Charlie
Becker.

Charlie
Becker.

Indiana· Sr· 5'10"· 204 lb
"Charlie Becker's value isn't found in his vertical speed but in his unique ability to process defenses and break tackles. His low center of gravity and contact balance make him a natural yac-monster from the slot, a reliable weapon for converting in critical downs. He projects as a starting slot receiver whose value will exceed his draft position."
Charlie Becker projects as the modern 'Slot-Z' prototype, prioritizing physical density over pure length. His game at Indiana is defined by an exceptionally strong base and contact balance that allows him to absorb hits without losing his acceleration axis, resembling a running back with great leverage more than a traditional receiver. He lacks elite linear speed to stretch the field vertically, but his ability to win with first-step burst and his discipline in the route stem make him a highly efficient safety valve in up-tempo schemes. Looking ahead to the next level, Becker has the ceiling of a productive interior starter, capable of processing zone defenses with advanced field vision. His NFL success will hinge on his ability to refine hand fighting against more aggressive press coverage schemes, as his catch radius is limited by his wingspan. His floor is that of a third-down specialist and a key special teams contributor, given his competitive temperament and willingness to block in the run game. The big question will be whether he can maintain his productivity against schemes with longer cornerbacks who can suffocate his operating space.
- 01
Low center of gravity and contact balance
Becker leverages his 204-pound frame to bounce off initial contact, maintaining momentum in YAC situations. In the NFL, this translates to hard-earned first-down conversions on short routes where defenders have limited pursuit angles.
- 02
Short-area quickness and acceleration
Possesses exceptional hip fluidity, allowing him to sink his hips and explode out of breaks without wasted steps. This mechanical efficiency generates immediate separation on slant and option routes, making him an ideal target for quarterbacks operating under pressure.
- 03
Tactical intelligence against zone coverage
Displays an instinctive ability to find the "soft spot" in the defense, adjusting his route speed to remain visible for the QB. His eye discipline allows him to recognize safety rotations pre-snap, optimizing attack angles in the second level.
- 04
Reliable hands in traffic
Despite not having a large catch radius, Becker attacks the ball with diamond technique and secures the football before turning upfield for contact. His concentration does not waver with impending impact, demonstrating the toughness required to work the middle of the field.
- 01
Limited Catch Radius and Wingspan
His 5'10" stature restricts his utility on contested catches and off-target throws outside his frame. Against long-armed NFL corners, Becker will struggle to high-point the ball if the delivery isn't precise.
- 02
Conditional Vertical Speed Ceiling
Lacks the extra gear needed to consistently burn defenders deep. His profile suggests a precision and control player, which could limit his role to short and intermediate passing schemes, reducing his positional versatility on the outside.
- 03
Struggles vs. Aggressive Press-Man
When facing physical defenders who get hands-on at the line of scrimmage, his lack of length can box him in. Needs to develop a more varied release repertoire to avoid being re-routed by longer-limbed defenders.
Loading seasons…
Shakir models the most probable trajectory as a valuable offensive piece who wins with quickness and YAC from the slot, not vertical speed.
The comparison hinges on translating that tactical intelligence and balance into a high-volume role as a QB's safety valve.
Berrios represents a floor where his athletic limitations pigeonhole him as a return specialist and situational receiver, not a full-time starter.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Charlie'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).
— — — mediana posicional (p50)
- 40 yardas
- 4.50sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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