Nick
Marsh.

Nick
Marsh.

Indiana· Jr· 6'1"· 218 lb
"More linebacker than ballet dancer, Nick Marsh uses brute strength as his main technical tool. He dismantles cornerbacks at the line with violent hands and actively seeks contact after the catch like a running back. This punishing mindset projects him as a solid WR2 or a high-value possession receiver in the NFL."
Nick Marsh projects as an X-alignment receiver with an imposing physique and muscle density uncommon for his age. His game centers on physical dominance at the line of scrimmage and aggressive hand-fighting that negates opposing cornerbacks' press coverage attempts. While not a pure 4.3 speedster, his long stride and ability to maintain vertical leverage allow him to functionally stretch the field, making him a constant threat on post and seam routes. Most impressive on his tape is his contact balance; Marsh operates like a running back after the catch, utilizing a violent stiff-arm and low base to break tackles at the second level. His projection to the next level hinges on refining his route tree and his ability to separate on horizontal breaks. Currently, he tends to round his transitions on dig or out routes, which will allow NFL defenders to close space with their click-and-close. If he can develop greater hip fluidity and technical stems to deceive defensive backs, he possesses the ceiling of a solid starter (WR2) in a system that prioritizes physical play and possession. His floor is that of a third-down and red-zone specialist, where his catch radius and strength overcome opposing technique.
- 01
Functional strength and dominant release
Marsh violently uses his hands to dismantle defensive jams at the line of scrimmage. This ability to gain immediate separation allows him to maintain play timing even against physical cornerbacks, a skill immediately transferable to the professional level.
- 02
Ball tracking and catch radius
He demonstrates elite hand-eye coordination, adjusting his body in the air to snag passes thrown outside his frame. His ability to high-point in 50/50 situations makes him a reliable target for any quarterback under pressure.
- 03
Aggressive YAC and runner's mentality
Once the ball is in his hands, Marsh seeks contact rather than shying away, utilizing an effective stiff-arm and excellent balance. In the NFL, this translates to extra yards after contact that keep drives alive and wear down opposing secondaries.
- 04
Run blocking
He exhibits an uncommon willingness to seal the perimeter and attack safeties in open space. His hand placement technique and relentless motor make him a valuable asset in outside zone schemes where the receiver must sustain effort.
- 01
Limited hip fluidity
On 90-degree cuts, Marsh displays some stiffness that slows his transition, allowing defenders to recover ground. In the NFL, this could limit his effectiveness on intermediate routes against elite man coverage if he doesn't improve his ability to sink his hips.
- 02
Technical separation at the break
Over-relies on his size to win, neglecting the art of deception with shoulders or eyes during the route stem. Needs to develop more nuance in his cuts to avoid telegraphing routes against veterans who read body language well.
- 03
Recovery speed
While his top-end speed is respectable, he lacks that instant burst to separate after a route break or after being slowed at the line. This pegs him more as a contested-catch receiver than a pure separation generator through acceleration alone.
Loading seasons…
This is Marsh's most probable trajectory: a reliable, tough starter who becomes his QB's security blanket due to his catch-point dependability.
Represents Marsh's ceiling as a high-volume, physical WR2 who can dominate over the middle and in contested-catch situations.
Illustrates the risk if Marsh's lack of separation isn't mitigated, leading him to become a 50/50 specialist unable to consistently get open in the NFL.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Nick'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
- 4.38sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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