Elijah Sarratt is a wide receiver from Indiana who is ranked No. 100 on my NFL Draft Top 100 Big Board. This comprehensive scouting report analyzes Sarratt’s draft potential, current mock draft trends, and where he ranks among the top prospects.
Elijah Sarratt’s NFL Draft Potential
Elijah Sarratt has produced everywhere he’s gone. As a true freshman at Saint Francis, he racked up 42 catches for 700 yards and 13 touchdowns. As a true sophomore at James Madison under Curt Cignetti, he amassed 82 catches for 1,191 yards and eight scores. Following Cignetti to Indiana in 2024, Sarratt picked up where he left off, pacing the Hoosiers with 53 catches for 937 yards and eight TDs. Now, with the best QB of his career in Fernando Mendoza, Sarratt is enjoying his most efficient year yet — and that’s saying a lot with how high a bar he’s set.
Some players simply have an instinct for playing wide receiver, and Sarratt falls under that category. Though he’s not an elite vertical athlete at 6’2″, 209 pounds, Sarratt has good hip sink, good speed, and throttle control, and he knows how to offset defenders and work through stems to create space for himself. Beyond that, he’s a true master of catch-point control and timing. He uses his frame proactively to box out, he uses late hands to avoid keying in defenders, and he has the flow-state body control and coordination to make tight, high-difficulty catches look second nature.
Sarratt’s PFSN WRi score of 80.4 is above the 75th percentile among qualifying WRs. Per TruMedia, he has a stalwart 9.48% catch rate over expectation, and he’s also proven his mettle as a heavy-set RAC threat. At his size, with his lean, wiry mass, Sarratt has the ability to scrape through arm tackles, but he also possesses the balance and nimble agility to reset his feet and keep driving on extension plays.
Sarratt and teammate Omar Cooper Jr. have split most of Indiana’s pass-game volume, and Cooper clears Sarratt as a vertical and explosive RAC threat. But when Indiana needs a conversion — either with a clutch contested catch or a tough catch-and-run — they go to Sarratt more often than not. It’s a reflection of Sarratt’s all-encompassing reliability, and why he should maintain a role as a WR2 or WR3 at the NFL level.
Sarratt was held out of the final two games of the regular season due to an injury, and missed most of the team’s game against Washington. But when he’s been healthy in 2025 thus far, he’s been the Hoosiers’ steadiest receiving presence, with just a 4.5% drop rate according to TruMedia. He’s one of the most reliable catch-point operators in the league, and he’s also a nuanced separator who can use tempo and spacing to offset defenders 1-on-1.
Sarratt grades out as a potential Top 100 prospect on my board, but modest athletic limitations may cause him to fall into the mid-round range. In that range, however, he has the skills to be a high-value add and a quality complementary WR for years on end in the NFL.
Where Is Sarratt Being Selected Most Often in the PFSN Mock Draft Simulator?
Sarratt currently holds the No. 73 overall rank among prospects, reflecting his standing among mid-round prospects. His most recent Average Draft Position (ADP) of 73.1 as of December 6 reflects that he is typically being selected on Day 2 or early Day 3.
This small gap between rank and ADP suggests he’s consistently valued among evaluators, even amid fluctuations in player evaluations at this stage of the draft cycle.
Users controlling the Atlanta Falcons have been the team that selected Sarratt the most frequently over the past week, accounting for 1.6% of their picks across all seven rounds.
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Where Does Elijah Sarratt Rank Amongst Other NFL Draft Prospects?
Sarratt is currently ranked No. 100 overall in my December 2026 NFL Draft Big Board. Among WR prospects, Sarratt ranks 14th at the position, trailing prospects like Carnell Tate, Jordyn Tyson, Makai Lemon. Currently ranked in the top 100, Sarratt will look to increase their draft stock in the coming months.
Want to see how we rank all the draft prospects in the PFSN Mock Draft Simulator? Check out our NFL Draft Prospect Rankings page, which includes more than 750 prospects.

