Bryant
Wesco Jr..

Bryant
Wesco Jr..

Clemson· Jr
"Bryant Wesco Jr.'s fluidity and expansive catch radius are reminiscent of Clemson's receiver lineage, using his lanky frame to dominate at the catch point. His body control allows him to win contested balls with enviable plasticity, though his thin build raises questions against physical corners. He projects as a rotational 'X' receiver with starter potential if he develops his functional strength."
Wesco Jr. presents as the prototypical Clemson outside receiver: long, wiry, and with a natural elegance in his movements that belies his frame. His greatest virtue lies in his route stem management, where he uses subtle shoulder fakes and tempo variations to freeze cornerbacks in press coverage. Despite his light build, he displays an exceptional catch radius, capable of attacking the ball at its highest point with refined "diamond" hand technique, preventing the oval from reaching his body. He specializes in gaining verticality, operating with unusual hip fluidity for a receiver of his stature. His transition to the NFL will critically depend on his development in the weight room and his ability to absorb contact in the intermediate area. Currently, he struggles when physical defensive backs establish early contact, which can disrupt the timing of his routes. Although his top-end speed is threatening, he needs to improve his release against jam to avoid being displaced from his trajectory. Wesco's ceiling is that of a high-end number 2 receiver capable of stretching the field and being a constant red-zone threat, while his floor is that of a deep-ball specialist who might struggle to be a consistent contributor across a full route tree.
- 01
Elite body control and catch radius
Wesco possesses an innate ability to adjust his center of gravity mid-air, allowing him to secure off-target passes. This flexibility, combined with exceptionally long arms, makes him a reliable target for any QB in 50/50 situations.
- 02
Stalk manipulation and tempo variations
Unlike other young receivers, he understands how to attack a defender's leverage through subtle speed changes during the route. This allows him to create separation at the breakpoint without needing overwhelming physical explosiveness.
- 03
Aggressive high-point attack
Displays a 'my ball' mentality with a vertical leap that maximizes his reach. In the NFL, this directly translates to a tactical advantage on fade routes and post routes where the defender is at a height disadvantage.
- 04
Fluid transition after the catch
Once he has the ball, Wesco doesn't lose inertia; he uses long strides to gain ground quickly. His hand-eye coordination allows him to secure the football and transition into a runner almost instantly, optimizing YAC.
- 01
Lack of Mass and Physical Anchor
His current frame is too lean for NFL standards, complicating his ability to win blocks and withstand physical play. He's prone to being knocked off his route by cornerbacks employing aggressive hand techniques at the line of scrimmage.
- 02
Difficulty with Sustained Contact
On crossing routes or in dense defensive zones, his production diminishes if forced to work through traffic. He needs to develop more robust play strength to avoid relying solely on clean separation.
- 03
Release Refinement vs. Press
While fluid, his hand repertoire for disengaging from defenders is limited. At the next level, NFL cornerbacks will exploit his lack of physical power if he doesn't improve his swipe and rip techniques to avoid initial contact.
Loading seasons…
Represents the most probable developmental curve as a solid perimeter possession receiver, becoming a reliable red-zone target.
This is the ceiling if Wesco translates his elite body control into a dominant tool for vertical routes and contested catches in the NFL.
This floor materializes if a lack of functional mass prevents him from consistently defeating press-coverage, limiting him to a jump-ball specialist role.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Bryant's RAS will publish once the official testing drops.
The Relative Athletic Score needs the 40, vertical, broad jump, shuttle and 3-cone — numbers that don't exist until the NFL Combine or pro day. Until then we grade the WR on percentiles vs. his positional cohort (see athletic radar below).
— Sin datos atléticos registrados
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