7th Round / Pick #242 Konata Mumpfield, WR, Pittsburgh

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Memento

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That was true 15-20 years ago. That's not exactly true now. Certainly, they're devalued when compared to guys who can play outside. We'll see how he does.
Renfrow was drafted in the fifth round, but there are so many smaller slot receivers that don’t even get a sniff at the NFL (T.J. Moe of Mizzou being a clear example.), and those that do are very much undervalued.

But I liked Restrepo because he was productive with two different quarterbacks, before Ward came to the team.
 

TheTackle

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Mumpfield's game similar to former Steelers WR Diontae Johnson.
View attachment 70768

Rams probably don't get him as UDFA as he's close to his former Akron HC and current Steelers QB Coach Tom Arth.

Perhaps this is optimistic but he looks very similar to a prospect that worked out pretty well. Very similar athletic profile and scouting report to Amon Ra St Brown.

Height5' 11½"*34
Weight197 lbs*21
Wingspan74⅝"*31
Arm Length30⅜"*16
Hand Size9⅛"*27
10 Yard Split1.63s*15
20 Yard Split2.64s*40
40 Yard Dash4.61s*38
Vertical Jump38½"*87
Broad Jump127"*88
3-Cone Drill6.9s*71
20 Yard Shuttle4.26s*54
Bench Press20 reps*64

 

TheTackle

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If you missed my last post, Mumpfield’s tape; college experience; productivity; athletic profile; height and weight; and ability to get open; with a strong release package; are extremely reminiscent of Aman Ra St Brown. I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself but this could be another classic late round steal


Draft Analysis: Konata Mumpfield​

April 23, 2025
  • Height: 5’11”
  • Weight: 186 lbs.
  • College: Pittsburgh
  • Tape watched: Clemson, Boston College, Louisville
  • NFL Comparison: Diontae Johnson

Pros​

  • Route Running
A legitimate separator, Konata Mumpfield is deceptive and has excellent burst in his route breaks. Mumpfield is really advanced with how he leans into and around contact in his routes. He knows to reset his stem after attacking different leverages. Mumpfield rarely loses speed on route breaks, showing the ability to run every route in the tree. Mumpfield really excels in the intermediate route range, further showing his ability to set up defenders and generate separation. His quick twitch nature leaves a lot of defenders taking false steps and flipping their hips in the wrong direction.
  • Release
Did I mention Mumpfield is twitchy? Facing various types of press and leverages, Mumpfield was bothered by little. He has several different release moves. Mumpfield’s most effective are his jab steps and hesitation move. Bigger press corners do succeed in forcing Mumpfield into their leverage. He has short arms and a weak frame that can prevent him from holding his ground.
  • Toughness/Experience
You would be hard-pressed to find a receiver with 49 career game appearances on their resume. Mumpfield is the definition of a veteran college receiver. He has versatility inside and out, and his skillset can be projected in the NFL similarly. Mumpfield missed 0 career games due to injury, a testament to his toughness. He took a lot of big hits over the middle of the field and popped right back up.

Midline​

  • Hands
Only a 4.8% drop percentage in four years, Mumpfield has steady hands that go and find the football. Despite an increase in drops over the last two seasons, Mumpfield has a respectable 49.2% contested catch rate over his career. He is not shaken with traffic or contact at the catch point. He will use his body if necessary, but ops for hand catches most of the time.

Cons​

  • Measurables
There is no way around it, Mumpfield lacks even average NFL size in any measurable. His arm length and hand size are in the 3rd and 4th percentile of NFL receivers in history. He has a thin, rail body type that allows him to take brutal hits and shoved off of his routes. He is an inadequate blocker as a result.
Mumpfield didn’t help his draft stock nearly enough at the combine, running a 4.59s 40-yard dash and middle of the road agility and explosion scores. I don’t think Mumpfield is slow, he did not show a lack of separation downfield. He also showed a decent ability to leap for the football. This may be a case of bad testing scores that overshadow game tape. It is worth noting, Mumpfield’s pro day 3 cone and short shuttle results were very good, which align with his on-field results.
  • YAC
Not much to write home about with Mumpfield after the catch. He does not force missed tackles, and he breaks even less of them.

Overview​

Konata Mumpfield could be a hidden gem of this draft class. There aren’t many route runners that offer his technical ability and football IQ. The Pitt team captain can play all three receiver positions on the field and has four full seasons under his belt of proven success. If he can withstand the physical transition to the big league, Mumpfield has upside as a third receiver and maybe even Top 64 potential”

 

DzRams

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Desmal M
Sarcasm received.

Any insight on what Mumpfield brings to the table for the Rams that Restparo doesn’t?
Speed? Restrepo ran a 4.8 40. He then said his hamstring tightened up but I'm guessing the league's not buying it. That is an undraftable number.
 

