ESPN’s annual position rankings rolled on Wednesday with wide receiver, and Tetairoa McMillan’s name was nowhere to be found in the top 10.
That’s a pretty notable omission considering the kind of rookie season McMillan just put together for Carolina. The Panthers used the eighth overall pick on the former Arizona standout about 15 months ago, betting that the 6-foot-5, 212-pound receiver could give Dave Canales’s passing game a major lift. He did exactly that.
McMillan finished his first NFL season with 70 catches for 1,014 yards and seven touchdowns, leading the Panthers in all three categories. Five of those scores came over Carolina’s final seven games, and his production helped reshape a receiver room that had been short on answers a year earlier.
In 2024, Carolina was the only team in the league without a player who reached 50 receptions. Xavier Legette led the club as a rookie with 49 catches, and the year before that Adam Thielen paced the team with only 615 receiving yards.
Still, NFL executives, coaches and scouts didn’t push McMillan into ESPN’s top tier at the position. The top three spots went to Ja’Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson and Jaxon Smith-Njigba.
The rest of the top 10 featured Puka Nacua, Amon-Ra St. Brown, CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, Nico Collins, A.J.
Brown and Davante Adams.
In all, 26 receivers were mentioned once the honorable mentions and one-vote names were added in. McMillan wasn’t among them.
That doesn’t mean the league has ignored him completely. Pro Football Focus gave McMillan a 79.3 grade, which tied him for 20th in the NFL with Colts receiver Alec Pierce, who did get mentioned in the survey.
McMillan also showed up on the NFL Top 100 list at No. 87.
There are still rough edges in his game. His catch rate on 122 targets was 57.4, a number that leaves room for growth in year two. But he also showed he can be part of a productive tandem, teaming with Jalen Coker to give Bryce Young a reliable stretch-run target group.
If McMillan takes another step forward, the league’s personnel will have a harder time leaving him out next time around.
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