Trez Davis
Bio
Recruiting
Scouting Report
Trez Davis is a 6-foot, 180-185 lb four-star wide receiver from West Monroe (LA), rated the No. 271 national prospect on the composite (0.9098) and a top-10 player in a deep Louisiana class. An explosive chunk-play producer who logged 53 catches for 1,008 yards (22.9 YPC) and 8 TDs as a senior, he profiles as a vertical field-stretcher with track-verified explosiveness who ultimately signed with Washington after flipping from Tulane.
Physical Profile
Davis carries a lean, wiry 6-foot, 180-185 lb frame that fits a 'Z'/outside receiver mold with room to add 10-15 lbs of functional weight without sacrificing his calling-card speed. His athleticism is elite and verified across sports — a 48-foot-11 triple jump and above-the-rim basketball tape confirm rare lower-body explosiveness, hip flexibility, and body control that translate directly to high-pointing the ball and creating after the catch. Top-end speed is a genuine separator; the question is play strength and a frame that still needs to fill out to handle press coverage and contested-catch traffic at the Big Ten level.
Play Style
Davis is a vertical-threat 'home run' receiver who does his best work attacking grass down the field and turning manufactured touches (screens, slants, crossers) into explosive plays with his top gear. On film he's a runner after the catch with the toughness to finish through contact, and his triple-jump/basketball background shows up on jump balls and adjustments at the catch point. At this stage he leans on straight-line speed rather than deception, so much of his production comes when he's given a runway rather than from technical route craft.
Strengths
- Elite long speed and explosiveness — 22.9 yards per catch as a senior with a 48-11 triple jump backing up the field-stretching profile; when given a clean release he runs away from DBs both pre- and post-catch
- Big-play/RAC ability — averaged nearly 23 YPC and projects as a chunk-yardage weapon who turns short and intermediate throws into explosive gains
- Football toughness and competitiveness — consistently fights for extra yardage, initiates contact, and notably produced 1,000+ yards while playing through a significant wrist injury his senior year
Areas to Improve
- Route-running nuance — currently a 'one-speed' runner who wins on raw athleticism; needs tempo variation, sharper breaks, and a fuller route tree to separate against more disciplined college corners
- Play strength and release package — must add weight and develop hand technique/footwork to defeat press coverage and reliably win contested catches against bigger, physical defenders
College Projection
Projects as a developmental vertical receiver at Washington with a realistic path to a rotational deep-shot and special-teams role by Year 2 once he adds weight and refines his route tree. Given his testing profile and toughness, the ceiling is a starting outside 'X/Z' and downfield difference-maker by his redshirt sophomore/junior season; the floor is a niche field-stretcher. Expect a redshirt or limited-snap true freshman year focused on strength and route development.
NFL Outlook
Day 3 developmental ceiling at this stage with genuine upside if the route running catches up to the athleticism. The verified explosiveness, long speed, and competitive toughness are traits NFL evaluators value, but he'll need to prove he can separate with technique and win contested reps against press to climb draft boards. Trajectory is heavily dependent on production and physical development over his college career.
Best Fit
A vertical, tempo-based spread offense that schemes him manufactured touches and isolates him in space on go/post/seam routes to maximize his speed — exactly the kind of explosive-play system Washington runs. Ideal fit is a program with strong receiver development and strength infrastructure that can refine his route nuance and add weight while letting his straight-line speed stress defenses immediately.
Player Comparison
Brandin Cooks shares a remarkably similar recruiting profile to the prospect, rated as a 4-star receiver and ranked #240 overall in his class. Both players are explosive vertical threats with verified track speed, consistently winning deep downfield. Cooks, standing at 5'10" and 189 lbs, has a comparable physical build and has built a long, successful NFL career on the very traits described in the prospect's profile: getting behind defenses, tracking the ball well, and making big plays.