The Miami Dolphins have spent the offseason tearing down and rebuilding their wide receiver room, and that leaves a real opening for a rookie to seize control of the pecking order. Tyreek Hill is gone.
Jaylen Waddle is gone. In their place, the depth chart is headlined by Malik Washington and free agent additions Jalen Tolbert and Tutu Atwell - unless third-round pick Caleb Douglas forces his way to the front.
Miami used the 2026 NFL Draft to add three wideouts, including two selections in the third round, and Douglas is the one drawing the spotlight in this 90-in-90 look.
Douglas arrives on a four-year, $7.2 million contract and carries a 2026 salary cap hit of $1.3 million in the first year. The Dolphins are betting on a player who flashed enough at Texas Tech to climb into second-day draft territory, even if the tape came with some rough edges.
After transferring from Florida, Douglas took a big step in his second season with the Red Raiders. He emerged as the team’s top receiver and leaned on his size-speed combination to produce, enough to earn Second-Team All-Big12 honors, a Senior Bowl invitation and a Scouting Combine invite.
The production was there, but so were the issues. Drops showed up, and there were questions about how well he used his frame.
That’s the tension with Douglas. Lance Zierlein of NFL.com described him as “a long, slender outside target with good production but uneven tape.”
Zierlein noted his “enticing moments” on fades and deep throws, while also pointing to “focus drops and an inability to win contested catches at a high enough rate.” He added that Douglas has “quick acceleration for a tall receiver,” but that his “top-end speed is relatively non-threatening to defenses.”
For Miami, the challenge now is turning those traits into something usable right away. The Dolphins have moved away from the smaller, speed-first receiver build they’ve leaned on in the past and added more size to the room this year. Douglas fits that shift, but he’ll have to show he can handle press coverage and get off the line cleanly, because defenses are going to test him there until he proves otherwise.
The rest of the offseason additions at the position - Tutu Atwell, Donaven McCulley as a UDFA, Terrace Marshall, Jr., Jalen Reagor and Jalen Tolbert - only make the competition tighter. Still, Douglas has the kind of upside that makes this one worth watching. The question is whether he becomes a true WR1 for Miami or settles in as part of the rotation behind a player like Washington.
Either way, this summer should start to reveal what kind of role Douglas can carve out.
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