Harrison Wallace III
Mississippi
Consensus Rank
280
Colors: elite (top 10%)·strong·weak·bottom 10%all within WR cohort (n=70)
NFL.com
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ACS
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40
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HT
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WT
—
Arm
—
PFF Col
—
Mock→
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Flags
0
Visits
0
Bench —
Vert —
Broad —
3c —
Shut —
Hand —
Age —
Measurables
HT (in)—
WT (lb)—
Arm—
Hand—
40—
Bench—
Vert—
Broad—
3-cone—
Shuttle—
Historical Projection
based on 2006-2024 draft outcomes (n≈256 per attribute · confidence low)Composite
31
0-100 scale
Expected career AV: 23.0
Attribute Contributions
- Draft ager=+0.25—z=—+0.0
- Weightr=+0.16—z=—+0.0
- Bench repsr=+0.12—z=—+0.0
- Heightr=+0.10—z=—+0.0
- Shuttler=-0.06—z=—+0.0
- Verticalr=+0.04—z=—+0.0
- Broad jumpr=+0.03—z=—+0.0
- 3-coner=-0.02—z=—+0.0
- 40-yardr=-0.00—z=—+0.0
Scouting Dossier
PFF
Strengths
● Balanced off the line and plays with consistent pacing
● Good feel for working through and sitting down in zones
● Squirmy after the catch to quickly get upfield and squeeze out extra yards
● Natural tracking and adjustment skills (credits experience as a center fielder)
● Focus doesn’t drop off with bodies around him
● Brave working into teeth of the defense
● Averaged 8.1 yards per return as Rebels’ featured punt returner
● High likeability factor among coaches and teammates (NFL scout: “Stable presence in the program. Not vocal, but (a) good kid.”)
● Production improved each of the past three seasons
Weaknesses
● High-cut, average body type with lean muscle
● Small hands; finished career with more drops than touchdowns
● Freelances his hands and feet vs. press
● Not a tackle-breaker; average elusiveness with the ball
● Underwhelming blocker with mediocre sustain strength
● Muffed two punts in 2025 and doesn’t have much special teams experience, aside from returning punts
● Missed five games as a sophomore because of right shoulder injury (Oct. 2023); missed one game as a junior after tweaking a
muscle (Nov. 2024)
Projection
A one-year starter at Ole Miss (and a two-and-a-half-year starter overall), Wallace was an outside receiver (primarily to the right of the
formation) in former offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr.’s scheme. He didn’t start playing football until he was a junior in high
school, and he showed gradual improvements over the years at Penn State and Ole Miss. Despite being in Oxford for only one season, he
developed quick chemistry with QB Trinidad Chambliss and led the Rebels in receiving in 2025.
There are receiving prospects in this draft class with more flash, but Wallace is a quality player — and he’s still getting better. He is an
efficient athlete with passable agility and speed, although he isn’t a polished technician at this point in his development. He tracks the
ball well and climbs to get it with coordinated body control. He is tough-minded in all facets and doesn’t have a fatal flaw that will keep
him from competing. Overall, Wallace doesn’t have high-level physical traits, but he is an instinctive player with the
developing ball skills and routes to become a dependable NFL player. He projects as backup Z, with upside as a punt
returner.
Mock Ranks (1)
- MDD-consensus280
Freak Notes
- none
Best Team Fits
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