chris-brazzell-ii player card

There are roughly a dozen players in the 2026 NFL Draft who stand 6'5". Chris Brazzell II is the one doing it as a wide receiver with a 1,006-yard senior season in the SEC, a 9-touchdown campaign, and an ADOT of 15.7 that ranks among the highest in this draft class. He's a true jump-ball threat โ€” a receiver whose catch radius and above-the-rim athleticism create coverage problems simply by his presence on the field. In a league that has increasingly found creative ways to use big, athletic boundary targets, Brazzell offers something genuinely scarce: size at the wide receiver position that comes with real vertical speed and an elite catch percentage at downfield depths.

The 2025 breakout โ€” 61 catches, 70% catch rate, 16.5 yards per reception, fourth-most touchdowns among the top-30 WRs in this class โ€” answered the questions left by a difficult 2024 regression (29 catches, 50% catch rate, a 17% drop rate). Coming back with a dominant senior campaign in the SEC is a meaningful data point; it's the kind of response year that separates career-path prospects from one-year wonders. The concerns, however, are equally specific: he's legitimately thin at 200 pounds on that 6'5" frame, his YAC production is bottom-tier for his class, and his route tree is narrow enough that NFL defensive coordinators will game-plan against it within weeks of the season opener.


STRENGTHS

Brazzell's catch radius is the defining physical trait, and the Georgia contested catch is the defining film clip. Fully extended, both hands high-pointing the ball over an SEC cornerback, body control intact through contact โ€” that's a play most receivers at any size simply cannot make. His 3% drop rate in 2025 against a 15.7 ADOT is a legitimately elite combination; he's not dropping difficult balls at the sticks, and he's consistently converting opportunities at depth that lesser receivers miss. His hands are natural and his tracking through the ball's flight is above-average for the position.

His deep speed is real. The New Mexico State vertical route โ€” 2-3 yards of separation from a corner in man coverage, smooth over-the-shoulder catch in stride without breaking step โ€” confirms he's a long-strider who genuinely gets behind NFL-caliber secondaries at depth. He's not a linear sprinter, but his speed over distance is a legitimate weapon on play-action shots and four-verticals concepts. At his size, that combination of speed and catch radius forces off-coverage from defensive coordinators who simply don't have a clean answer.

His 2025 red-zone numbers โ€” fourth in touchdowns among the top-30 draft WRs โ€” confirm he's trusted in compressed end-zone situations against SEC competition. Teams pay premium for receivers who can reliably score in tight quarters, and Brazzell delivers that on a year-over-year basis.


CONCERNS

The 200-pound frame at 6'5" is the central draft risk. He is legitimately thin โ€” the kind of lean that raises durability concerns at the NFL level and creates release-point vulnerabilities against physical press corners at the line of scrimmage. NFL corners will get hands on him more easily at the point of release, and it remains to be seen whether he can add functional weight without compromising the speed profile that makes him valuable. His YAC production (4.0 per reception, bottom-tier for this class) suggests limited after-catch explosiveness and an inability to leverage his size to shed tackles โ€” a disappointing number for a 6'5" target.

His route tree is narrow to the point of being a genuine scheme dependency. Operating 94% from wide alignment in 2025, running primarily comebacks, fades, and vertical routes, Brazzell's college sample is a one-alignment, limited-concept exercise. NFL defensive coordinators will identify this within the first viewing and design specific press-man principles to eliminate his go-to routes. Whether he can add legitimate interior route-running and win against press coverage at depth remains unproven from this film sample.


SCOUT GRADES

Only Scout 1 provided a full evaluation for Brazzell; scout2_report was not available, so this assessment reflects a single-scout consensus. Scout 1 graded him at 68/100 with a R2, Pick 45-65 projection โ€” crediting the elite catch radius, verified deep speed, and low drop rate while flagging the thin frame, limited route tree, minimal YAC production, and the severe 2024 regression. The projected pick range is conservative relative to his name recognition, reflecting genuine concerns about whether the 2025 breakout season translates or represents a ceiling performance that favorable scheme enabled.


PROJECTION

Brazzell's dynasty value is almost entirely landing-spot dependent. In the right team environment โ€” a downfield passing offense with a gunslinger quarterback, a scheme-forward offensive coordinator who designs vertical concepts and red-zone fades โ€” he becomes a WR3 with consistent TD upside and mid-range target share. In a conservative, dink-and-dunk offense or with a game-manager quarterback who won't trust deep throws to a contested receiver, he disappears entirely.

The dynasty buy window is mid-to-late second round of rookie drafts โ€” not a reach in Round 1 based on name recognition, but a calculated upside swing in Round 2. His floor is a situational red-zone weapon who contributes 4-6 TDs annually without volume; his ceiling is a Darnell Mooney-type WR3 who posts 800+ yards in the right offense. Monitor his NFL landing spot obsessively โ€” it's the single most important variable in his dynasty value.


View Chris Brazzell II's full player profile, measurables, and scouting breakdown โ†’


๐ŸŽฌ All-22 Film Analysis Update

*Updated after All-22 film review by Scout1 and Scout2.*

Film Score: 74.0/100 (โ†‘ +1.5 from base score of 72.5)

Composite Score: 74.3

Scout1 Assessment Chris Brazzell II is a big-bodied, downfield boundary receiver out of Tennessee who offers a genuinely rare combination of size (6'5", 200 lbs) and vertical athleticism โ€” a true jump-ball threat who can high-point contested catches at the NFL level and force off-ball coverage by his mere presence on the field. The case for him is simple: elite size, elite ADOT (15.7 in 2025), a 1,006-yard breakout senior season with a 70% catch rate and 9 TDs in the SEC, and the kind of above-the-rim catch radiu...

Scout2 Assessment Trusted iso boundary X vs elite SEC secondaries (e.g., FLOR_scene_0001, GEOR_scene_0001) | Frequent red zone/goal line deployment with versatile splits (KENT_scene_0036, FLOR_scene_0027) | Relaxed/upright stance limits burst potential; needs refinement for press (GEOR_scene_0056, KENT_scene_0001) [confidence: medium]

*Film analysis is based on All-22 footage reviewed independently by two scouts. Scores reflect on-field evidence and may differ from pre-film model projections.*