← Back to Players
#208
Eric McAlister
46.0
Grade
Draft Projection
5
Round
140 - 200
Pick Range
#-
Position Rank
Measurements
6'4"
Height
194
Weight (lbs)
32.625"
Arm Length
9.625"
Hand Size
Athletic Testing
Scouting Report
A productive 169-career reception receiver averaging 18-plus yards per catch with a monster 2025 of 72 catches for 1,190 yards and 10 touchdowns after transferring from Boise State to TCU. His 6-3 frame, long stride, solid deep-threat ability, and YAC prowess are legitimate NFL tools, but he struggles with contested catches, has 10 career drops, and his mid-season departure from Boise State raises character concerns. Projects as an early Day 3 pick with some teams removing him from their boards.
Player Comparison
Corey Coleman
Strengths
- Gets vertical in a hurry and stacks corners with ease. Once he's on top of you, good luck. That long speed is real.
- Ball tracking is a thing of beauty. Looks it in over his shoulder, adjusts to underthrows, plucks it away from his frame. Natural hands.
- This kid runs angry after the catch. Broke five tackles on one play against SMU. Defenders bounce off him and he keeps his legs churning.
- At 6'3" and 205, he wins the physical battles at the catch point. Back-shoulder fades are automatic. Just throw it up and let him go get it.
- Sinks his hips and snaps out of breaks cleanly on intermediate stuff. The decel is smooth for a bigger receiver.
- Shows some dog in the run game. Laid out a DB to spring a 75-yard touchdown against North Carolina. Takes pride in that dirty work.
- Works the middle of the field without flinching. Takes shots from linebackers, hangs onto the ball, pops right back up.
- Finds the soft spots in zone coverage like a veteran. Good feel for settling in windows and giving his quarterback an easy target.
Areas to Improve
- Drifts at the top of his stems. That extra half-second he takes to gather himself will get him blanketed by NFL corners.
- The 4.5 forty is what it is. Play speed looks faster, but he's not blowing by anybody at the next level on pure jets alone.
- Blocking technique is sloppy. The effort is there, the want-to is there, but he whiffs on assignments too often to trust in the run game.
- Concentration drops pop up on the easy ones. Makes the circus catches, then lets a simple dig bounce off his hands. Maddening.
- Route tree was pretty limited in college. Lots of slants, posts, and go balls. Need to see more variety before trusting him on the full tree.