👉 TAP TO SAVE 50% WITH CODE SPRING
X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


Coach Knows Ball: Marvin Harrison Jr. 2024 NFL Draft Film Breakdown of Ohio State WR

Marvin Harrison Jr. - Fantasy Football Rankings, College FB, WR, NFL Draft Sleepers

2024 NFL Draft breakdown for Marvin Harrison Jr. Read Andrew's NFL Draft rookie profile, NFL Draft prediction, and projected fantasy football value for 2024.

Welcome to Coach Knows Ball, an NFL Draft series analyzing the top prospects in the 2024 class. I'm a college football coach with nine years of NCAA experience and have been scouting NFL Draft prospects for over 15 years. This series will give a deep dive into the film of some of the top players in this draft class, with detailed insight into future NFL standouts' strengths, weaknesses, and projections.

Scouting NFL draft prospects is about projecting translatable traits. There is often overlap between translatable traits and college performance, but there's a reason many top college players are not considered legitimate professionals. For example, a wide receiver being able to get in and out of breaks efficiently will not change from college to pro. Conversely, an edge-rusher who got most of his sacks due to hustle or missed offensive line assignments may not have shown translatable traits on film.

The film clips in this series show each pro prospect's positive and negative traits. Reading this article will give you a more in-depth look into each player with actual in-game visual evidence. We will continue our Coach Knows Ball series with Ohio State WR Marvin Harrison Jr.

Editor's Note: The FFPC Baby Gorilla Tournament is now open, featuring a $100,000 grand prize and a $675,450 total prize pool! This 12-team, Tight End Premium contest uses a 20-round draft format, with the overall winners determined by total points scored during Weeks 15–17. Get $25 to use toward your first entry by signing up through our link. Grab your team now! Sign Up Now!

 

Marvin Harrison Jr. Rookie Profile

Marvin Harrison Jr. is one of the most heralded wide receiver prospects of all time. The son of a former NFL great, Harrison burst onto the scene in 2022, performing as the best receiver in all of college football with C.J. Stroud as his quarterback.

He had another successful season in 2023, cementing his status as one of the best prospects regardless of position in the 2024 NFL Draft. In a loaded WR class, Harrison's status as the clear-cut WR1 is being threatened this draft season by other terrific prospects. Let's dive into the film.

 

In His Blood

The first trait that pops up in Harrison's film is his ability to make crazy difficult catches. He has elite ball skills in most situations. With the highest drop rate among the top WRs in this class, some may question his hands. Drops as a stat are generally overrated, and make no mistake -- Harrison has special hands. His coordination while being contacted is unbelievable.

In the clip below, Harrison is being literally tackled by the Michigan defender, and does not have access to his left hand. He's still able to get his eyes to the ball and reel it into his body with just his right hand.

In the clip below, the ball is placed right at the Penn State defender. Harrison collides with him and makes a similar catch -- quickly bringing his right hand up to secure the ball into his body while fighting contact. The key translatable trait here besides the ball skills is his strength and size to jolt the defender off the spot. Harrison has enough size to be physical against DBs.

The clip below shows another high-level-of-difficulty reception in front of a crowd. Harrison is running a dig, but the ball is placed out of reach. He snaps his eyes and belly button to the catch point and secures the ball almost parallel to the ground.

Harrison's instinct is to use his body while catching the ball in many situations. However, there are plenty of reps that show an ability to extend and make plays with his hands. Using your body to secure catches -- especially difficult ones -- is absolutely viable and not really a negative despite what some may say.

In the clip below, we see Harrison snatch a high-thrown ball on a slant. Not only do his arms extend quickly, but he's also able to tuck quickly and survive aggressive contact in a tight space.

The clip below shows more work without body catching. Harrison wins on a vertical route, and uses late hands and excellent technique to complete the catch for a touchdown. One of the coaching points is to "catch above your eyes" as to not give the defender any chance to play the ball. He also closes his left shoulder away from the defender's hand and quickly moves the ball to his right side, giving the defender no chance. It's high-level catching technique from a natural.