Memento

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If you missed my last post, Mumpfield’s tape; college experience; productivity; athletic profile; height and weight; and ability to get open; with a strong release package; are extremely reminiscent of Aman Ra St Brown. I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself but this could be another classic late round steal


Draft Analysis: Konata Mumpfield​

April 23, 2025
  • Height: 5’11”
  • Weight: 186 lbs.
  • College: Pittsburgh
  • Tape watched: Clemson, Boston College, Louisville
  • NFL Comparison: Diontae Johnson

Pros​

  • Route Running
A legitimate separator, Konata Mumpfield is deceptive and has excellent burst in his route breaks. Mumpfield is really advanced with how he leans into and around contact in his routes. He knows to reset his stem after attacking different leverages. Mumpfield rarely loses speed on route breaks, showing the ability to run every route in the tree. Mumpfield really excels in the intermediate route range, further showing his ability to set up defenders and generate separation. His quick twitch nature leaves a lot of defenders taking false steps and flipping their hips in the wrong direction.
  • Release
Did I mention Mumpfield is twitchy? Facing various types of press and leverages, Mumpfield was bothered by little. He has several different release moves. Mumpfield’s most effective are his jab steps and hesitation move. Bigger press corners do succeed in forcing Mumpfield into their leverage. He has short arms and a weak frame that can prevent him from holding his ground.
  • Toughness/Experience
You would be hard-pressed to find a receiver with 49 career game appearances on their resume. Mumpfield is the definition of a veteran college receiver. He has versatility inside and out, and his skillset can be projected in the NFL similarly. Mumpfield missed 0 career games due to injury, a testament to his toughness. He took a lot of big hits over the middle of the field and popped right back up.

Midline​

  • Hands
Only a 4.8% drop percentage in four years, Mumpfield has steady hands that go and find the football. Despite an increase in drops over the last two seasons, Mumpfield has a respectable 49.2% contested catch rate over his career. He is not shaken with traffic or contact at the catch point. He will use his body if necessary, but ops for hand catches most of the time.

Cons​

  • Measurables
There is no way around it, Mumpfield lacks even average NFL size in any measurable. His arm length and hand size are in the 3rd and 4th percentile of NFL receivers in history. He has a thin, rail body type that allows him to take brutal hits and shoved off of his routes. He is an inadequate blocker as a result.
Mumpfield didn’t help his draft stock nearly enough at the combine, running a 4.59s 40-yard dash and middle of the road agility and explosion scores. I don’t think Mumpfield is slow, he did not show a lack of separation downfield. He also showed a decent ability to leap for the football. This may be a case of bad testing scores that overshadow game tape. It is worth noting, Mumpfield’s pro day 3 cone and short shuttle results were very good, which align with his on-field results.
  • YAC
Not much to write home about with Mumpfield after the catch. He does not force missed tackles, and he breaks even less of them.

Overview​

Konata Mumpfield could be a hidden gem of this draft class. There aren’t many route runners that offer his technical ability and football IQ. The Pitt team captain can play all three receiver positions on the field and has four full seasons under his belt of proven success. If he can withstand the physical transition to the big league, Mumpfield has upside as a third receiver and maybe even Top 64 potential”


That's not Amon-Ra's St. Brown's profile. St. Brown can easily break and force missed tackles, that's been one of his strengths, and that has never been Mumpfield's game. Mumpfield is not Amon-Ra St. Brown, he's not Isaac Bruce, he's not whom people are saying he is, let's be clear. Just because a physical profile is similar doesn't make them similar players.
 

TheTackle

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That's not Amon-Ra's St. Brown's profile. St. Brown can easily break and force missed tackles, that's been one of his strengths, and that has never been Mumpfield's game. Mumpfield is not Amon-Ra St. Brown, he's not Isaac Bruce, he's not whom people are saying he is, let's be clear. Just because a physical profile is similar doesn't make them similar players.
I am not saying he will be Amon Ra - whose game is not “breaking tackles”. That’s simply not true. Here’s him having a day. Not one broken tackle! I don’t remember comparing him to Bruce. I do get why you were surprised, and disappointed, we picked him above other available players but guess I am coming round to the idea they might be on to something. McVay sure seemed happy he was available


View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6baJqHGGKKo
 
Last edited:

Memento

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I am not saying he will be Amon Ra whose game is not “breaking tackles”. That’s simply not true. Here’s him having a day. Not one broken tackle! I don’t remember comparing him to Bruce


View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6baJqHGGKKo

I said it was one of his strengths. He has that ability to force missed tackles. I may have stated it wrong with "breaking" tackles, but he's good at forcing misses. I know you didn't compare him to Bruce, that someone else did. I just don't like the Mumpfield pick, and the superlatives are...well, a bit much for me. Bruce? St. Brown? Mumpfield hasn't proven to be anything close to that, even on the collegiate level.
 

jjab360

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I think people are sleeping on this pick a bit. He's not Puka who just wins through physical dominance but a crafty route runner who can create separation outside of being schemed open. This pick makes sense for where he went in the draft and I've seen Diontae Johnson as a comparison which seems about right.

I think there's a role for him as a no.4/5 WR and they must see something on STs as well because he'll be required to play that to make the 53.