Why Colts Believed Deion Burks Was Too Good To Last

Deion Burks' impressive speed and strength draw the Colts' attention, challenging assumptions based on his draft position.

The Colts didn’t wait until the end of the 2026 NFL Draft to start thinking about Deion Burks. They had the Oklahoma wideout graded much higher than No. 254, and that’s why his slide caught so many people around the league off guard.

Chris Ballard didn’t pretend to have a clean answer for why Burks lasted that long.

“Why he was there?” Chris Ballard asks rhetorically.

“I don’t know. Fortunate for us.

“He’s fast, he’s explosive. We think he’s got a real chance to help us. And we’ll try to get him worked in the return game too, even though he hasn’t done a lot of it, we think he’s got upside as a returner.”

At 5-10 and 180 pounds, Burks brings a profile built around burst. He turned in a 4.3 40-yard dash at the Combine, one of the fastest times posted by a wide receiver.

That speed is the obvious selling point, but the Colts also see a player with more force than his size might suggest. With Michael Pittman Jr. gone from the receiver room, Indianapolis is looking to replace more than just targets - it’s also trying to make up for some of the physical edge Pittman brought.

“The first thing is speed. He’s a 4.2 guy and that’s what you want.

You want to create explosive plays, get the ball in this guy’s hands any way you can. Like Chris (Ballard), just then in the return game.

If he can help us in the return game too, that’ll be very beneficial for us.”

The return work is still a project. The Colts like the idea, but Burks has not done enough there yet for the team to hand him that role without hesitation.

What stood out during the scouting process was that Burks didn’t play like a receiver who was easy to box into one spot. Colts Southwest Area Scout Mike Lacy said the team saw more than a pure slot option.

“Not your typical size that you want (outside), but I think this kid, pound for pound, his play strength and how put together he is, I think he should not be exclusively labeled as a slot receiver,” Colts Southwest Area Scout Mike Lacy says. “I think he has the speed to kind of threaten vertically, no matter where you line him up on the field. And in some situations, again, that play strength, catching through contact or getting outside the numbers, I think he can do more than just play inside.”

Burks backed that up at the Combine with 26 bench press reps, tied for the most among wide receivers and matched with New Orleans Saints first-round pick Jordyn Tyson.

Lacy said that kind of strength showed up on film, too.

“At his size, pound for pound, this kid is very, very strong, very explosive,” Lacy adds. “You can feel it when he’s coming off the ball and again, you can feel it when he’s running through contact. I think that bench press (total) is consistent with what we kind of saw on film.”

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