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Tony Thomas
Feb 28, 2026
Updated at Feb 28, 2026, 03:22
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Jacksonville Jaguars scouts interview explosive tight end and dynamic playmakers, revealing draft board priorities amidst coaching changes.

At Lucas Oil Stadium and the Indiana Convention Center in downtown Indianapolis, Day 2 of the NFL Scouting Combine played out before the gathered media, coaches, general managers and scouts. 

The Jacksonville Jaguars, minus coach Liam Coen and GM James Gladstone, were not exactly a rudderless ship. The Jaguars’ coaching staff was on-hand conducting interviews and meeting with prospects -- four of them, talented players on offense.

TE Eli Stowers, Vanderbilt

One of the best combine performances by a tight end was turned in by Stowers on Friday. First, he broad jumped 11 feet, 3 inches, then he jumped out of the building with a freakish vertical jump of 45 feet, 5 inches, reportedly the best by a tight end in combine history. In the 40-yard dash, Stowers clocked 4.51 seconds.

On the gridiron for the Commodores, Stowers (6-foot-3, 239 pounds) was first-team All-American and first-team All-SEC after catching 62 passes for 769 yards and four touchdowns. He caught at least three passes in 12 games last season and caught 146 passes for over 1,700 yards and 11 touchdowns in his collegiate career.

WR Antonio Williams, Clemson

As the second-leading receiver for the Tigers, Williams hauled in 55 catches for 604 yards and four touchdowns. He also added a rushing score in nine games of action. Against Duke, Williams caught a season-high 10 passes for 142 yards and a touchdown in a one-point loss to the Blue Devils. Williams is not a big receiver, at 5-foot-11 and 190 pounds. Williams was named third-team All-ACC.

RB Jonah Coleman, Washington

At 5-foot-9, 220 pounds, Coleman led the Huskies with 758 rushing yards, and he scored 15 touchdowns, which ranked among the top 15 running backs in the FBS. He opened the 2025 season with 177 yards and two touchdowns against Colorado State. Coleman followed that up the next week with five rushing TDs against UC Davis.

He is also a skilled pass-catcher out of the backfield, with 31 receptions for 354 yards and two touchdowns. Against Washington State, Coleman caught six passes for 104 yards and a score.

For his collegiate career that began at Arizona, Coleman rushed for over 3,000 yards and scored 34 rushing touchdowns in 50 games played.

RB Le’Veon Moss, Texas A&M

One of 13 Aggies invited to the combine (the most of any school), Moss missed half of the 2025 season due to an ankle injury. Moss rushed for 404 yards and six touchdowns. For his career in College Station, Moss rushed for over 1,700 yards and 22 TDs.

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In the first two days of the combine, the Jaguars have met with three tight ends, two running backs, one offensive tackle, one cornerback and one linebacker. All are talented players, which gives the fans a little insight into what the Jaguars may be thinking come draft day.

If the Jaguars let running back Travis Etienne go in free agency, Coleman could be a talented and productive replacement who could be a remedy for some the rushing woes of the Jaguars suffered in the second-half of last season. In three games on the back half of the season, the Jaguars failed to rush for 100 yards.

Stowers could be too good to pass up. But without a first-round pick in the 2026 draft, the Jaguars may have to trade up to get him, but may not have the draft capital. However, you never know when a deal may be struck. Stay tuned football fans.

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