Emeka Egbuka is a sneaky type of receiver who excels in deceiving defenders thanks to a wide array of small movements.
A former five-star recruit out of Steilacoom High School in Steilacoom, Washington, where he was the second recruit from his state and the number one wide receiver during the 2021 cycle; fellow Buckeye J.T. Tuimoloau was the only player ranked higher than Egbuka from Washington that year, according to 247 Sports. He was the ninth overall player coming out of high school in 2021.
Egbuka decided to return to school after many believed he might be selected in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft. That decision led to a National Championship for Egbuka, where he was Third-Team All-Big Ten (also earned that in 2023) and Second-Team All-Big-10 in 2022.
Egbuka went over 1,000 yards twice with double-digit touchdowns (2022 & 2024). His 2023 was plagued with ankle and knee injuries; he only played in ten games.
Egbuka aligned out wide just 25.2% of the time through four college seasons. He averaged 2.61 yards per route run, over three during his first two seasons on campus.
His contested catch rate was 54.3% through his four seasons, and he secured 59.1% of his contested catches in 2024. Egbuka’s aDOT was 9.1 yards, and his yards per reception was 14. His drop percentage was 5.5% throughout his career.
With the 39th pick in the 2025 #XMockDraft (via trade with the Chicago Bears), the Detroit Lions (#OnePride) select:
— Blueridge Bronco (@BlueridgeBronc1) March 24, 2025
Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State (#Buckeyes)
The Kansas City Chiefs (@bignizo) are OTC pic.twitter.com/ArZFsZe1vJ
Emeka Egbuka is a skilled route runner who understands the nuances of uncovering against man and zone coverage. He excels with elite micromovements to keep defenders unaware of his intentions until the break. Egbuka sports good—but not spectacular—explosiveness out of his breaks and is a very good overall athlete with excellent YAC ability—he ranked 16th in FBS with 476 yards after the catch.
Egbuka’s savvy nature as a football player, along with his competitive toughness to uproot safeties in the run game, will appeal to every NFL team even though he’s more of a slot-oriented receiver who thrives from condensed sets. I do not love comparisons – especially when they’re from the same college – but I understand why he reminds people of Jaxson Smith-Njigba. Egbuka also has some Cooper Kupp to his game.
The team that selects Egbuka will receive a tone-setting receiver who will enhance the rushing ability of their 11-personnel package while providing the team’s quarterback with a reliable chain-moving asset. Egbuka doesn’t possess elite size or elite athletic ability, but what he does possess in those departments is more than enough, and he excels with the intricacies of the position.
Egbuka is a high-floor player who still possesses a ceiling. He will quickly become a fan favorite and may find his way into the first round.
GRADE: 6.67
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