide down from the No. 2 spot, they could easily target Tate to pair him with former Ohio State standout Garrett Wilson. General managers want a finished product, and Tate checks every single box. The on-field receiver drills kick off Saturday. If Tate clocks a 40-yard dash in the 4.4 range, lock him in as a top-10 selection.