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Draft Sickos · Prospect profile2027 Draft · BB #012
WR· #2 WR· Round 1· Tier 2 · Pro Bowl ceiling

Cam
Coleman.

Cam Coleman

Texas logoTexas· Jr· 6'4"· 216 lb

88R1

"The ability to redefine the geometry of the catch radius is what separates Cam Coleman. His body control and dominance on contested balls forgive inaccuracies, making him a lethal red zone and downfield weapon. Despite stiffness in creating separation on shorter routes, his profile as a spectacular catch specialist projects him as an immediate starter with WR1 potential."

Draft Sickos · Scouting profile2027 Draft · No. 002
01Play style

Cam Coleman established himself in Austin as the modern archetype of the dominant perimeter wide receiver. With an imposing 6'4", 216 lb frame, he operated as the primary 'X' receiver in Steve Sarkisian's offense, a sophisticated system blending Air Raid concepts, Pro-Style elements, and heavy use of play-action and RPOs. His role was not subtle: align isolated on the short side of the field and consistently win against the opponent's best cornerback, often facing bracket coverage or safety help. His physical and technical development was evident, evolving from an athletic prospect to a polished weapon Texas's offense sought in critical moments. His presence dictated coverages, opening opportunities for others on the field and demonstrating his gravitational impact even without the ball. Analyzing his tape, Coleman is a specialist in the vertical and intermediate game. In Sarkisian's scheme, he thrives on concepts like 'post', 'dig', and 'comeback' routes. His ability to sell the vertical before breaking is notable for a player of his size. An example of his Football IQ was seen against Oklahoma: on 3rd & 9 in the fourth quarter, aligned right, his assigned route was a 'deep post' against apparent Cover-1. At the snap, he read the safety's rotation to an 'invert' Cover-2 structure, adjusting his trajectory to attack the 'hole shot' between the cornerback and safety, resulting in a 25-yard reception that extended the drive. He's not just an athlete; he processes coverage on the move. In the RPO game, he's a reliable target on 'glance' routes, using his frame to shield the defender and present a massive target for his quarterback. His effectiveness isn't limited to complex routes; his simple 'go route' is a lethal weapon due to his ability to 'stack' over the defender once he gets past him. His primary strengths are a confluence of physical gifts and refined technique. He possesses an elite 'catch radius', complemented by extraordinary 'body control' that allows him to contort his body in the air for acrobatic catches outside his frame. His hand technique is nearly impeccable; he attacks the ball at its highest point with strong, secure 'hand placement', rarely letting the ball get to his chest. This strength at the catch point makes him a nightmare on 50/50 balls, where his win rate was consistently over 60% in one-on-one situations according to tape analysis. His acceleration is deceptive; his long strides eat up the corner's cushion in a few steps, consistently creating vertical separation. Finally, his ability to 'track' the ball on deep passes is outstanding, showing the calm and instinct to adjust to imperfect throws without losing speed. Areas for development, however, limit his projection as a truly complete receiver at the level of a Ja'Marr Chase or Justin Jefferson. His main weakness is a noticeable hip stiffness, which affects his ability to generate separation on 'sharp-breaking routes' like 'speed outs' or 'whip routes'. His 'hip drop' is telegraphed and lacks the explosiveness to burst out of his cuts fluidly, allowing more technical cornerbacks to stay glued to him in short spaces. Related to this, his release against physical, aggressive 'press-man' needs work. If a corner manages to get hands on his chest and control the 'rep' early, he can get stalled at the line of scrimmage. He needs to develop a more varied arsenal of 'releases' beyond a simple 'speed release'. Lastly, his 'after the catch' contribution is modest. He's a power runner, not elusive; he'll look to lower his shoulder for extra yards, but he's not a dynamic playmaker with the ball in his hands. In the NFL, Coleman fits perfectly as an 'X' receiver in a vertical-leaning West Coast offense or a play-action based scheme. Systems like Kyle Shanahan's, Sean McVay's, or even his own coach Sarkisian's would maximize his talent. He doesn't project as a high-percentage volume receiver on short routes, but rather as the player who changes the scoreboard with big plays. His durability profile is clean, with no major injuries reported. In his rookie year, he projects as an immediate WR2, whose production will be defined by his effectiveness in the red zone and his ability to generate explosive plays. By his third year, if he refines his route tree and improves his release, he has the potential to become a Pro Bowl receiver with over 1,200 yards and double-digit touchdowns, a true offensive pillar.

02What he does well
  1. 01

    Elite Catch Radius and Body Control

    Displays near-circus-level ability to adjust his body in the air, evident on a one-handed sideline grab against Alabama. His massive catch radius forgives inaccurate throws, making him a quarterback's best friend.

  2. 02

    Vertical Acceleration and DB Stacking

    Uses long, deceptively quick strides to eat up corners' cushion and stack them on vertical routes. His win rate on routes over 20 yards deep was among the nation's highest.

  3. 03

    Physical Dominance at the Catch Point

    Leverages his 216 lb frame and aggressive hand technique to consistently win in contested catch situations. Converted 65% of his 50/50 targets, ripping the ball away from defenders.

  4. 04

    Red Zone Weapon

    A walking mismatch inside the 20, where Texas used him prolifically on fade and slant routes. Scored 8 of his 12 touchdowns last season in the red zone.

  5. 05

    Deep Ball Tracking

    Demonstrates an innate ability to locate the ball in the air, adjust his speed, and position his body without breaking stride. Turns what appear to be overthrown or underthrown passes into routine receptions.

03What he's missing
  1. 01

    Stiffness on Short-to-Intermediate Route Breaks

    His hip drop lacks fluidity and explosiveness, preventing him from creating separation on routes like outs and curls. DBs with good click-and-close can stick to his hip on these concepts.

  2. 02

    Limited Release vs. Physical Press-Man

    He relies too heavily on his athleticism to beat press and can be neutralized at the line by patient, physical corners who achieve good initial hand placement. His release repertoire is basic.

  3. 03

    Limited Yards After Catch (YAC) Creation

    He is not an elusive or dynamic runner with the ball in his hands. He's a catch-and-get-down player who rarely makes the first tackler miss in open space, limiting his potential on screens.

  4. 04

    Technique and Consistency as a Perimeter Blocker

    His effort in the run game is variable. He frequently plays with a high pad level, which prevents him from sustaining blocks against physical DBs or linebackers on the perimeter.

04Production
Source · sports-reference

Loading seasons…

05Grade + Comps
Overall
90
/ 100 · ELITE
/ LIKELY
Mike Williams

The most probable outcome: a high-impact WR2 who punishes defenses deep and in the red zone.

/ CEILING
Mike Evans

His ceiling if he refines his route tree and becomes the undisputed focal point of an offense.

/ FLOOR
Kenny Golladay

A scenario where his lack of consistent separation limits his role to a situational jump-ball specialist.

End of report · Draft Sickos 2027

RAS · Relative Athletic Score

Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football

Pending

/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27

Cam'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).

Auto-syncSource · ras.football
06Perfil atléticovs. WR del Big Board
40VERTBRD3CSHTLBNCH

— — — mediana posicional (p50)

40 yardas
4.37sp50
Vertical
in
Broad jump
in
Three-cone
s
Shuttle
s
Bench
rep

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End of report · Draft Sickos 2027