
Ian Hartitz provides a profile on Ohio State WR Carnell Tate ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft, earning a comp to fellow Buckeye Chris Olave.

THE Ohio State University has produced at least one first-round wide receiver in each of the last four NFL Drafts–and it's doubtful even a Laremy Tunsil gas-mask situation could prevent Carnell Tate from making it 5 for 5 come April 23.
Today, we'll get to know Tate a bit better by breaking down five cool things about the 21-year-old talent, including:
And, of course, we'll finish things off with several provocative comps that will hopefully get the people going.
As always: It's a great day to be great.
Tate didn't exactly come out of nowhere. The Chicago native took his talents to the national powerhouse IMG Academy before his junior season and quickly proved more than capable of dominating at the highest level high school had to offer. 247 accordingly slapped a five-star rating on Tate, and he moved to Columbus to develop under renowned WR coach Brian Hartline.
Once at Ohio State, Tate paid his dues behind Marvin Harrison Jr. and company in 2023 before bursting into the starting lineup as a sophomore alongside Emeka Egbuka and Jeremiah Smith in 2024. His 52-733-4 receiving line during the Buckeyes' National Championship run was highlighted by big-time performances in two of the team's closest wins against Nebraska (4-102-1) and Texas (7-87-0).
This start to his career made Tate a bit of a darkhorse first-round pick prior to 2025 … and then he proceeded to ball the hell out and make himself a near consensus projected top-10 selection.
The overall numbers weren't necessarily gigantic relative to what we've seen other studs produce at Ohio State. Still, they came in just 11 games, and the style points for creating big plays and coming down with circus catches can't be overstated. This brings us to the strengths that have teams salivating to select Tate very early in the 2026 NFL Draft.
Three key strengths that Tate brings to the table:
Contested-catch artist: Tate caught 12 of 14 contested targets (85.7%!) in 2025. Only two Power Four WRs have bested that mark since 2019 with a minimum of 10 contested targets: 2019 Justin Jefferson (12/13, 92.3%) and 2021 Jaxon Smith-Njigba (9/10, 90%). Pretty great company! But, yeah: Tate's combination of strong hands, body control, and leaping ability make him a nightmare to defend at the catch point.
Smoothness is Olave-esque: While Tate won't be confused with an elite YAC producer, he wasn't exactly asked to operate in the underneath areas of the field very often, and there were plenty of flashes of him gliding past defenders in the open field either way. Independent of Tate's ability after the catch: His smoothness getting in and out of breaks is very impressive for a taller outside receiver.
Vertical route-running is borderline erotic: This is the main selling point here: Tate's superpower is winning down the field. Much was made of Tate's relatively disappointing 4.53-second 40-yard dash at the NFL Scouting Combine; just realize it takes far more than just pure speed to consistently win on the outside. Just look at the NFL track record from the fastest players the position has to offer. It was rare to see defensive backs stand a chance against Tate's smooth and explosive vertical stems—and good luck winning the jump ball on the few occasions where immense separation wasn't created.
Three more cool stats and facts about Tate that line up with what you'll see from watching him play:

Of course, as is the case with any prospect, there are some potential red-ish flags to concern yourself with here—primarily in the YAC and physical traits departments.
Was never the No. 1 WR on his own team: Something that was also the case for Emeka Egbuka and arguably Jaxon Smith-Njigba, although in that case it was more so an annoying hamstring injury that wiped out his 2022 campaign. Either way: There were plenty of times on film (especially vs. Texas) where it was clear that opposing defenses were doing everything they could to limit No. 4 and live with whatever Tate did on the other side of the field. Credit to Tate for making a habit of making those defenses pay for not sending more help his way; just realize he'll need to take his game to an even higher level to deal with more attention in the pros.
Not overly shifty after the catch: We've complimented Tate's smoothness and underrated production on screens already, but that doesn't mean he'll be confused with the position's more dynamic talents with the ball in his hands. This is evident in him forcing just six missed tackles in his final college season–a mark that sits low in not-great company when looking at recent first-round receivers.
Doesn't have elite physical traits: 40 times aren't everything, obviously, but Tate's status as a 4.5 guy does reflect the reality that he wasn't exactly burning past corners with pure speed on Saturdays. He's pretty thin at 6-foot-2, 192 pounds with 31-inch arms (52nd percentile). Tate's decision not to jump or do agility drills at the combine is probably a decent sign that his agent didn't think they had much to gain from whatever his marks are. It'd make sense if Tate fills out and becomes more explosive with NFL strength training—the man just turned 21 after all—but we aren't exactly looking at a freak among freaks here.
Four facts of the fun variety about Tate:
And now for the moment you've all been waiting for: My favorite comps for Tate:
Best of luck to Tate on his NFL journey and thank you all for reading!