 

Twitchy and Sticky

Harrison and his camp decided not to train for the 40-yard-dash this draft season, an interesting strategy not often used by draft prospects. Even without a 40, it's evident on film that he plays fast enough. He did a great job stair-stepping to score touchdowns running after the catch on shallow crosses. More important than speed, Harrison has the twitchiness and quickness necessary to excel at any route.

Specifically adept at curls and comebacks, Harrison's ability to sink his hips and use efficient footwork and head snaps make him a fine outside route-runner.

In the clip below, Harrison is running a comeback and puts his cover defender on skates. He attacks the blind spot of the cornerback, and shows terrific hip sink and head snap to win the breakpoint.

In the clip below, you can see Harrison work against the press. One of the best parts of his game is how he closes the space on his releases and erases the cornerback's cushion. Here, he also shows off his play strength and uses violent hands to quickly swipe the defender's shoulder pad away. That's excellent handwork, and it's married to quick feet. Harrison is a natural separator on routes that work back toward the ball.

The reason any receiver is able to run routes like hitches, curls, and comebacks effectively is that they threaten their cover defender vertically. Harrison has the long speed to win down the field.

In the clip below, Harrison motors to close the space on his release, then wins with speed to separate from the press-man corner. He finishes with a contested catch because the ball is not placed out in front.

Elite quickness is necessary for wide receivers. Cooper Kupp didn't run a 4.4, but his quickness makes him an amazing separator. Harrison possesses the quick-twitch lower body to stick his foot in the ground on sharp breakpoints and explode out quickly.

In the clip below, Harrison is running a slant against cover zero. The Michigan State defensive coaching staff is not helping out its nickel here, and the matchup ends as you'd expect. Notice how quickly he accelerates off of his right footstick. You can also see the arrogance with the almost-too-quick flip of the official. Confidence won't be an issue.

The clip below shows Harrison aligned as the No. 3 receiver with Purdue running cover zero in the red zone. This is a common man-beating red zone concept, as the No. 1 and No. 2 run short ins while No. 3 runs a corner route.

While Harrison undoubtedly shows translatable traits, including quickness out of the break and speed to run away, I'm not sure it's how the route was coached. Typically, a receiver who inside releases off the line will, at some point, look to push vertical. Down in the red zone, it gets trickier, as the cover defender has the back line to work with. Here, Harrison doesn't actually threaten the defender vertical, but his break is so sudden and his acceleration is so fast that he wins easily anyway.

I do not have access to Ohio State's playbook and don't know exactly how they teach each route. I do suspect, however, that Harrison breaks routes off shallower and quicker than his coaches would like. I've coached gifted athletes who are so good, especially at sharp breaks, that they rush routes. Harrison will probably improve that habit in the pros. On some of his slot routes in particular, he broke at surprisingly shallow depths.

 

Patience is Key

It's tough to find weaknesses in Harrison's game. His film isn't flawless, but with his size, athleticism, and ball skills, the traits are obvious. Even when his technique isn't pristine, you can still see the movement skills that translate in a big way.

Among the top prospects in the class, Harrison actually had the second-highest 2023 drop rate behind Oregon's Troy Franklin at 8.2%. Drops aren't the stickiest stat, so I try to evaluate the natural coordination rather than simply count drops. With Harrison, it's mostly due to concentration or flipping his eyes up the field too quickly in an effort to run after the catch. It coincides with his habit of rushing routes -- he rushes to run before securing the catch.

The clip below shows exactly that. Harrison's eyes come off the ball, and he tries to run without securing the catch first.

The clip below is a double-catch where Harrison again takes his eyes off the ball. The pass is placed perfectly; there's no reason to have lazy hands and fight the ball here. He should exaggerate his eyes. He's rushing to stick the landing and stay in bounds rather than securing the catch first.

Harrison has elite ball skills and coordination, but he'll likely drop some passes in the NFL. The league leaders in drops are typically some of the best WRs in the league. He'll be just fine.

