Skip to main content
ohio state buckeyes Avatar
Enrolled12/14/2022

Jeremiah Smith

Default Avatar
ohio state buckeyes Avatar
StatusEnrolled
Class2024

Ohio State

Avatar
On3 College Rating
99.00
Natl.
9
WR
1
Recruiting Class of 2024
Natl.
1
WR
1
FL
1
On3 DB / Jeremiah Smith

As a College Recruit

One of the more talented and well-rounded receiver prospects in recent cycles. The highest-rated wide receiver prospect from Florida in well over a decade. A big, skilled receiver with fluidity and savvy for the position. Measured in at 6-foot-3 and around 200 pounds with a 32.5-inch arm prior to his senior season. Had a breakout junior season, catching 58 passes for 1,073 yards and 20 touchdowns while leading Chaminade-Madonna to a state title. A very polished route-runner at this stage with rare ability to change directions at his size. Smooth mover with technical refinement that allows for separation. Regularly stacks cornerbacks off the line. Pairs his route-running ability with advanced ball skills. Has strong hands and comes down with catches in traffic. A high-level ball tracker with the ability to locate the football over his shoulder. Capable of making fantastic one-handed grabs. Also flashes ability after the catch. Has the size to run through contact and a long stride to pull away in the open field. Also a strong track athlete winning state titles in the 110 meter and 400 meter hurdles as a junior. An extremely well-rounded prospect with a high floor and ceiling. Looks like a prototypical X wide receiver prospect with considerable traits and skills that point to an upside as a high draft pick.

Reminds Us Of
Larry Fitzgerald Avatar
Larry FitzgeraldWR/6-3/218
pittsburgh panthers Avatar
HS Class of 2002
Arizona Cardinals Avatar
2004Draft: Rnd1 /Pick3

Jeremiah Smith is a big, highly skilled blue-chip wide receiver prospect who reminds us of Larry Fitzgerald. The size, athleticism and overall skill sets have a strong resemblance. Smith's technical ability - namely his route-running, strong hands and elite tracking - reminds us of Fitzgerald. Both are similar from a size and frame perspective as well, checking in at around 6-foot-3 with good length and the frame to carry 220+ pounds.

Vitals

To unlock player vitals, Subscribe Now

Videos

Highlights

Junior Season

Scouting Journal

1/29/24

Jeremiah Smith finishes as No. 1 prospect in 2024 On300

Charles Power

Jeremiah Smith finished as the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2024 On300. The Hollywood (Fla.) Chaminade-Madonna product is the top route-runner in the cycle in a 6-foot-3, 215 pound body that wouldn’t be out of place on a NFL field. The combination of technical ability along with his size and high-end athleticism (state champion hurdler) is unique. Smith is strong in every facet. He effortlessly stacks cornerbacks off the line of scrimmage with a deep bag of releases. He runs an advanced route tree and has an innate ability to drop his weight and change directions at his size. Smith has strong hands at the catch point, consistently winning in jump ball situations and easily tracking the ball over his shoulder. He’s also very strong after the catch, showing the ability to maximize yardage with the ball in his hands. The physical and technical skill set seamlessly transfers over to the field, as Smith was a dominant, high volume target on Friday nights. The future Buckeye wideout hauled in 90 catches for 1,389 yards and 19 touchdowns as a senior, on top of 20 touchdown catches as a junior.

1/06/24

Jeremiah Smith a Top Performer at All-American Bowl

Charles Power

Jeremiah Smith entered the All-American Bowl as the top-ranked player on hand and more than lived up to that lofty billing. The Five-Star Plus+ Ohio State commit was dominant in practice. We did not see him effectively covered all week. At 6-foot-3 and over 210 pounds, Smith looks like a wide receiver created in a lab. The combination of size, athleticism and technical polish is as good as we’ve ever seen from a high school receiver prospect in this setting. Smith has an elite release package and immediately had opposing cornerbacks in a blender off the line of scrimmage. The ability to stack corners off the line is rare. Once the corner was out of phase, we saw Smith display an array of double moves to further confuse hapless defenders. The long speed and plus ball-tracking skills were also regularly on display. He’s also able to drop his weight and change directions on a dime, creating a dangerous threat on comeback and in-breaking routes. We even saw Smith show off his ability after the catch in a setting that allows for minimal contact. Smith wasted no time getting going in Saturday’s game, scoring the game’s first points, getting vertical for a touchdown. Coming into the event with little to prove, it’s also notable how hard Smith practiced throughout the week. He was at the front of every line and took a bunch of reps. It was apparent the touted prospect is all about business. He was in San Antonio to work – a great sign for his overall approach and mindset.