Chris Stewart
Bio
Recruiting
Scouting Report
Chris Stewart is a four-star slot receiver from Pearland Shadow Creek (TX) and an early, sticky Texas commit (June 2024) who ranks as a top-310 national prospect with a 0.9062 composite. A verified producer against elite Houston-metro competition (60-922-15 as a junior after 35-654-10 as a sophomore), he projects as a high-major vertical-slot weapon whose calling card is proven speed and run-after-catch suddenness rather than size.
Physical Profile
Stewart carries a slot-receiver frame that, per 247Sports' Gabe Brooks, 'looks and plays like a slot' though measurables remain third-party unverified — a flag for evaluators given how much of his projection rests on speed. The athletic markers are real, however: sophomore track times of an 11.10 100m and 22.24 200m confirm legitimate, translatable long speed plus above-average initial acceleration. That combination of burst off the line and top-end gear is exactly what allows an undersized slot to win vertically and stress safeties on seams and crossers.
Play Style
On tape Stewart is a field-stretcher first — he eats cushion with acceleration, gets on top of corners, and is comfortable tracking the deep ball from inside or outside alignments. The dangerous wrinkle is what happens after the catch: he's a one-cut accelerator who hits a second gear in space, making him a quick-game and screen multiplier, not just a deep threat. He wins with speed and suddenness more than physicality or polished route-running at this stage.
Strengths
- Verified track speed (11.10 100m / 22.24 200m as a sophomore) that translates directly to vertical stretch — he threatens the top of the coverage from both the boundary and the slot, not just on schemed touches.
- Run-after-catch threat with genuine one-cut suddenness; the 18.7 yards-per-catch sophomore average and 25 combined receiving TDs over two varsity seasons show he turns short and intermediate targets into explosives.
- Battle-tested production against strong big-school Houston-metro competition, which de-risks the projection — this isn't camp-helmet hype, it's two years of leading-receiver tape against quality DBs.
Areas to Improve
- Play strength and contested-catch ability at the catch point — as a likely sub-6-foot slot, he'll need to add functional mass to beat press and finish through contact against P4-caliber length.
- Route-tree expansion and nuance underneath; his film leans on vertical stems and speed wins, so developing the short-area separation skills (tempo changes, head fakes, comebacks) to win as a full-field slot will determine his college floor.
College Projection
Expect a redshirt or rotational true-freshman year at Texas while he adds strength and learns Sarkisian's route detail, then a rise into the two-deep as a designated speed/slot weapon by Year 2. His ceiling is a starting slot and vertical complement; the timeline hinges almost entirely on physical development, since the athletic traits and ball production are already P4-ready.
NFL Outlook
A developmental Day 3 / priority-free-agent profile to monitor at this stage, with clear draftable upside if the speed pairs with added strength and a refined route tree. Slot receivers with verified sub-11.2 100m speed and proven RAC traits routinely earn pro looks; his draft stock will be decided by separation consistency against college corners and by his still-unverified measurables.
Best Fit
A tempo-based, vertical-spread offense that isolates slot receivers in space and schemes touches on the move — precisely what Texas under Steve Sarkisian offers. He maximizes in a scheme that uses motion, manufactured RAC opportunities, and four-verticals concepts to weaponize his speed rather than asking him to be a possession or contested-catch outside X early in his career.