Jayden Warren

Bio

Height 6'1"
Weight 195 lbs
Hometown Rosharon, TX
High School Iowa Colony
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#172 National
#19 WR
#14 State
0.9300 Rating

Scouting Report

A
93 / 100 Ceiling 93 • Floor 85
year 1 contributor NFL Rd 5

Jayden Warren is a 6-2, 195-pound vertical-threat wide receiver from Iowa Colony HS (Rosharon, TX) who flipped from Houston to Texas A&M on November 22, 2025. A consensus four-star with a 0.93 composite (#172 national, #27 WR, #14 TX), Warren projects as a long-strider outside receiver whose elite track-verified speed and ball-tracking made him a top in-state target for Mike Elko's staff.

Physical Profile

Warren has the prototypical size-speed package for an X-receiver build: 6-foot-2, 195 pounds with a long, lean frame that still has room to add functional mass to his upper body. His athletic testing is the headline — a verified 4.50 forty at the Navy All-American Combine (on a notoriously slow surface), a 35-inch vertical, and track credibility with 10.1-/10.2-second 100-meter times. That speed profile is genuinely elite for the position and translates on tape, where he separates vertically and threatens the top of coverage without needing a sprinter's start. Catch radius is solid at his height, though he doesn't yet play to the full extension his frame should allow.

Play Style

Warren is a vertical-stretch outside receiver who wins primarily by running past people. Film shows a long-strider who eats cushion quickly and tracks the deep ball naturally over either shoulder — the 23.6 YPR as a junior is not a fluke of scheme, it's a function of him being a legitimate shot-play menace in the deeper third. He's most comfortable on go balls, posts, and double-moves where his speed forces a corner to flip and panic. He's less developed underneath; his short-area route tree on tape is limited, and his run-after-catch is more sprinter's straight-line burst than elusive maneuvering. Plays competitively but isn't yet a physical, finishing blocker.

Strengths

  • Track-verified deep speed (10.1 100m, 4.50 forty) that forces single-high safeties to cheat depth — produced a 21.8 yards-per-catch average across 81 receptions and 23.6 YPR in Fall 2024
  • Big-play finisher with elite touchdown production (35 TDs over final two prep seasons, 14 scores on just 26 grabs as a junior) — he doesn't just get behind defenders, he scores when he does
  • Multi-sport athleticism (basketball background, track sprinter) shows up in body control on contested verticals and in his 35-inch vertical, giving him a high-point dimension on jump balls and back-shoulder fades

Areas to Improve

  • Route-running refinement — evaluators consistently flag him as raw technically; needs work on releases vs. press, stem variation, and selling vertical routes to set up breakers so he isn't a one-trick deep threat at the SEC level
  • Play strength and physicality through contact — at 195 pounds he can be rerouted by physical corners, and he'll need to win at the catch point in tighter SEC windows rather than relying on separation he created at the high school level

College Projection

True freshman role at Texas A&M should be as a designated vertical/9-route specialist and gadget element — the kind of player Collin Klein's offense can put on the outside in 11 personnel to take the top off Cover 3 and one-high looks. Realistic timeline is a rotational role with 15-25 snaps a game as a freshman, with an opportunity to start outside by Year 2 if he tightens his route tree and adds 10-15 pounds. Ceiling is a three-year starter and Day 2 NFL prospect; floor is a high-end situational deep threat in the SEC.

NFL Outlook

Tools-based draft profile that NFL scouts will track from his first college snap. Verified sub-4.5 speed at 6-2 with a 35-inch vertical is exactly the testing profile that gets WRs invited to the Combine, and his production at the prep level (35 TDs in two seasons, 21.8 YPC career) shows the speed plays in pads. Day 2 ceiling (Rounds 2-3) if he develops a complete route tree, fills out to a sturdy 205-210, and proves he can win against press at the SEC level; more likely a Day 3 vertical specialist if the route refinement and physicality plateau. The track speed is the floor-raiser — players with verified 10.1 100m times and 6-2 frames almost always get drafted.

Best Fit

Texas A&M is a logical landing spot — an SEC program with a play-action, downfield-oriented passing identity that can weaponize his speed immediately while developing the technical side. Scheme fit is any vertical-stem offense that uses an X-receiver to win on isolation routes against single coverage: Air Raid derivatives, Shanahan-tree play-action systems, or any spread that builds in shot plays off the run game. He needs a WR coach who will invest in his release package and route detail rather than letting him coast on speed, and a QB with the arm to actually push the ball 50+ yards in the air to let his best trait show up.

Player Comparison

Tyrann Mathieu LSU • New Orleans Saints 82% match

Similar physical profile at 5'9" 190 lbs with elite athleticism and versatility that made him highly coveted despite not fitting a traditional position mold. Both prospects share the combination of exceptional talent evaluation scores, elite regional rankings in talent-rich states, and early commitments to premier SEC programs, suggesting similar football IQ and character traits that impressed top-tier coaching staffs.