
Ian Hartitz breaks down five things to know about Washington WR Denzel Boston ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft.

The University of Washington has produced five first-round picks across the last five drafts—and WR Denzel Boston is looking to make it six come April 23 after spending the better part of the last two seasons terrorizing Big Ten defensive backs.
Today, we'll get to know Boston a bit better by breaking down five cool things about the 22-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.
Boston was a bit of a late bloomer, as the three-star recruit was ranked as just the 146th-best receiver in the country by the fine folks at 247 coming out of Emerald Ridge in Puyallup, Washington. Still, Boston chose his hometown school over fellow West Coast squads like Arizona, Arizona State and Washington State, even knowing the potential struggle to get on the field ahead of NFLers like Rome Odunze, Ja'Lynn Polk and Jalen McMillan.
And it was indeed a struggle: Boston caught just seven total passes during his first two years on campus, but then things got real in 2024 following the Huskies' runner-up National Championship campaign. The newfound leader of this passing game proceeded to put up some BIG numbers during his final two seasons on campus, potentially doing enough to hear his name called within the first 32 picks of this year's NFL Draft.
Of course, it's the tools that Boston displayed while putting up these numbers that make him such an enticing Round 1 prospect.
Three of Boston's biggest strengths as a prospect:
This is a big dude: Standing 6-foot-4, 212 pounds, Boston is a safe bet to be bigger than pretty much any corner who will be matching up with him at the professional level. Furthermore, Boston knows how to use this size to his advantage, consistently high-pointing the football and winning in contested-catch situations. Speaking of …
Contested-catch artist: Boston's career 61% contested catch rate is up there with the best receivers in this class. This is his "super power", and it better be. For someone who doesn't possess blazing speed or super high-level separation ability, it's imperative that Boston manages to win the majority of his 50/50 opportunities—and that's exactly what he did across his four seasons in Seattle.
Route-running is impressive for a man this size: And this fact feels lost on many who carelessly throw around Keon Coleman comps. Sure, Boston isn't as fast or quick as some sub-6-foot, 185-pound receivers, but guess what? When you're his size, you don't need to be! Either way, Boston's quick feet to spring open on slants, comebacks and even whip routes stood out, while some of the releases were also surprisingly smooth. Overall, PFF considered Boston "open" or "wide open" on 45% of his non-screen targets in 2025. This ranks 38th among 61 draft-eligible WRs, which isn't exactly elite, but is also firmly in the same ballpark as guys like Carnell Tate (47.5%, 33rd) and Jordyn Tyson (47%, 34th). Again, Boston shouldn't be confused with the DeVonta Smith's of the world, but the man put some good routes on tape ESPECIALLY for his size! Watch for yourself!
Three more cool stats and facts about Boston 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 speed and early-production departments.
Won't be confused as a burner: Boston usually won deep by either snagging a contested catch or getting a safety turned around in a mismatch situation. You generally didn't see him just dusting dudes off the line. And hey, Carnell Tate doesn't exactly possess world-class speed either, but Boston declining to run the 40 at the combine or pro day could be a decent indication that he's closer to a 4.6 instead of a 4.5. This obviously doesn't help with creating separation down the field, making Boston's ideal fit at the next level more of a big-bodied possession receiver—I think Michael Thomas is a decent higher-end comp here.
Not an early breakout: Which isn't the most damning thing in the world when your offense had three NFL WRs ahead of you on the depth chart, but still: Boston doing next-to-nothing for his first two seasons on campus isn't ideal and is a big reason why his Production Rating comes out to a lowly 69 (26th among 46 WRs) in the Fantasy Life Rookie WR Super Model.
Didn't always see his best against the best: Boston put up the following stat lines against top-25 scoring defenses during his final two years at Washington:
We did see some bigger booms against top-30 scoring defenses (6-107-2 vs. Washington State in 2025), but under 50 yards in all but one of his seven stiffest matchups isn't ideal.
Five facts of the fun variety about Boston:
And now for the moment you've all been waiting for: My favorite comps for Boston:
Best of luck to Boston on his NFL journey, and thank you all for reading!