The one area that Harrison can improve is his functional strength as a blocker. In the clip below, you see him appear on a crack block against a safety. He's aggressive initially, but does not have leverage and gets tossed to the ground as a result. At 6-foot-3 and 209 pounds, putting on some muscle will likely be necessary. Although his father wasn't exactly a powerful player, he's now in the Hall of Fame. I don't think NFL coaches will ask him to block inside the box all that often.

 

NFL Outlook

Marvin Harrison Jr. lives up to the hype on film. He has everything teams look for in a No. 1 wide receiver and makes some of the most amazing contested catches you'll see. He showed off his speed, scoring touchdowns on a lot of shallow crosses. He also possesses the twitch and quickness that makes him lethal on releases and on all types of routes. Sometimes I suspect he's rushing things, but he has all the tools to develop into one of the best WRs in the entire NFL.

If you want to read and watch some of my past film breakdowns, click the links below.

Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for more draft content in the coming days.



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy football app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, rankings, starts/sits & more. All free!

More NFL Rookie Analysis




REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Hunter Greene

Could Return Before the All-Star Break
Isaac TeSlaa

How Will Isaac TeSlaa Follow Up on a Strong 2025 Finish?
Troy Franklin

a Dynasty Hold with Potentially Rough Times Ahead
Trevor Lawrence

Is Trevor Lawrence Finally Becoming the Can't-Miss Player That Was Promised?
Courtland Sutton

an Undervalued Dynasty Depth Piece
KC Concepcion

Versatility Could Provide an Early Dynasty Floor
Dylan Harper

Remains a Bright Spot for San Antonio
De'Aaron Fox

Shoots Well in a Loss to the Knicks
Victor Wembanyama

Scores 29 Points in Game 2 Loss
OG Anunoby

Anchors Knicks' Defense in Finals Game 2
Mikal Bridges

Helps Knicks Secure a Game 2 Victory
Karl-Anthony Towns

Records Another Finals Double-Double
Jalen Brunson

Overcomes Cold Night to Seal Game 2
Michael Harris II

Dealing With Back Tightness, Not Believed to be Serious
Byron Buxton

Suffers Shoulder Contusion After Colliding With the Wall
Sacramento Kings

Kings Want to Trade Their Larger Contracts
Chicago Bulls

Darius Acuff Jr. Works Out for Bulls
Jaime Jaquez Jr.

Could Get Traded
MIN

Marcus Johansson Returning to Europe
Thomas White

Likely to Miss Rest of Season With Shoulder Capsular Sprain
Mitchell Robinson

is Upgraded to Available for Game 2
Cole Caufield

Earns Lady Byng Trophy
Nick Suzuki

Lands Selke Trophy
Deebo Samuel Sr.

Does Deebo Samuel Sr. Carry Buy-Low Appeal for Win-Now Dynasty Managers?
Elic Ayomanor

Is Elic Ayomanor Still Worthy of a Dynasty Roster Spot?
Jose Altuve

Astros Reinstate Jose Altuve From the Injured List
Tyler Warren

Does Tyler Warren Have Dynasty TE1 Upside?
Jonathon Brooks

Entering 2026 as a Buy-Low Dynasty Candidate?
Tyler Allgeier

Remains a Dynasty Buy-Low Candidate
Quentin Johnston

Is Quentin Johnston Undervalued by Dynasty Managers?
CFB

Reed Harris Hoping to Fill Void in Arizona State Receiving Room
CFB

Nick Marsh Gearing Up for Breakout
CFB

Drew Mestemaker Looking to Catapult Oklahoma State Offense in 2026
CFB

Rocco Becht Brings Experience to New-Look Nittany Lions
CFB

Can Trey White, Adam Trick Keep Texas Tech's Defensive Front Elite?
CFB

Devon Dampier is Key to Success for Morgan Scalley in Year 1
Aaron Judge

Yankees Officially Place Aaron Judge on Injured List With Fractured Rib
Francisco Lindor

Expected to Return in "About a Couple Weeks"
J.J. McCarthy

Fighting Uphill Battle to Win Starting QB Job?
Brian Thomas Jr.

