Wide receivers
Oct 19, 2024; Tucson, Arizona, USA; Arizona Wildcats wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan (4) against the Colorado Buffalos at Arizona Stadium. Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Just like at tackle, it’s still pretty much the same names at the top of the wide receiver board as it was when we last checked in. The consensus top player outright at the position (make sure you read this all the way to the end) is still Tetairoa ‘Tet’ McMillan from Arizona.
McMillan showed some incredibly high highs this year. From putting up 304 yards in the season opener against New Mexico, to a 10-catch, 202 yard performance against West Virginia and a nine-catch, 115-yard performance against a TCU team that allowed just 192.7 passing yards per game for the season. McMillan finished the year with 84 catches for 1,316 yards and eight touchdowns.
However, McMillan’s numbers don’t reflect the hot-and-cold nature of his game. 50.4 percent of his receiving yards this year came in just three games – against a 5-7 New Mexico team and two of the three worst pass defenses in the Big 12 in Texas Tech and West Virginia. Half of his touchdowns came in the season opener.
McMillan didn’t totally disappear in those other games. He had at least 68 yards in all but three of his games this year. Without much talent around him on the Arizona offense, opposing defenses were able to key in on him. It’ll be up to teams to see through that for their ultimate evaluation.
Simply put though, when he’s on, he’s on. McMillan is built like a 50/50 ball receiver at 6-foot-5, 212 pounds. And yes, he can go up and get it thanks to his outstanding body control. But he’s as much if not more of a threat underneath, using his size to create natural separation and then pull away from defenders with the ball in his hands and ability to make tacklers miss.
Along with McMillan, Luther Burden III from Missouri was the other top projected receiver. A five-star recruit coming out of high school who was first-team All-SEC in 2023, Burden had a ton of momentum coming into this season.
Unfortunately, that momentum didn’t fully translate into results. Quarterback Brady Cook didn’t take the step forward he was expected to (he more so took a step back) and the entire offense was impacted. Burden finished the year with just 61 catches and 676 yards in six games, nearly halving his production from last year in just one fewer game.
Still, the talent is apparent on tape. He has the skills to be a plus ‘Z’ and/or slot receiver in the NFL between his reliable hands, and ability to separate from defenders before and after the catch.
Burden’s draft evaluation will be a case of how much teams are willing to look at past seasons and weigh them against the most recent. He should still be a first-round pick, but the question is how far will he fall?
One player who had a similar pre-draft outlook was Jordan Addison (although he is stylistically a different player than Burden). Addison broke out with Pitt in 2021, then transferred to USC the next year. His production was still good, but not to the level of the previous season. Projected at one point to be a top-10 pick, he ended up going 23rd to the Minnesota Vikings.