The Kentucky Wildcats have an intriguing trio of wide receiver prospects eligible for the 2025 NFL Draft, and with his scouting report, Dane Key might be the most imposing of the group. What does Key bring to the table, and how far can he rise in April?
Dane Key’s Draft Profile and Measurements
- Height: 6’3″
- Weight: 210 pounds
- Position: Wide Receiver
- School: Kentucky
- Current Year: Junior
Key is a storybook playmaker for the Wildcats. He went to Frederick Douglass High School in Lexington, Kentucky — and now, he plays SEC football for his hometown team at the highest level of the collegiate game.
Key signed with Mark Stoops and the Wildcats as a four-star recruit out of Lexington after catching 53 passes for 959 yards and nine touchdowns during his senior year. Not long after he arrived on campus, Key became a legitimate part of Kentucky’s offense.
As a true freshman — catching passes from eventual second-round pick and Tennessee Titans quarterback Will Levis — Key hauled in 37 passes for 519 yards and six touchdowns, quickly establishing himself as a venerable big-play threat.
In 2023, though the Wildcats experienced more adversity and week-to-week volatility, Key remained steady, with 42 receptions for 636 yards and six more touchdowns. In his third season, Key is trending up, and he could be due for more.
Key’s Scouting Report
Strengths
- Has enough twitch and explosiveness to offset and stack off of split releases.
- Has the requisite short-area energy to stack route transitions and quickly enter phase.
- Able to make smooth adjustments out of route breaks to passes thrown behind him.
- Has superb ball-tracking ability in the deep third and can high-point with authority.
- Boasts incredibly strong hands and can secure tough catches with diamond technique.
- Has a tremendous sense of timing and coordination, controlling contested situations.
- Can press into stems and use combined physicality and bend to break free on outs.
- Flashes impressive route timing and angle freedom, pressing and then diverting out.
- Has shown to suddenly snap and retract his strides on deep comebacks and hitches.
- Able to employ sudden stride variations after pressing, before hinging hips inside.
- Extremely physical player who knows how to use physicality to compound separation.
- Can use forceful, well-executed swim moves to supplement out and corner transitions.
- Has the grating play strength to scrape through arm tackles and generate RAC yards.
- Showcases good alignment versatility and can be integrated off motions and sweeps.
- Rangy, high-energy run blocker who uses length and physicality to dictate positioning.
Weaknesses
- Isn’t a particularly fast strider out of breaks and doesn’t have elite corrective mobility.
- Long speed on the vertical plane, while very good, falls short of the elite mark.
- Doesn’t have elite explosive capacity and functions better with runways to gear up.
- Without elite lateral agility, weight transfers on delayed releases can be staggered.
- Lateral viability fades after initial moves, highlighting primary vertical proficiency.
- As a route runner, sometimes relies on physicality to a fault against tight coverage.
- Doesn’t quite have elite hip sink or flexibility, which can snag sharp route transitions.
- Sometimes has to take extra gather steps to sink and swivel, losing uncovered time.
- Route tree, while functional, can undergo more development at the intermediate level.
- Occasionally forfeits angle discipline when stemming, playing into his defender’s hand.
- Despite physicality, lacks the mass or low center of gravity to magnify RAC potential.
- Can occasionally employ more discipline with his extensions and timing as a run blocker.
Current Draft Projection and Summary
Entering the 2025 NFL Draft cycle, Key grades out as a fringe top-100 prospect, who could command late Day 2 or early Day 3 capital. And with added growth as a route runner, there’s a chance he could rise farther up into the Day 2 range.
A former four-star recruit, Key comes with a few easily observable positive traits right away. He has great size, strength, and physicality, along with the baseline explosiveness, vertical speed, and short-area quickness to be a threat as a separator and as a deep threat.
Key might not have quantifiably elite athleticism — which will put a cap on his ultimate potential. But as it stands, he has very good overall utility and specializes as a tremendous contested threat with elite hand strength, coordination, and tracking ability.
As a route runner, Key has room to keep developing. His hip sink isn’t elite, and there are times when his weight transfers and footwork on breaks can be smoother. But he does show a level of understanding and nuance that grants him added versatility, plus his grating RAC strength is a bonus.
Key may never be a bona fide WR1, but he profiles as a steady and valuable rotational presence with alignment versatility, high proficiency in contested situations and on clutch downs, and superb run-blocking ability. He could eventually be a solid WR2.