Improving his Chemistry With QB
Malik Willis

' Chemistry With New WRs is a "Work in Progress"
Baker Mayfield

"Not Anywhere Close" to New Contract With Buccaneers
Chris Rodriguez Jr.

Sitting Out of OTAs
Isaiah Likely

Carries Significant Dynasty Upside into First Season in New York
Emanuel Wilson

Dynasty Outlook Clouded by Depth Chart Uncertainty in Seattle
Jaylin Noel

Is Jaylin Noel Still Roster-Worthy in Dynasty Formats?
Dylan Sampson

Carries Dynasty Upside Despite Current Place on Depth Chart
George Holani

Is George Holani Worthy of a Deep-League Dynasty Roster Spot?
Corey Seager

Rangers Activate Corey Seager From the Injured List
Gabriel Bonfim

Set For UFC Vegas 118 Main Event
Belal Muhammad

In Dire Need Of Win
Edmen Shahbazyan

An Underdog At UFC Vegas 118
Shayne Gostisbehere

Dishes Out Two Power-Play Assists in Comeback Win
Brendan Allen

Looks For His Third Win In A Row
Seth Jarvis

Ties Finals With Power-Play Goal
Mark Stone

Scores Sixth Playoff Goal in Overtime Defeat
Tom Nolan

Searches For His Fifth Consecutive Win
Mitch Marner

Records Two Assists in Game 2 Loss
Farés Ziam

Fares Ziam A Favorite At UFC Vegas 118
Brett Howden

Matches Franchise Record With Another Productive Outing
Brayden McNabb

Hospitalized After Taking Puck to Face
Aaron Judge

Diagnosed with Stress Fracture, Out 4-6 Weeks
Shohei Ohtani

has "Small" Blister, a "Non-Issue" for his Pitching Starts
Brent Rooker

Out on Thursday Due to Knee Soreness
Frederik Andersen

Hurricanes Retain Confidence in Frederik Andersen
Vincent Trocheck

Maple Leafs Interested in Vincent Trocheck
Dylan Larkin

Requests Trade From Red Wings
Corey Seager

Expected to Return This Weekend
Lucas Erceg

Royals to Mix and Match in Ninth With Lucas Erceg Struggling
Jonathan Toews

Expected to Retire
Anders Lee

Set to Hit Open Market
TB

Jon Cooper Wins First Jack Adams Trophy
De'Aaron Fox

Struggles Again Wednesday Night
Dylan Harper

Turns Heads in Finals Opener
Stephon Castle

Close to Double-Double in Game 1 Loss to Knicks
Victor Wembanyama

Notches 26 Points in Finals Debut
Josh Hart

Grabs 15 Rebounds in Game 1 Win Over Spurs
Karl-Anthony Towns

Opens Finals With Double-Double
Jalen Brunson

Scores Game-High 30 Points in Finals Opener
Aaron Judge

to Undergo Additional Imaging
Ketel Marte

Out on Wednesday With Back, Hamstring Injuries
Mitchell Robinson

is Available for Game 1 on Wednesday
Kawhi Leonard

Unlikely to be Traded
Chicago Bulls

Bulls Host Potential Lottery Picks for Workout
Corbin Burnes

has Teres Major Strain, Unlikely to Return Until September
Rickie Fowler

Looks To Continue Resurgent Season At Memorial
CFB

Can Eric Singleton Jr. Fully Break Out at Third School?
CFB

Katin Houser Steps into QB1 Role for Illinois
CFB

Savion Hiter an Immediate Impact Freshman for Michigan
CFB

Isaiah Horton Set to Take Over KC Concepcion's Role
CFB

UCLA Transfer Karson Gordon Signs with Austin Peay
CFB

Will Muschamp Bringing New Intensity to Texas Practices
Gary Woodland

Brings Boom-or-Bust Potential to Memorial
Jordan Spieth

Still Searching for a Breakthrough
Alex Smalley

Brings Elite Form to Memorial Tournament
Justin Rose

Looks to Recapture Memorial Tournament Success
Cameron Young

