NFL Mock Draft 2016: How high is too high for Jalen Ramsey?

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Oct 11, 2014; Waco, TX, USA; Baylor Bears running back Corey Coleman (1) celebrates catching a touchdown with teammates during the fourth quarter against the TCU Horned Frogs at McLane Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports
Oct 11, 2014; Waco, TX, USA; Baylor Bears running back Corey Coleman (1) celebrates catching a touchdown with teammates during the fourth quarter against the TCU Horned Frogs at McLane Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports /

<p>DeAndre Hopkins is awesome, and his mere presence may throw some people off the scent when it comes to the Texans. Hopkins is one of the best young wide receivers in the NFL, and having a legitimate number one option on the outside is a very nice situation for any team in this pass-happy league. However, Hopkins can’t do it alone.</p> <p>Houston made massive upgrades at quarterback (Brock Osweiler) and running back (Lamar Miller) via free agency, and that trio gives the organization a bright future. Still, Osweiler is going to need more than one quality target to throw the ball to in the present and future, and the Texans can add a big-time wide receiver with this pick.</p> <p>Laquon Treadwell is (somehow) still available in this situation, but since we are using Miller’s big board, the pick is Baylor’s Corey Coleman. My personal rankings have Treadwell as the easy choice here, but that isn’t a knock on Coleman, who brings blazing speed and a ton of college production to the table as a late first round choice.</p> <p>I wouldn’t classify Coleman as “safe”, but the Texans want a burner to complement the size and play-making of Hopkins, and Coleman offers just that.</p>. WR. Baylor. Corey Coleman. 22. player. 10

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