Denzel Boston: The Next Nico Collins or a Speed Illusion?
Washington’s Denzel Boston sits as the unofficial WR4, heavily debated in war rooms across the league. Measuring in with exceptional length, Boston engulfs passes at the point of attack. One scout compared his developmental arc to Nico Collins, estimating his speed at a 4.45 40-yard dash. The ball simply does not move when it hits his hands. He operates like a dominant rebounder in the red zone, boxing out defensive backs with brute force. Critics argue he lacks a second gear to pull away on crossing routes, but his contested-catch ability remains unquestioned.
KC Concepcion’s Size Red Flags and Chris Bell’s ACL Discount
Texas A&M’s KC Concepcion terrifies traditional talent evaluators. Falling below the 40th percentile in height, weight, and wingspan, Concepcion faces an uphill battle against physical press coverage. One scout labeled him a pure track athlete schemed open by the Aggies, pointing to his agonizing drop rate in traffic. He lacks an NFL-caliber catch radius.
Conversely, Louisville’s Chris Bell presents the ultimate value play. Watching Bell pull away from defenders before his injury, you felt the stadium collectively hold its breath. He moves with a violent grace rare for his size. Bell’s grueling rehabilitation journey back from his torn ACL brings raw emotional weight to his draft stock. He fights to prove his elite college tape under Jeff Brohm was no fluke. If his medicals clear, grabbing him in the third round constitutes a massive steal.
“These Denzel Boston’s and KC Concepcion’s… they’re just guys. Even Makai Lemon, he’s a little guy, a tough guy, but he’s not a No. 1. After Tate, in other years, they would be second, third, and fourth rounders. There’s nothing out there.”
— Anonymous AFC Personnel Executive, NFL Scouting Combine
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Teams like the San Francisco 49ers, clinging to narrow Super Bowl windows, face massive playoff implications based on these selections. Overdrafting a project like Indiana’s Omar Cooper—who tested brilliantly at the combine but vanishes against premium college secondaries—could derail a championship-caliber offense. The 49ers hold three early picks and heavily scouted Boston, Concepcion, and Cooper. As the board thins rapidly on Day 1, expect general managers to panic-pick Day 2 talent, heavily reshaping the balance of power in the NFC West.

