2025 Receivers on the doorstep of (more) D1 offers
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The 2025 receiver class is absolutely loaded. This class has several receivers who are going to go D1. This list describes five receivers who are either on the brink of D1 offers or who have one Division 1 offer and…
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Continue ReadingThe 2025 receiver class is absolutely loaded. This class has several receivers who are going to go D1. This list describes five receivers who are either on the brink of D1 offers or who have one Division 1 offer and should receive more.
According to his Twitter, Jami currently holds an offer from Central Michigan. Looking at his film, it’s extremely easy to see why a school like CMU would be intrigued. 6’3″, slim, and long limbs passes the eye test and then some. He truly has the measurables to intrigue any Division 1 school. Jami is a decent route runner, and has decent explosiveness off the line of scrimmage. He’s also incredible at climbing the ladder for 50/50 balls. He’s good at earning yards after catch, but that aspect could also be improved. I think of Jami like a taller Devonta Smith. He plays with the same style and has that sort of upside if he improves his explosiveness.
Jaielen has been a monster so far this offseason. At Troy, he’s done a good job at making plays with what he’s been given. During the 7on7 season, he’s been able to show off his abilities a bit more in a purely pass-oriented game. He’s tall, has good body control, great effort, and works to earn yards after catch. If Jaielen keeps this up throughout this offseason, there’s not a doubt in my mind he’ll earn Division 2 attention, maybe even Division 1.
Mason burst onto the scene about a year ago. A little over a year ago, he earned his first D1 offer from Marshall. Last season, his numbers won’t jump off the page, but his highlights show why he has D1 upside. I love his release off the line of scrimmage. Mason is explosive, quick to full speed, and makes difficult catches look easy. He seems to do the little things correctly, which is a big plus in my eyes. If Mason keeps attending camps then he’ll be able to earn a lot more recruiting attention.
Connor is one of those guys who’s been working relentlessly on his game for years. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched him at camps, and he’s one of the prospects I know best. Connor is a good route runner, athletic, and can make difficult catches. I haven’t seen Connor in a while, but if I were to knock one thing about his game it would be that he sometimes failed to look the ball in, resulting in drops. Otherwise, he’s an extremely hard-working receiver who, like Mason, works on the little things. More good showings at offseason camps should earn him more MAC or GLIAC attention.
Highlights
In a very crowded wide receiver room at West Bloomfield, Elisha totaled 1121 yards, 41 receptions, and 11 touchdowns, averaging 27.3 yards per catch. His tape tells the story. Elisha succeeds in deep posts, streaks, etc, commonly outrunning even the best secondaries. Some players claim they run x time in x event (usually 40-yd or 100M dash) but Elisha shows it on tape. His north-south running is blazing quickly, and he can change direction quite fast. If he shows up at several camps this offseason, I could 100% see him earn more Division 1 attention.