Looks to Get Back to His Contending Ways at Murifield Village
Chris Gotterup

Needs to Find Fairways at Muirfield Village
Si Woo Kim

Looks to Stay Hot at Memorial Tournament
Matt Fitzpatrick

Positioned for Success at Muirfield Village
Jalen Chatfield

Records Two Assists in Tuesday's Loss
Keegan Bradley

Looking for Another Strong Finish at Muirfield
Nikolaj Ehlers

Nets Two Goals in Game 1 Loss to Golden Knights
Shea Theodore

Notches Three Points in Game 1 Win
Brayden McNabb

Sets Up Three Goals in Game 1 Win Over Hurricanes
Justin Thomas

is an Exciting Play This Week in Ohio
Brett Howden

Starts Finals With Multi-Point Effort
Scottie Scheffler

Looks to Win Memorial Tournament for Third Consecutive Year
Tomas Hertl

Scores Game-Winner in Finals Opener
Rory McIlroy

Looking for Better Performance at Muirfield Village
Drake Baldwin

Could Return During Braves Next Homestand
Garrett Crochet

Diagnosed With Low-Grade Lat Strain
Russell Henley

Coming to Ohio on the Heels of Latest Victory
Tommy Fleetwood

Looking for Better Iron Play at Memorial Tournament
Patrick Cantlay

Looks to Continue Dominance at Muirfield Village
Ludvig Aberg

a Great Fit for Muirfield Village
Aaron Judge

Out on Tuesday With Rib/Shoulder Injury
Josh Hader

Set to Return from Injured List on Tuesday
CFB

SEC Coach Calls Buster Faulkner a "Home-Run Hire"
CFB

Auburn a Sleeper in the SEC Under Alex Golesh?
CFB

Noah Fifita Primed for Strong 2026 Campaign
CFB

Oregon Assistant Coach Charged with DUII, Reckless Driving
CFB

Tight End Nick Pollack Commits to Clemson
Akshay Bhatia

Needs the Driver to be True in Ohio
Aaron Rai

Primed to take on the Memorial Tournament
J.J. Spaun

Rebounded at Charles Schwab Challenge
Xander Schauffele

One to Watch This Week in Ohio
Elly De La Cruz

to Miss 2-4 Weeks of Action
Deiveson Figueiredo

Suffers Second-Round Submission Loss
Song Yadong

Gets Second-Round Submission Win
Zhang Mingyang

Suffers Back-To-Back Losses
Alonzo Menifield

Gets Back In The Win Column
Tallison Teixeira

Suffers First-Round Knockout Loss
Sergei Pavlovich

Scores First-Round Knockout Win
Cameron Smotherman

Suffers Third Loss In A Row
Kai Asakura

Earns His First UFC Win
Denny Hamlin

Earns the first Nashville Cup Series Victory of his Career on Sunday
Christopher Bell

Finishes as the Runner-Up at Nashville
Chase Briscoe

Earns First Career Podium Finish at Nashville
Ryan Blaney

Scores A Solid Top-10 Finish at Nashville
Kyle Larson

Top-10 Streak at Nashville Ends after Late Flat Tire Spin
Tyler Reddick

Is One of the Top Favorites to Win at Nashville
Kyle Larson

May Continue his Top-10 Consistency at Nashville this week
Christopher Bell

Is One of the Top Competitors for the Win at Nashville
Chase Briscoe

Is A Must Start for Nashville DFS Lineups
Chase Elliott

has Plenty of Upside for Nashville DFS Lineups
William Byron

Is William Byron A Playable DFS Option for Nashville Lineups?
Carson Hocevar

Is Likely to have Another Solid Result at Nashville
NASCAR

Should Fantasy Players Roster Bubba Wallace at Nashville?
Chris Buescher

Is A Decent All-Around DFS Option for Nashville Lineups
Daniel Suarez

is Likely to Drop Positions during the Cracker Barrel 400
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF