
Derived from 2 independent scout reports + combine measurables.
DynastySignal | 2026 NFL Draft
Kevin Coleman Jr. is a compact, SEC-seasoned wide receiver who transferred from Mississippi State to Missouri and has been a primary offensive weapon at both stops. He's a functional slot/outside hybrid who wins with quickness, route variety, and legitimate clutch-play trust — Missouri deployed him on 3rd-and-longs and 4th-down conversion attempts against Oklahoma, Vanderbilt, and Kansas all in the same season. The case for him is a multi-year résumé against elite competition and 74/932/6 production at Mississippi State alone; the case against is a 180-pound frame that invites physicality concerns and a separation profile that gets tighter against NFL-caliber press coverage. He's not a home-run threat, but he could carve out a WR3/slot role early in his NFL career with the right fit.
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Position | Wide Receiver (X/Slot) |
| School | Missouri (transferred from Mississippi State) |
| Class | Senior (2026 draft eligible) |
| Height | 5'11" |
| Weight | 180 lbs |
| 2024 Stats (Miss. State) | 74 rec / 932 yds / 6 TD |
| 2025 School | Missouri (SEC) |
| Jersey Number | #3 |
| Conference | SEC (both stops) |
| Source | Prefix | Frames | Key Content |
|---|---|---|---|
| CollegeWideoutsTV — KEVIN COLEMAN JR. (Mississippi State) II Full 2024 Highlights | `highlights_` | 18 | MSU 2024 season; games vs. Florida, Texas, #5 Georgia (x2), Texas A&M, Arkansas, UMass, Tennessee, Missouri, Ole Miss |
| 0 For The Season (Jason McGensy) — Kevin Coleman - WR Missouri | 2026 NFL Draft Names to Know | `highlights_2_` | Profile card with confirmed measurables (5'11"/180/SR), Ole Miss Egg Bowl frames from MSU 2024 |
| hyper highlights — Kevin Coleman Jr Missouri Highlights | `highlights_3_` | 19 | Missouri 2025 games vs. C. Arkansas, Kansas, S. Carolina, Louisiana (x2), UMass (x2), Vanderbilt, Oklahoma, Auburn |
Coleman runs a legitimate route tree — digs, crossers, comebacks, sideline outs, and occasional verticals. His stems off the line are clean with a two-point stance release that doesn't telegraph his routes early. In the Ole Miss game (highlights_2_008, highlights_2_010), he consistently aligned boundary-side and showed sharp break points on intermediate routes, drawing soft coverage from Ole Miss corners who respected his speed. Against Auburn (highlights_3_018), he created clear 3rd-and-7 separation at the break point — that's not nothing against an SEC secondary. Where it gets concerning is against physical, press-heavy corners. The Texas game (highlights_001 context) and Georgia frames (highlights_002) show tight-window operation where he was rarely generating the clean 3-5 yard cushion you want. At the NFL level, he will need to sharpen his press release — the speed is real but technique in the first three steps needs polish.
The film consistently shows a player who changes directions well, and the UMass sequence (highlights_3_009) where he's running free along the sideline ahead of defenders confirms legitimate play-speed. The Missouri vs. Kansas hurry-up drive (highlights_3_002, highlights_3_003) shows him being targeted in a two-minute drill scenario — the offense leaned on him when they needed to move quickly, which speaks to his burst and ability to run clean routes under pressure. That said, he's not a vertical separator who simply runs away from corners. His speed is functional rather than elite — he'll beat most zone coverage and create on short/intermediate routes, but he won't routinely threaten over the top at the next level.
The catch radius is adequate for his 5'11" frame, and what's notable is his willingness to make contested catches in traffic. The Louisiana frame (highlights_3_008) is the clearest illustration — multiple defenders arriving at the catch point, and he's not going down early, catching through contact. The Oklahoma sideline play (highlights_3_005) shows boundary awareness and body control near the out-of-bounds line while securing the ball going to the ground. The Ole Miss Egg Bowl frames (highlights_2_015) show a possible sideline/end zone catch attempt with Coleman working the boundary. No clear drop situations are visible across all 55 frames, and he's repeatedly targeted in tight-window situations — that's meaningful data. The concern is that at 180 lbs, contested catches over the middle at the NFL level against linebackers and safeties will be harder than they were in college.
Coleman fights. He doesn't go down on first contact (highlights_3_008, highlights_3_007) and consistently shows effort to turn catches into extra yardage. Against South Carolina (highlights_3_006), he was making a 3rd-and-7 play and fighting through a tackle attempt rather than surrendering. The Louisiana run-after-catch sequence shows multiple defenders needed to bring him down. However, he's not a genuine YAC threat in the Amon-Ra St. Brown mold — he's not consistently making tacklers miss in open space or accelerating away from secondaries. The Georgia frames (highlights_006) show him getting wrapped up immediately with minimal YAC. His floor in this category is solid (he competes), but the ceiling is limited by his frame and what appears to be functional rather than elite open-field elusiveness.
At 180 lbs there's a ceiling here, but Coleman at least shows effort. The Arkansas run play (highlights_010) shows him low to the ground engaged as a perimeter blocker — he's willing, which matters to NFL staffs. He's not going to physically dominate defensive backs at the point of attack, but he won't embarrass himself or create missed assignments on outside run concepts. He won't be a liability on run plays as long as he stays disciplined in his assignments.
