Playing all four of his college seasons at Washington, Denzel Boston did not see much time during the then-Pac-12 program’s Michael Penix Jr. years. But Boston made a big leap over the past two seasons, with some teams viewing that jump as more impressive than mock drafters would seem to believe.

The consensus among the latter community has Carnell Tate and Makai Lemon residing as this draft class’ premier receiver prospects, with Jordyn Tyson regularly going off the board before Boston as well. But some teams view the big-bodied target this crop’s second- or third-best wideout, according to ESPN.com’s Peter Schrager.

Boston has been a regular on the “30” visit circuit, thus far meeting with the Browns, Commanders, Steelers and 49ers. With the exception of Washington (No. 7 overall), those teams hold first-round picks in the 20s (Cleveland holds Nos. 6 and 24). If anything, Boston’s stock may have been trending downward in recent days/weeks. ESPN.com’s previous mock draft placed the Huskies standout 35th, while Daniel Jeremiah’s most recent NFL.com mock draft also has Boston outside the first round. Schrager has him going 23rd to the Eagles, indicating Howie Roseman and Washington HC Jedd Fisch are longtime friends going back to college.

While an Eagles play for Boston could certainly signal they are ready to move on from A.J. Brown (at a high price) after June 1, Boston leapfrogging the likes of Lemon, Tyson or Indiana’s Omar Cooper Jr. — whom Jeremiah sends to the Jets at No. 16 — would mark a notable misevaluation from several prominent draft experts. Both Jeremiah and ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr.-Field Yates-Jordan Reid mock also have Texas A&M’s KC Concepcion going off the board before Boston as well.

Receiving Mike Evans and Courtland Sutton comps, Boston checked in at 6-foot-4 and 212 pounds at the Combine. He did not run the 40-yard dash. Boston followed an 834-yard, nine-touchdown sophomore season with an 881-yard, 11-TD junior slate. Boston’s catch radius will make him an attractive red zone threat at the next level, and he averaged 14.2 yards per reception last season.

Jeremiah’s big board places Tate sixth, Lemon 12th, Cooper 18th, Tyson 21st and Boston 27th. Tyson’s stock looks to be moving down a bit — at least, the most recent reporting indicates as such — as he no longer is hobnobbing near the Tate-Lemon tier. It will be interesting to see where Boston’s goes over the next two-plus weeks, as we remain in visit season.

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