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Draft Sickos · Prospect profile2027 Draft · BB #076
WR· #9 WR· Round 3· Tier 4 · Solid starter

Jackson
Harris.

Jackson Harris

Hawaii logoHawaii· Jr

69D3

"Intelligence in reading coverages and surgical precision in his routes define a receiver who is pro-ready from the slot. Harris doesn't win with elite athleticism, but with a technical maturity that allows him to exploit the blind spots of zone defenses. His projection is that of a reliable starter and a safety valve for teams that prioritize timing."

Draft Sickos · Scouting profile2027 Draft · No. 004
01Play style

Jackson Harris presents as a dynamic, highly technical receiver who flourished in Hawaii's high-volume passing system. He's a slot specialist who perfectly understands how to manipulate zone coverages, finding blind spots between the linebacker and safety with spatial intelligence uncommon for his age. His greatest virtue is his nourishing ability to generate instant separation thanks to an electric lateral release that freezes defenders in press coverage contexts. Despite not possessing dominant stature, he plays with surprising contact balance, absorbing initial impacts to extend plays post-catch. For the NFL, Harris projects as a highly efficient #3 receiver who can punish defenses on third downs. His transition to the next level will depend on his ability to handle increased physicality at the line of scrimmage and if he can diversify his route tree beyond the tendencies of the 'Run & Shoot' offense. While his ceiling might be limited by his wingspan, his floor is very high due to his reliability at the catch point and his tactical discipline. The main question mark will be his top-end speed against elite NFL cornerbacks, but his ability to win within the first five yards guarantees an immediate functional role.

02What he does well
  1. 01

    Lateral release and initial acceleration

    Harris possesses extremely light feet, allowing him to beat press coverage without direct contact. His first step off the snap is explosive, forcing defenders to retreat prematurely and concede inside leverage. In the NFL, this ability to gain early separation is vital for a functional target in quick-passing systems.

  2. 02

    Visual processing and zone reads

    Displays professional-level eye discipline to identify coverage rotations in real-time. Harris knows when to settle his route in defensive voids or when to convert a seam into a deep route based on safety alignment. This tactical intelligence minimizes quarterback error.

  3. 03

    Consistent hands under pressure

    Not a receiver who needs to be wide open to secure the ball, showing an excellent catch radius for his size. He attacks the football at its highest point and maintains concentration even with imminent defender contact. His drop rate is minimal, generating immediate trust within the offensive scheme.

  4. 04

    Fluid transition after the catch (YAC)

    Once he has the ball, he becomes a power runner with a low center of gravity that makes single-arm tackles difficult. His ability to plant and change direction without losing speed (breakdown agility) makes him dangerous on crossing routes and screens. He adds a vertical element after the short catch that stretches defenses horizontally.

03What he's missing
  1. 01

    Wingspan and Height Limitations

    His lack of physical length reduces his success probability on 50/50 balls against larger outside corners. In the NFL, this almost exclusively pigeonholes him into the slot, limiting his versatility to play X. Teams must scheme his production to prevent him from being neutralized by physical defenders.

  2. 02

    Vertical Speed Ceiling

    While agile and quick over short distances, he appears to lack that elite extra gear (top-end speed) to purely out-athlete the fastest professional-level cornerbacks. This could limit his impact as a consistent deep threat on long-developing plays. Requires creative schemes to generate deep mismatches.

  3. 03

    Anchor in Run Blocking

    Although he shows willingness, his physical profile makes it difficult to sustain blocks against heavy outside linebackers and safeties. In a demanding run-heavy system, he could be a perimeter liability if he doesn't improve his hand placement and technical strength. Needs to develop a more solid anchor to be a complete three-down receiver.

04Production
Source · sports-reference

Loading seasons…

05Grade + Comps
Overall
69
/ 100 · D3
/ LIKELY
Khalil Shakir

Projects as a versatile and reliable secondary receiver who becomes a key rotational piece.

/ CEILING
Hunter Renfrow

Both are slot technicians who win with superior processing and route planning over their athletic profile.

/ FLOOR
Greg Dortch

If his game doesn't translate against NFL physicality, he might be relegated to a specialist or depth receiver role.

End of report · Draft Sickos 2027

RAS · Relative Athletic Score

Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football

Pending

/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27

Jackson'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
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End of report · Draft Sickos 2027