NFL Draft buzz pinpoints only ‘true WR1’ in 2026 class

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NFL Draft buzz pinpoints only ‘true WR1’ in 2026 class

In a way, the wide receiver group in the 2026 NFL Draft is a microcosm of the entire class. The 2026 class is viewed as weak at several positions, and even the positions considered among the strongest have no shortage…

NFL Draft buzz pinpoints only ‘true WR1’ in 2026 class

In a way, the wide receiver group in the 2026 NFL Draft is a microcosm of the entire class. The 2026 class is viewed as weak at several positions, and even the positions considered among the strongest have no shortage…

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In a way, the wide receiver group in the 2026 NFL Draft is a microcosm of the entire class.

The 2026 class is viewed as weak at several positions, and even the positions considered among the strongest have no shortage of question marks.

That seems to be the case with the wide receivers, a group that has promise but no real surefire locks.

We see that play out with the latest buzz coming from SNY’s Connor Hughes, who is hearing from talent evaluators that Arizona State’s Jordyn Tyson is the only wideout with “true WR1 potential,” and even he has a concern due to his injury history.

“Jordyn Tyson is the one with true WR1 potential, from talking to multiple high-ranking evaluators. The issue is, obviously, injuries,” Hughes writes.

Two other receivers who have usually been grouped in with Tyson among the top three or four wide receivers in this class are USC’s Makai Lemon and Ohio State’s Carnell Tate.

But, per Hughes, talent evaluators only see Tate as a high-end WR2. Meanwhile, Lemon is included in the group that has a “big gap” between it and Tyson and Tate.

“Carnell Tate is far safer (than Tyson), but ceiling is high-end WR2. That’s not bad, but not usually one selected top-10,” Hughes wrote. “There is a ‘big gap,’ one told me, between Tate/Tyson, and whoever you feel WR3 is.”

Tyson has been one of the more talked about prospects in this year’s class.

His talent isn’t in question, but his durability certainly is after injury issues during his college career that leaked into the pre-draft process.

But Tyson’s recent workout no doubt helped his stock.

ESPN’s Matt Miller reported that teams are more comfortable with Tyson’s injury history after the workout and he should go “much higher than earlier expected.”

“I think Jordyn Tyson goes much higher than earlier expected. Teams are comfortable with the (injury) history. Conversation for him starts at 5 but he’s off the board no later than 16,” Miller said.

Somewhere around 20 teams attended Tyson’s workout, and of those teams the New York Giants seem to be the one most connected to him.

In fact, NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo believes the Giants acquiring the No. 10 overall pick in the Dexter Lawrence trade with the Cincinnati Bengals only increases the chances Tyson is selected in the top 10.

How much of this chatter is just a smokescreen and how much is legit remains to be seen, but we’ll have a better idea once the 2026 NFL Draft starts on April 23.

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