Omarion
Miller.

Omarion
Miller.

Arizona State· Jr· 5'10"· 204 lb
"Omarion Miller's value isn't just in the catch, but in the efficient, often violent, yards that follow. With a low center of gravity and a running back's mindset, Miller turns short passes into first downs thanks to his contact balance and explosive burst. His NFL projection is that of a productive starting slot receiver, a reliable weapon on third downs."
Omarion Miller is a compact, dynamic receiver who operates with uncommon physical urgency for his 5'10" frame. His game is defined by a low center of gravity and exceptional contact balance, allowing him to absorb hits over the middle and turn short passes into explosive yards after contact. He is not merely a gadget-based scheme receiver; Miller demonstrates an advanced understanding of how to manipulate a defender's leverage in the route stem, using violent shoulder fakes to create separation on intermediate routes. His musculature is well-distributed, giving him a competitive advantage in blocking and traffic situations where other receivers his stature often disappear. Looking ahead to the next level, Miller projects as a high-volume starting slot or a situational 'Z' who will thrive in systems prioritizing YAC and West Coast concepts. While his top-end speed isn't strictly elite for consistently burning deep coverage, his initial acceleration and click-and-close ability make him a reliable target on third downs. Miller's ceiling will depend on his release consistency against physical press coverage in the NFL and whether he can expand his route tree to avoid being pigeonholed solely as a short-perimeter threat. His floor is that of a functional kick returner and a reliable fourth receiver with a 'dog' mentality on the field.
- 01
Explosive short-area acceleration
Miller possesses immediate burst post-reception, forcing defenders into perfect pursuit angles. This ability to reach top speed in few steps makes him a constant threat on slant and screen routes.
- 02
Low center of gravity and contact balance
Unlike many receivers his size, Miller runs with a wide base, allowing him to bounce off defensive back tackles. His contact balance is pro-level, maintaining verticality after lateral impacts to gain critical extra yards in red zone situations.
- 03
Attention to detail in the Route Stem
He uses subtle head fakes and tempo changes to 'sell' deep routes before breaking outside or inside. This technical maturity allows him to compensate for a lack of dominant stature, creating clear throwing windows for his quarterback.
- 04
Secure hands outside his frame
Despite not having a massive catch radius, Miller attacks the ball aggressively with diamond technique. He shows a great ability to adjust his body in the air and secure catches on low or slightly behind throws without losing stride.
- 01
Limited Catch Radius
His 5'10" stature restricts his ability to win 50/50 balls against taller corners on the sideline. In the NFL, this will limit his utility in contested jump-ball situations where he cannot out-position the defender.
- 02
Questionable Elite Long Speed
While explosive over 10 yards, he tends to get tracked down on long open-field pursuits by world-class corners. This suggests his primary role will be as an offensive engine on short-to-intermediate routes rather than a pure vertical threat.
- 03
Difficulty Against Physical Press-Man
Though strong, NFL corners with long arms could neutralize his initial release if they get hands on his chest early in the snap. He needs to develop a more varied repertoire of hand fighting moves to disengage from physical defenders at the line.
Loading seasons…
Robinson embodies Miller's most probable role: a dynamic slot weapon for whom touches are schemed to exploit his acceleration and tackle-breaking ability.
The comparison draws from Landry's peak as a dominant, high-volume, physical slot receiver who out-muscled defensive backs.
This represents the floor if Miller fails to develop his technique against physical coverage, relegating him to a 'gadget' or return specialist role rather than a primary starter.
RAS · Relative Athletic Score
Kent Lee Platte methodology · ras.football
/ Combine Feb '27 · Pro days Mar '27
Omarion'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
- 4.49sp50
- Vertical
- —in
- Broad jump
- —in
- Three-cone
- —s
- Shuttle
- —s
- Bench
- —rep
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