Coleman projects as a fit in spread/West Coast/RPO-heavy systems at the NFL level. Missouri used him as an X-receiver in pure wide splits, as a slot, and in jet-sweep/manufactured-touch roles — that versatility is translatable. He's not a traditional boundary outside receiver who wins with size, and he's not a true in-line blocker, so he's not a Shanahan F-receiver type. Where he thrives is being deployed in space with intermediate route trees — think of offenses that deploy a "move-WR" in multiple alignments (e.g., Philadelphia-style, Kansas City slot-flex work). If he's asked to line up exclusively outside against NFL press corners at 180 lbs, that's a problem. In the slot or as a flexed player with alignment variety, the upside is real.
Primary: Wan'Dale Robinson (New York Giants) — Similar size profile (5'9"/185), SEC transfer background, functional slot/outside versatility, fights for YAC, makes contested catches in traffic, limited ceiling vs. elite physicality but floor as a reliable WR3/chain-mover. Both are players who do a lot right without dominating any single trait.
Secondary: Rashee Rice (Kansas City Chiefs, early career) — The blend of route precision, clutch situational usage, and need for the right scheme fit tracks. Rice was deployed in manufactured roles early before earning trust as a primary option. Coleman has the profile to follow a similar trajectory if the scheme is right — not an immediate WR1 but a legitimate WR2/3 upside with the right development.
Kevin Coleman Jr. is a legit, SEC-tested receiver who has earned his opportunity at the 2026 draft table. Two years of productive SEC film, a profile that fits modern spread offenses, and genuine trust on high-leverage downs make him worth a Day 3 investment. The 5'11"/180 frame is the elephant in the room — he'll need a team that will use him in space and not ask him to win physically at the line of scrimmage against NFL press corners consistently. Dynasty managers should view him as a stash in the early rounds — his NFL ceiling is a slot WR3 who contributes in PPR formats, with the comp range of Wan'Dale Robinson rather than anything higher. He's not a dynasty cornerstone but he's a real NFL player.
Score: 68/100
Projected Pick: R3, Pick 70-100
Film Score: 68 / 100
Coleman's a pint-sized missile in the slot—explosive YAC demon who drags safeties like they're tackling dummies. Contrarian take: Size queens overlook his sub-4.5 burst and nasty spin moves; he's no gadget, he's a legit WR2 floor in creative offenses.
| Trait | Detail |
|----------------|-------------------------|
| Height | 5'11\" |
| Weight | 180 lbs |
| Age (Draft) | 22 |
| School | Missouri (trans. MSU '24, Louisville '22) |
| 2024 Stats (MSU) | 74 rec, 932 yds, 6 TD (highlights_2_001-003) |
| Career | Explosive slot prodigy, multi-transfer |
| Source | Duration | Frames (prefix) |
|---------------------------------------------|----------|--------------------|
| CollegeWideoutsTV — KEVIN COLEMAN JR. (MSU) Full 2024 Highlights | 11:35 | highlights_001-018 |
| 0 For The Season — Kevin Coleman Missouri 2026 Names to Know | 1:00 | highlights_2_001-018 |
| hyper highlights — Kevin Coleman Jr Missouri Highlights | 1:58 | highlights_3_001-019 |
Speed/Explosion: 8/10 (A-) - Electric first step torches cushions; YAC bursts break angles (highlights_005 vs Florida, highlights_3_002 vs Kansas).
Release Package: 8/10 (A-) - Twitchy hip flip beats press with hesitation dips (highlights_001 pre-snap vs Florida, highlights_013).
Route Running: 7/10 (B) - Precise breaks on slants/crossers, but repertoire slot-heavy, lacks vertical polish (highlights_2_007 graphic context, highlights_010).
Hands/Ball Skills: 9/10 (A) - Vacuum mitts in traffic; high-points despite frame (highlights_006 vs Texas, highlights_3_010).
Body Control: 8/10 (A-) - Adjusts mid-air, torque for ODIs (highlights_011 vs LSU).
YAC Ability: 9/10 (A) - Elusive spinner, stiff-arms LBs like pros (highlights_015 vs Georgia, highlights_3_015 vs Oklahoma).
Overall Grade: B+
Small frame caps catch radius on 50/50s—struggles vs lengthier CBs outside (highlights_3_011 fade attempt). Injury history (MSU nagging) + transfer carousel raise durability flags. Speed plays fast on tape but unproven GPS burner; deep routes rare (highlights_018 limited verticals). Production padded by checkdowns in shaky MSU/Mizzou QBs.
Y1: Slot motion weapon/WR4 (200 targets). Y2: WR3 flex (600+ yds). Y3: WR2 in Shanahan tree (run-pass options thrive). Fits West Coast/Gunnery offenses needing chain-movers.
Floor: Tyler Lockett (slot savvy, YAC pop minus elite speed).
Ceiling: Deebo Samuel (compact frame, YAC violence + route savvy).
Coleman gets slept on as \"slot only tweener,\" but his juice post-catch screams Day 2 value—bet the under on size doubters.
Score: 84/100
Projected Pick: R2, Pick 40-60
Film Score: 84 / 100
2025–26 season
● = confirmed at the Combine. Pre-combine estimates shown where unconfirmed.